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Russellville is a city in Franklin County in the U.S. state of Alabama. At the 2020 census, the population of the city was 10,855, [3] up from 9,830 at the 2010 ...
English: The W. W. Orr Medical Doctors' Building in downtown Atlanta, Georgia, is part of the Emory University Hospital Midtown campus. Date 21 April 2024, 13:01:12
The building's namesake, W. W. (Wayman W.) Orr, was the president of the Atlanta Retail Merchants' Association for several years in the 1910s. [1] It is currently part of the Emory University Hospital Midtown complex. The building is decorated with serpents and staffs, alluding to its function as a medical building (as which it still functions ...
Orr was a personal member of the London Stock Exchange, and a director of stockbroking firm Quilter Goodison up until 1987. He is a former member of the ifs School of Finance Board of Governors, (The London Institute of Banking & Finance is a financial education charity providing financial qualifications from GCSE level through to master's degrees) and a former chair of the ifs ProShare ...
There are two school systems and one community college in Franklin County; Russellville City Schools and Franklin County Schools. Northwest Shoals Community College has a campus in Phil Campbell. Russellville City Schools [16] include: Russellville High School; Russellville Middle School; Russellville Elementary School (grades 3 - 5)
Senators take office at midnight on the day of their election. [10]Arthur Orr (2006-present); Tommy Ed Roberts (1994-2006); Ray Campbell (1986-1994); Gary Aldridge (1982-1986) ...
M. A. Orr (1867–1949), British astronomer and Dante scholar, aka "Mary Acworth Orr Evershed" Margaret Orr, American television meteorologist; Marion Alice Orr (1918–1995), Canadian aviator; Mary Orr (1910–2006), American author; Matthew Orr (born 1962), British entrepreneur; Matthew Young Orr (1883–1953), British botanist
Russellville was incorporated in 1819 on former Chickasaw lands. The town was built about 5 miles (8.0 km) northeast of the Cedar Creek Furnace and at the intersection of the Gaines Trace and Jackson's Military Road. It was named the county seat of Franklin County in 1820, but lost the seat to the more centrally-located Frankfort in 1849.