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A Healthy Imagination
Museum uses fun and games to teach health lessons
OLD WEST MEETS DEEP SOUTH
AN INDUSTRY SITTING PRETTYTown remains regional hub of furniture manufacturing
Video tour of Elvis Presley’s
birthplace
What’s Online
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TUPELO, MISSISSIPPI
2009-10 | IMAGESTUPELO.COM
®®
Click the top corners of the magazine to turn pages
2009-10 EDITION | VOLUME 8
TUPELO, MISSISSIPPI
®
CONTENTS
FEATURES
14 A HEALTHY IMAGINATIONHealthWorks! interactive museum mixes laughter with learning.
18 OLD WEST MEETS DEEP SOUTHTupelo Buffalo Park and Zoo brings a bit of the Old West to Tupelo.
22 SUPER SERVICE MADE TO ORDERDanver’s down-home restaurant serves up soups, salads and plenty of smiles.
26 A TALE OF TWO TUPELOSDiverse housing options make this Southern city the perfect choice for newcomers.
30 PET PROJECTRare Toyota model is driving visitors to the Tupelo Automobile Museum.
ON THE COVER HealthWorks! interactive museumPhoto by Antony Boshier
34 A NOTEWORTHY SUCCESSTupelo Symphony takes its show on the road as part of regional outreach program.
38 COMMUNITY ACTIVE-ISMResidents work toward increasing parks and recreation offerings.
42 PRINCE OF TUPELOHistoric home site celebrates Elvis Presley’s early years.
46 HEALTH CARE 2.0High-tech advancements keep North Mississippi Medical Center in tip-top shape.
50 REEL GOOD FISHINGTupelo’s lakes, rivers and waterways earn reputation as an angler’s paradise.
TUPELO IMAGESTUPELO.COM 3
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TUPELO, MISSISSIPPI
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TUPELO BUSINESS 66 An Industry Sitting Pretty
Tupelo remains a regional hub of furniture manufacturing.
70 Biz Briefs
73 Chamber Report
74 Economic Profi le
DEPARTMENTS
10 Almanac: a colorful sampling of Tupelo’s culture
56 Image Gallery
60 Portfolio: people, places and events that defi ne Tupelo
79 Health & Wellness
81 Arts & Culture
82 Sports & Recreation
85 Education
86 Community Profi le: facts, stats and important numbers to know
TUPELO IMAGESTUPELO.COM 5
imagestupelo.comTHE DEFINITIVE RELOCATION RESOURCE
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FACTS & STATS
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ABOUT THIS MAGAZINE
LOCAL FLAVOR
“Find the good – and praise it.” – Alex Haley (1921-1992), Journal Communications co-founder
Images gives readers a taste of what makes Tupelo tick – from business and education to sports, health care and the arts.
Go online to learn
even more about:
Schools•
Health care•
Utilities•
Parks•
Taxes•
Considering a move to this
community? We can help. Use our
Relocation Tools to discover tips,
including how to make your move
green, advice about moving pets
and help with booking movers.
From barbecue to bread pudding, Tupelo dives dish out old-fashioned Southern cuisine. Get a taste of local fl avor in our food section.
In our Interactive section, watch quick videos by our editors and photographers featuring people, places and events.
VIDEOS
We’ve added even more of our prize-winning photography to the online gallery. To see these photos, click on Photo Gallery.
PICTURE PERFECT
TUPELO IMAGESTUPELO.COM 7
TUPELO, MISSISSIPPI
®
COPY EDITOR JOYCE CARUTHERS
ASSOCIATE EDITORS LISA BATTLES,
SUSAN CHAPPELL, JESSY YANCEY
STAFF WRITERS CAROL COWAN, KEVIN LITWIN
CONTRIBUTING WRITERS SHARON H. FITZGERALD,
ANNE GILLEM, MICHAELA JACKSON,
JOE MORRIS, ANITA WADHWANI
DATA MANAGER CHANDRA BRADSHAW
INTEGRATED MEDIA MANAGER ANDREA JOINER
SALES SUPPORT MANAGER CINDY HALL
SENIOR PHOTOGRAPHER BRIAN McCORD
STAFF PHOTOGRAPHERS JEFF ADKINS,
TODD BENNETT, ANTONY BOSHIER,
IAN CURCIO, J. KYLE KEENER
PHOTOGRAPHY PROJECT MANAGER ANNE WHITLOW
CREATIVE DIRECTOR KEITH HARRIS
ASSOCIATE PRODUCTION DIRECTOR CHRISTINA CARDEN
PRODUCTION PROJECT MANAGERS
MELISSA BRACEWELL, KATIE MIDDENDORF, JILL WYATT
SENIOR GRAPHIC DESIGNERS LAURA GALLAGHER,
KRIS SEXTON, VIKKI WILLIAMS
LEAD DESIGNER CANDICE SWEET
GRAPHIC DESIGN ERICA HINES, ALISON HUNTER,
JESSICA MANNER, JANINE MARYLAND,
AMY NELSON, MARCUS SNYDER
WEB IMPLEMENTATION DIRECTOR ANDY HARTLEY
WEB DESIGN DIRECTOR FRANCO SCARAMUZZA
WEB PROJECT MANAGER YAMEL RUIZ
WEB DESIGN CARL SCHULZ
WEB PRODUCTION JENNIFER GRAVES
COLOR IMAGING TECHNICIAN TWILA ALLEN
AD TRAFFIC MARCIA MILLAR,
PATRICIA MOISAN, RAVEN PETTY
CHAIRMAN GREG THURMAN
PRESIDENT/PUBLISHER BOB SCHWARTZMAN
EXECUTIVE VICE PRESIDENT RAY LANGEN
SR. V.P./CLIENT DEVELOPMENT JEFF HEEFNER
SR. V.P./SALES CARLA H. THURMAN
SR. V.P./OPERATIONS CASEY E. HESTER
V.P./SALES HERB HARPER
V.P./SALES TODD POTTER
V.P./VISUAL CONTENT MARK FORESTER
V.P./EDITORIAL DIRECTOR TEREE CARUTHERS
V.P./CUSTOM PUBLISHING KIM NEWSOM
MANAGING EDITOR/BUSINESS BILL McMEEKIN
MANAGING EDITOR/COMMUNITY KIM MADLOM
PRODUCTION DIRECTOR NATASHA LORENS
PHOTOGRAPHY DIRECTOR JEFFREY S. OTTO
CONTROLLER CHRIS DUDLEY
ACCOUNTING MORIAH DOMBY, DIANA GUZMAN,
MARIA McFARLAND, LISA OWENS
RECRUITING/TRAINING DIRECTOR SUZY SIMPSON
DISTRIBUTION DIRECTOR GARY SMITH
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY DIRECTOR YANCEY TURTURICE
IT SERVICE TECHNICIAN RYAN SWEENEY
HUMAN RESOURCES MANAGER PEGGY BLAKE
SALES SUPPORT RACHAEL GOLDSBERRY
SALES/MARKETING COORDINATOR RACHEL MATHEIS
EXECUTIVE SECRETARY/SALES SUPPORT KRISTY DUNCAN
OFFICE MANAGER SHELLY GRISSOM
RECEPTIONIST LINDA BISHOP
C U S TO M M A G A Z I N E M E D I A
Images Tupelo is published annually by Journal Communications Inc. and is distributed
through the Community Development Foundation and its member businesses.
For advertising information or to direct questionsor comments about the magazine, contact
Journal Communications Inc. at (615) 771-0080or by e-mail at info@jnlcom.com.
FOR MORE INFORMATION, CONTACT:Community Development Foundation
300 W. Main Street • Tupelo, MS 38804Phone: (662) 842-4521 • Fax: (662) 841-0693
www.cdfms.org
VISIT IMAGES TUPELO ONLINE AT IMAGESTUPELO.COM
©Copyright 2009 Journal Communications Inc.,725 Cool Springs Blvd., Suite 400, Franklin, TN 37067,
(615) 771-0080. All rights reserved.No portion of this magazine may be reproduced
in whole or in part without written consent.
Member Magazine Publishers of America
Member Custom Publishing Council
Member Community Development Foundation
8 IMAGESTUPELO.COM TUPELO
Follow the signs ...
... to an easier home buying or selling experience.
Backed by specialized training and state-of -the-art resources, CENTURY 21© Sales Professionals are here to help make every aspect of your buying or selling a home easier and more successful.
Stop by a local office at 1720 McCullough Blvd. or call us at (662) 842-7878.
Sue Gardner Realty
©2008 Century 21 Real Estate LLC. CENTURY 21® is a trademark licensed to Century 21 Real Estate LLC. An Equal Opportunity Company. Equal Housing Opportunity. Each Office is independently owned and operated. C21Ad72
www.suegardnerrealty.com
Turn the pages of our
Digital Magazine
imagestupelo.com
LIVE LINKSHot links allow users to quickly link to other sites for additional information, and an ad index allows you to easily locate local advertisers in the magazine.
SEARCH AND YOU SHALL FINDAn easy-to-use search function allows you to fi nd specifi c articles or browse content by subject.
A DIGITAL TOOLBELTTools allow you to customize the look and function of the magazine on your desktop as well as print individual pages or save the magazine for offl ine reading.
MORE OF THE SAMEAnd that’s a good thing. Inside, you’ll fi nd the same award-winning photography and compelling content as in the printed magazine.
SHARE WITH A FRIENDE-mail individual stories using the pop-up text window.
TUPELO IMAGESTUPELO.COM 9
Scholarly ApproachWho better to prepare tomorrow’s workforce than today’s business leaders?
The Mississippi Scholars program pairs educators with business and civic
leaders to create a special four-year curriculum for incoming high-school
freshman aimed at preparing them for college and careers. Students selected
to participate in the program complete a rigorous course of study as well as
complete 20 hours of community service. Tupelo Middle School was one of only
14 schools in the state to participate in the pilot program. Since Mississippi
joined the nationwide initiative in 2003, more than 5,000 students have
graduated with Scholars diplomas.
