Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Telfair County is a county located in the central portion of the U.S. state of Georgia.As of the 2020 census, the population was 12,477. [1] The largest city and county seat is McRae-Helena.
McRae was a city in and the county seat [3] of Telfair County, Georgia, United States. It was designated as the seat in 1871, after being established the previous year as a station on the Macon and Brunswick Railroad. Upon the city's merger with adjacent Helena in 2015, the new county seat is the combined city of McRae-Helena.
At the time of McRae's death in 2017, the three papers had been cited more than 1700 times, and a software package written by McRae implementing his model had been used in more than 200 academic papers. In an obituary, his model was described as having become the dominant paradigm for landscape genetics by 2009. [1] [2]
Frank E. Campbell Funeral Chapel on Madison Avenue at 81st Street in Manhattan. The Frank E. Campbell Funeral Chapel is a funeral home located on Madison Avenue at 81st Street in Manhattan. Founded in 1898 as Frank E. Campbell Burial and Cremation Company, the company is now owned by Service Corporation International.
Mitchell, a 1975 action film; Mitchell movement, a type of duplicate bridge table movement; Mitchell Scholarship, given annually by the US-Ireland Alliance; The Mitchell Trio, or The Chad Mitchell Trio, North American vocal group who became known during the 1960s; Cyclone Mitchell, a tropical cyclone of the 2012–13 Australian region cyclone ...
McCrea had small roles in his father's film, Wichita (1955). He was also in Lucy Gallant (1955). While still at UCLA he had the lead role in Johnny Moccasin (1956), a half hour film made for television by Laslo Benedek as a white boy raised by Indians after a massacre. [1]
Union Chapel, also known as Mitchell Hollow Union Chapel, is a historic chapel on Mill Road in Windham, Greene County, New York. It was built in 1897 and is a one-story, three by three bay, wood-frame structure resting on a stone and concrete foundation.
McRae was among the summer stock cast at Elitch Theatre for five seasons—1904, 1905, 1911, 1912, and 1914. In 1911 he had just completed a run with Blanche Bates in Nobody's Widow in New York's Hudson Theater when he returned to Elitch's for another summer.