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“Bite-Size Bits of Local, National, and Global History”
 
 
 
 
 
 
179 entries match your criteria. Entries 101 through 179 are listed. ⊲ Previous 100                                              

 
 

Historical Markers and War Memorials in Richmond County, Georgia

 
Clickable Map of Richmond County, Georgia and Immediately Adjacent Jurisdictions image/svg+xml 2019-10-06 U.S. Census Bureau, Abe.suleiman; Lokal_Profil; HMdb.org; J.J.Prats/dc:title> https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Usa_counties_large.svg Richmond County, GA (179) Burke County, GA (33) Columbia County, GA (19) Jefferson County, GA (30) McDuffie County, GA (24) Aiken County, SC (131) Edgefield County, SC (68)  RichmondCounty(179) Richmond County (179)  BurkeCounty(33) Burke County (33)  ColumbiaCounty(19) Columbia County (19)  JeffersonCounty(30) Jefferson County (30)  McDuffieCounty(24) McDuffie County (24)  AikenCountySouth Carolina(131) Aiken County (131)  EdgefieldCounty(68) Edgefield County (68)
Augusta is the county seat for Richmond County
Adjacent to Richmond County, Georgia
      Burke County (33)  
      Columbia County (19)  
      Jefferson County (30)  
      McDuffie County (24)  
      Aiken County, South Carolina (131)  
      Edgefield County, South Carolina (68)  
 
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101 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta — 121-5 — Stoney Nurses Homeof the Lamar School of Nursing
On Saint Sebastian Way at R.A. Dent Boulevard, on the right when traveling south on Saint Sebastian Way.
This building, named for Dr. George N. Stoney, a prominent local black physician, opened in 1909 to house students of Lamar School of Nursing. The school, founded in 1897 by Lucy Craft Laney and Dr. William H. Doughty, was one of the first nursing . . . Map (db m15337) HM
102 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta — 121-36 — Summerville Cemetery
On Cumming Road at Johns Road, on the right when traveling east on Cumming Road.
In this cemetery are buried the following eminent Georgians: JOHN MILLEDGE (1757-1818), Revolutionary officer, Congressman, Governor (1802-1806). He gave the land on which the University of Georgia is built. GEORGE WALKER CRAWFORD . . . Map (db m14871) HM
103 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta — 120-21 — Tabernacle Baptist Church
On Laney Walker Boulevard at C S Hamilton Way, on the right when traveling west on Laney Walker Boulevard.
Emerging from Central African Baptist Church's divided congregation, Beulah Baptist Church was founded in the Union Baptist Church fellowship hall in August 1885 by Rev. C.T. Walker. Renamed Tabernacle Baptist Church two days later in August 1885, . . . Map (db m200152) HM
104 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta — Tank, Combat, 90MM GunM48
On Pendleton King Park.
The M48 Tank was designed in 1954. The tank weight is 45 tons. It has an aircooled 810 hp engine and carries a crew of four. Armament consists of two machine guns in addition to the 90mm gun which has a maximum effective range of 2.7 miles. . . . Map (db m35028) HM
105 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta — 121-16 — Thankful Baptist Church
On Walker Street near 3rd Street, on the right when traveling west.
Thankful Baptist Church was founded on April 26, 1840 under the name “Independent” in an area of Augusta known as “Pinched Gut”. It was the first daughter church established out of Springfield Baptist Church who emerged . . . Map (db m48993) HM
106 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta — The “Haunted” Pillar of the Lower Market
On Broad Street (U.S. 25) at 5th Street, in the median on Broad Street.
On this site stood The Lower Market. Fire destroyed an early structure in 1829. The rebuilt market, with its bell that could be heard throughout the city, was a center of agricultural and livestock trade. A freakish cyclone blasted the structure in . . . Map (db m211686) HM
107 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta — 121-25 — The Augusta Arsenal
On Walton Way at Fleming Avenue, on the right when traveling east on Walton Way.
