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Wallace Oliver Stovall Sr. (December 14, 1891 – May 19, 1966) was the publisher of the Tampa Tribune. The Wallace Stovall building, built in 1926 according to designs by Tampa architect B. Clayton Bonfoey, was located at 416 Tampa Street and Lafayette Street (309 North Morgan Street). It was used as a Works Progress Administration (WPA) Headquarters during the Great Depression of the 1930s and was eventually demolished. His father Col. Wallace F. Stovall was an editor at the Tribune in 1910. Stovall is buried in the Myrtle Hill Memorial Park cemetery in Tampa.

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  • Wallace Stovall (en)
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  • Wallace Oliver Stovall Sr. (December 14, 1891 – May 19, 1966) was the publisher of the Tampa Tribune. The Wallace Stovall building, built in 1926 according to designs by Tampa architect B. Clayton Bonfoey, was located at 416 Tampa Street and Lafayette Street (309 North Morgan Street). It was used as a Works Progress Administration (WPA) Headquarters during the Great Depression of the 1930s and was eventually demolished. His father Col. Wallace F. Stovall was an editor at the Tribune in 1910. Stovall is buried in the Myrtle Hill Memorial Park cemetery in Tampa. (en)
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  • Wallace Oliver Stovall Sr. (December 14, 1891 – May 19, 1966) was the publisher of the Tampa Tribune. The Wallace Stovall building, built in 1926 according to designs by Tampa architect B. Clayton Bonfoey, was located at 416 Tampa Street and Lafayette Street (309 North Morgan Street). It was used as a Works Progress Administration (WPA) Headquarters during the Great Depression of the 1930s and was eventually demolished. His father Col. Wallace F. Stovall was an editor at the Tribune in 1910. Stovall was married to Doris Knight Stovall (1893–1979). He was a FL Y2 USNRF World War I. His children included Wallace Oliver Stovall (1919–2012). He also has a grandson named Wallace O. Stovall III. Stovall is buried in the Myrtle Hill Memorial Park cemetery in Tampa. (en)
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