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Related Historical Markers
By David Seibert, April 9, 2008
Opposite side of the Francis Robert Goulding Marker
SHOWN IN SOURCE-SPECIFIED ORDER
| On Goulding Place, 0.1 miles west of Canton Street, on the left when traveling west. |
| | Francis Robert Goulding, author, clergyman, inventor, lived in this house at the time of his death, August 22, 1881, and is buried in the Roswell Presbyterian Cemetery. The son of Rev. Thomas Goulding, founder and first president of the Presbyterian . . . — — Map (db m10860) HM |
| On South Alexander Street at South Street, on the right when traveling north on South Alexander Street. |
| | c. 1828
Two Houses Joined
1833-1843
"Old Manse"
Francis Goulding
Presbyterian minister
authoring children's books
and invented an unpatented
sewing machine. — — Map (db m94234) HM |
| On East Robert Toombs Avenue (Business U.S. 78) at East Liberty Street on East Robert Toombs Avenue. |
| | The Presbyterian Church at Washington was organized in 1790, under the Presbytery of South Carolina, with the Rev. John Springer as first pastor. Services were held in private homes, in the Court House, the Academy, and in the Methodist Church, . . . — — Map (db m25936) HM |
| On Bethany Church Road, 0.3 miles north of Bethany Road, on the right when traveling south. |
| | Organized in 1786, Bethany Presbyterian Church was the first church in Greene County. Dr. Francis Cummins, Dr. Francis Goulding, and other great ministers preached here. In 1886, Dr. James Woodrow was tried for heresy here in the first “monkey . . . — — Map (db m24619) HM |
| On Crawfordville Road (Georgia Route 22) 0.1 miles east of Philomath Woodville Road, on the left when traveling east. |
| | This ancient Church has served under four names and in four counties. Liberty Presbyterian Church was organized by the Rev. Daniel Thatcher, about 1788. The original place of worship, a log house, was erected near War Hill, about seven miles from . . . — — Map (db m21578) HM |
| On North Atlanta Street (Georgia Route 9) at Oak Street, on the right when traveling north on North Atlanta Street. |
| | In this cemetery lie some of Roswell’s leading early citizens, most of whom came here from Georgia’s coastal counties: Francis Robert Goulding (1810-1881), clergyman, inventor, author of The Young Marooners and other juvenile classics; . . . — — Map (db m70425) HM |
| 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 |
May. 7, 2024