For a period of 128 years until its abandonment in 1955, a United States Arsenal was located on a tract comprising approxiamately 70 acres lying South and West of this spot. An "arsenal at Augusta" to aid the state in "resisting invasion" was . . . Map (db m34706) HM
108 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta — L22 — The Augusta ArsenalA "great arsenal of construction..."
On January 24, 1861 five days after Georgia's secession from the Union, Governor Joseph E. Brown accepted the surrender of the United States Arsenal at Augusta from Captain Arnold Elzey. {Picture included} Brown rejected Elzey's . . . Map (db m36086) HM
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109 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta — The Augusta CanalEnterprise Mill
On 15th Street (Bridge) near Greene Street, on the right when traveling north.
Until the Enterprise Mill was built Augustans were not sure that the 1875 enlargement of the canal had worked to attract industry. The 1848 granite block building at the canal end of this complex is a former flour mill and the only . . . Map (db m36308) HM
110 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta — The Augusta CanalPowder Works and Mills
On Eve Street near Pearl Street, on the right when traveling north. Reported missing.
The tall chimney in front of the Sibley Mill is the only surviving structure built by the Confederacy, and stands as a memorial to war dead. Augusta and its canal played a prominent role in the War between the States as the site of . . . Map (db m210476) HM
111 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta — 121-1 — The Augusta Canal
On Walton Way at 13th Street (U.S. 1/SR 4), on the right when traveling west on Walton Way.
The Augusta Canal, begun in 1845 and completed in 1847, provided power for one of the first cotton textile manufacturing plants in the South and was the beginning of the development of Augusta as a great textile manufacturing center. The . . . Map (db m33907) HM
112 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta — The Bell at Augusta State University
On near Patriot Drive near Arsenal Avenue..
The Bell, donated to the College by the Georgia Railroad Bank, came from the last steam locomotive of the Georgia Railroad. In 1957, the bank also funded the building of the tower to house the bell, which at one time rang to mark the . . . Map (db m47808) HM
113 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta — The Colonial Church of Augusta
Near Reynolds Street.
"But as Indian Friendship is sometimes precarious, we have built it opposite one of the Curtains of the Fort." Augusta, April 12, 1750
In June 1737, under orders from General James Oglethorpe, . . . Map (db m55626) HM
114 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta — L23 — The Confederate States Powder Works"...the best powder mill in the world..."
On Goodrich Street, on the right when traveling north.
When the conflict began in April 1861, leaders on both sides were unprepared to wage a long war. The Confederacy's industrial capacity was especially lacking, and munitions of all types were scarce. Initial stores of gunpowder . . . Map (db m32882) HM
115 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta — 121-17 — The First Academy of Richmond County‹——«
On 4th Street at Reynolds Street, on the left when traveling north on 4th Street.
One block east on Bay Street was opened as a boys' classicial school on April 12, 1785. Here President George Washington attended examinations in 1791. The buildings housed the General Assembly of Georgia when Augusta was the capital, the . . . Map (db m34128) HM
116 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta — 121-29 — The First Baptist Church
On Greene Street at 8th Street, in the median on Greene Street.
In March 1817, eight men and two women meeting in an Augusta home formed "The Baptist Praying Society of Augusta" - the forerunner of the First Baptist Church. Two months later the society was constituted a church under the leadership of the first . . . Map (db m10135) HM
117 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta — The First Presbyterian Church
On Telfair Street.
[Lower Marker]: The origin of this church is 1750 when St. Paul's Church was established under the jurisdiction of the Church of England. In 1804 Christ Church was incorporated at St. Pauls's as a Presbyterian congregation. . . . Map (db m9784) HM
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118 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta — 121-11 — The First Presbyterian Church
On Telfair Street.
Organized by the Rev. Washington McKnight, rector of Richmond Academy, in 1804. Met at first at site of St. Paul`s Church, incorporated by the Georgia General Assembly and given a lot on the common by Richmond Academy Trustees. Cornerstone of the . . . Map (db m9838) HM
119 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta — The Great Fire of 1916
Near James Brown Boulevard north of Reynolds Street, on the right when traveling north.
