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Covington County is the name of a couple of counties in the United States: Covington County, Alabama; Covington County, Mississippi This page was last edited on 28 ...
September 9, 2009 (115-300 6th Ave., 302-425 College St., and 403-505 E. Three Notch St. Andalusia: 9: Opp Commercial Historic District: October 29, 2001
The 1916 courthouse is the fifth to serve Covington County. The fourth courthouse was built of brick in 1896 in the center of Courthouse Square (which sits in front of the current courthouse). When the Central of Georgia Railway reached Andalusia in 1899, followed shortly by the Alabama and Florida Railroad , the town saw massive growth ...
The bank was founded in 1901 as The Bank of Covington. [2] In 1996, the bank was renamed Main Street Banks. [2] In December 2002, the company acquired First National Bank of Johns Creek for $26.2 million. [3] In May 2003, the company acquired First Colony Bancshares Inc. for $96 million. [4] In June 2004, the bank laid off 37 employees. [5] In ...
Coulter and Huff collaborated on several of the largest and most significant companies in Westmoreland County in the 1880s, including the Keystone Coal and Coke Company, the Greensburg-Hempfield Electric Street Railway, and the First National Bank of Greensburg (now the First Commonwealth Bank). Coulter served at the bank's president until his ...
The district encompasses 108 contributing buildings, 1 contributing site, and 1 contributing structure in the historic core of the city of Covington. It includes late-19th and early-20th-century commercial buildings, dwellings that date from around 1820 until 1940, and governmental, educational, religious, industrial, and transportation-related ...
Located in the district is the separately listed Fountain County Courthouse. Other notable contributing buildings include the Loeb Building (c. 1870), Old Covington City Building (1903, 1915), First National Bank (1913), Knights of Pythias Building (1894), and Covington Post Office (1956). [2]
The "Plan of Cincinnati" from the 1878 Encyclopaedia Britannica, showing the layout of downtown Covington and Newport to the south. In 1814, John Gano, Richard Gano, and Thomas Carneal purchased 150 acres (0.6 km 2) on the west side of the Licking River at its confluence with the Ohio River, referred to as "the Point," from Thomas Kennedy for $50,000.