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The Thomas Gamble Building on Savannah's East Bay Street, named for the mayor upon his death. Thomas Gamble who was a Newspaperman, six-term Mayor of Savannah, Mayor of Savannah Beach, Historical Researcher and Writer, the father of Armstrong Junior College, a Publisher, a Husband, a Father, a decorated Chevalier Cross of the Order of Polonia Restituta, a recipient of a bronze medallion from ...
After being raised in Savannah, Georgia, Lawton moved with his family to Atlanta. He graduated from Woodberry Forest School in Orange, Virginia. [7] He began at the University of Georgia School of Law (UGA) in 1961. He served in the U.S. Air Force between 1962 and 1966, studying at Tulane University and graduating with a science degree.
After his knee healed, Paschal got a tryout with the New York Giants on the recommendation of the sportswriter Grantland Rice and eventually signed with New York in 1943 for $1,500. [1] He became the first player to win consecutive rushing championships in the NFL, gaining 572 yards on 147 carries in his rookie year and 737 yards on 196 rushes ...
Hundreds of mourners from throughout the U.S. lined streets, placed flowers and offered their thoughts on the life and legacy of President Jimmy Carter on Saturday. Funeral services for Carter ...
Rivers was born in Savannah, Georgia, in 1939, [2] to Joe Murray Rivers Sr. and Sarah Frazier. [3] Growing up in Savannah's "Old Fort" neighborhood, [1] near Emmet Park, he attended Savannah's Beach High School, [3] and graduated from the U.S. Air Force Institute (University of Maryland), City College of New York and Savannah State University.
James Arthur Williams was born in 1930 in Gordon, Georgia, to Arthur Costlar, a barber, and Blanche Brooks Williams. [1] He studied piano at Middle Georgia College and interior design at Ringling College in Sarasota, Florida. [2] He dropped out of Ringling after the second of three years and enrolled at Mercer University in Macon, Georgia. [3]
“I’ll get her home safe,” Benson allegedly said, Wolfe’s mother, Tracy Coleman, claimed to the paper. “I’ll take care of her, I promise.” ...
The reported numbers for the Savannah Morning News ' circulation as of the six months ended September 30, 2009, were 39,656 daily and 52,493 on Sundays. [4] In June 2005, the daily circulation was reported at 53,825, [5] a 26.3% drop.