The Great Fire of 1916 broke out on March 22nd at 6:20 p.m. in Kelly's Dry Goods Store, located in the Dyer Building at the northwest corner of Broad Street and Jackson (Eighth) Street. Whipped along by high winds, the flames rapidly spread to . . . Map (db m114283) HM
120 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta — 121-39 — The Home of Charles Jones Jenkins, Jr., LL. D.
On Cumming Road near Montrose Court, on the left when traveling west.
After rendering valuable aid to his State as a justice of the Georgia Supreme Court (1860-1865). Charles Jones Jenkins was elected Governor in 1865. For defying certain reconstruction measures of Congress and military orders, he was replaced by . . . Map (db m35251) HM
121 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta — The Levee
Near 8th Street north of Reynolds Street, on the right when traveling north.
Serious flooding of the Savannah River in 1852 prompted the first consideration of the construction of a levee, a man-made earth embankment, but Augusta experienced the calamity of several other destructive floods before construction of the levee . . . Map (db m114302) HM
122 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta — 121-23 — The Mayham Tower
On Reynolds Street at 8th Street, on the right on Reynolds Street.
Approximately at this place, May 28-31, 1781, a Mayham tower was erected by the American forces commanded by General Andrew Pickens and Lt. Colonel "Light Horse Harry" Lee, who was besieging Fort Cornwallis, located on the present site of Saint . . . Map (db m9808) HM
123 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta — 121-3 — The Medical College of Georgia←——«
On Laney-Walker Boulevard, on the right when traveling west.
The Medical College of Georgia, oldest school of medicine in Georgia, was incorporated in 1828 as the Medical Academy of Georgia. Of the 23 original board of Trustees, 5 were from the City of Augusta and three of these were elected as the initial . . . Map (db m34253) HM
124 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta — The Old Government House
On Telfair Street at Courthouse Lane, on the right when traveling east on Telfair Street.
The Old Government House, built in 1801, is one of the oldest remaining public buildings in Augusta. The original building consisting of the central block of the structure only, housed the seats of local government. It was sold to Mayor Samuel . . . Map (db m200158) HM
125 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta — 121-23 — The Riot of May 11-12, 1970
Near Telfair Street, 0.1 miles west of Button Gwinnett Street, on the right when traveling west.
On May 11, 1970, Augusta became the site of Georgia's largest uprising during the Civil Rights era. Hundreds of black citizens gathered at the Municipal Building to demand an investigation into the beating death of Charles Oatman, a 16-year-old . . . Map (db m200154) HM
126 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta — The Rotary Club of Augusta
On Broad Street (Georgia Route 104) just east of 8th Street, on the right when traveling east.
On September 23, 1914, The Rotary Club of Augusta met for the first time in the former Albion Hotel, located here. Organized by attorney James M. Hull and local businessmen, the club promotes fellowship and service. Rotary began in Chicago in 1905 . . . Map (db m191174) HM
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127 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta — 121-28 — The Signer's Monument
On Greene Street near Monument Street.
Dedicated July 4, 1848, in honor of the signers of the Declaration of Independence for Georgia: George Walton, Lyman Hall and Button Gwinnett. The first two lie buried in crypts beneath this shaft. The burial place of Gwinnett, whose body was to . . . Map (db m9946) HM
128 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta — 121-11 — The Sisters of Saint Joseph In Augusta
On Monte Sano Avenue near Belleview Avenue, on the right when traveling north.
Members of the seventeenth-century French Order of Saint Joseph of Carondelet were first invited to Georgia at the end of the Civil War to teach and staff an orphanage in Savannah. Working with the children of African Americans, the Sisters of St. . . . Map (db m36714) HM
129 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta — The Veterans of 1898-1902
On Greene Street at 9th Street, in the median on Greene Street.
