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The Ephraim Ponder House in Thomasville, Georgia, also known as the Sholar House, was built c.1854-56 It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1970. [ 1 ] It was built by Ephraim Ponder , and served part of old Young's Female College in Thomasville in 1869 and latterly as home of the president of the old College. [ 2 ]
"The Potter House" by George N. Barnard published as plate 38 in his 1866 photograph album Views of Sherman's Campaign (MET_1970.525). The Ponder brothers were four siblings, William G. Ponder, Ephraim G. Ponder, James Ponder, and John G. Ponder, who worked as interstate slave traders in the United States prior to the American Civil War, trafficking people between Maryland, Virginia, Georgia ...
Ephraim G. Ponder's former house in Atlanta, Georgia, the so-called "Potter House," which became a target for Union artillery during the American Civil War Topics referred to by the same term This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Ponder House .
Ephraim Ponder House: Ephraim Ponder House. August 12, 1970 : 324 N. Dawson St. Thomasville: 35: Stevens Street Historic District: Stevens Street Historic District ...
John Patten House; Pectol-Works House; Pena Palace; Joshua Pettegrove House; Phoenix Hall-Johnson-Harper House; Dr. William H. Pitts House; Pleasant Grove (Palmyra, Virginia) Point Betsie Light; Ephraim Ponder House; Dr. Joseph M. and Sarah Pound Farmstead; Pratt's Castle (Richmond, Virginia) Pressey House; George N. Proctor House; Prospect ...
Cabaniss-Hanberry House; Cabiness-Hunt House; Cagle House; J. W. Callahan House; Callanwolde Fine Arts Center; Camak House; Campbell-Jordan House; Cannonball House (Macon, Georgia) Carter-Newton House; Leonard Carter House; Cecil and Hermione Alexander House; The Cedars (Washington, Georgia) Chief Vann House Historic Site; James W. Coleman ...
Mary A. Livermore was a private tutor at a Virginia plantation around 1840; she commissioned this illustration for her memoir. The accompanying text reads: "Do all slave-traders look alike?"
James Ponder (1819–1897), an American merchant and politician; Patricia Maxwell née Ponder (born 1942), American romance writer; Samantha Ponder (born 1987), American sportscaster and wife of Christian Ponder; William Thomas Ponder (1893-1947), American World War I flying ace; William David Ponder (1855–1933), South Australian politician