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From Beautification to Preservation: When Greenwood’s Women Took on City Hall
Weekly Highlights Nick Walters Weekly Highlights Nick Walters

From Beautification to Preservation: When Greenwood’s Women Took on City Hall

Greenwood Cemetery’s continued preservation was not always inevitable. In the mid-twentieth century, its care depended on the steady work—and at times determined resistance—of individuals who saw the cemetery as a place worth protecting.

Two very prominent members of that effort were Mrs. Isham (Norvelle Adams) Beard and Mrs. Luther (Louise) Manship, Jr. Their work together reflects the kind of civic leadership that combined beautification, restoration, documentation, and, when necessary, direct action to protect the cemetery.

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Four Occupations, Two Husbands, One Determined Woman: Mary D’Ambrogio
Weekly Highlights Nick Walters Weekly Highlights Nick Walters

Four Occupations, Two Husbands, One Determined Woman: Mary D’Ambrogio

In 1858, Charles Frederick Worth founded the House of Worth in Paris, France. Soon, the gowns and dresses he created were the epitome of fashion. To be compared in any way to the famous House of Worth would be the highest compliment paid to a seamstress, but that is exactly what happened to Jackson’s Mary D’Ambrogio. Kate Markam Power wrote an article in an early edition of the Jackson Clarion-Ledger and entitled it, “Biography of Jackson’s Pioneer Business Woman Resembles Fiction Character.” In the article she described Mary simply, “What Worth meant to Paris in his day Mrs. D’Ambrogio meant to Jackson in hers.”

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Matilda O’Leary: An Irish Immigrant Who Helped Build Jackson
Weekly Highlights Nick Walters Weekly Highlights Nick Walters

Matilda O’Leary: An Irish Immigrant Who Helped Build Jackson

In the late nineteenth century, as Jackson rebuilt and expanded in the years after the Civil War, one of the city’s most successful real estate developers was an Irish immigrant widow who had already endured extraordinary loss. Matilda O’Leary’s life story is one of resilience, entrepreneurship, and civic contribution. By the time of her death in 1911, she had become one of Jackson’s most prominent property owners, and her obituary described her as “a woman of exceptional business sagacity.”

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