"You Triumphed Over Obstacles Which Would Have Overcome Men Less Brave And Determined"                        President McKinley Dedicated to The Veterans Of 1898 to 1902 by Department of Georgia National Auxiliary . . . Map (db m10187) HM
130 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta — This Memorial
On 2nd Street, on the right when traveling north.
This memorial is dedicated to the memory of these 7 brave soldiers who rest elsewhere in Magnolia. They fought against oppression, tyranny, absolute power and usurpation off states' rights, all of which still plague our country.Map (db m210591) WM
131 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta — Troop K Georgia Cavalry
1795 Richmond Hussars Troop K Georgia Cavalry Glorified in Every War 1917 ( Rear ) [ Emblem: Last Man's Club ] Honor Roll of the Last Man's Club organized 24 December 1929 and dedicated to Men Of . . . Map (db m32998) HM
132 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta — Turbine Power
On Blome Lane south of Greene Street, on the left when traveling south.
For many years during the 19th and 20th centuries, turbines like this one helped manufacturers turn waterpower into the power that helped drive machines. Back in 1918, Howle & Turner of Heflin, Alabama, purchased this Improved Double Turbine . . . Map (db m210541) HM
133 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta — 121-26 — Twiggs Cemetery<-------<<<
On Goshen Road at Mike Padgett Highway (Georgia Route 56), on the right when traveling east on Goshen Road.
In the cemetery about 300 yards from here are buried Major-General John Twiggs, a hero of the American Revolution, for whom Twiggs County is named, and his son, Major-General David Emanuel Twiggs, who achieved military distinction in the Mexican . . . Map (db m61699) HM
134 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta — 121-45 — Two Early Augusta Churches
On Greene Street.
St. John Methodist Church was founded in 1798 by Stith Mead, a young Virginia minister who denounced the worldliness of fun-loving Augusta. Biship Francis Asbury visited the church and watched its growth with particular interest. Augustus B. . . . Map (db m10200) HM
135 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta — 121-12 — U.S. Marshal Robert Forsyth( 1754-1794 )
On Washington Street near Reynolds Street.
Robert Forsyth was the first law enforcement officer killed in the line of duty. Captain of Light Dragoons in Henry "Light-Horse Harry" Lee's cavalry during the Revolutionary War, Forsyth had been appointed the first marshal for the District of . . . Map (db m10164) HM
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136 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta — Untitled (Georgia Railroad and Banking Company)
On Broad Street at 7th Street, on the right when traveling west on Broad Street.
2200 feet to the southwest at a place indicated by a marker of the Georgia Historical Commission, Georgia Railroad and Banking Company on May 21, 1837 operated the first railroad in Georgia. It is the oldest railroad in Georgia continuously . . . Map (db m61570) HM
137 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta — Veterans of All Wars — Augusta, Ga. —
On Greene Street at 4th Street, in the median on Greene Street.
Dedicated to The Glory Of God And To The Veterans Of All Wars Dedicated November 11, 1983Map (db m34574) HM
138 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta — Village of SummervilleNational Register of Historic Places, 1980
On Walton Way at Milledge Road, on the right when traveling west on Walton Way.
While not incorporated as a separate community until 1861 (with boundaries being a circle with a one mile radius from Gould's Corner), Summerville was occupied before the turn of the 19th Century. Early residents included George Walton (signer of . . . Map (db m49963) HM
139 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta — Walker Family Cemetery
On Arsenal Avenue, 0 miles north of Bellevue Avenue, on the right when traveling north.
Freeman Walker, in 1826, deeded 70 acres of land to the U. S. Govt. to be used as an arsenal – the site now of Augusta College. He reserved one acre as a family burial ground. The marker in front of his home “Bellvue”, on . . . Map (db m63573) HM
140 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta — 148-7 — Ware High SchoolCivil Rights Milestone
On Reynolds Street near 11th Street, on the right when traveling west.
