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Parkhill Cemetery, Columbus; Patrick R. Cleburne Confederate Cemetery – large memorial cemetery with hundreds of unmarked confederate graves from the Civil War; Resaca Confederate Cemetery, Resaca, Georgia; South Bend Cemetery; South-View Cemetery, Atlanta; Southview Cemetery, Augusta, Georgia; Summerville Cemetery, Augusta, Georgia
St. Paul's Episcopal Church— Founded in 1750, it is the oldest church in Augusta. Was burned to the ground in 1916 with many other buildings. It was rebuilt in 1919. United States Post Office and Courthouse; Downtown Augusta contains a large amount of historical homes, many being built in the 19th century. Some of these homes include: Brahe House
Notable buildings include the Baptist Church (c. 1832), Damascus Academy, Vail and Appley Store (c. 1860), Methodist Church (1857), Philip O'Reilly House (c. 1840), and Luther Appley House (c. 1850). The sites are the Hillside Cemetery and Overlook Cemetery. [2] It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1992 by Dr. Brent D ...
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Augusta: Confederate Monument at St. James United Methodist Church. [103] Rome: Confederate monuments at Myrtle Hill Cemetery include: Nathan Bedford Forrest Monument (1909), UDC Monument [104] Women of the Confederacy Monument, "erected by the Floyd County Camp of Sons of Confederate Veterans, March 9, 1910." Dedicated by Theodore Roosevelt. [104]
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According to the earliest church records, the Baptists Praying Society was established when . In the year 1817, Jesse D. Green, a layman, was active in gathering together the few scattered Baptists in Augusta, and, after holding one or more preliminary meetings, the brethren and sisters, to the number of eighteen, had drawn up and adopted a covenant, to which they affixed their names.