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The Thomas Gamble Building on Savannah's East Bay Street, named for the mayor upon his death. Thomas Gamble who was a Newspaperman, six-term Mayor of Savannah, Mayor of Savannah Beach, Historical Researcher and Writer, the father of Armstrong Junior College, a Publisher, a Husband, a Father, a decorated Chevalier Cross of the Order of Polonia Restituta, a recipient of a bronze medallion from ...
Thomas Gamble (mayor) (1868–1945), historian and mayor of Savannah, Georgia; Thomas Gamble (cricketer) (1800–?), English cricketer; Thomas Evan Gamble (1883–1931), English-born farmer and political figure in Saskatchewan; Tom Gamble (athlete) (born 1991), Australian sprinter; Tom Gamble (racing driver) (born 2001), British racing driver
The Thomas Gamble Building, formerly known as the Eugene Kelly Stores, Kelly's Block and Kelly's Building, [1] is a historic building in Savannah, Georgia, United States. Located in Savannah's Historic District, between Upper Stoddard Range to the east, Savannah City Hall to the south and the Hyatt Regency Savannah to the west, the addresses of ...
Hill Hall (Savannah State College) (NRHP) W. B. Hodgson Hall (NRHP) St. Philip African Methodist Episcopal Church (NRHP) Historic districts The Gingerbread House, at 1921 Bull Street, is in Savannah's Victorian Historic District. Juliette Gordon Low Historic District (NRHP and National Historic Landmark District) Carver Village Historic ...
After his knee healed, Paschal got a tryout with the New York Giants on the recommendation of the sportswriter Grantland Rice and eventually signed with New York in 1943 for $1,500. [1] He became the first player to win consecutive rushing championships in the NFL, gaining 572 yards on 147 carries in his rookie year and 737 yards on 196 rushes ...
James Arthur Williams was born in 1930 in Gordon, Georgia, to Arthur Costlar, a barber, and Blanche Brooks Williams. [1] He studied piano at Middle Georgia College and interior design at Ringling College in Sarasota, Florida. [2] He dropped out of Ringling after the second of three years and enrolled at Mercer University in Macon, Georgia. [3]
Roger Lawson Gamble (1787 – December 20, 1847) was a United States representative and lawyer from Georgia. Born near Louisville, in 1787, Gamble studied law, was admitted to the state bar in 1815 and began practicing law in Louisville. He was an officer in the War of 1812. Gamble served in the Georgia House of Representatives in 1814 and 1815.
Congregation Mickve Israel (transliterated from Hebrew as "Congregation for the Hope of Israel") is a Reform Jewish congregation and synagogue located at 20 East Gordon Street, [a] Monterey Square, in Savannah, Georgia, in the United States.