What Darkness Brings to Light
March 28, 2009, will go down in history as the night the lights went out in Tupelo.
No, there was no storm. The voluntary blackout was part of the city’s recognition of Earth Hour, a global initiative to bring to light issues surrounding the environment. For one hour, downtown restaurants shut off their lights in eco-solidarity. Some restaurants, such as Fairpark Grill, took the celebration to another level by offering dinner by candlelight. According to officials of the Downtown Tupelo Main Street Association, the Earth Hour celebration was just another example of the business community’s commitment to sustainability and environmental awareness.
Cruising Toward a SuccessWith a successful 2009 event under their belt, organizers are
already busy planning the 2010 Blue Suede Cruise, which they
promise will be an even bigger and greater success.
The annual May event offers hard-core collectors the opportunity to
show off their prized classic cars and network with other owners and
vendors from across the state. But the Cruise isn’t just for automobile
aficionados; five venues, live entertainment, food and a visit to the
Tupelo Automobile Museum make this a must-do event for anyone.
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Almanac
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Fast Facts Approximately
80,000 people tour the Elvis Presley Birthplace attraction each year.
The Gum Tree Museum of Art is housed in a Beaux Arts-style building that is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
In 1934, Tupelo became the first city in America to buy electricity from the Tennessee Valley Authority. Residential electric rates in Tupelo today remain among the lowest in the nation.
Fishing is abundant in the Tupelo area, with popular spots such as Elvis Presley Lake, Lake Lamar Bruce and the Tennessee-Tombigbee Waterway.
The 1864 Battle of Tupelo was among the bloodiest Civil War battles in Mississippi.
The Tupelo Buffalo Park and Zoo attracts 200,000 visitors a year who can safely view the big beasts by riding aboard a Monster Bison Bus.
The Tupelo Automobile Museum, which includes an 1886 Benz and an 1889 Knox Porcupine, is regarded as the official car museum for the state.
Art Out LoudFor 38 years, Tupelo’s Gum Tree
Festival has been giving visual and
performing artists from across the
country a stage on which to
showcase their talents.
Typically held the first weekend
in May, the festival features a
songwriting competition, live
musical performances, arts and
crafts displays, as well as plenty of
food and fun for the entire family.
The festival is sponsored by the Gum
Tree Museum of Art, formerly the
Tupelo Artist Guild Inc., a nonprofit
organization that promotes the arts
in Tupelo through educational
opportunities for the community
and display space for local artists.
Homegrown GoodnessHelping the environment has never tasted so good as when you buy locally
grown fruits and vegetables at the Downtown Tupelo Farmers’ Market.
Held each Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday morning from May through October,
the market attracts vendors and patrons from across the state’s northeast region.
A Mississippi Certified Farmers’ Market, Tupelo’s market features fresh flowers, plants,
pastries and preserves. Vendors only have to pay $7 a day to rent a booth.
TUPELO IMAGESTUPELO.COM 11
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NATCHEZ TRACE PKWY.
1515
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3030
37137
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Future I-22
POPULATIONTupelo: 36,058 (2007)
Lee County: 81,139 (2008)
LOCATIONTupelo is in northeast Mississippi, 90
miles from Memphis, TN, and 165 miles
from Jackson, MS.
BEGINNINGSTupelo was incorporated as a city in
1870, and its development was closely
tied to the boom of the railroad
industry.
FOR MORE INFORMATIONCommunity Development Foundation
300 W. Main St.
Tupelo, MS 38804
Phone: (662) 842-4521
Fax: (662) 841-0693
www.cdfms.org
Tupelo At A Glance
What’s Online eTake a virtual tour of Tupelo, courtesy of our award-winning photographers, at imagestupelo.com.
Tupelo
Driving Through the DecadesDating as far back as 1898, the antique, classic and collectible
automobiles featured in the Tupelo Automobile Museum are a history
book on wheels.
The museum, which began as a hobby of collector and museum
founder Frank Spain, features more than 100 cars, including the 1976
Lincoln Mark IV gifted by native son Elvis Presley. Since opening in
2002, the museum has been a hit with both budding collectors and
car novices alike – so much so that it was designated the state’s
official automobile museum. The museum is open every day except
Mondays for self-guided tours.
The Toast of the Town
The Downtown Tupelo Main
Street Association has found a
new way to welcome spring –
a free wine-tasting.
The event aptly dubbed Wine
Down Main Street replaces the
annual Burger Bash on
Broadway as the
DTMSA’s main spring
event. Eleven local
merchants participated
in the inaugural
tasting, with each
offering a variety of
wines to sample.
Attendees received
wine glasses, T-shirts
and could purchase
tickets to Art for
Animals, which
raises money for
the Tupelo-Lee
Humane Society.
TUPELO IMAGESTUPELO.COM 13
Almanac
N ot many school field trips start with a talking brain discussing the importance of f lossing. But then, you’d
be hard pressed to find anything typ-ical about HealthWorks!, an interactive health-education museum in Tupelo. The city’s teachers bring their classes to HealthWorks! to satisfy a state-man-dated health-education requirement, but the experience feels more like being on a fast-paced kids’ game show than being in school.
Learning about the human body turns into a high-energy race to assemble a glow-in-the-dark-skeleton with the lights turned off. Kids learn the difference between smokers’ and non-smokers’
lungs, for example, by blowing a ball across the room through a straw and then blowing that same ball across the room using a coffee stirrer. Watching a multimedia presentation about choices becomes an active experience as stu-dents play the role of neurons inside the brain.
“We try to get their bodies involved; we get that kinesthetic energy going,” says Donna Loden, who oversees the facility. “They’re learning, and they’re not realizing they’re learning.”
The energetic experience is often surprising to both students and teachers, who are expecting a run-of-the-mill museum experience but instead find themselves competing against each other
in hilarious learning challenges.“We let them see that they are allowed
to be kids and show them that it is okay. It’s fun to watch the teachers release a little bit of control as well,” says Kathy Tucker, a HealthWorks! teacher. “We have to unravel them a bit and let them loosen up so that they’re free to interact and do the fun things that we’re asking them to do. You can see them breaking down and loosening up, and that’s when the magic starts.”
Though words like “zany” and “ram-bunc tious” would not be inappropriately applied to HealthWorks!, the facility is, at its core, more than an entertaining way for schools to fulfill a state educa-tion requirement. Organizers hope the
MUSEUM USES HANDS-ON HUMOR TO TEACH HEALTH LESSONS
A
STORY BY MICHAELA JACKSON | PHOTOGRAPHY BY J. KYLE KEENER
Second-graders work their way around an obstacle course of giant vegetables during a field trip to HealthWorks! museum.
FunDoseofHealthy
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What’s Online eWatch kids laugh and learn about their bodies at HealthWorks!, an interactive health-education museum. See this and more quick videos at imagestupelo.com.
program will be something of a catalyst in Tupelo and throughout Mississippi.
“We are trying to make an impact on the overall health of the region, which will be a long-term effort. In doing so, we are focusing in on children’s health,” says Dean Hancock, president of the Health Care Foundation of North Mississippi, which founded HealthWorks!. “When the kids get in there and they start absorbing the information, you can just see it in their eyes, how they’re absorbing it. And we’re getting some anecdotal information back that it’s clicking; it’s working.”
HealthWorks! opened in 2009, and a telling gauge of the program’s success has been the rising number of repeat visits by children who visit the facility with their school and are so excited that they want to share the experience with their families. This multiplying effect is actually a primary goal of HealthWorks! – to see children, newly imbued with all manner of health smarts, becoming the standard bearers of healthy living to their parents, grandparents and, ulti-mately, the greater community.
“Every parent wants to do the right thing, but maybe they don’t have all the information. What we see HealthWorks! doing is sort of turning that pyramid on its head,” Hancock says. “We are engaging children in such a dynamic way that they can’t help but learn, and then in turn, they’re going to bring somebody in their family into the circle of it, and that reinforces our idea of children becoming teachers to their parents. It is the beginning.”
Students increase their heart rates and health knowledge through interactive play at HealthWorks!.
TUPELO IMAGESTUPELO.COM 17
WhereBuffalo Roam
the
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B uffalo in Tupelo? That’s the question Dan Franklin’s family and friends might have asked him when the veteran cattleman returned home with six buffalo from Colorado and Canada.
But doubts were quickly put to rest as Franklin’s herd grew to nearly 100 and became the main attraction at the Tupelo Buffalo Park and Zoo, a 217-acre menagerie of giraffes, monkeys, buffalo and everything in between.
The park, which occupies a former Chickasaw Indian village, offers schoolchildren and families part animal kingdom experience and part social studies lesson.
“We teach them about the buffalo and the longhorn and what role those animals played in the history of this country,” Franklin says.
One hundred buffalo may seem like a sizable herd, but that number was at one time roughly a third of all living buffalo in the world, Franklin says. While the animals were about 64 million strong before North America was colonized by the Europeans, within about 150 years of their arrival, that
TUPELO BUFFALO PARK AND ZOO BRINGS THE OLD WEST TO THE DEEP SOUTH
STORY BY MICHAELA JACKSON
Fast FactThough they are both part of the Bovidae family and they are similar in appearance, buffalos and bison are different animals. With stark differences in the shape of the horns, the physical body and the size of the head, the American bison, the African cape buffalo and the Asian water buffalo are related, but not synonymous.
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number fell to fewer than 300, which is why Franklin con-siders his work at the park so important.
There are currently 375,000 buffalo worldwide, but it’s uncommon to see large herds in captivity. The Tupelo Buffalo Park and Zoo’s herd is one of the largest east of the Mississippi River.
The park also features zebras, yaks, bears, tigers, lions and all of a large zoo’s other usual suspects.
More than 140,000 people visit the park and zoo each year. Franklin hopes to impart in the visitors the importance of environmental conservation as well as the love of animals.
“What I’m hoping they’ll take away from the park is to experience what the animals actually look like and to learn
what we’ve done to our environment and the animals’ environment and how we’ve changed things, destroyed things by just not caring,” Franklin says. “But if we pay attention to what we’re doing, we can stop the way things are going and make them go back to the way they were.”
