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Memorial contributions may be made to the St. Teresa Building Fund, 4921 Columbia Road, Grovetown, GA 30813. This article originally appeared on Augusta Chronicle: Augusta coach who followed faith ...
May was elected to three 2-year terms as Coroner of Richmond County starting in 1898 [9] until his death in 1903. Robert H. May died on February 7, 1903 [10] in Augusta, Georgia at the age of 80 and was buried in Magnolia Cemetery in Augusta. [11] The park across from Magnolia Cemetery he now rest, bears his name. [12]
A piece of local Black history was lost after the 101-year-old home of the Mays family in downtown Augusta was demolished. 'History is dying:' Augusta loses Mays family residence built in 1902 ...
The Augusta Chronicle's headquarters is in the News Building on Broad Street. The paper was founded as the weekly Augusta Gazette in 1785. In 1786, the paper was renamed The Georgia State Gazette. From 1789 to 1804, the paper was known as The Augusta Chronicle and Gazette of the State.
Augusta Chronicle [1] Augusta: 1785 [3] Daily Morris Communications Company [2] Began as Augusta Gazette in 1785 The Augusta Press: Augusta: 2021 Daily Barnesville Herald-Gazette: Barnesville 1867 Weekly Berrien Press: Nashville Weekly Blackshear Times: Blackshear: Weekly Brunswick News: Brunswick: Daily Bryan County News: Fitzgerald Weekly ...
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Map of Georgia with Richmond County highlighted. This is a list of properties and districts in Richmond County, Georgia that are listed on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP). Augusta-Richmond was formed by merger of the independent city of Augusta, Georgia and Richmond County, Georgia.
Robert H. May: 1861 1866 May served five 1-year terms during the period of the Civil War. In 1865, he was ordered by Georgia Governor Joseph E. Brown to burn the large amounts of cotton stored in Augusta warehouses "on the approach of the Yankees," so it would not fall into enemy's hands. As it turned out, the Union Army never came to Augusta. [6]