Near this site stood Ware High School, which was the first public high school for African-Americans in Georgia and one of only five in the south while it was in operation. Founded in 1880, it was named for Edmund Asa Ware, Freedman`s Bureau Officer . . . Map (db m37094) HM
141 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta — 121-2 — Washington's Southern Tour
On Washington St near Reynolds St.
During his Southern tour of 1791, President George Washington visited Augusta--at that time Georgia's capital--from May 18-21. Washington met with Governor Edward Telfair and other "principal gentlemen of the place," including George Walton and . . . Map (db m9708) HM
142 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta — 121-48 — White House Tract
On Welch Lane, 0.1 miles east of Eve Street, on the left when traveling east.
The 500-acres parcel of land long known as the “White House Tract” witnessed many of Augusta’s most significant historical events. On this tract an Indian trading company known as MacKay’s Trading Post, or the White House, flourished. Around this . . . Map (db m23265) HM
143 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta — William Bartram TrailTraced 1773-1777 — Deep South Region —
Near 8th Street.
William Bartram Visits Augusta 1773 for Indian Ceded Lands Treaty. 1775 said . . . ."Augusta would become the Metropolis of Georgia"Map (db m9762) HM
144 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta — 121-7 — William Bartram Visited Augusta, 1773.
Near E. Ford Street near Telfair Street.
"The village of Augusta." wrote the celebrated American naturalist and botanist of his visits in 1765 and 1773, "is situated on a rich and fertile plain of the Savanna River; the buildings are near its banks and extend two miles. The site of Augusta . . . Map (db m9761) HM
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145 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta — 121-8 — William Makepeace Thackeray
On Broad Street (Georgia Route 28) near 8th Street, on the right when traveling east. Reported permanently removed.
In the "Masonic Hall" on this site, the British author lectured (Feb. 11-12, 1856), as guest of The Young Men's Library Assn. He wrote home: "Nice quaint old town Augusta, rambling great street 2 miles long, doctors and shopkeepers the society of . . . Map (db m9987) HM
146 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta — William Schley 1786 - 1858Governor of Georgia 1835- 1837 — Grand Master of Georgia 1828- 1831 —
On Richmond Hill Road near Sconyers Way, on the right when traveling north.
Masonic Emblem In this family cemetery rest the remains of William Schley, Governor and Grand Master of Georgia. Brother Schley was born in Frederick, Maryland December 10, 1786 and acquired his education in the academies at Louisville and . . . Map (db m27065) HM
147 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta — Woodmen Of The World MemorialDum Tacet Clamat
On Greene Street near 10th Street.
( West Face ) ( Emblem ) In the Sacred Memory Of The Men Of Richmond County Who Made The Supreme Sacrifice World War I { List of Names } World War II { List of Names } Time Shall Not Dim The Glory Of Their Deeds . . . Map (db m10272) HM
148 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta — Woodmen of the World Veterans Memorial
On Greene Street, on the left when traveling east.
"With great admiration and gratitude for the service and sacrifice of our veterans of all wars."Map (db m210542) WM
149 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta — World War1917       1918
On Greene Street.
[Front]: To honor the men of Richmond County, of every creed and color, who served at their country's call that aggression and lawless force should not dominate the world. [Reverse]: What stands if freedom fall?         . . . Map (db m10211) WM
150 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta, Downtown Augusta — 121-26 — The Augusta Chinese and the Chinese Consolidated Benevolent Association中華公所
On Walker Street east of 6th Street, on the right when traveling east.
The second half of the nineteenth century saw increased Chinese immigration to the United States to meet the needs of large-scale labor projects. In 1873, Chinese laborers were contracted to expand the Augusta Canal. The Chinese Exclusion . . . Map (db m235779) HM
151 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta, Laney Walker — A. C. Griggs1881-1952
On Laney Walker Boulevard west of Phillips Street, on the right when traveling west.