A trip to the park and zoo is a bit like stepping back into the Old West, without having to leave Tupelo’s backyard.
“Just the big eyes, or that little gasp that you hear when those huge bison come right up next to the trolley, and you just see the kids’ eyes light up,” says Jesse Swinford, a park manager. “This is a chance to come and see the bison and get right next to them – we’re talking two feet away from a huge, 2,000-pound animal. That’s just awesome, you know?”
From left: Peacock in full plumage; a giraffe at the Tupelo Buffalo Park and Zoo PHOTOS BY J. KYLE KEENER
TUPELO IMAGESTUPELO.COM 21
A Tupelo staple for some 31 years, Danver’s restaurant serves up some of the finest sandwiches, soups and
salads you’ll find anywhere. But this popular eating establishment is known for more than its hearty, home-cooked food. The place has a solid reputation for cleanliness and excellent customer service
as well. Visit Danver’s and you’re likely to see owner Gene Box pause from bus-ily wiping down tables to give you a personal welcome. That’s because, Box says, the restaurant business is all about the people.
“Since the day I opened, I try to greet everybody when they come in and say goodbye when they leave. It doesn’t cost
you a quarter to be nice to people.”As for the food, he says, “If it’s not
good, I’m not going to put it out there.” That includes hamburgers, roast beef sandwiches, and quarter-pound, all-beef hot dogs that are so big and juicy “they’ll fill you up for two days,” Box says.
Danver’s also goes through 20 to 40 pounds of chicken every day for its
DANVER’S SERVES UP SOUPS, SALADS AND PLENTY OF SMILES
STORY BY CAROL COWAN | PHOTOGRAPHY BY J. KYLE KEENER
Clockwise from top left: Danver’s famous hot dog on a grilled bun; Happy customers are Danver’s commodity. Danver’s owner Gene Box, right, shares a laugh with long-time patrons Sheila Jenkins and Sandra Ballard.
SUPERService
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homemade chicken salad croissants, and the Rueben sandwich – rye bread piled high with corned beef and sauerkraut, slathered in thick, tangy thousand-island dressing – earns high praise from customers, including one New Yorker who said it was one of the finest corned beef sandwiches he had ever had.
Box believes in giving his customers plenty of choices, which is why on any given day, Danver’s offers five different soups, such as its own vegetable soup, as
well as French onion, clam chowder, gumbo, chili – served with old-fashioned Southern corn bread, of course – bean and cheddar cheese soups. And there’s more.
“A big drawing card is my salad bar,” Box says. “It’s really fresh and clean and colorful – it’s just wonderful. We put out fresh lettuce every day. I have a server taking care of the salad bar at all times, and we keep it as neat as a pin. We also sell a big baked potato and have all kinds of fixings on the salad bar.”
Don’t have time to come in for a sit-
down meal? Don’t worry. Danver’s res taurant also has drive-through service. To make sure customers drive away with everything they ordered, Box says he is very particular about employee service at the window. But his employees know the drill. Some, including manager Larry Wade, have been at Danver’s since the place opened, inspired, no doubt, by their boss’s example.
“Sure, I’ve worked some long hours,” Box says. “But I like the restaurant business because I love people.”
Diners enjoy a late evening dinner at Danver’s restaurant, a Tupelo staple since 1977.
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C hoosing to live in Tupelo is not hard. The question is which Tupelo.
There’s the Tupelo with small-town charm, historic, tree-lined neighborhoods and quaint,
well-preserved architecture. Then there’s the Tupelo with its sleek, 21st-century downtown renovations and brand-new subdivisions that offer all the state-of-the-art amenities modern living can provide.
Fortunately for newcomers, both options combine to create the picturesque and progressive Southern town that has been wooing residents for years.
“Any type of residential living people want, they can find in Tupelo,” says Joey Guyton, a local developer and father of three who has watched Tupelo’s popularity with newcomers
NEIGHBORHOODS RANGING FROM HISTORIC TO TRENDY WELCOME NEWCOMERS
A
STORY BY ANITA WADHWANIPHOTOGRAPHY BY J. KYLE KEENER
From left: Spring Lake, a 1,000-acre planned community; The Belfry, a mixed commercial and residential development in downtown developed by Coldwell Banker Realtor Tommy Morgan
TupelosTale of Two
TUPELO IMAGESTUPELO.COM 27
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and people looking to relocate grow in the past decade.The real challenge, he says, is deciding which of the city’s
attractive neighborhoods to call home.Guyton lives with his wife and family in the new Spring
Lake development, a planned, upscale community of newer single-family homes on 1,000 acres in northern Tupelo.
As a developer, Guyton is building several, similarly planned communities suited to a variety of price ranges and offering modern construction, community amenities such as pools, spas and club houses, and attractive living.
“Because of the great job the Community Development Foundation has done, we have had an influx of families which has increased our new and existing home sales,” says Sue Gardner of Century 21 Sue Gardner Realty. “The home of today is substantially larger with bonus/play rooms, home offices and larger yards.”
For those with a yen for an older home, the Joyner Area and the Highland Circle districts offer a chance to live in some of the oldest homes in Tupelo. In fact, the homes in these neighborhoods may be even more beloved than homes in many other cities because they survived the 1936 tornado that destroyed much of the city.
And for the urban professional, downtown Tupelo and the Fairpark district offer lofts and townhouses within easy walking distance of restaurants and shopping, including the Belfry, a former government office building and bomb shelter turned luxury apartment complex developed by Coldwell Banker Realtor Tommy Morgan.
But even with all the available options, Ellen Short of TRI Inc./ Realtors believes what makes Tupelo so attractive to newcomers are the people who live here. While showing potential residents from Virginia around, the couple could not help but notice what Short calls the “Tupelo spirit.”
“They said ‘we feel so welcome and wanted,’ and I said ‘that’s the idea.’ The Tupelo spirit is one of open arms and welcome. I think that is very evident,” Short says.
Larry Ray, a resident of the planned community at Spring Lake, teaches his grandson, Ben, the finer points of fishing.
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I t may have been a dud during the Eisenhower administration, but the Toyota Toyopet is the hottest thing on four wheels these days at
the Tupelo Automobile Museum.The car, which was Toyota’s first
entry into the U.S. market, went on sale in July 1958. American drivers were underwhelmed, to say the least. They found the car to be overpriced, not terribly powerful and lacking in the bells and whistles they’d become accustomed to from Detroit’s offerings, and only a dismal 287 were sold.
Fast-forward to 2008, when a Toyopet Crown Deluxe, one of only four known to still exist, surfaced on eBay. Some fast bidding put the car into the hands of the Community Development Foundation and the Tupelo Automobile Museum, which had long wanted to expand its early Toyota offerings. A trip to California and $22,322 later, and the car was on a trailer and headed to its new home.
“David Rumbarger at the CDF had come across the auction, and he got some other people to join in and start bidding on it,” says Allen McDaniel,
EARLY TOYOTA MODEL BECOMES MUSEUM’S LATEST STAR
PetSTORY BY JOE MORRIS
JE
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AD
KIN
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Project
More than 100 antique cars represent a century of automobile design.
TUPELO IMAGESTUPELO.COM 31
PHOTO BY J. KYLE KEENER
BancorpSouth Bank
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curator for the Tupelo Automobile Museum. “They ended up getting the car, and now it’s here in the back being restored. The engine and transmission are in Arizona, where they are being restored by Frenchy Dehoux, an older-car restorer, and the rest of the work is being done here.”
Restoring the car will be tricky, in that no replacement parts exist, so care and caution are the order of the day. A 2010 rollout is being planned, as well as a joint exhibit with a Toyota Prius, which will be built at Toyota’s plant in Blue Springs.
For the museum, which has more than 100 classic automobiles in its 120,000 square feet of space, adding a Toyopet to the collection is a dream come true. And with Toyota’s physical presence just up the road, it’s also a chance to tie some automotive past with a major new indus-trial player in the region.
“A lot of people are coming in and wanting to know when it’ll be ready,” McDaniel says. “If we can, we take them back to have a look at it. It’s really going to be wonderful for us, because a lot of people who follow this kind of project will travel in to see it. That’s going to put the spotlight on the museum and show people the scale and caliber of our collection. Toyota has already given us a couple of cars for display here, and so this will really be the icing on the cake as far as they’re concerned.”
Being able to handle such a high-profile project also means the museum might be considered for others, giving it a whole new direction to develop as the staff explores not only acquisition but also restoration.
“Car lovers have that common bond, so they’ll talk about what we’re doing and the word will get out. It’s great for the museum,” says Cindy Hale, the museum’s marketing director.
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From left: Chrome detailing on the rear quarter panel of the rare 1958 Toyopet Crown Deluxe; The Tupelo Automobile Museum
TUPELO IMAGESTUPELO.COM 33
I t’s not hard to get Margaret Anne Murphey and Steven Byess to talk about the Tupelo Symphony, and these days they have more ears to bend than ever.
Murphey, the symphony’s president and executive director, and Byess, its music director, are enjoying the early results of a new outreach program designed to take the symphony to smaller communities around Tupelo. The idea was to give smaller cities and towns the chance to host a concert or a school-education program, Murphey says.
“We targeted the communities within a 75-mile radius,” Murphey says. “A lot of those people come to our concerts, so we thought they would be open to having us come to them.”
The cities of New Albany, Fulton, Amory, Columbus and Starkville were chosen for the inaugural effort, and Byess went to each while he was in Tupelo preparing for an upcoming concert. He met with local officials, civic clubs and others throughout spring 2008, and the response was even more positive than he and Murphey dreamed it would be. Armed with that support, the symphony applied for and received a $10,000 grant from the National Endowment for the Arts, and the road show was on.
“During the 2008-2009 season we did two programs – one
OUTREACH PROGRAM TAKES SYMPHONY ON THE ROAD TO REGION’S COMMUNITIES
STORY BY JOE MORRIS
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As part of its community outreach, the Tupelo Symphony Orchestra regularly performs concerts for schools.
