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Historic American Buildings Survey (HABS) No. GA-1156, "Milledgeville State Hospital, Central Building, Milledgeville, Baldwin County, GA", 1 photo, 2 data pages; A September 2009 photoessay on the abandoned Walker building at Central State Hospital. Article on the history of Central State; Renaissance Park Reimagine - Reinvent - Reinvest
3 mi. SE of Milledgeville, centered on Cedar Lm, at Central State Hospital, bet. US 441 and GA 112 33°02′20″N 83°13′12″W / 33.038889°N 83.22°W / 33.038889; -83.22 ( Central State Hospital Cemeteries
Listed are the physical capacities, not the operational capacities. Because facilities may house a greater number of offenders than their established operational capacities, and because operational capacities are much more likely to change than vice versa, physical capacities may be more useful numbers for comparison purposes.
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., with others, was arrested at an Atlanta sit-in on October 19, 1960. While the others were released, King was held regarding a previous traffic case and was transferred to the Georgia State Prison in Reidsville, Georgia on October 22, where he was a prisoner until October 29; pressure from soon-to-be president John F. Kennedy, and the entire Kennedy family, saw King ...
The Milledgeville Historic District, in Milledgeville in Baldwin County, Georgia, is a historic district which was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1972. [ 1 ] The district is approximately the size of the 3,240 acres (13.1 km 2 ) area laid out in the 1803 plan for the city.
A 10-year-old boy was rescued by Texas State Troopers after he crossed the US border on Thanksgiving Day only to be abandoned by smugglers in a desolate stretch of territory. ... only a cell phone ...
The last purpose for the building was for Three D Home Repair, Plumbing, Backhoe, and Trenching service with a name and phone number to call. Iron Lodge No. 107. I.O.O.F. 1873 2013 NRHP-listed 133 N. Main St. Ironton, Missouri
Located in what was at the time the capital city of Georgia, [1] the building was built in 1838 for Colonel Samuel Rockwell of the Georgia Militia. [2] Rockwell, a slaveholder, had previously lived in Maine before moving to Georgia in 1834, and before moving to Milledgeville to practice law, he served as an attorney in Savannah. [2]