COLUMBUS — The childhood home of playwright Tennessee Williams will undergo $108,000 in renovations with a grant from the Mississippi Department of Archives and History.
A new roof will be built on the yellow and blue home on Main Street downtown. Repairs also will be made to the house’s chimneys and flooring.
The Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright was born in Columbus in 1911.
Dewitt Hicks, president of the Columbus Convention and Visitors Bureau’s board of directors, tells The Commercial Dispatch that a new roof is the most pressing need.
The Tennessee Williams Home was built around 1875. The building was originally the rectory for St. Paul’s Episcopal Church. The home was moved away from the church to its present location on Main Street in 1993.
State News
Money will pay for new roof at TW home
- State News
-
-
MDOC battles back against inmate cell phones
State corrections officials are going high tech to combat the problems of illegal cell phones making their way to inmates.
-
Turtle egg rescue at space center billed success
The turtle rescue effort at NASA’s Kennedy Space Center is winding down.
-
US terror training in Yemen reflects wider program
U.S. special operations forces are expanding their training of the Yemeni military as the Obama administration broadens its program to counter terrorism in countries reluctant to harbor a visible American military presence.
-
Most Miss. school districts favor dress codes
The Mississippi School Boards Association says a recent survey found that 61 percent of the state’s public school districts require uniforms or something similar.
-
Time of quadruple killings not known; IDs released
A 26-year-old woman originally from Slidell is identified as the fourth victim of a quadruple killing in a trailer park near Lake Charles.
-
Rust seeks partners in restoration
Rust College has asked the Marshall County Board of Supervisors to support application for an $800,000 grant to help restore five historic buildings on the former Mississippi Industrial College campus.
-
Greenville homicide rate highest in Miss.
Although Jackson has had more homicides so far this year than any other city in the state, Greenville’s rate is nearly double that of Mississippi’s capital.
Greenville had 11 homicides through Sept. 1, compared with 28 in Jackson, the Delta Democrat Times reported Monday. -
Grant sought for Meridian’s historic Threefoot
Harsh economic times have stymied efforts to restore Meridian’s Threefoot Building, a 16-story Art Deco structure now listed as one of America’s Most Endangered Historic Places.
-
Rehabbed eagle injured again, back with Bolm
A bald eagle nursed back to health and released in June is back with a Vicksburg wildlife rehabilitator.
-
Hermine gives south Texas another tropical lashing
Tropical Storm Hermine gave a wet and windy punch to Texas on Tuesday but left only minor scrapes in the storm-weary Rio Grande Valley, which is proving resilient this hurricane season after taking a third tropical system on the chin.
- More State News Headlines
-
MDOC battles back against inmate cell phones






