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before I k5JtlALLC£i 1 1JLIV | you imag-
sianal Staff Writer ^there
:hase\	/was	...	but
d prop- \	4 / she always
in the \	/- had time to
over to the \	play with us.’
;h.	________“My daddy had
is no wonder that	a	farm	all	his life, but
planes began flying	worked at the Weston
rver the area around	Lumber Company for a
no one thought much	while and the tax assessor’s
; it. The planes were	office. We grew sugar cane
the U.S. government	and sweet potatoes and we
hey were surveying the	always had a garden.” The
to plan an acquisition	family also made cane syrup
le land by eminent	and cooked the mixture for
in in order to build a	days over open fires in the
-ocket testing facility. yard.
re didn’t know,” said Charles later became a y Murphy. “The plans	county supervisor and
flying over low and we	served on the school board
ered what was going
we thought they might	NAPOLEON--4B
: it was as pretty as we . but they were looking
Nancy Murphy never married, she said, though sne came close once to taking the p' *e with a man from Longview, Texas once. She lives in he. jme in Bay St. Louis.
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The eighth grade graduation announcement at Logtown School. Nancy also grad-d eighth grade from the school along with classmate
i	Hover Boutwell, she said. All attended the Napoleon iol till it joined with Logtown.
As children at their home in Napoleon are top to bottom, sisters Lucille Murphy Witter of Pass Christian and Nancy “Nan” Murphy of Bay St. Louis, their Grandmother Murphy, deceased, of Napoleon, and brother Charles Murphy. Grandmother Murphys “Hatching Trunk” is a favorite memory for the family.
The Lost Communities series will continue on the first Sunday of every month. History should be the memories of many people, not just one or two people. We would like to add your memories to the stories of Logtown, Napoleon, Santa Rosa, Gainesville, Westonia or other areas in Hancock County that were lost when Stennis Space Center was established. We are looking for people to help. Please add your story, old photos or momentoes to the living history of an area that was loved and should not be forgotten. No story is too small to be preserved for future generations and only you can share those memories and ensure that they are preserved. Please call Bennie Shalibetter at 228-467-5474 or e-mail me at bennie@goldinc.com to set up an interview.


Napoleon Community Document (011)
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