Jackson serves as the seat of Madison County and the principal city of West Tennessee between Memphis and Nashville, with roughly 68,000 residents and a location along I-40 that has kept it central to regional commerce since the railroad era. The city dates to 1822 and was named for Andrew Jackson. It developed as a major rail junction where the Mobile and Ohio and the Illinois Central lines met, and that rail heritage survives in several preserved structures and the Casey Jones Home and Railroad Museum.
John Luther "Casey" Jones was a locomotive engineer who died at the throttle of the Cannonball Express near Vaughan, Mississippi, on April 30, 1900. His Jackson home on West Chester Street, where he lived during his time running the Jackson-to-Water Valley route, operates as a museum with an original engine on the grounds. The ballad "The Ballad of Casey Jones" turned him into a folk figure.
Union University in northeast Jackson, a Baptist-affiliated liberal arts institution founded in 1823, enrolls around 3,000 students. Lambuth University, founded in 1843, now operates as the University of Memphis Lambuth Campus. Jackson General Hospital (West Tennessee Healthcare) serves as a regional trauma and referral center for the western portion of the state.
Escortservice.com's Jackson listings point to the escort websites active in the area. The site catalogs. Nothing beyond cataloging is offered, including no bookings, no vetting of advertisers, and no mediation. Only visitors who are at least 21 may use the directory.
Jackson serves as the seat of Madison County and the principal city of West Tennessee between Memphis and Nashville, with roughly 68,000 residents and a location along I-40 that has kept it central to regional commerce since the railroad era. The city dates to 1822 and was named for Andrew Jackson. It developed as a major rail junction where the Mobile and Ohio and the Illinois Central lines met, and that rail heritage survives in several preserved structures and the Casey Jones Home and Railroad Museum.
John Luther "Casey" Jones was a locomotive engineer who died at the throttle of the Cannonball Express near Vaughan, Mississippi, on April 30, 1900. His Jackson home on West Chester Street, where he lived during his time running the Jackson-to-Water Valley route, operates as a museum with an original engine on the grounds. The ballad "The Ballad of Casey Jones" turned him into a folk figure.
Union University in northeast Jackson, a Baptist-affiliated liberal arts institution founded in 1823, enrolls around 3,000 students. Lambuth University, founded in 1843, now operates as the University of Memphis Lambuth Campus. Jackson General Hospital (West Tennessee Healthcare) serves as a regional trauma and referral center for the western portion of the state.
Escortservice.com's Jackson listings point to the escort websites active in the area. The site catalogs. Nothing beyond cataloging is offered, including no bookings, no vetting of advertisers, and no mediation. Only visitors who are at least 21 may use the directory.
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