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Batson Hall in the
1950's. Batson Hall was built in 1912, the third of the original
three buildings on campus. The three story hall served the campus
from then until it was destroyed by Hurricane Camille.
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This picture of
Batson Hall was taken from in front of White Hall and appeared in a fifties
annual.
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Bilbo Hall was built
in 1947 for the returning Veterans and their brides. It served as
a married student's dorm until the seventies. The buiding was a prefabricated
government building that was modified.
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The Fine Arts Building
(present day Hancock Hall) was built in 1953. This building contained
the band hall, choral room and a drafting classroom.
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This group of students
stand in front of the Fine Arts building. The doors they are standing
in front of led into the band hall. This wing is currently occupied
by the museum.
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Huff Hall continued
to dominate the campus. In the fifties, it looked quite different
with a porch on the south side of the building and a balcony on the front
side.
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This photo of Huff
Hall was taken from a postcard in the late forties or early fifties.
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Jacobs Hall, the
second oldest building on campus, built in 1911 was called the High School
building by the students and didn't become known as Jacobs Hall until after
the high school classes were moved to the Poplarville Municipal Special
Separate School District in 1960.
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Jacobs Hall, technically
a three story building, contained classrooms on the second and third floors
with a library in a large hall on the third floor. The first floor
contained the steam boiler that provided heat to Jacobs, Batson and Huff
Halls. It was also occupied by the ROTC Armory and a classroom.
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Jefferson Davis
Hall (originally called the Science Building) was another government prefabricated
building. It was assembled by PRC vocational students and then bricked.
It was built about the same time as Bilbo.
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Another photo of
Jefferson Davis Hall (The Science Building).
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As part of the move
to provide more Vocational classes, the Metal Trades Building was constructed
in 1957. This building currently serves as the Visual Arts building.
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College Hall became
Moody Hall in the forties and continued to serve as classroom space, however,
with the construction of Shivers Gym in 1949, the gym/auditorium in Moody
then became the school's auditorium, a purpose it still serves.
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The Original Hancock
Hall was located between Crosby Hall and Pearl River Hall. It served
as a vocational building. Built around 1935 it served its lifetime
exclusively as a vocational classroom building.
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Pearl River Hall,
built in 1933, served as the college freshman dorm, Freshman Barracks,
and now serves as one of three men's dormitories.
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Another photo of
Pearl River Hall.
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White Hall, built
in 1928, served as a sophomore women's dormitory when this picture was
taken. This building was remodeled in the eighties and the large
balcony was removed to make way for a staircase and larger head resident's
quarters. At one time (so some alumni tell us) it served as a hospital.
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The President's
house, built in 1923, served in that capacity until 1987 when the President's
quarters were moved into the new President's House and this building became
the home of the Office of Alumni Affairs and Development Foundation.
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