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NE of downtown Valdosta roughly bounded by North Ashley and E. Ann Sts., East Hill Ave., and Georgia and Florida RR 30°50′19″N 83°16′25″W / 30.838611°N 83.273611°W / 30.838611; -83.273611 ( East End Historic
NCMI encourages local church elders to follow a specific process for selecting new elders. The elders of the local church identify one or more men (women are not eligible [17]) who meet the various scriptural requirements (for example: 1 Timothy 3–5, Titus 1 and 1 Peter 5) and according to Pole, [18] "have a proven track record of attending ...
It is the only Classical Revival-style church in Valdosta and was designed by Atlanta architects James W. Butt (d. 1914) and Marshall F. Morris (d. 1921). The church's front facade, on Patterson Street, has a portico with six Corinthian columns, with dentils and modillions in its cornice and pediment, and decorative terra cotta in the tympanum.
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Church_of_the_New_Covenant_in_Christ&oldid=1013382553"
The Southside Historic District in Valdosta, Georgia is a 202-acre (82 ha) historic district that was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2007. [2] The neighborhood developed as an African-American area. The district included 421 contributing buildings, two other contributing structures, and 283 non-contributing buildings. [2]
Valdosta is a city in and the county seat of Lowndes County in the U.S. state of Georgia.As the principal city of the Valdosta metropolitan statistical area, which in 2023 had a metropolitan population of 151,118, according to the US Census Bureau its metropolitan area includes Brooks County to the west.
The first courthouse at Valdosta was built in 1860 and was a wooden structure that was sold for the funding of a new courthouse by 1869. The wooden building used for the courts of ordinary burned down in 1869. Lowndes County was without an official courthouse for a number of years. A two-story brick building was completed in 1874.
In the peak lynching era, from 1880 to 1930, this county had 20 lynchings, the third-highest number of any county in Georgia, which was the state with the highest number of lynchings in the country. All of the victims in Georgia were black, including at least 13 killed in the May 1918 lynching rampage in this county, starting with the murders ...