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July 14, 1971 (538-566 Walnut St. Macon: 11: Collins-Odom-Strickland House: Collins-Odom-Strickland House: January 22, 1979 (1495 2nd St. Macon: 12: Cowles House
She collapsed while working at the H&H and was taken to the Medical Center of Central Georgia in Macon where doctors determined she suffered a brain aneurysm. She lived to be the mother of seven, a grandmother of sixteen, a great-grandmother, and a great-great-grandmother. Her funeral service was in Macon, but closed to the public. [8]
Decatur and Macon County Welfare Home for Girls: August 12, 1999 (#99000982) August 14, 2004: 736 S. Martin Luther King Jr. Dr. Decatur: Also known as Webster Hall. Demolished December 10, 2003. [5] 2: Millikin Building: July 24, 1979 (#79000853) July 24, 1980: 100 N. Water St. Decatur: Demolished in June 1980.
October 16, 1970 (1 mi. E of Andersonville on GA 49: Andersonville: administered by the National Park Service: 3: Billy Place: November 25, 1980 (Rt. 1: Marshallville: 4: DeVaughn-Lewis House
Location of Macon County in Missouri. This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Macon County, Missouri. This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Macon County, Missouri, United States. Latitude and longitude coordinates are provided for many ...
The Allman Brothers Band Museum, also known as The Big House, is a museum in Macon, Georgia, United States. It was the home to The Allman Brothers Band's original members, their families, and various friends from 1970 to 1973. The Big House was renovated by The Big House Foundation and opened in November 2009 as an interactive museum dedicated ...
In 2022 the home was donated to Historic Macon, a local historic preservation group. [7] The group plans to use $75,000 grant from the Connecticut-based 1772 Foundation to restore the house. [ 8 ] The group plans to offer the house as a short-term rental, using the rental income to fund its maintenance and other restoration projects.
The monumental earthworks of Poverty Point consist of a series of earthen ridges, earthen mounds, and a central plaza. The earthworks core of the site measures about 345 acres (140 ha), although archaeological investigations have shown that the total occupation area extended for more than three miles (5 km) along the Bayou Macon. [7]