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in New Albany in February and a school concert in Fulton in April,” Murphey says. “We have had the most wonderful response, and next year we plan to add the rest of the communities to the schedule as well as go back to these two.”
This pretty much doubles the season for the 38-year-old orchestra, but nobody’s complaining. For Byess, who comes to town just prior to concerts to work with the musicians, most of whom also live out of the city, reaching into communities throughout the region is a key component of the symphony’s ongoing mission.
“I don’t think I’ve ever designed or been a part of any process that has been exponentially more successful than I expected,” Byess says. “I began with the premise that we have something wonderful in Tupelo, and we should meet other communities and show them what we have.”
Adding the traveling shows also ties in with his goal of continually raising the artistic bar for the orchestra, as it gives members more opportunities to play together and be more cohesive as an entity. And with five very eager new audiences, it also introduces new listeners to the orchestra and to Tupelo’s performing arts scene.
Going forward, Byess says he hopes to build on the
framework that’s been created with this inaugural effort, and based on the wildly successful first year, that shouldn’t be much of a problem. If anything, he notes, the difficulty will be finding the time to put even more concerts on what’s becoming a crowded symphony calendar.
“All five communities in this first year have been over-whelmingly enthusiastic, and four of them engaged us immediately,” Byess says. “We think this will support our children’s concerts as well as our regular performances, so it’s already a win-win situation for everyone involved.”
More importantly, he adds, various organizations within the cities have pooled their resources to raise the funds needed to pick up some of the symphony’s traveling expenses, which has created a whole new network of music lovers and supporters in each municipality.
“We’ve established communication across different lines in these communities as they’ve worked to bring the sym-phony in, so there’s collaboration and communication that we’ve never seen before,” Byess says. “Only last spring I was in my car going to visit these people, and now we have all this. It really speaks so well for the quality of life in northeast Mississippi.”
TUPELO IMAGESTUPELO.COM 37
PARENTS GET INVOLVED TO INCREASE PARK AND RECREATION OFFERINGS
CommunityActive-ism
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F or the past 20 years, Tupelo parents have shuttled their little leaguers across town from one city park to another
to play in various ball games. With the opening of a new, refur-
bished sports complex at Ballard Park, all of the city’s youth baseball games are held at one state-of-the-art facility, a location that can now lay claim to being the largest city-owned athletic complex in the state of Mississippi.
Today, the Ballard Park Sportsplex attracts crowds nearly every night of the week during the warm spring and summer ball season.
“Normally on any given weeknight, especially on a Tuesday or Thursday, all
800 ballplayers are here,” says Don Lewis, director of Tupelo Parks and Recreation. “That’s almost 2,000 to 3,000 people in the city’s park on a weeknight. The baseball lights are on. There’s a whole lot of excitement about the games, seeing neighbors and one another’s kids. It’s a huge community gathering spot.”
In 2008, Ballard Park reopened with nine new baseball complexes in the 153-acre park, which has long attracted residents to its scenic lake, serene walking trails, soccer fields and acres of green space.
It took an investment of nearly $4.8 million and the sincere desire of the community to create such a youth sports
STORY BY ANITA WADHWANIPHOTOGRAPHY BY J. KYLE KEENER
From left: Walking paths encircle the lake at Ballard Park; little leaguers practice fielding grounders at the Ballard Park Sportsplex; Veteran’s Memorial Park
TUPELO IMAGESTUPELO.COM 39
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What’s Online eWatch little leaguers swing for the fences in a video tour of Ballard Park. See this and other quick videos at imagestupelo.com.
complex, Lewis says. Parents got together and raised nearly $1 million of the total, including all of the funds needed to open the 5,000-square-foot concessions stand.
“It’s great when you get the com-munity involved like this,” he says. “They have a lot more pride in it.”
Lewis credits parents and the com-munity for creating a culture in Tupelo in which parks and recreation are a priority. If the community really wants something, Lewis says that the city has a long history of bending over backwards to try and get it for them.
“One of the things we do here in Tupelo is we take on community projects, and those are the ones we try to give priority to, when community really gets involved,” he says. “If they really want to get involved, we can usually make whatever it is happen – anywhere from a $10,000 investment in basketball courts to a multimillion-dollar baseball complex. It doesn’t matter the size of the project. When the community wants to get involved, we can make it happen.”
At Veterans Memorial Park, commu-nity interest led to a new cross-country trail, walking tracks, playgrounds and volleyball courts.
The 206-acre park has gone through many other recent changes, including the establishment of four softball fields, a playground facility, fitness trails throughout the park and a new splash and spray park.
The park has two lakes and a veterans’ memorial, dedicated in a 2008 ceremony to all of the city’s veterans.
The amenities – some old and some more current – make Tupelo’s parks a prime recreational destination for local residents and visitors.
“On any given weekend, you have to come early to find parking spots in the parks,” he says. “They are so well-used, from walkers and runners, to grand-parents with grandchildren.”
The Tupelo Rangers take batting practice at the Ballard Park Sportsplex.
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The house where Elvis Presley was born still stands at the Elvis Presley Birthplace and Museum.
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B efore the adoring crowds, before the swaying hips, before Graceland, before there was a “King,” there was Tupelo.
Elvis Presley was born in the north-east Mississippi city on Jan. 8, 1935, in a two-room home that his father built for $180. Each year, more than 80,000 people visit the home, which Elvis once remarked could fit inside his living room at Graceland.
The house nearly passed into obscurity in the 1950s when the land came up for sale. But Elvis happened to be stopping through in 1956 to play a concert at the fair, and he decided to donate the proceeds of his show to preserve his boyhood home and save the 15-acre plot from development.
“I’m sure he wasn’t thinking in 1956 that it was going to be what it is today, but he had foresight enough to not want to see that little shack that he was born in be torn down,” says Linda Elliff, director of sales for the Tupelo Convention and Visitors Bureau. “Now, though, it is probably one of the most popular attrac-tions in the state of Mississippi.”
The property has evolved over the years, with the restoration of the house com pleted by the Tupelo Garden Club
HISTORIC HOMESITE CELEBRATES ELVIS PRESLEY’S EARLY YEARS
Prince
STORY BY MICHAELA JACKSONPHOTOGRAPHY BY JEFF ADKINS
Tupeloof
The Fountain of Life at the Elvis Presley Birthplace and Museum
TUPELO IMAGESTUPELO.COM 43
Thanks to a $750,000 renovation in 2006, the birthplace includes Elvis’ boyhood home and the church he attended.
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before Elvis’s death, the construction of a meditation chapel in 1979 and the opening of a museum in 1992.
Today, the site also includes the fully restored Assembly of God church that Elvis attended with his family as a little boy, a 60-foot story wall covered with accounts written by people who knew Elvis in Tupelo and a replica of the vehicle that Vernon Presley took his family to Memphis in when Elvis was 13 years old.
“People have really enjoyed seeing the early life of Elvis Presley because nobody has ever told that story before,” says Dick Guyton, executive director of the Elvis Presley Memorial Foundation, which runs the park. “That’s what we’re all about. We let Graceland take care of the famous entertainer Elvis, and we portray to the fans his early years, his beginning, and how those 13 years in Tupelo affected the rest of his life.”
Aside from being shaped by the culture of Tupelo in the 1930s, Elvis received his earliest introduction to music in the city. The Presleys were quite poor, and they were forced to leave the home Vernon had built and bounce around east Tupelo, living with relatives or renting inexpensively. Their wanderings took them for a time to a predominantly black neighborhood, and it was there that Elvis was exposed to rhythm and blues and black gospel music. He also fell under the influence of gospel at his church, where his pastor taught him a few chords on the guitar. And he discovered country music by listening to the Grand Ole Opry on the radio.
Elvis’ mother bought him his first guitar at the Tupelo Hardware Store, which is still in business and still selling guitars to budding musicians.
“There are fans of Elvis who are avid and want his whole story, and for years, all they could get was the entertainer Elvis, because the birthplace had not developed to the point that it was really worth coming to Tupelo,” Guyton says. “But now we tell that story, and I think that’s another reason that people are going to continue to come down here: because they want to know the whole story. They want to know why he turned out to be the most famous entertainer of all time, and it was because of those formative years here in Tupelo.”
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H igh-tech innovations are the order of the day at North Mississippi Medical Center, where not one but
two new robotic devices are changing patient care in very profound ways.
In the operating room, the hospital now boasts the da Vinci Surgical System, which provides an alternative to open surgery and laparoscopy. The system can be used for various procedures and requires only a small incision. Since its installation, it has been used frequently for a variety of surgeries, including prostatectomies.
Urologist Paul Farabaugh says using robotics saves the patient a great deal of
recovery time as well as reduces the risk of future complications.
“Traditional open surgery to remove the prostate is very good,” Farabaugh says. “Robotic surgery is simply more sophisticated and mimics traditional surgery but with a less invasive approach. These patients can recover more quickly and have the same cancer-free results.”
The da Vinci robot gives the surgeon a three-dimensional view of the area in question as well as the ability to zoom in and out. The surgery itself is done through 8-millimeter ports, which cuts down on healing time. The robotics sys-tem will soon be used for kidney surgery, as well as hysterectomy procedures and
TECHNOLOGICAL ADVANCEMENTS ENHANCE PATIENT CARE AT NMMC
STORY BY JOE MORRISPHOTOGRAPHY BY J. KYLE KEENER
Health
Northeast Mississippi Medical Center
Care 2.0
TUPELO IMAGESTUPELO.COM 47
some cancer treatments.And for those patients whose con-
ditions are being treated with various medications, there’s always the matter of getting that prescription in a secure, timely manner. That’s going to be a faster and more efficient process now that ROBOT-Rx is on the job.
The pharmacy robot spends its days selecting medications for each patient,
then places them in envelopes to be delivered to each floor. The medications themselves are prepackaged by another technology, PACMED, for the robot’s use, so efficiency and safety are ensured throughout the process, says Ronnie Crosswhite, Pharm.D., assistant director of the medical center’s pharmacy.