Born in Farmville, Va., he earned the Bachelor of Arts and the Bachelor of Sacred Theology degrees from Lincoln University in 1903 and received its honorary Doctor of Divinity in 1925. He did further study at both Columbia University and Atlanta . . . Map (db m227187) HM
152 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta, Laney Walker — Attorney James Madison Nabrit, Jr.1900-1997
On Laney Walker Boulevard east of Blounts Avenue, on the right when traveling east.
An accomplished lawyer, Nabrit actively participated in seminal civil rights cases in the 1940s and 1950s. Along with such notables as Thurgood Marshall he often handled cases for the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund. He was Marshall's . . . Map (db m227193) HM
153 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta, Laney Walker — Atty. Judson Whitlocke Lyons1860-1924
On Laney Walker Boulevard, 0.1 miles west of C S Hamilton Way, on the right when traveling west.
Attorney Judson Whitlocke Lyons was the first Black lawyer in the State of Georgia. He was born in Burke County, but lived most of his life in Augusta. He was a graduate of Augusta Institute (now Morehouse College) and Howard University Law . . . Map (db m227151) HM
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154 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta, Laney Walker — Augustus R. Johnson1853-1908
On Laney Walker Boulevard at 13th Street, on the right when traveling east on Laney Walker Boulevard.
In 1869, he became the first Black licensed to teach by the State of Georgia and paid by the State School Fund. Born in Augusta and educated in the public schools, he earned the A.B. and A.M. degrees from the Augusta Institute, now Morehouse . . . Map (db m227107) HM
155 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta, Laney Walker — Carrie J. Mays1928-1994
On Laney Walker Boulevard east of 13th Street, on the right when traveling east.
The first woman elected to the Augusta City Council (1970), the first Black woman elected to a city council in the Southeast, the first woman to serve as secretary of the Georgia Democratic Party (1971, 1980), and a Presidential elector (1976, . . . Map (db m227112) HM
156 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta, Laney Walker — Dr. Channing H. Tobias1882-1961
On Laney Walker Boulevard east of 13th Street, on the right when traveling east.
Born in Augusta, he earned the A.B. from Paine College, the B.D. from Drew Theological Seminary and did further study at the University of Pennsylvania. He received numerous honorary degrees and was the first Black awarded an honorary doctorate . . . Map (db m227110) HM
157 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta, Laney Walker — Dr. Charles T. Walker1858-1921
On Laney Walker Boulevard west of C S Hamilton Way, on the right when traveling west.
Born near Hephzibah in 1858, he came to Augusta in 1874 and graduated from the Augusta Institute, (now Morehouse College). He organized Tabernacle Baptist Church in 1885 and built the present edifice in 1914, the largest black church in the . . . Map (db m227148) HM
158 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta, Laney Walker — Dr. George Nelson Stoney1865-1926
On Laney Walker Boulevard at Marks Street, on the right when traveling west on Laney Walker Boulevard.
A graduate of the Howard University School of Medicine, he opened his office in Augusta in 1889 and started, along with Lucy C. Laney. a nursing training program which later became the Lamar School of Nursing of the Lamar Hospital. When the new . . . Map (db m227189) HM
159 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta, Laney Walker — Dr. James Edward Carter1875-1955
On Laney Walker Boulevard at 12th Street, on the right when traveling west on Laney Walker Boulevard.
After completing the basic science courses at Paine College, he was taught dentistry by two local dentists. He passed the Georgia Board Examination and then served two years as an apprentice. He practiced dentistry from the back of a horse . . . Map (db m227138) HM
160 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta, Laney Walker — Dr. James Edward Carter Jr.July 1, 1906 - May 18, 1993
On Laney Walker Boulevard west of 12th Street, on the right when traveling west.
The son of Augusta's first black dentist, he graduated from Howard University dental school in 1930 and began his 51-year practice with his father. He was president of the Stoney Medical, Dental and Pharmaceutical Society; president of the . . . Map (db m227142) HM
161 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta, Laney Walker — Dr. John Hope1868-1936
On Laney Walker Boulevard east of 13th Street, on the right when traveling west.
