I thought maybe "Sand Hills Historic District" was a misspelling for
Sands Hill Historic District aka
Elizabethtown Historic District, listed 1997: when search in Elkman infobox generator based on NRIS, searching for "Sand Hills Historic District" yields nothing. However when search for "Elizabethtown Historic District" one gets message "National Register property not found! Found it by another name" and then an infobox for "Sands Hill Historic District" is provided. --
Doncram (
talk)
05:13, 8 November 2019 (UTC)reply
Okay, thanks
User:Bubba73! I see the usage throughout the NRHP document is "Sand Hills", too, and I agree it should be "Sand Hills Historic District". I am moving the article. --
Doncram (
talk)
06:37, 8 November 2019 (UTC)reply
Goodall House (Macon, Georgia), 618 Orange Street. The fact that building is gone was noticed by editor
User:Bubba73, who was preparing to visit it. There is a park now where the building was located. Based on Google maps / Google street view review, looking for a building as appears in photos accompanying NRHP nomination document. The nom document includes a map which no longer matches up as streets have been realigned; the park was not there at date of map. --
doncram19:40, 14 January 2017 (UTC)reply
As of 2017, Google satellite view shows no buildings where the complex was located. Google Streetview dated May 2014, accessed April 22, 2017, shows an empty lot.
Debris from the demolition of the Old Primary School was burned in April 2011.Deborah Bennett (April 27, 2011).
"BOE burns Old Primary School debris". The Millen News. Retrieved April 22, 2017.
I'm planning to go to both of those in late May. I was in Millen about a year ago and the school is gone but the foundation is still there. I should have photographed it, but I didn't. As far as the church, the cemetery is part of the NRHP, so I'll get it when I go up there.
Bubba73You talkin' to me?22:23, 22 April 2017 (UTC)reply
This one is a weird story that I am writing up for an article on the house. The house was slated to be demolished (I think the permit was even issued) in 2007 to build a new Central High School in Macon. The Historic Macon Foundation sold the building for $1 to the city of Morrow in Clayton County, which was putting together a tourist / shopping attraction called Olde Towne Morrow. Other historic houses were moved as well, none others on the NRHP though. But the attraction collapsed in less than a year, the town of Morrow lost over $10 million on the deal, and felony charges were filed against at least one official. I intend to attempt to take photos of the house in its new location, which is much closer to where I live. Apparently they spent over $1 million restoring the house but now that the site has been abandoned it is attracting vandalism and the like. An odd and sad story. --
Krelnik (
talk)
13:39, 6 November 2018 (UTC)reply
A parcel map showing the oblong 3.80 acre lot upon which the Weeks-Kimbrough House was located is included in the NRHP document.
It appears that the house has been demolished or otherwise lost, however, because review of Talbot County tax assessor map information shows the same oblong 3.80 acre lot having no building upon it.[1] It is Parcel ID 005 12255 L, which has no buildings or other improvements upon it.[2]
Westover, at 151 Meriwether Rd. NW, Milledgeville, GA. It is listed in NRIS as being in "Milledge", which Google maps and other sources do not recognize. Google maps shows this address in Milledgeville. Many other listings in same county show as Milledgeville in NRIS. Change needed from Milledge to Milledgeville.
doncram (
talk)
03:14, 4 April 2009 (UTC)reply
Bowdre-Rees-Knox House, listed January 19, 1979, "SW of Thomson on Old Wrightsboro Rd." in McDuffie County, Georgia, is listed in NRIS as being in or near "Thomas". The town is
Thomson, Georgia. There are several other NRIS listings showing in Thomson. Mapquest shows the NRIS-coordinates for this being just north of Thomson.
doncram (
talk)
16:33, 22 April 2009 (UTC)reply
Sweetwater Inn, listed May 02, 1985, Off GA 17 on Old Milledgeville Rd., Thomson, Georgia, in McDuffie County, Georgia, is listed in NRIS as being in "Thompson" when the town is
Thomson, Georgia. There are several other NRIS listings showing in Thomson. Mapquest shows the NRIS coordinates just south of Thomson.
