Results for Oakland
Oakland Cemetery
Oakland Cemetery is an 48-acre hilly area in the southeast...
Oakland Valley School District #3
One of the seven schools established in 1837. It was a joi...
Oakland Cemetery
Civil War Heritage Trail
This cemetery contains the ...
Oakland Normal Institute
W. 1 mi. Here, 1887~1904, G.A. & J. T. Holley bridged gap ...
Oakland Plantation
[Front]:
This house was built in 1823 by Dr. ...
Oakland Railroad History
The railroad industry transformed Oakland from an oak fore...
Pony Express Ferry "Oakland"
Dedicated April 23, 1999
Jack London Square
By...
Oakland United Methodist Church
Generations of African~American families have worshiped he...
First Unitarian Church of Oakland
Designed in 1889 by Walter J. Mathews, this solid masonry ...
Oakland High School
Founded in the 1880’s Oakland High School’s name was deriv...
Results for Oakland
Oakland Cemetery
Oakland Cemetery is an 48-acre hilly area in the southeastern section of Atlanta which contains the city's oldest extant burial grounds. Among the approximately 70,000 interred at Oakland are: the unmarked graves of paupers, Confederate and Union soldiers, a Jewish ...
Oakland Valley School District #3
One of the seven schools established in 1837. It was a joint district serving children in Oakland Valley and Orange County. The school term was three months, 20 days. In 1866 it had an enrollment of 82 pupils. It closed ...
Oakland Cemetery
Civil War Heritage Trail
This cemetery contains the remains of
at least 15 Confederate veterans and
one Union veteran. Also buried here
is John C. McGehee, a prosperous
Madison County plantation owner and
staunch proponent of states' rights who
was a ...
Oakland Normal Institute
W. 1 mi. Here, 1887~1904, G.A. & J. T. Holley bridged gap between rural schools and colleges for many who distinguished themselves in law, education, & business.
Marker is on Mississippi Route 178 just from Patton Flat Oakland Road.
Courtesy hmdb.org
Oakland Plantation
[Front]:
This house was built in 1823 by Dr. Thomas Collins Austin (1790-1883), physician and planter. Austin attended the Medical University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia, and practiced medicine here for sixty years. His office, just north of the house, was demolished ...
Oakland Railroad History
The railroad industry transformed Oakland from an oak forest to a thriving city. Rapid growth began when the Central Pacific Railroad absorbed local rail lines in 1868 and was granted right-of-way to build a freight and ferry pier. The Oakland ...
Pony Express Ferry "Oakland"
Dedicated April 23, 1999
Jack London Square
By Port of Oakland, William Campbell Family, Dreyers Grand Ice Cream, Alameda/Oakland Ferry Service, Waterfront Plaza Hotel & Jacks, Sportsman's Hall - Pollock Pines Pony Express Home Station, Pony Express Trail Association
Sponsors: Walter R. Harmon ...
Oakland United Methodist Church
Generations of African~American families have worshiped here, beginning with services held under a brush arbor prior to the Civil War. In August of 1879, the land for the Oakland Methodist church was deeded to parishioners. In a wooden one-room building, ...
First Unitarian Church of Oakland
Designed in 1889 by Walter J. Mathews, this solid masonry Romanesque church departed radically from California's traditional Gothic wood frame construction. Noted for its world famous stained glass windows produced by Goodhue of Boston, and for arching redwood spans, the ...
Oakland High School
Founded in the 1880’s Oakland High School’s name was derived from oak trees which grew in abundance at this location when the school building was constructed. The school originally had 10 grades. Mrs. Arlene Newton Richardson taught here from 1908 ...