Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Chapel Hill Cumberland Presbyterian Church: Chapel Hill Cumberland Presbyterian Church: August 30, 1985 : 302 N. Horton Pkwy. Chapel Hill: 8: Confederate Cemetery Monument: Confederate Cemetery Monument: July 11, 2001 : 2279 TN-64
Dr. Wiley Wagner Vaught Office: Dr. Wiley Wagner Vaught Office: November 20, 2009 : W.W. Vaught Ln., south of Dug Hill Rd. Mountain City: Doctors' office built c. 1905 by rural physician Wiley Wagner Vaught (1874–1974). 7
On April 5, 2009, The Washington Post reported that the National Funeral Home, a facility owned by SCI in the Falls Church area of Fairfax County, Virginia, which also acts as a centralized embalming and dressing station for embalming and body preparation for other nearby SCI-owned operations (Arlington Funeral Home, Danzansky-Goldberg Memorial ...
Henry Horton State Park is located near Chapel Hill, [10] along the Duck River on the former estate of the late Henry Hollis Horton, 36th governor of Tennessee.The park includes the Buford Ellington Golf Course, hiking trails, playground, cabins, picnic facilities, trap and skeet range, conference facilities, restaurant, and both Olympic-sized and children's swimming pools.
Nathan Bedford Forrest was born July 13, 1821 to Miriam (Beck) and William Forrest, a poor settler family living in a secluded frontier cabin near the hamlet of Chapel Hill, Tennessee (then part of Bedford County, but now in Marshall County). [11] [12] Early home of the Forrest family in Hernando, Mississippi, photograph published 1902
The Nathan Bedford Forrest Boyhood Home is a historic log house in Chapel Hill, Tennessee, United States. It was the childhood home of Confederate General and Ku Klux Klan Grand Wizard Nathan Bedford Forrest [2] from 1830 to 1833. It is owned by the Sons of Confederate Veterans.
UNC Bell Tower, 2007. Chapel Hill Historic District is a national historic district located at Chapel Hill, Orange County, North Carolina.The district encompasses 46 contributing buildings, 2 contributing structures, and 2 contributing objects on the central campus of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and surrounding residential sections of Chapel Hill.
Memorial Hall in July, 2008. The original Memorial Hall was commissioned in 1883, when Gerrard Hall was deemed too small for the University's commencement ceremonies. . Planned as a memorial to former president David Lowry Swain and alumni lost during conflicts such the Civil War, the building was financed by sale of marble tablets dedicated in the