Results for R
E. Van Winkle Gin and Machine Works
One of the largest cotton-related industrial sites in the ...
Rhodes Memorial Hall
Rhodes Memorial Hall was originally the home of furniture ...
Peach Tree Southern Railway (Brookwood Station)
Peachtree Southern Railway, now known as Brookwood Station...
Brookwood Hills Historic District
Brookwood Hills is a well-defined residential area that in...
Beth El Cemetery
In 1869, when Simerall Goldbach donated land to Temple Bet...
Hillcrest Cemetery, Jewish section
At one time, Jews who died in Quincy were buried in Bainbr...
Former Packing House
In its heyday, Quincy was home to a number of prominent Je...
Henry Brash House (The Porches)
Henry Brash built this yellow pine house in 1865. The porc...
Korean War Liberty Tree Memorial
In memory of the
men, women & POW-MIA
w...
Old Brown Marsh Presbyterian Church
2 Miles North East
Organized prior to 1756. Present ...
Results for R
E. Van Winkle Gin and Machine Works
One of the largest cotton-related industrial sites in the South, the E. Van Winkle Gin and Machine Works is a complex of industrial buildings on an 11-acre site serviced by three separate rail lines in northwest Atlanta. Built between the ...
Rhodes Memorial Hall
Rhodes Memorial Hall was originally the home of furniture magnate Amos Giles Rhodes. This 1904 Romanesque Revival building was inspired by the Rhineland castles Amos Rhodes admired on a trip to Europe in the late 1890s. Rhodes was born in ...
Peach Tree Southern Railway (Brookwood Station)
Peachtree Southern Railway, now known as Brookwood Station, is the last passenger terminal in Atlanta, a city which owes its existence to railroads. Representing a fine example of a suburban railroad terminal, it is the work of the eminent Atlanta ...
Brookwood Hills Historic District
Brookwood Hills is a well-defined residential area that incorporates the major architectural, landscape, and planning elements of suburban development of the early 1920s. In 1912, Benjamin F. Burdett and a partner had purchased approximately 50 acres of land from the ...
Beth El Cemetery
In 1869, when Simerall Goldbach donated land to Temple Beth El for a Jewish cemetery, Beth El's founding president Gerson Forcheimer received the deed. The earliest grave is for one of Goldbach's children, Abraham, who died of yellow fever in ...
Hillcrest Cemetery, Jewish section
At one time, Jews who died in Quincy were buried in Bainbridge, Georgia. After the Jewish cemetery opened in 1930, some of the early graves were moved to Quincy. The cemetery is maintained by the city. From Quincy, take U.S. ...
Former Packing House
In its heyday, Quincy was home to a number of prominent Jewish tobacco growers. Large leaf shade tobacco was a profitable crop in Gadsden County in the 19th and 20th centuries. At that time, shade tobacco leaves were used as ...
Henry Brash House (The Porches)
Henry Brash built this yellow pine house in 1865. The porches were added in 1890. Brash, a Confederate soldier, sponge fisherman and local merchant, and his wife Henrietta raised 11 children in this house. They kashered (ritually cleansed) their dishes ...
Korean War Liberty Tree Memorial
In memory of the
men, women & POW-MIA
who fought in the
Korean War
1950 - 1953
Dedicated November 11, 2003
Marker is on Summit Street (U.S. 77) north of Maple Avenue when traveling north.
Courtesy hmdb.org
Old Brown Marsh Presbyterian Church
2 Miles North East
Organized prior to 1756. Present building constructed 1818—the third on site. First two buildings of logs. Was also used for secular education until 1848. Among early ministers: H. McAden, Jas. Hall, S. Stanford, C. Lindsay.
Marker is at ...