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Tupelo
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Tupelo

City and administrative headquarters of Lee County, northeastern Mississippi, 76 km/47 mi southeast of Oxford; population (1990) 30,700. It is the shipping and processing centre for a cotton growing and dairying region. The city is widely known as the birthplace of the rock-and-roll legend Elvis Presley. The Tupelo National Battlefield, to the northwest, commemorates a Civil War battle fought here in 1864.

In 1859 the original settlement of Harrisburg was moved two miles east to the Mobile and Ohio railway line; the new community, Gum Pond, was renamed Tupelo after the local tupelo (black gum) trees that supplied timber.

Civil War battle

A Union force led by A J Smith arrived here on 14 July 1864, aiming to prevent the Confederate forces of Stephen D Lee and Nathan Bedford Forrest from harassing W T Sherman's march on Atlanta. Victorious in a bloody two-day battle, the Northerners were forced to retreat two days later because of low supplies.



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If you want to mainly attract birds to your yard, consider some trees like live oak, black gum, flowering dogwood and red mulberry; or shrubs like common juniper, hollies, trumpet creeper or vines and wild grape.
Low lying areas with some constant fresh water input have developed stands of bald cypress, black gum, coastal willow and other water tolerant species.
 
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