University of Mississippi Power House

The University of Mississippi Power House was located on the campus of the University of Mississippi in Oxford, Mississippi. The original building was constructed in 1908 as a central power plant for the entire campus.[1][2]

Author William Faulkner was employed by the University of Mississippi in the Power House through the winter of 1929 as a night supervisor.[3] At that time, the plant would supply power during the night for both the University of Mississippi and the town of Oxford, Mississippi. The low power demand during the evening and the redundancy of the supervisory position offered Faulkner time to write, which he did using the back of a wheelbarrow. The resulting work was published in 1930 as As I Lay Dying.[4]

The University of Mississippi Power House was demolished by the University in the spring of 2016. The University of Mississippi plans to construct a commemorative space near the same location using a $5 million donation from the Gertrude C. Ford Foundation.[5]

gollark: Like I said, it isn't good for anything but learning clustering, since most stuff will not actually conveniently parallelize across devices and x86 systems offer more perf/$.
gollark: Clustered RPis aren't actually that good for much beyond cheaply learning clustering tech.
gollark: They're pretty cool, although not really optimal for more electronicsy things since the SoC is apparently for TV boxes.
gollark: Blame them, not me, I just changed the file extension.
gollark: It's a misnamed JPEG.

References

  1. Mejia, Paula. "Power Plant Where Faulkner Wrote 'As I Lay Dying' Will Cease to Exist". Newsweek. Retrieved 10 January 2016.
  2. Associated Press. "Ole Miss to demolish power plant where Faulkner wrote 'As I Lay Dying'". Associated Press. Retrieved 10 January 2016.
  3. Blotner, Joseph. Faulkner: A Biography. New York, NY: Random House, 1974, Vol 1., p. 631
  4. Blotner, Joseph. Faulkner: A Biography. New York, NY: Random House, 1974, Vol 1., p. 633-635
  5. Sawyze, Royce. "Ford Foundation to give $25M to Ole Miss". Clarion Ledger. Retrieved 10 January 2016.

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