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Finley-Cartwright Home
Finley Cartwright bought this 1918 Tudor Revival Style hou...
Bower Hill
Site of Gen. John Neville's mansion, burned to the ground ...
Lee's Retreat
Near here General Robert E. Lee, moving south toward Danvi...
Richlands
This fertile region was known as Richlands from an early p...
Tazewell
The town was laid off as the county seat, in 1800, when Ta...
Americus Colored Hospital
One of the earliest hospitals in southwest Georgia devoted...
The Only Advantage of the Day
June 27, 1864.
While 8 Federal brigades at Kennesaw...
Allatoona Pass
Allatoona was in pioneer days a travel hub, because ridges...
Hawkins Line
This line, sometimes called "The Four Mile Purchase Line,"...
Millersylvania State Park
Millersylvania State Park Historic District, a forested tr...
Results for L
Finley-Cartwright Home
Finley Cartwright bought this 1918 Tudor Revival Style house from the Cowan Family in 1920. His father formed one of Oceola's earliest stores in 1879, offering sporting goods, household items, and plantation supplies.
By World War II, N.G. Cartwright and Sons ...
Bower Hill
Site of Gen. John Neville's mansion, burned to the ground by insurgents during a major escalation of violence in the Whiskey Rebellion, July 16-17, 1794.
Gen. Neville was Inspector of Revenue under President Washington. In the two-day battle, Neville with ...
Lee's Retreat
Near here General Robert E. Lee, moving south toward Danville, in the afternoon of April 5, 1865 found the road blocked by General Phillip Henry Sheridan.
He then turned westward by way of Amelia Springs, hoping to reach the South ...
Richlands
This fertile region was known as Richlands from an early period. In 1782, and later, Richlands was a militia station for frontier defense.
The town was laid off in 1890, with the coming of the Norfolk and Western Railroad, and ...
Tazewell
The town was laid off as the county seat, in 1800, when Tazewell County was formed, on land given by William Peery and Samuel Ferguson.
First known as Jeffersonville, the name was changed to Tazewell, for Senator Henry Tazewell. Averell ...
Americus Colored Hospital
One of the earliest hospitals in southwest Georgia devoted to the care of African Americans, the Americus Colored Hospital opened in 1923.
The majority of the funds needed to build the hospital were provided by Dr. W.S. Prather. Practice in ...
The Only Advantage of the Day
June 27, 1864.
While 8 Federal brigades at Kennesaw Mountain and at Cheatham Hill, made futile attempts to break Johnston's Confederate lines, Schofield's 23rd Union Regiment moved South from Powder Springs road.
This flanking move was opposed by Hood's A. ...
Allatoona Pass
Allatoona was in pioneer days a travel hub, because ridges from east and south met here where it was fairly easy to cross the Allatoona Mountain range by winding over a low ridge, or pass.
The Sandtown or Tennessee Road from ...
Hawkins Line
This line, sometimes called "The Four Mile Purchase Line," was the boundary between Georgia and the Cherokee Nation from 1804 to 1818.
It was established when Georgia bought a four mile strip from the Indians so as to take in ...
Millersylvania State Park
Millersylvania State Park Historic District, a forested tract surrounding a small lake in the south Puget Sound region of Western Washington developed by the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC), reflects distinctly the contributions of Despression-era New Deal relief programs to our ...