“As you look at technology from a pharmacy’s perspective, you must
consider at least two things,” Crosswhite says. “Will the new technology enhance services provided to the patients by increasing efficiency in the pharmacy and to nurses who, ultimately, are our customers, when it comes to providing the medications to the patients? And will the new technology provide a safer environment for our patients by making the medication distribution system from
The McKesson ROBOT-Rx can sort more than 4,000 doses of medicine per day in the NMMC pharmacy.
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pharmacy to the end point, the patient, more efficient? Purchasing automation and robotics for the pharmacy was done entirely with the patient in mind.”
ROBOT-Rx uses bar codes to verify and automatically pick the right med-ications for a patient. After delivery, the system also utilizes bar-code technology to scan the medications at bedside, which further reduces the possibility of error.
It also tackles such tasks as updating the patient’s medication records, as well as keeping an ongoing inventory of pharmaceutical stock.
This level of automation is still fairly new to the field, and the hospital was eager to upgrade. While several hospitals throughout the country are utilizing ROBOT-Rx, few have set it up for a start-to-finish, comprehensive operation
such as what is being done at NMMC, Crosswhite adds.
“The NMMC pharmacy has always been a leader in providing the most advanced pharmacy technology products available to serve our patients,” he says. “We are committed to researching the products on the market and performing comparisons of these products to assure we have the best for our patients.”
TUPELO IMAGESTUPELO.COM 49
TUPELO EARNS ITS REPUTATION AS AN ANGLER’S PARADISE
FISHINGReel Good
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E very weekend, anglers in northeast Mississippi confront what some might say is a good problem to have.
When they grab their poles and head for the water, they have to choose one of more than 20 lakes within an hour-and-a-half drive of Tupelo. It’s tempting to head out to Enid Reservoir to try and beat the white crappie world record that was set there in 1957, but then all those prize smallmouth bass swirling around
in Pickwick Lake might get jealous. Is the day more suited for an afternoon jaunt up to Lake Lamar Bruce, just nine miles north of town or a day trip 50 miles out to Sardis Lake? That’s not to mention Tennessee-Tombigbee Waterway, Elvis Presley Lake or the dozens of ponds dotting the region.
“I tell people all the time that my problem in Tupelo is not when to fish, it’s which lake do I want to try and go to,” says Larry Pugh, assistant
STORY BY MICHAELA JACKSONPHOTOGRAPHY BY J. KYLE KEENER
From left: Lake Lamar Bruce is known for large populations of bass and channel catfish; fisherman’s bait washed up on the shores of Sardis Lake
TUPELO IMAGESTUPELO.COM 51
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director of the Fisheries Bureau for the Mississippi Department of Wildlife, Fisheries and Parks. “Tupelo is really the center, the hub, that would provide access to all these other places [for serious fishing].”
The Tupelo area is known far and wide as a hotbed for anglers, hosting tournaments and attracting biologists and fishermen from across the country. In addition to abundant crappie and smallmouth bass, the region’s lakes and rivers have a reputation for stocking largemouth bass, catfish and bream.
What really cements Tupelo’s repu-tation in the fishing world, though, is that you can hardly throw a rock in any direction without hitting a pond, lake or river.
“When daylight savings time starts, you can get off work, hook the boat up and be on the water in 10-15 minutes at Trace, Tombigbee, Elvis Presley, Lake Lamar Bruce,” Pugh says. “In 10 to 15 minutes, you can be fishing, and you can fish for three hours. And there’s not a lot of places throughout the state – and trust me, I’ve looked at them all – that
Ethan Jones of Stayhorn, Miss., shows off his catch from Sardis Lake.
TUPELO IMAGESTUPELO.COM 53
can say that.”Pugh isn’t just blowing smoke. The
former president of the Tupelo Bass Club was transferred to work in Jackson nearly 200 miles away but chooses to com-mute instead of moving from Tupelo and its waterways.
That kind of dedication doesn’t seem odd to Mark Gwin, another member of the Tupelo Bass Club. Other than a few weeks when he was off his feet for health reasons, Gwin hasn’t missed a week on the water in roughly 16 years.
“I go every weekend,” he says. “We are so blessed in Tupelo with so many different kinds of water to fish. Just the father with his kid and a cane pole can fish farm ponds, and there’s public
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access on all our public waters. The state’s done well; the government’s done well on supplying fishable places.”
Despite Tupelo’s recognition nation-wide as an angler’s paradise, Gwin says there are still some watering holes that only the locals know.
“We’d rather … keep [those places] a secret,” Gwin says, laughing. “But that’s okay because I do believe in ‘share and share alike.’ And maybe they’ll give us some of their secrets, too.”
Top: Shore fishing is popular at Elvis Presley Lake. Left: Anglers get an early start at Lake Lamar Bruce.
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Image Gallery
A 1957 Chevrolet at the Tupelo Automobile Museum
What’s Online eVisit imagestupelo.com to see more award-winning photography highlighting the people and places of Tupelo.
TUPELO IMAGESTUPELO.COM 57
PHOTOGRAPHY BY J. KYLE KEENER
The historic Lee County Courthouse in downtown Tupelo
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Image Gallery
Guitars for sale at downtown’s Main Street Vintage Guitars
TUPELO IMAGESTUPELO.COM 59
PHOTOGRAPHY BY J. KYLE KEENER
Save money. Live better.
Actors have been breaking a leg at the historic Lyric Theatre for nearly
100 years.The downtown landmark hosted live
theatrical productions from 1912 to the early 1930s, then was converted into a movie house during the Depression. It showed movies until 1984, at which time the Tupelo Community Theatre decided to purchase the historic build-ing for $100,000 in order to stage the troupe’s performances.
That $100,000 investment was a good one because the building today is supposedly worth more than $2 million thanks in part to massive renovations over the past few years. The renovations have allowed the landmark to retain its art deco structure, and the exterior still has the original marquee.
Since 2001, the Tupelo Community Theatre has been a part of a Mississippi Arts Commission grant program called Building for the Arts, which helps cities make improvements to their art venues. In 2008, TCT received $400,000 from the commission to make improvements to the theater’s auditorium, including upgrades to all 464 seats on the main floor and balcony.
The Lyric was built for live theater, so it has great acoustics. TCT presented its first production, On Golden Pond, in the theater in 1985.
Today, the theatrical troupe offers an annual five-show season that runs from September through May, and TCT currently has attracted 1,100 season ticket holders. Approximately 15‚000 people attend TCT productions annu-ally at the Lyric, which is appropriately located on Broadway.
In addition, more than 200 volunteers contribute their time and talents to TCT each year. They range from actors to set builders to members of the Lyric Krewe, a support organization that raises money for the theater throughout the year.
A Historic Return to SplendorLYRIC THEATRE CONTINUES TRADITION OF BRINGING BROADWAY TO TUPELO
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Portfolio
Picture-Perfect Success Story
Much of Stephanie Rhea’s successful professional career has been a snap.
In fact, it’s been a snapshot.Rhea is the owner of the Tupelo-
based Stephanie Rhea Photography, although her work extends far beyond the local area. Her reputation in the industry is so highly regarded that she has been booked for assignments from Memphis to Maine and was even hired to shoot a wedding in Italy.
“My studio is currently based in the friendly South, but I’m available for travel pretty much anywhere,” Rhea says.
Her current body of work features primarily travel and wedding photog-raphy, and her specialty is an ability to artistically capture real-life moments. Her mission is to blend fashion and photojournalism in all of her wedding day and travelogue assignments, and her passion always results in con-temporary-classic images that tell a beautiful story.
Some of Rhea’s recent work has been featured in Southern Weddings and Coastal Weddings magazines as well as on the cover of Mississippi magazine’s 2009 Wedding Register bridal edition.
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Well-Versed Refl ections of the South
A celebration of the South and many of the aspects that are distinctly
Southern is what Ref lections of a Mississippi Magnolia is all about.
Penned by Tupelo native Patricia Neely-Dorsey, the book of poetry blends the author’s childhood memories, per-sonal beliefs and fond musings about her home state.
“There are so many negative con-notations associated with Mississippi and the South in general,” Neely-Dorsey says. “I want to show a flip side of the coin. There is much to love about this much maligned and misunderstood part of our country.”
Neely-Dorsey says the book was not easy to write, and points out that words from the song The Long and Winding Road might best illustrate her efforts. But even though the project was difficult, most of the poems from the book were actually written within a span of six months – from February 2007 to August 2007.
“My mother gave me a passionate love for reading and writing, and my father gave me an appreciation for poetry and great literature,” she says.
As for her choice of subject matter, the author admits being “totally enam-ored with the Southern way of life.” Patricia Neely-Dorsey can be reached at magnoliagirl21@yahoo.com.
©2002 American Cancer Society, Inc.
questionsanswers
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Dr. Do-Much
The passion of Dr. Ed Ivancic to help treat sick children from low-
income families has earned him national recognition.
Ivancic is a veteran pediatrician who has practiced medicine in Tupelo for several decades, and he received a 2008 Local Hero Award from the American Academy of Pediatrics Council for his work with the Tupelo chapter of Community Access to Child Health, or CATCH Kids, program.
The CATCH program was designed and introduced by the American Academy of Pediatrics to improve access to health care for children. Its mission is to support pediatricians who work with communities and local gov-ernments to ensure that all children have convenient places to go for their medical needs.
With the help of volunteer physi-cians like Ivancic, CATCH Kids treats sick children in 10 school-based clinics in Tupelo, Okolona, Lee County and Pontotoc County schools, as well as four weekly community clinics in North Tupelo, Haven Acres and Okolona. All of the clinics are open to any child under 18, but there’s a special focus on those children who encounter barriers to service, such as lack of insurance or transportation.
The program also works with pharmacies to fill prescriptions at dis-counted rates. A group of Tupelo dentists also offer volunteer services to CATCH Kids patients. In all, clinic volunteers in the Tupelo region annually serve an average of 800 children who need medical care, along with 60 children who have dental needs.
What’s Online eRead more about Tupelo’s health-care options at imagestupelo.com.
