
A Sign of Things to Come
Early one morning in Tupelo, Mississippi, a young man nailed his shingle on the old brick building
across the street from the county courthouse. The sign read “Guy Mitchell, Lawyer” – a simple
epigraph reflecting the character of the age. When the task was completed, the little assembly of
shopkeepers, clerks and fellow lawyers that gathered to watch clapped with polite optimism.
Then they set off to work. The year was 1904, and Guy Mitchell’s dusty little law office contained
one idealistic Mississippi Law School graduate, a third-hand desk and an empty file cabinet. No one,
perhaps not even Guy Mitchell himself, imagined that his final hammer tap would usher in more than
a century of remarkable achievements.
1904
Guy Mitchell beggins practicing law in Lee County, Mississippi.
Guy Mitchell beggins practicing law in Lee County, Mississippi.
1936
Guy Mitchell , Jr., son of the founder, receives his law degree and joins his father’s practice.
Guy Mitchell , Jr., son of the founder, receives his law degree and joins his father’s practice.
1990
Mitchell, McNutt, Lagrone and Sams of Tupelo merges with a long-standing Columbus firm, Threadgill Smith Sanders & Jolly, and becomes Mitchell, McNutt, Threadgill, Smith & Sams, creating Mississippi’s largest law firm outside of Jackson.
Mitchell, McNutt, Lagrone and Sams of Tupelo merges with a long-standing Columbus firm, Threadgill Smith Sanders & Jolly, and becomes Mitchell, McNutt, Threadgill, Smith & Sams, creating Mississippi’s largest law firm outside of Jackson.