doncram (
talk)
16:33, 22 April 2009 (UTC)reply
Howard's Covered Bridge, listed July 1, 1975, located "3 mi. SE of Smithsonia on SR S2164 over Big Clouds Creek", is listed in NRIS as being in "Smithsonia", Georgia, in Oglethorpe County. It seems it should be "Smithonia", with no second S, in the town name and in the location description. There is a
Smithonia listed on the NRHP also in the county, not sure if that is a hamlet or a plantation. Google maps show Smithonia at the intersection of Crawford-Smithonia Rd. and Smithonia Rd. (Google also shows a Smithsonia within Macon, GA, in Bibb County which seems unrelated).
doncram (
talk)
18:43, 24 April 2009 (UTC)reply
South Metter Residential Historic District. Per
registration text and Google maps, change description to perhaps "Roughly bounded by Vertia, S. Kennedy, Hiawatha, and S. Leroy Streets". NRIS description of "S. Kennedy, S. Roundtree, S. Lewis, and S. Leroy" is a list of the north-south streets upon which most of the properties apparently are located and does not define bounds. A black-lined map of the district referenced in the registration text is not included in the PDF. --
doncram01:18, 29 June 2017 (UTC)reply
photo not of the Dawson Women's Clubhouse
Dawson Woman's Clubhouse in Dawson, Georgia, was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1982, with listing address being 311 6th Ave., as appears in NRIS2013a and in the NRHP document linked from the article. However a 2012 photo of the building at the NRHP listing address of 311 6th Avenue in Dawson is not the clubhouse building, which is a log cabin. Instead the building is now known as the Log Cabin Club House, and is located at 360 6th Avenue, NE, in Dawson. No indication of having been moved. Seems like original listing address was wrong, or the address numbering system was changed. --
Doncram (
talk)
23:01, 11 October 2018 (UTC)reply
User:Bubba73 has since photographed the building, and added to the article that "As of 2018, it had been moved to the southwest corner of 7th Avenue and Stonewall Street." Which, per Google maps, is a different location than 360 6th Avenue address still asserted to be current by
this source. So it seems like it has been moved twice? --
Doncram (
talk)
22:51, 5 November 2018 (UTC)reply
I got email back from the local historical society. They think the 311 vs. 360 on 6th Avenue was a typographical error. The building was moved to the corner of 7th and Stonewall in October 2017.
Bubba73You talkin' to me?18:04, 9 December 2018 (UTC)reply
I thought maybe "Sand Hills Historic District" was a misspelling for
Sands Hill Historic District aka
Elizabethtown Historic District, listed 1997: when search in Elkman infobox generator based on NRIS, searching for "Sand Hills Historic District" yields nothing. However when search for "Elizabethtown Historic District" one gets message "National Register property not found! Found it by another name" and then an infobox for "Sands Hill Historic District" is provided. --
Doncram (
talk)
05:13, 8 November 2019 (UTC)reply
Okay, thanks
User:Bubba73! I see the usage throughout the NRHP document is "Sand Hills", too, and I agree it should be "Sand Hills Historic District". I am moving the article. --
Doncram (
talk)
06:37, 8 November 2019 (UTC)reply
Goodall House (Macon, Georgia), 618 Orange Street. The fact that building is gone was noticed by editor
User:Bubba73, who was preparing to visit it. There is a park now where the building was located. Based on Google maps / Google street view review, looking for a building as appears in photos accompanying NRHP nomination document. The nom document includes a map which no longer matches up as streets have been realigned; the park was not there at date of map. --
doncram19:40, 14 January 2017 (UTC)reply
As of 2017, Google satellite view shows no buildings where the complex was located. Google Streetview dated May 2014, accessed April 22, 2017, shows an empty lot.
Debris from the demolition of the Old Primary School was burned in April 2011.Deborah Bennett (April 27, 2011).
