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The church's first service was held on May 26, 1867, and its first ten members included Reverend and Mrs. Frederick Ayer and Atlanta University's first president Edmund Asa Ware. [3]: 209 The church was never formally segregated but had become mostly black by 1892. The current building is the second church, built on the site of the original one ...
Southern Railway's 1918 facility, named Peachtree Station but known locally as Brookwood Station, has been Atlanta's only long-distance passenger rail stop since 1970. Amtrak took over Southern's Crescent route in the '70s, which (as of 2015) continues to operate between New Orleans and N.Y. City .
First African Baptist Church Parsonage (Columbus, Georgia) First African Missionary Baptist Church; First Baptist Church (Augusta, Georgia) First Bryan Baptist Church; First Congregational Church (Atlanta) First Methodist Episcopal Church (Stillmore, Georgia) First Presbyterian Church (Augusta, Georgia) First Presbyterian Church (Cartersville ...
On Sunday, Oct. 1 the First Congregational Church of Gardner at 28 Green St. held its last service in celebration of the long successful history of the church. The church is being sold and ...
First Congregational Church (Covert, Michigan), listed as a MSHS; First Congregational Church (Detroit), listed on the NRHP; First Congregational Church (Jackson, Michigan), listed on the NRHP and as a MSHS; First Congregational Church (Lake Linden, Michigan), listed on the NRHP; First Congregational Church (Lawrence, Michigan), listed as a MSHS
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December 8, 1868 near Fayetteville, Tenn., d. 1933) was a minister of the First Congregational Church in Atlanta, the second-oldest African American Congregational church in the United States. He was also an author and lecturer. [1]