TUPELO IMAGESTUPELO.COM 63
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Smart Deal for High School Seniors
College tuition can be expensive, but how does a tuition bill of zero
dollars sound?Beginning with the class of 2009,
Lee County high school graduates from Baldwyn, Mooreville, Nettleton, Shannon, Saltillo and Tupelo will receive two years of free tuition to Itawamba Community College.
It is all a part of an initiative called the Lee County/Marchbanks Helping Hand Tuition Guarantee Program. The program was established by the local CREATE Foundation and the Lee County Board of Supervisors.
“The Lee County/Marchbanks pro-gram is named for John and Frances Marchbanks. John was a native of Shannon and along with his wife, Frances, envisioned a brighter future for all of northeast Mississippi,” says Jennie Hannah, CREATE Foundation director of communications.
“The Marchbanks left a gift of $8.5 million to benefit the region, and we believe they would be very pleased that their extraordinary gift is making a significant difference in our region.”
The tuition program has actually been around since 1996 when the CREATE Foundation’s Commission on the Future of Northeast Mississippi came up with the goal of providing two years of tuition-free education at a community college for each high school graduate in the region. CREATE is the leading regional community founda-tion and the state’s oldest.
In 1997, Meridian Community College implemented a tuition guarantee pro-gram for all high school graduates of Lauderdale County. Twelve years later, the same holds true for seniors in Lee County.
“By getting a high school diploma and two years of college, seniors obvi-ously can increase their potential for a higher paying job as well as a better quality of life,” Hannah says. “They now have that option thanks to the tuition guarantee program.”
– Stories by Kevin Litwin
TUPELO IMAGESTUPELO.COM 65
Portfolio
66 IMAGESTUPELO.COM TUPELO
Business
TUPELO REMAINS REGIONAL HUB OF FURNITURE MANUFACTURING
T he who’s who of furniture and upholstery know that no one climbs to the top of the industry ladder without a stop in Tupelo.
Twice a year, furniture manufacturers and store buyers and owners descend on the city’s 2 million-square-foot market to collectively decide how consumers nationwide will decorate their homes in the coming season. The Tupelo Furniture Market, which gives manufacturers the chance to showcase their wares in hopes of getting into showrooms and, ultimately, into living rooms, is a two-decades-plus institution in the acknowledged upholstery capitol of the world.
The 10-county region surrounding Tupelo is a powerhouse of the furniture industry, from the timber companies that
supply wood for frames to fabric weavers to actual furniture manufacturers. The furniture industry employs some 25,000 statewide, and about 21,000 of those work in the northeast Mississippi region.
“We’ve got a vital role in doing what we can in this area to keep this industry sector thriving,” says Greg Giachelli, vice president of existing industry for the Community Development Foundation. “It is very important to the economic vitality of this area.”
Furniture first took root as an industry in the Tupelo area when Morris Futorian made his way south from Chicago with an innovative vision to build furniture the way cars were built in Detroit – on an assembly line. He was lured to the area in
STORY BY MICHAELA JACKSONPHOTOGRAPHY BY J. KYLE KEENER
One of the hundreds of lamps on display at the Vintage Verandah showroom in Tupelo’s Furniture Market
PrettyAn Industry Sitting
TUPELO IMAGESTUPELO.COM 67
1948 by the Community Development Foundation, which touted Tupelo’s attractive labor force and enticing tax incen-tives. And the rest, as they say, is history.
“All the other companies started spinning off Futorian. People that worked there would say, ‘We can do this.’ And then they would open their own company,” says Bill Cleveland, president of the Tupelo Furniture Market. “I think it has just evolved, and all the pieces of suppliers and expertise, all the pieces it takes to make furniture, all the support companies have matured here, and now everything you need to do it is here.”
Between 1950 and 2008, the number of workers in Tupelo employed by the furniture industry grew from just under 2,000 to roughly 12,000.
The industry was founded in upholstery, but as times have changed and much upholstery manufacturing has moved offshore, furniture players in the Tupelo area have adapted to the changing climate to build furniture frames, foam for sofa
cushions and everything in between.“That’s the one constant in any industry: change,”
Cleveland says. “They’re starting to make more upholstery in China, but there’s still more upholstery manufactured in northeast Mississippi than in any other one location.”
As consumer spending patterns change and global com-petition stiffens, the industry as a whole – in Northeast Mississippi and beyond – is undergoing substantial evolution. But no one expects to see the industry shutter its collective Tupelo headquarters altogether. The same available, skilled workforce that drew Morris Futorian to Tupelo in 1948 is still working hard today, still keeping the industry above water.
“That has probably been the key thing over the last 40-50 years that has made us the number one furniture upholstery area in the world, ” Giachelli says. “It’s in transition now, and it’s not going to be the same type of industry that we saw 15-20 years ago. But without a doubt, the furniture industry is here to stay.”
Home furnishings in the American Furniture Manufacturing showroom at the Tupelo Furniture Market
68 IMAGESTUPELO.COM TUPELO
Business
TUPELO IMAGESTUPELO.COM 69
Biz BriefsBUSINESSES – BOTH LARGE AND SMALL – THAT
HELP DEFINE TUPELO’S ECONOMIC CLIMATE
ScorecardBUSINESS AT
A GLANCE
3,627Total number
of firms
$1,028,908Retail sales ($1,000)
$29,488Retail sales
per capita
$93,475Accommodation
and food services
sales ($1,000)
Source: QuickFacts, census.gov
TOM’S AUTOMOTIVE SERVICE CENTERBiz: automobile repair centerBuzz: At a time when locally owned businesses are fading, Tom’s Automotive Service Center is a prime example of what customer service and loyalty can accomplish. Run by Jeff Robertson, the shop, which offers diagnostic services and repair as well as f leet maintenance, employs some 10 people and has been a Tupelo staple since 1952. 317 Magazine St.
70 IMAGESTUPELO.COM TUPELO
Business
THE COTTON BOLT & RUG GALLERYBiz: retail and wholesale fabric companyBuzz: Ask interior designers in Mississippi for the place to go for high-end drapery fabrics, handmade rugs and custom upholstery, and they’ll point you to The Cotton Bolt, a family-owned and -operated company specializing in custom and hard-to-find items, including furniture and drapery hardware.www.magnoliaco.com
DESIGN BY TRACY PROCTORBiz: f loral artistBuzz: Recognized as one of the premier f loral artists in the country, Tracy Proctor has been wowing clients with his f loral creations for more than 15 years. Proctor’s work has been featured at all types of events, from weddings to church homecomings, and his work has taken him around the globe from Europe to Australia.www.designbytracyproctor.com
OLD VENICE PIZZA CO.Biz: Italian restaurantBuzz: To call Old Venice a pizza place doesn’t quite do this eclectic eatery justice. With 17 different specialty pizzas on the menu – including one called the John Wayne – and appetizers such as crawfish rolls, Old Venice far surpasses the typical pizza joint offerings. www.oldvenice.com
MY ELEGANT CLUTTERBiz: arts and crafts retailerBuzz: Not many businesses can claim to buy, sell and hire locally. But My Elegant Clutter, an arts and crafts retailer run by single mom Connie Snell, does just that. Snell enlists college students, retirees, the mentally and physically challenged – even professional football players – to help make and sell her stunning beaded crosses. And all the materials used to make them are purchased from local merchants. www.myelegantclutter.com
COMMERCIAL REAL ESTATE SPECIALISTS
“SINCE 1952”
Clay Short, Barry Replogle, Ellen Short(662) 842-8283(800) 731-8873
TUPELO IMAGESTUPELO.COM 71
60 Years and CountingCDF MARKS ANNIVERSARY BY LOOKING BACK AT CONTRIBUTIONS TO COMMUNITY
A s birthdays go, the big 6-0 is not only a major milestone but also a time to ref lect on past
accomplishments. But for Tupelo’s Community
Development Foundation, which cele-brates its 60th anniversary (1948-2008), this milestone means looking forward to the future.
“We determined that the anniversary would be about our 60 years of service to the community, and we would reflect that through our normal networking programs and also different events,” says David Rumbarger, president and CEO of the Community Development Foundation. “I think the highlight was the Habitat for Humanity house which we built in August and September 2008. We were very pleased to build a home for a needy and deserving family.”
A sign that hard work doesn’t go unnoticed, the foundation was named by Site Selection magazine as one of the top 10 development organizations in the country. This was the second straight year for the recognition, and it is something Rumbarger points to as an indicator of the organization’s as well as the city’s growth and success over time.
“For [the Site Selection] list, we compete with the likes of Chicago, Dallas and Denver, so we’re very honored to be in the same league,” Rumbarger says. “But it also shows that Tupelo is holding its own, even in this economy, because of our diversity. That’s what the CDF has worked on for the past 60 years – grow-ing our health care, manufacturing, customer service and other sectors around town while keeping our other industries healthy.”
The foundation’s membership of 1,450 has helped the organization to reach out in several different ways, including collab-orating with industry leaders to hold business roundtables, which can serve as both early-warning indicators of potential trouble as well as offer practical advice for businesses experiencing a rough patch. And then there’s the new business incubator, which opened in 2007 and is expected to launch new companies into the local business market.
“It’s our foray into developing the next generation of businesses and tech-nology,” Rumbarger says. “It lets us partner with our colleges and univer-sities, work with them to identify the newest trends. We realize that a lot of new technology companies grow from small seeds, and we’ve got to put them to work in our incubator and then graduate them into the community and help grow
them into full-size organizations.”Being a catalyst for forward-thinking
growth has long been a hallmark of the community organization.
