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Damascus Methodist Church
The church organized as early as 1817 and known as "Wright...
Old Town’s Entrepreneur Spirit (#1)
From 1870 through the 1800s, Henry Piper, one of Old Town’...
Broderick – Terry Duel
The famous duel that ended dueling in California was fough...
Chesterfield Courthouse
Chesterfield County's first courthouse was built here soon...
Confederate State Capitol of Kentucky
Bowling Green named state capitol at the Convention in Rus...
Hartsville Oil Mill
Side A
The Hartsville Oil Mill, founded in 1...
Diverted Attack
Aug. 31, 1864. The three divs. of Hardee’s A. C. [CS] Lowr...
Butler School
Butler School, located on this site since 1921, was the se...
Robson's Castle and Columbus, Texas, Meat and Ice Company
Robert Robson (1804-1878), one of many Scotsmen seeking fo...
Early Texas Hotels and Inns
Two miles east, at Winedale, is the Old "Sam Lewis Stoppin...
Results for R
Damascus Methodist Church
The church organized as early as 1817 and known as "Wright's Meeting House, Black Creek" was the first Methodist congregation in the area. James D. Wright, an elder who was appointed "Exhorter" in 1826, preached here until his death in ...
Old Town’s Entrepreneur Spirit (#1)
From 1870 through the 1800s, Henry Piper, one of Old Town’s early entrepreneurs, operated a successful bakery in a narrow alley. Today, the building at Wells and North is known as Piper’s Alley. The existing house located at 1546 North ...
Broderick – Terry Duel
The famous duel that ended dueling in California was fought in a ravine east of here, near the shore of Lake Merced. In the early morning of September 13, 1859. The participants were U.S. Senator David C. Broderick and Chief ...
Chesterfield Courthouse
Chesterfield County's first courthouse was built here soon after the county was established in 1785. The second courthouse on this site was built 1825-1829 from plans by architect Robert Mills, designer of the Washington Monument. According to local tradition it ...
Confederate State Capitol of Kentucky
Bowling Green named state capitol at the Convention in Russellville November 20, 1861.
First Governor, George W. Johnson.
Commissioners to the Confederate Congress, William Preston, W.W. Simms and Henry Burnett.
Marker is on College Heights Boulevard, on the right when traveling west. ...
Hartsville Oil Mill
Side A
The Hartsville Oil Mill, founded in 1900 by J.L. Coker, D.R. Coker, and J.J. Lawton, stood here until 1993. A cotton oil mill, it crushed cottonseed to produce cooking oil; meal and cake for feed and fertilizer; and ...
Diverted Attack
Aug. 31, 1864. The three divs. of Hardee’s A. C. [CS] Lowrey’s, Brown’s & Maney’s (under Gen. Cleburne), moved W. from Jonesboro to attack the flank of the intrenched Federal 15th A. C. 400 yds. N. This called for a ...
Butler School
Butler School, located on this site since 1921, was the second public school to serve Hartsville's black community and operated for over sixty years. Known as the Darlington Co. Training School until 1939, it was renamed for Rev. Henry H. ...
Robson's Castle and Columbus, Texas, Meat and Ice Company
Robert Robson (1804-1878), one of many Scotsmen seeking fortune in North America, came to the Texas Republic in 1839. On land he owned at this site, he built a concrete "castle," using native lime and gravel. It had running water, ...
Early Texas Hotels and Inns
Two miles east, at Winedale, is the Old "Sam Lewis Stopping Place" of the 1850s--a typical early Texas inn, now a University of Texas Research Center. Built 1834, as a settler's 2-room log cabin of hand-hewn cedar; then enlarged twice ...