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By 1887, the Gossypium Phospo, made by the George W. Scott Company, had become one of the most noted fertilizers in the south. [ 3 ] Scott became the first person to exploit Florida's vast phosphate deposits and in 1887 purchased 1,000 acres (4 km 2 ) of land along the Peace River in Charlotte County , backed the Arcadia Phosphate Company , and ...
So Jason Clarke is my public defender at the time and he's warning me. He's saying, "Lindsey don't take drug court. I'm telling you, you won't make it." He's told me this like three or four times. I'm adamant. I'm saying, "I'm taking drug court." Because all I know is I get to get out of jail. It's all I know. I don't know anything else about it.
George W. Scott may refer to: George W. Scott (American football) , American football and track and field coach George W. Scott (politician) (born 1937), American politician in the state of Washington
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By 1887, the Gossypium Phospo made by the George W. Scott Company had become one of the most noted fertilizers in the south. (Tallahassee Weekly Floridian, January 28, 1886). In 1889, Scott founded Agnes Scott College. Around 1884 or 1885 the Scott plantation was sold to a J. P. Castleman, who had moved to Tallahassee from the Dakota Territory.
Sitting in the noisy dayroom of Mule Creek State Prison in Ione, Calif., as he speaks over a grainy video call, Scott Peterson looks more like a laidback surfer than a man convicted of the heinous ...
Convicted murderer Scott Peterson is speaking out for the first time in over a decade. A new A&E documentary captured the statements from Peterson. "It was just like this amazing, horrible ...
Between three and four in the morning, Scott was removed from his cell by the mob who took him to a nearby oak tree, where he was hanged. Scott’s body remained there until he was discovered by the Clay County Coroner, Dr. George Pell, who transported Scott’s body to the courthouse around seven in the morning. [2]