“We [CDF] really are the troops in the community,” Rumbarger says, “taking those hills. It’s an inspiring, awesome task – not a sprint, or a 400-yard dash, but a marathon. And we’ve done well with it.” – Joe Morris
TUPELO IMAGESTUPELO.COM 73
Business | Chamber Report
GOVERNMENT OFFICES
Tupelo City Hall71 E. Troy St., 38804
(662) 841-6487
www.ci.tupelo.ms.us
Public Works Department38801
(662) 841-6457
Department of Planning and Community Development38804
(662) 841-6510
Lee County GovernmentP.O. Box 1785
Tupelo Mississippi 38802
(662) 841-9110
mississippi.gov
TUPELO
TAX STRUCTURE
0.25%City Sales and Use Tax
7.25%County Sales Tax
7%State Sales Tax
7.25%Total Sales Tax
TRANSPORTATION
Tupelo Regional Airport2704 W. Jackson St., 38801
(662) 841-6570
flytupelo.com
ECONOMIC RESOURCES
Community Development Foundation300 W. Main, 38804
(662) 842-4521
(800) 523-3463
www.cdfms.org
Tupelo Chamber of Commerce300 W. Main St., 38804
(662) 842-5421
(800) 523-3463
www.cdfms.org/chamber
INDUSTRIAL SITES
www.cdfms.org/ed/
MAJOR EMPLOYERS
North Mississippi
Health Services, 4,286
Lane Furniture
Industries, 2,080
Cooper Tire
and Rubber Co., 1,520
Tupelo Public
School District, 1,200
JESCO Inc., 1,000
Walmart/
Sam’s Club, 979
Lee County
Schools, 931
BancorpSouth, 800
DayBrite-
Capri-Omega, 800
MTD Products, 800
H.M. Richards, 670
Tecumseh
Products, 670
COST OF LIVING INDEX
86.5% Tupelo
94.2% Gulfport-Biloxi
92.5% Huntsville, Ala.
89.1% Jackson, Tenn.
National Average is 100%Source: 2008 Year-end Average Council for Community & Economic Research
MORE ONLINE
imagestupelo.com
More facts, stats and community information, including relocation tools and links to resources.
E OEEE OOOOOOO
BUSINESS CLIMATEAs one of the most rapidly developing micropolitan areas in the
state, Tupelo/Lee County has consistently ranked in the top 10 for
population growth, new business development and personal
income generation. The primary economic sector is manufacturing,
which employs more than 25 percent of the county’s workforce.
74 IMAGESTUPELO.COM TUPELO
Business | Economic Profile
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Full range of Urologic procedures including robotic surgery, testing and treatment for both male and female urinary incontinence, no scalpel vasectomy, erectile dysfunction, infertility, and treatment for prostate and kidney problems.
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New patients welcome
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76 IMAGESTUPELO.COM TUPELO
Health & Wellness
Treating Digestive Diseases for Patients in North Mississippi
DIGESTIVE HEALTH SPECIALISTS P.A.
Stephen T. Amann, M.D.John B. Averette, M.D.Barney J. Guyton, M.D.Roger L. Huey, M.D.Noel K. Hunt, M.D.Samuel C. Pace, M.D.John O. Phillips, M.D.
Carah W. Edgeworth, CFNP
W. Carl Kellum Jr., M.D. 1952-2006
Colon Cancer ScreeningHeartburn/GERD
Irritable Bowel SyndromeCrohn’s Disease/Ulcerative Colitis
Hepatitis and Liver DiseasesPancreas and Biliary Diseases
NutritionClinical Research
Finding BalanceLow Sex Drive
Seven out of 10 women complaining of low sex drive have a hormone imbalance
Hot FlashesEight out of 10 women complaining of hot flashes have a hormone imbalance
DepressedTwo out of three women complaining of depression have a hormone imbalance
Irritable
Seven out of 10 women complaining of irritability have a hormone imbalance
COMPOUNDING PHARMACY
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TUPELO IMAGESTUPELO.COM 77
1542 Medical Park Cir.Tupelo, MS 38801 (662) 844-4711
2301 S. Lamar Blvd. Suite 130 Oxford, MS 38655
(662) 236-2900
NEPHROLOGY &HYPERTENSIONASSOCIATES LTD.
Thomas D. Wooldridge, M.D.
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Patricia McKnight, CFNP
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General dentistry including cosmetic dentistry, complex crown and bridge and orthodontics.
78 IMAGESTUPELO.COM TUPELO
Fitness has no closing time in Tupelo, where a center with state-of-the-art equipment is available
for its members 24 hours a day, seven days a week.
Convenience, affordability and top-flight Cybex workout machines at Snap Fitness have great appeal for exercise buffs, says Thomas Cain, general man-ager of the Tupelo location, which opened in June 2008. Another perk is that members don’t have to sign a contract, he adds.
“One of the things Snap Fitness boasts is its no-contract option. People can come here and join without signing a contract. And they can cancel at any time with 30 days’ notice,” Cain says.
Snap Fitness is headquartered in suburban Minneapolis, with about 1,000 franchises in the United States and
Canada. Owners of the Tupelo operation, located at 549 Coley Road, also opened a center in Saltillo in June 2008.
In addition to being accessible anytime with a key card, members can take advantage of online training, nutri-tion and meal planning at www.mysnapfitness.com, Cain says. Members may also work out at any other Snap Fitness center.
Response to the Tupelo franchise – the company’s second largest – has been excellent, Cain says.
“We have all aspects of body build-ing and fitness equipment. We have treadmills with televisions, bicycles with programs where you steer the bike on a course and free weights. We cater to every type of fitness guru,” Cain says.
Tanning booths are available for $20 extra per month, and the center also
sells dietary supplements. The 7,000-square-foot facility is
staffed Monday through Friday 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. with five employees who offer personal training and a boot camp for members, as well as orientation on the equipment and a personal fitness assessment.
As for security, the center has 24-hour surveillance, and members can wear a necklace with an emergency button, if they choose.
Cain says the key to the fitness center’s success is its convenience and affordability.
“People aren’t spending as much money in other areas, but with what money they do have, they [can] get out and go to the gym, and that’s recreation on top of fitness.”
– Anne Gillem
Fitness Is a Snap at New CenterTUPELO’S FIRST 24-HOUR GYM OFFERS CONVENIENCE AND AFFORDABILITY
TUPELO IMAGESTUPELO.COM 79
Health & Wellness
It isn’t easy being new, or being small, but don’t tell that to organizers of the Tupelo Film Festival.
While some cities take years to grow a film festival into a national and international draw, Tupelo has managed to do so in under a decade. And since the festival’s 2004 beginning, the city is becoming more of a destination for filmmakers not only during the event itself but also throughout the year as they scout locations and look for a place to put down permanent production roots.
“We have become a very reputable film festival nationally and internationally,” says Pat Rasberry, director. “Our sub-missions were up 85 percent in 2009; we got close to 200. And we’ll screen 41 films in competition, which is also an increase over previous years.”
The festival’s inception really dates back to 1989 with the establishment of the Tupelo Film Commission. The group works with local organizations such as the Tupelo Convention and Visitors Bureau as well as the Mississippi Film Office. Its goal is to elevate Tupelo’s profile as a filming location.
The commission also works to develop homegrown talent, and in 2009, added a category to the festival’s roster of competitions for student filmmakers.
“The Mississippi High School Competition is for any schools who want to compete against each other,” Rasberry says. “We had one from Starkville enter this year, and they
entered two films. We think this is something that will grow quickly and be very exciting for student filmmakers.”
Additions such as this one help keep the festival fresh while opening it up to more opportunities and exposure, Rasberry says.
“We were featured in Every Day with Rachel Ray and are the only film festival to be featured in her magazine,” she says. “And even with all the new activities, we’re still able to screen all the films in the Lyric Theatre downtown. We get a lot of comments from the filmmakers about how nice it is that they can see everything in one location.”
Keeping everyone in a central location also allows for more networking opportunities between filmmakers and city officials who want to tout the area’s positive attributes.
“We showcase the city and let [filmmakers] know how we can help them if they come and film here,” Rasberry says. “We had one attendee win for best short in 2004, and she filmed a short while she was here. She came back in 2007 and stayed three months to shoot a feature and now is looking at setting up her production company here. And others who have screened here have made it on to Sundance and other major festivals. That’s the amazing thing about the ripples this festival has; you just don’t realize what all it can do.”
– Joe Morris
Lights, Camera … Tupelo!FILM FESTIVAL CONTINUES TO GAIN PROMINENCE WITH REGIONAL, NATIONAL FILMMAKERS
TUPELO IMAGESTUPELO.COM 81
Arts & Culture
Neal McCoy, sports development director for the Tupelo Convention and Visitors Bureau,
doesn’t just spend his time touting the virtues of the city’s golf courses; he actually takes time to practice what he preaches.
“We certainly have some good golf courses at a great value, and I have played my fair share of holes in Tupelo,” McCoy says. “Whether you’re a good golfer is relative to who else is around, but I enjoy playing the game.”
Ranking as a top-quality tract is Tupelo Country Club, which built its 18-hole course in 1970 in Belden, just out side Tupelo. At 6,887 yards from the
back tees, the course is a northeast Mississippi treasure, with six lakes and 300 native trees planted in 2005 and 2006. Groundskeepers plant 10,000 sum-mer and 8,000 fall annuals, which thrive in Tupelo’s Southern climate.
“It’s an absolutely amazing course with some challenging holes. It has some opportunities for you to pull out your driver and challenge yourself with the length of the course, and it makes you shape your shots,” McCoy says.
In 1998, the greens were replaced with champion Bermuda grass, which is why the country club’s greens are notorious for their fast roll, McCoy says.
In June 2009, Big Oaks Golf Club
replaced all its bent grass greens with Bermuda, thus improving on an 18-hole course that McCoy calls “a dynamic golf facility.” Opened in Saltillo in 1996, Big Oaks is semiprivate, offering memberships while also open to the public. Also in Saltillo is Natchez Trace Golf Club.
“It’s probably the hardest golf course in the area,” McCoy says. “It has rolling hills, and you have uneven lies most of the time. They keep their greens fast, and they have a lot of older, established trees that really come into play. It’s very humbling.”
Natchez Trace is home to the Butch Lambert Invitational, an annual event
Sinking SensationsTOP-RANKED COURSES HAVE TOURISM OFFICIALS SEEING GREEN
82 IMAGESTUPELO.COM TUPELO
Sports & Recreation
Over 100 classic automobiles from the 1880s-1990s!
