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Jersey is located at (33.716872, -83.803943 [ 6 ] According to the United States Census Bureau , the town has a total area of 0.8 square miles (2.1 km 2 ), all land.
Sherald was born on August 30, 1973, in Columbus, Georgia, to dentist Amos P. Sherald III and Geraldine W. Sherald. [10] Her great-grandfather was a German Jewish tailor, and the family belonged to the all-white Worldwide Church of God, celebrating the Sabbath on Friday night, honoring Old Testament holidays such as Passover, and dispensing with Christmas and Easter. [11]
Showing the aftermath of the Battle of Antietam—the deadliest single day in the American Civil War [s 3] [s 4] The Scourged Back: c. 2 April 1863: McPherson & Oliver: Baton Rouge, Louisiana, United States Albumen print One of the most widely distributed photos of the abolitionist movement. [s 4] Cartes de Visite: May - August 1863 Andre ...
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Georgia Tech President Blake R. Van Leer. Carlos Valdes, actor and singer; Blake R. Van Leer, President of Georgia Tech, the first to admit women and fought against segregationist Governor Griffin; Ella Lillian Wall Van Leer, artist and architect, women's rights activist; Fernando Velasco, football player; born in New York
First African-American woman elected to the Georgia General Assembly [51] Sarah Porter Hillhouse (1763–1831) 2006 First woman editor and printer in Georgia [52] Alice Woodby McKane (1865–1948) 2005 First female doctor in Savannah [53] Nina Anderson Pape (1869–1944) 2005 Educator [54] Jeannette Pickering Rankin (1880–1973) 2005
Burruss was born in College Park, Georgia, [1] the daughter of the Reverend Titus Burruss Jr. [3] and Joyce Jones. [4] She had an older brother, Patrick Riley (1968–1991), [5] who died in a car crash. [3] [6] Burruss attended Tri-Cities High School in East Point, Georgia, graduating in 1994. [7] She first appeared on the BET series Teen ...
Webster answered an ad placed by William "Doc" Carver in 1923 [2] for a diving girl and soon earned a place in circus history. Her job was to mount a running horse as it reached the top of a 40-foot (12 m) - sometimes 60-foot (18 m) - tower and sail down on its back as it plunged into an 11-foot (3.4 m) pool of water directly below.