Monday, May 26, 2008

"Today in Fayetteville" Oct. 5. 1906

Big things were happening in 1906. Let us take a look at the Fayetteville News, date, Oct. 5,1906, and see what was of interest to our ancestors of that period..
 
 
                                              FAYETTEVILLE NEWS
                                                       Oct. 5. 1906
 
                                          Historic Round House Burned
 
               Property of W. and A. railroad to value of $150,000 destroyed in Atlanta
 
In less than three-quarters of an hour Monday night flames licked up $150,000 in property within 1 1/2 bocks of the Fire Department Headquarters in Atlanta.
The old Western and Atlantic round house and work shops together with tools and equipment, are a total loss, Eighteen engines valued at an average of $9,000 each were damaged at Approx. $5,000 each, and 250 men are, indefinitely, thrown out of employment.
 
                                                  Noted Conspirator Dead
 
                         Arnold, confessed to complicity in plot to abduct Lincoln.
 
Samues Bland Arnold, who confessed that he was a party to the conspiracy to abduct president Lincoln, which culminated in the assassination of the president by John Wilkes Booth, died in Baltimore Friday, he was 72 years of age. Arnold with three others, was sentenced in July, 1865, to life imprisonment at the Dry Tortuga's. All four were pardoned by president Johnson in 1869.
 
Does smoking injure the mouth, no, there is not a trace of evidence in favor of tobacco smoke being in itself injurious. It may irritate the tongue. Jagged pipe, mouth pieces, may set up a tongue sore, and this maybe the starting point for cancer, but the offender is not tobacco.
submitted by CB Glover

Wednesday, May 21, 2008

Adair HouseTo Move Down Grayson Highway

Traffic on Grayson Highway (State Route 20) will be disrupted on Tuesday, May 27 (weather permitting), while Gwinnett County moves the historic Isaac Adair House to a new location in Lawrenceville.

A professional house mover will take the house from Chandler Road through the construction zone for the Sugarloaf Parkway Extension, then north on Grayson Highway to its new location at 15 South Clayton Street. Utility crews will assist by disconnecting then reconnecting wires and traffic lights as the move progresses, which may result in temporary utility service interruptions. The house weighs 200,000 pounds and is 37 feet high, 35 feet wide and 45 feet long.

“It’s one of the oldest houses in the county and we want to preserve this important part of our history,” said Community Services Director Phil Hoskins. The antebellum home was built in 1827 near what is now the intersection of Pike Street and Hurricane Shoals Road. It was disassembled, moved and painstakingly restored in the 1980s by its previous owners, Marvin and Phyllis Hughes.

The new, more visible and accessible location is where a recently relocated public health clinic once stood. Together with the historic Female Seminary building that now houses the Gwinnett History Museum, it is within 1.5 miles of the home’s original site and within a few blocks of the Gwinnett Historic Courthouse. The previous Chandler Road site will soon be right on the centerline of Sugarloaf Parkway, which is being built with SPLOST funds.

Alternate routes that drivers may choose to use to get around that day include Sugarloaf Parkway, State Route 124/Scenic Highway, State Route 8/U.S. 29/Lawrenceville Highway, New Hope Road, Simonton Road, Davis Road, Park Place Drive, and Plantation Boulevard.

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www.fayettefrontpage.com
Fayette Front Page
News You Can Use
Fayetteville, Peachtree City, Tyrone

Sunday, May 18, 2008

“Rosie The Riveter” Returns To Warm Springs

Saturday, June 7, 2008
12:00 p.m.- 3:00 p.m.
Roosevelt’s Little White House Museum
$4-$7

The popular “Rosie the Riveter” program will return as educator and actress Carol Cain portrays Rosie with a series of short skits. Kelly’s Zeroes, a living history reenactment group will host “On the Home Front” depicting how women maintained their homes and held down many jobs during WWII. Westside Magnet School students of Lagrange, Georgia will portray Rosie in nationally acclaimed program, “Making Compromises at Home and at Work”.

770-655-5870 or www.gastateparks.org

Monday, May 12, 2008

Preserving Your Family's Precious Photos And Documents

StatePoint- We all want our precious photos, documents and news clippings to last a lifetime, if not longer.

Preserving your family's priceless memories and keepsakes needn't be expensive, especially if you know how to store them.

Linda Angle Miller, college archivist at Roanoke College in Salem, Virginia, offers these helpful preservation tips that are easy and cheap:

"Keep your documents and photos, especially color photos, out of direct sun and away from florescent lighting. The same UV rays that give us wrinkles make photos fade," she says.

Besides insects and mice, the deadliest elements to documents and photos are light, heat and humidity. Simply by storing photos and papers in "cool" areas, you are already on your way to preserving life's treasures.

Also, avoid basements, garages and cellars, since humidity can cause mold.