An Augusta native, he earned the bachelor's degree from Brown University in 1894. President of the National Association of Teachers in Colored Schools, and Morehouse College for 25 years, he was the first African American to head that . . . Map (db m227161) HM
162 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta, Laney Walker — Frank Garvin Yerby1916-1991
On Laney Walker Boulevard east of 13th Street, on the right when traveling east.
Born in Augusta, Yerby – short story writer, poet, and novelist – earned the B.A. from Paine College and the M.A. from Fisk University. His books, sold in 82 countries, have been translated into more than 30 languages. His 33 novels are said to . . . Map (db m227119) HM
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163 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta, Laney Walker — 121-25 — Frank Garvin YerbyKing of the Costume Novel
On 8th Street north of Laney Walker Boulevard, on the right when traveling north.
Born in Augusta on September 5, 1916, author Frank Garvin Yerby graduated from the Haines Institute and Paine College, and also attended Fisk University and the University of Chicago. He published poetry, short stories, and 33 novels, 12 of . . . Map (db m227201) HM
164 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta, Laney Walker — Miss Lucy Craft Laney1854-1933
On Laney Walker Boulevard at Phillips Street, on the right when traveling west on Laney Walker Boulevard.
Lucy Craft Laney was born in Macon, Georgia, during slavery. She graduated in Atlanta University's first class in 1873. Ten years later, she founded Haines Normal and Industrial Institute in the lecture room of Christ Presbyterian Church of . . . Map (db m227180) HM
165 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta, Laney Walker — Rev. Dr. Charles Spencer Hamilton1927-1997
On Laney Walker Boulevard at C S Hamilton Way, on the right when traveling west on Laney Walker Boulevard.
Born in Cedartown, Ga., he pastored several Georgia churches, most notably Tabernacle Baptist, Augusta's largest black church, where he served for 40 years (1956-1996). He earned the bachelor of divinity, bachelor of arts, and master of . . . Map (db m227145) HM
166 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta, Laney Walker — Rev. Dr. William Jefferson White1831-1913
On Laney Walker Boulevard at 13th Street, on the right when traveling west on Laney Walker Boulevard.
Born in Ruckerville, Ga., he moved to Augusta in 1842. He organized Springfield Baptist Church's first Sunday School, served as president of the Colored Baptist Sunday School Convention, founded Harmony Baptist Church in 1868, and served as . . . Map (db m227178) HM
167 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta, Laney Walker — Rev. Essie Mae McIntyre1912-1996
On Laney Walker Boulevard, 0.1 miles east of Blounts Avenue, on the right when traveling east.
Believed to be the first female Baptist pastor in the South, Essie Mae McIntyre was born in Louisville, Ga. She helped to found and served as pastor of Good Shepherd Baptist Church from 1940-1996. During this period the church increased its . . . Map (db m227103) HM
168 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta, Laney Walker — Rev. Jesse Peters Galphincirca. 1740-1814
On Laney Walker Boulevard.
He was born on the Galphin Plantation near Beech Island, S.C. Freed by his slave-master father, he became an ordained minister and co founded Silver Bluff Baptist Church in 1773. He dropped the Galphin name when he moved to Augusta in 1783. . . . Map (db m227113) HM
169 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta, Laney Walker — Rev. Nathaniel T. Young, Sr.1910-2001
On Laney Walker Boulevard at 12th Street, on the right when traveling east on Laney Walker Boulevard.
A graduate of Morehouse College and the Morehouse School of Divinity, he began his historic pastorate of Thankful Baptist Church in 1945 and served for 46 years. The third African American elected to the Richmond County Board of Education he . . . Map (db m227137) HM
170 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta, Laney Walker — Rev. Samuel Butler Wallace — 1878-1938 —
On Laney Walker Boulevard, 0.1 miles west of C S Hamilton Way, on the right when traveling west.
