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The Historical Marker Database (HMdb.org) is an online database that documents locations of numerous historical markers and commemorative plaques in the United States as well as other countries. The database was launched in 2006 by computer programmer J. J. Prats. [1] The HMdb was launched in 2006 with 179 markers that Prats had personally ...
Historic markers can be located by exact GPS location. A "county" marker can be found at every county courthouse in all 159 counties in Georgia. Each marker roughly tells how and when the county was formed and who the founding officials were. Blue Star Memorial Highway markers can be found at every rest stop on I-75, and other places.
Old Brick Church, which is also known as Ebenezer Associate Reformed Presbyterian (ARP) Church or First Associate Reformed Presbyterian Church is a church built in 1788 about 4 mi (6 km) north of Jenkinsville on SC 213 in Fairfield County, South Carolina. It was named to the National Register of Historic Places on August 19, 1971.
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The interior of St Mary's and St Julian's Church. The existing church has been dated to the 15th century, with the nave and chancel possibly of an earlier date. [2] The first record of a church at Maker dates to the 12th century, when one was granted to Plympton Priory. [3]
"Southerly on Old Church Road is located the first Roman Catholic edifice in New Hampshire. It was erected in 1823 under the direction of the Reverend Virgil Horace Barber, S.J. The building serves St. Mary's parish and contained the first Roman Catholic school in the State." [28] Note: this marker was erected in 1966. [29]
White and red or yellow and red — white or yellow for normal use in one direction, and red to indicate "do not enter" or "wrong way" in the other direction. White and black — white for marking lane restrictions in one direction on a roadway that has "reversible" traffic flow, and black in the other direction when the markings do not apply.
The Polegreen Church, also known as the Hanover Meeting House (and locally as the "ghost church"), is the site of what may be the first non-Anglican church in Virginia. [2] It was named after a 17th-century landowner, George Polegreen.