Hours:March-October Tues.-Sat. 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Sun. 12 p.m.-5 p.m.November-February Tues.-Sat. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Sun. 12 p.m.-5 p.m.Closed: Mondays, New Year’s Day, Easter, Thanksgiving and Christmas Day
1 Otis Blvd.Tupelo, MS 38804(662) 842-4242
www.tupeloauto.com
in memory of Holcut native A.C. “Butch” Lambert Sr., Southeastern Conference officiating great. Players in the event are “the who’s who in golf in north Mississippi. When it comes to golf tournaments, they all look to the Butch Lambert,” McCoy says.
Other courses in the area include Pontotoc Country Club and River Birch Golf Club in Amory, both 18 holes, and nine-hole Meadows Golf Course in Pontotoc and Bel Air Golf Course. Bel Air, built in 1936 and now owned and operated by the city of Tupelo, was once the Tupelo Country Club before construction of the new course.
– Sharon H. Fitzgerald
TUPELO IMAGESTUPELO.COM 83
“Specializing in meeting your needs”
LLC
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tupeloelvisfestival.com
Get downtown!Unique Dining
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It's easy. That's living healthy and green.
Just call 866-730-green or visit www.epa.gov/radon
LIVING GREENSTARTS FROM THE GROUND UP.
84 IMAGESTUPELO.COM TUPELO
In today’s lean economic times, students are discovering the affordability and convenience of attending college closer to home. For the University of Mississippi-Tupelo, that means
record enrollment and expanded course and degree offerings.“A number of our students have actually attended senior
institutions, even the main campus of our university in Oxford, and simply found that it was not what they were looking for, so they chose to come back home and attend our branch campus here,” says UM-Tupelo Dean Jim Pate. “Nationally, there’s a real strong trend for students seeking to complete their degree programs closer to home, and the economy is driving some of that for sure.”
UM-Tupelo’s fall 2008 enrollment was the highest ever at 717 students, representing a 16.4 percent increase over fall 2007. Pate also attributes the branch campus’s growth to its strong partnership with the region’s community colleges and an aggressive recruitment program. In 2005, UM-Tupelo employed just one recruiter. Today, three recruiters work on the Tupelo campus, and a fourth works at UM-Booneville, where students can take many of the prerequisite courses needed for their degree.
With the number of classes up to about 150 each semester, the branch campus offers junior- and senior-level under-graduate studies, plus several master’s degree programs in education and an online master’s degree program in business
administration. That’s a far cry from the few courses taught in the four-room downtown office building that housed the campus in the early 1970s.
Today, UM-Tupelo calls the 85,000-square-foot Advanced Education Center home. The campus, which opened in fall 2000, also houses Itawamba Community College and the Mississippi University for Women, which offers a bachelor’s degree in nursing.
“Our regional community colleges are critically important to us,” Pate says. The campus’s fall 2008 enrollment included students from 23 different two-year institutions – 12 of those being Mississippi community colleges. The average age of UM-Tupelo students is 28, highlighting the critical niche the school plays for nontraditional students.
Pate says the “meat and potatoes” of UM-Tupelo’s undergraduate programs are education and business, but applied-science programs such as criminal justice and social work are gaining in popularity.
As for the future, Pate foresees UM-Tupelo’s enrollment approaching 1,200 students in the next five years, with the potential additions of a master’s degree program in accountancy and a traditional MBA program taught on campus to answer the demand from Tupelo’s and Lee County’s business community.
“There are going to be more opportunities for us to serve this region,” Pate says. – Sharon H. Fitzgerald
Bringing a Little Class to TupeloSATELLITE CAMPUS EXPANDS COURSE OFFERINGS, INCREASES ENROLLMENT
Elementary education students listen to a lecture at the University of Mississippi’s Tupelo campus.
J. K
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TUPELO IMAGESTUPELO.COM 85
Education
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SNAPSHOTTupelo combines small-town charm with urban accessibility.
The relatively low cost of living here makes the city attractive to
newcomers. Tupelo has a thriving arts and cultural community
and is home to a symphony and ballet. The city’s close proximity to
professional sporting events and major universities adds to its appeal.
TUPELO
CLIMATE
Tupelo’s climate offers four
distinct seasons. Mild winters
make outdoor activity possible
year-round.
32 FJanuary Low Temperature
50 FJanuary High Temperature
71 FJuly Low Temperature
91 FJuly High Temperature
EDUCATIONAL
The Tupelo Public School
District has been nationally
recognized for academic
excellence. Four of the 12
schools in the district are
National Blue Ribbon Schools,
each receiving the highest
honor the U.S. government
bestows on a school. Nearby
Oxford, which is home to the
University of Mississippi and
a devoted Southern literary
community, offers many higher
education and continued learn-
ing opportunities. For a list of
schools and other information,
visit imagestupelo.com.
HEALTH CARE
Tupelo arguably offers the
finest health-care services
in the state. North Mississippi
Medical Center is the largest
non-metropolitan hospital
in the nation and the largest
hospital in the state. It serves
as the hub of a 22-county
health-care system that extends into northwest Alabama.
For a breakdown of medical services, visit imagestupelo.com.
UTILITIES
Tupelo Water & Light Department (water)38804(662) 841-6470 www.ci.tupelo.ms.us/water-lightAtmos Energy (gas)38801(662) 842-2441www.atmosenergy.com
MORE ONLINE
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More facts, stats and community information, including relocation tools and links to resources.
E OOOOOOOOOOO
86 IMAGESTUPELO.COM TUPELO
Community Profile
visit ouradvertisersB&B Concrete www.bbconcrete.com
BancorpSouth www.bancorp.com
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Cardiology Associates of North Mississippi www.cahm.com
Cellular South www.cellularsouth.com
Century 21 Sue Gardner Realty www.suegardnerrealty.com
Coldwell Banker Tommy Morgan Inc. Realtors www.tmhomes.com
Community Development Foundation www.cdfms.org
Cook Coggin Engineers www.cookcoggin.com
Cooper Tire www.coopertire.com
Create Foundation www.createfoundation.com
Crye-Leike Realtors www.crye-leike.com
Day-Brite Lighting www.dcolighting.com
DB’s Floral Designs N’ More
Digestive Health Specialists
Dogwood Development www.dogwooddevelopmentcompany.com
Eli’s BBQ Grill
Express Employment Professionals www.expresspros.com
Heavenly Ham www.heavenlyham.com
Heritage Obstetrics & Gynecology www.heritage-obgyn.com
Hilton Garden Inn/BancorpSouth Conference Center www.tupelo.hgi.com
Hunter Group
Itawamba Community College www.iccms.edu
Jesco Inc. www.jescoinc.net
Jim Bain’s Pharmacy www.jimbainspharmacy.com
Johnson Bailey Henderson McNeil Architects www.jbhm.com
Kellum Dental Clinic www.kellumdental.com
Main Street Association www.tupelomainstreet.com
McCarty Company www.mccartycompany.com
Nephrology & Hypertension Associated LTD
Newell Paper Company www.newellpaper.com
North Mississippi Medical Center www.nmhs.net
Obstetrics & Gynecology Associates
Premier Dental Care www.premierdentalcareonline.com
Renasant Bank www.renasant.com
Sanders Clinic for Women
The Mall at Barnes Crossing www.barnescrossing.com
The Pampered Pooch www.clipswithlove.com
TRI Inc. Realtors www.trirealestate.net
Tupelo Auto Museum www.tupeloauto.com
Tupelo Church of God www.tupelocog.org
Tupelo Retirement Living www.ci.tupelo.ms.us
TVA www.tva.gov
University of Mississippi Tupelo www.olemiss.edu/tupelo
Urology Professional Association & Continence Center www.urologypa.com
Walmart Super Center www.walmart.com
WCBI-TV-DT www.wcbi.com
Woman’s Clinic
Tombigbee Electric Power Association38802
(662) 842-7635
www.tombigbeeelectric.com
Comcast (cable/internet)(662) 842-5625
comcast.usdirect.com/
ms-tupelo-comcast-cable.html
AT&T (phone/internet)(662) 557-6500, www.att.com
HOUSING COSTS
$122,600Average Home Price
19.51%Home Turnover Percentage
ARTS AND CULTURE
The Cultural Alliance of Tupelo/Lee County1800 W. Main St., 38801
(662) 620-2500
www.tupelo.net/things-to-do/
arts-entertainment.asp
Birthplace of Elvis Presley-Home and Museum306 Elvis Presley Dr., 38804
(662) 841-1245
www.elvispresley
birthplace.com
Tupelo Symphony OrchestraP.O. Box 474, 38802
(662) 842-8433
www.tupelosymphony.com
Tupelo Ballet Inc.775 Poplarville St., 38801
(662) 844-1928
RECREATION ACTIVITIES
Tupelo Buffalo Park and Zoo2272 N. Coley Rd., 38801
(662) 844-8709
(866) 27BISON
www.tupelobuffalopark.com
Natchez Trace Parkway2680 Natchez Trace Pkwy.
38804
(800) 305-7417
www.nps.gov/natr
TUPELO IMAGESTUPELO.COM 87
Complete conference and meeting facilities
On-site culinary experts
Over 10,000 sq. ft. of flexible space
Everything. Right where you need it.®
Located in the heart of historic downtown Tupelo, The Hilton Garden Inn is the first choice for comfortable accommodations, memorable meals and successful events.
Hotel FacilitiesFull-service Great
American Grill® restaurant
Indoor pool and whirlpool
24-hour fitness center and Stay Fit Kit®
Complimentary newspaper
Pavilion Pantry convenience market
Fully equipped business center
Complimentary HSIA throughout hotel
Banquet and meeting space
Guest Room FeaturesMicrowave, mini-refrigerator and coffee brewer
Large work desk with Herman Miller Mirra® ergonomic desk chair
Remote printing to the business center
Phillips® 26” inch HD flat-screen television
Innovative MP3 compatible clock/radio
Hairdryer, iron and ironing board
Two telephones with voice mail and data ports
Hilton Garden Inn Tupelo
WWW.TUPELO.HGI.COM
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