Reverend Wallace graduated from Howard University. A former pastor of Trinity CME Church. He envisioned a library where black children, denied access to local public libraries, could study, read for pleasure and conduct research. Rev. Wallace led . . . Map (db m227157) HM
171 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta, Laney Walker — Sidney “Beau Jack” Walker1921-2000
On Laney Walker Boulevard east of 13th Street, on the right when traveling east.
Born in Waynesboro, Ga., he moved to Augusta at an early age. Once a shoe shine boy and caddie, he became a boxer extraordinaire, twice winning the New York Boxing Commission's World Light Weight Championship and earning Ring Magazine's . . . Map (db m227118) HM
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172 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta, Laney Walker — The Honorable Edward M. McIntyre1933-2004
On Laney Walker Boulevard, 0.1 miles east of Blounts Avenue, on the right when traveling east.
A member of the Board of Directors of the National Conference of Black Mayors and the Black Mayors Association of Georgia, he was the first African American to serve on and chair the Richmond County Board of Commissioners, and the first African . . . Map (db m227092) HM
173 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta, Laney Walker — The Honorable John H. Ruffin, Jr.1934-2010
On Laney Walker Boulevard west of 12th Street, on the right when traveling east.
A native of Waynesboro, Ga., he graduated from Morehouse College and Howard University School of Law. A pioneering attorney and judge, he filed and won the lawsuits that desegregated the Richmond County School System, the Augusta Police . . . Map (db m227136) HM
174 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta, Laney Walker — Thelma “Butterfly” McQueen1911-1995
On Laney Walker Boulevard east of 13th Street, on the right when traveling east.
Originally a dancer with the Katherine Dunham troupe, she made her professional stage debut in George Abbot's Brown Sugar. But she is best known for her role as Prissy in Gone with the Wind, 1939. Later, a stint on the radio show . . . Map (db m227115) HM
175 Georgia, Richmond County, Augusta, Laney Walker — William Carpenter, Sr.1873-1959
On Laney Walker Boulevard at C S Hamilton Way, on the right when traveling west on Laney Walker Boulevard.
Born into poverty in Edgefield, South Carolina, fewer than ten years after the Civil War, he became one of the wealthiest men in the Augusta area. In South Carolina, he owned a 420-acre tract of land, farms in Beech Island and Sumter, and . . . Map (db m227143) HM
176 Georgia, Richmond County, Hephzibah — 121-32 — Hephzibah Methodist Church»—→
On Brothersville Road (County Route 1105) near Church Street, on the right when traveling south.
The Brothersville Methodist Church was organized in March 1852 in the community of Brothersville to serve the fifteen families living there. The building completed in 1853, was dedicated in 1854 by Bishop George Pierce. In 1890 the church was moved . . . Map (db m44513) HM
177 Georgia, Richmond County, Hephzibah, — 121-47 — Liberty Methodist Church
On Liberty Church Road, on the right when traveling south.
Liberty, which evolved out of a Methodist society organized about 1775, is Georgia`s oldest Methodist Church. The original log church was erected west of here by Samuel Collins who, in 1773, had emigrated from Ireland. The present church building is . . . Map (db m35340) HM
178 Georgia, Richmond County, Hepzibah — 121-7 — First Ebenezer Baptist Church
On Windsor Spring Road at Ebenezer Drive, on the right when traveling north on Windsor Spring Road.
This congregation began when a handful of slaves gathered for services on the Rhodes Plantation in August 1812. In 1851 Absalom A. Rhodes sold a quarter acre of land here for two dollars to the deacon board of Ebenezer Baptist Church. The . . . Map (db m14885) HM
179 Georgia, Richmond County, near Bath — 121-6 — Author "The Young Marooners"»—1mi.→
On Deans Bridge Road (U.S. 1) at Bath-Edie Road (Georgia Road 75), on the right when traveling south on Deans Bridge Road.
Francis Robert Goulding, preacher, teacher, author, inventor, as minister of the Bath Presbyterian Church from 1843 to 1851, occupied its manse, about 1 mile North. During that time he wrote the most popular of his several books: " The Young . . . Map (db m36715) HM

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May. 5, 2024