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Millen: Originally built in 1908, burned in 1910. Rebuilt (essentially the same) by 1912. Also part of the Downtown Millen Historic District 6: Millen High School: Millen High School: November 21, 2002 : 100 Cleveland Ave. Millen: It has been demolished.
The Downtown Millen Historic District is a 47 acres (19 ha) historic district in Millen, Georgia, United States, which was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1996. It then included 44 contributing buildings, four contributing structures, and two contributing objects. [1] It also included 15 non-contributing buildings. [2]
May 14, 1934), a director of the local Millen Bank, a 40-year member of the board of education and scion of the county's Daniel family who had large mercantile and farming enterprises. [4] The effect was to place the county seat of Millen in a position where the town could become a safe place for economic growth.
Tyler Home – Ladies Aid Society Memorial, Veteran's Parkway (1936). [57] [dubious – discuss] Commerce: UDC monument (1941) in Spencer Park to women and veterans of the War Between the States. High school students sang Dixie at the dedication ceremony. [34] Cordele: Crisp County Confederate Monument, community clubhouse (1911). [58]
Millen is a city, and the county seat of Jenkins County, Georgia, United States. The population was 3,120 at the 2010 census , [ 5 ] down from 3,492 at the 2000 census. The city is intersected by U.S. Route 25 and State Route 17 .
Ruffin was driving to the church celebration when he had to stop because of the congestion of people. A car pulled alongside Ruffin, containing W. Clifford Brown, a Jenkins County sheriff's deputy, Thomas Stevens, a Millen, Georgia police marshal, whose presence outside his jurisdiction is unexplained, and Joe's friend Edmund Scott, in handcuffs.
State Route 23 (SR 23) is a 240.0-mile-long (386.2 km) state highway that travels south-to-north through portions of Charlton, Brantley, Wayne, Long, Tattnall, Candler, Emanuel, Jenkins, and Burke counties in the southeastern and east-central parts of the U.S. state of Georgia.
On September 8, 1912, Mae Crow, [d] a white girl aged 18, went missing near Cumming. [11] She was walking from home to her aunt's house nearby on Browns Bridge Road along the Forsyth-Hall county line. The next day, searchers found the missing girl at noon, in secluded woods about one mile (1.6 km) from her house. [11]