"Tapes and glues generally have acids in them that discolor the paper and make them deteriorate. Tapes may repair tears but will yellow the paper," says Roanoke College's Miller.

Using ink and markers can be a bad idea, since they can bleed through documents and photos, so be careful!

These simple mistakes even have been made by the federal government. One U.S. Secretary of the Treasury had his office staff glue all his newspaper clippings into a notebook with rubber cement. Over the years, the glue dried and no longer kept many of the clippings in place and caused discoloration on many others. Precious history damaged!

The acids in paper are what cause it to deteriorate and become brittle, but there are certain products available that will help you preserve your documents -- such as archival or "acid free" papers, folders and boxes.

When preserving photographs, black and white ones are more stable than color, which begin fading from the time they are printed.

Some simple suggestions that Miller stresses are: use Kodak and Fuji papers for long-term preservation; avoid ink jet prints since they can run and get wet; and use an archival mat when placing photos in a glass frame to avoid damaging adhesion.

Scanning photos onto CDs also is a good idea as long as they do not become scratched or warped. If this happens, then your photos are no longer accessible. And remember, in the future you will have to reformat when CDs become obsolete due to whatever comes next in the technology wave.

It's never too early to begin properly storing photos. Those pictures of your newborn child all too quickly become images of days gone by, so don't let them fade and degrade with the passage of time.

Think of it this way -- if a moment is worth capturing on film or in a document, it's worth saving well.

Sunday, May 11, 2008

"Today in Fayetteville" Sept. 3, 1909

Let us look back in time to see the concerns and events affecting our ancestors. Just another day in Fayette Co.
early September 1909. Note the busy intersection of Hwys 85 and 54 in photo..
 
 
FAYETTEVILLE NEWS
 
Today in Fayetteville
September 3, 1909
 
HOME AFFAIRS
 
Last Sat. night the mule being drove by Messrs. James Pritchett and Ben Renfroe being frightened near the home of Marion McEachern in the upper part of the county and both were thrown from the buggy. Mr. Pritchett received several bruises and it was necessary to take some stitches on his head. The wounds are healing and pain has almost ceased.
 
The public school at this place will open next Monday. Every pupil should enter the 1st day if possible. There is no change in the teachers and they promise their best work.
Because of the dry weather, the cotton crop of this county has suffered much loss during the past two weeks.  Late cotton will likely be one-fourth less than the expectation two weeks ago.  The late corn seems now as if it would be almost a complete failure.  The farmers never had a better time to save their fodder and many have taken advantage of the fair weather and now have their hay crop in their barns.
 
We are printing 4,000 copies of by-laws for the UBA society this week. It will be remembered that this society originated among the colored people of this place, and is now the strongest order of its kind in the state. Most of the officers are residents of this county. It has given to many colored people of the county a good and decent burial and had it not been for this society they would have been on the charity of the people.
 
WORLD TO BE A PARADISE
 
Religious society believes that in 1914 change will come.
 
Saratoga, NY-Believers in the early dawn of the millennium, members of the Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society gathered here from several stares for this annual conference. The followers of the sect believe that in 1914 "after times of great trouble" the world is to be transformed into a paradise.  They profess to find their information for this belief in the study of scriptures of the prophets.
 
Submitted by CB Glover
 

Sunday, May 4, 2008

"Today in Fayetteville" Feb. 8, 1895

Politics were a big topic  in February 1895, and women wanted to be a part of it. Go back in time with me to see the attitudes of our ancestors, and how they felt about the issue..  
 
                                THE FAYETTEVILLE NEWs
  Feb. 8, 1895
  
That crowd of women that met in Atlanta last week to talk about voting, etc. ought to be satisfied with what they have to do without wanting to be allowed to take part in politics. The men do not object to their wearing "bloomers" but they do kick at them wanting to take off our pants and step into our shoes and controlling the whole business. "Go home" and stay indoors where you are needed to look after preparing your poor "hen-pecked" husbands meals and thereby stop a divorce suit or perhaps trouble in your neighbors family. We beg your pardon ladies if none of you have husbands, but we do not wonder at it.
 
A woman out of Iowa has been elected justice of the peace by mistake. Her husband was conducting business under his wife's name which was not generally known, and at the nominating convention and election her initials were used when the intention was to elect him.
However, she was elected, and there being no obstacle in the law, she has qualified and is now filling the office.
 
Dr J.B. Hawthorne delivered a sermon in Atlanta Sunday which was carried by telephone to the homes of fifty people in the city of Athens, a distance of sixty miles. It is said that it was heard perfectly and was greatly enjoyed by the Athens people. Even the music of the choir was equally well heard. Electricity is accomplishing wonders.
                                   
                                        Local News
 
There is a force of hands now at work opening the new street east of the railroad.
Teeth extracted without any pain whatever at the corner Drug store. Its the place to go.
 
Submitted by CB Glover
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