"BOE burns Old Primary School debris". The Millen News. Retrieved April 22, 2017.
I'm planning to go to both of those in late May. I was in Millen about a year ago and the school is gone but the foundation is still there. I should have photographed it, but I didn't. As far as the church, the cemetery is part of the NRHP, so I'll get it when I go up there.
Bubba73You talkin' to me?22:23, 22 April 2017 (UTC)reply
This one is a weird story that I am writing up for an article on the house. The house was slated to be demolished (I think the permit was even issued) in 2007 to build a new Central High School in Macon. The Historic Macon Foundation sold the building for $1 to the city of Morrow in Clayton County, which was putting together a tourist / shopping attraction called Olde Towne Morrow. Other historic houses were moved as well, none others on the NRHP though. But the attraction collapsed in less than a year, the town of Morrow lost over $10 million on the deal, and felony charges were filed against at least one official. I intend to attempt to take photos of the house in its new location, which is much closer to where I live. Apparently they spent over $1 million restoring the house but now that the site has been abandoned it is attracting vandalism and the like. An odd and sad story. --
Krelnik (
talk)
13:39, 6 November 2018 (UTC)reply
A parcel map showing the oblong 3.80 acre lot upon which the Weeks-Kimbrough House was located is included in the NRHP document.
It appears that the house has been demolished or otherwise lost, however, because review of Talbot County tax assessor map information shows the same oblong 3.80 acre lot having no building upon it.[1] It is Parcel ID 005 12255 L, which has no buildings or other improvements upon it.[2]
Westover, at 151 Meriwether Rd. NW, Milledgeville, GA. It is listed in NRIS as being in "Milledge", which Google maps and other sources do not recognize. Google maps shows this address in Milledgeville. Many other listings in same county show as Milledgeville in NRIS. Change needed from Milledge to Milledgeville.
doncram (
talk)
03:14, 4 April 2009 (UTC)reply
Bowdre-Rees-Knox House, listed January 19, 1979, "SW of Thomson on Old Wrightsboro Rd." in McDuffie County, Georgia, is listed in NRIS as being in or near "Thomas". The town is
Thomson, Georgia. There are several other NRIS listings showing in Thomson. Mapquest shows the NRIS-coordinates for this being just north of Thomson.
doncram (
talk)
16:33, 22 April 2009 (UTC)reply
Sweetwater Inn, listed May 02, 1985, Off GA 17 on Old Milledgeville Rd., Thomson, Georgia, in McDuffie County, Georgia, is listed in NRIS as being in "Thompson" when the town is
Thomson, Georgia. There are several other NRIS listings showing in Thomson. Mapquest shows the NRIS coordinates just south of Thomson.
doncram (
talk)
16:33, 22 April 2009 (UTC)reply
Howard's Covered Bridge, listed July 1, 1975, located "3 mi. SE of Smithsonia on SR S2164 over Big Clouds Creek", is listed in NRIS as being in "Smithsonia", Georgia, in Oglethorpe County. It seems it should be "Smithonia", with no second S, in the town name and in the location description. There is a
Smithonia listed on the NRHP also in the county, not sure if that is a hamlet or a plantation. Google maps show Smithonia at the intersection of Crawford-Smithonia Rd. and Smithonia Rd. (Google also shows a Smithsonia within Macon, GA, in Bibb County which seems unrelated).
doncram (
talk)
18:43, 24 April 2009 (UTC)reply
South Metter Residential Historic District. Per
registration text and Google maps, change description to perhaps "Roughly bounded by Vertia, S. Kennedy, Hiawatha, and S. Leroy Streets". NRIS description of "S. Kennedy, S. Roundtree, S. Lewis, and S. Leroy" is a list of the north-south streets upon which most of the properties apparently are located and does not define bounds. A black-lined map of the district referenced in the registration text is not included in the PDF. --
doncram01:18, 29 June 2017 (UTC)reply
photo not of the Dawson Women's Clubhouse
Dawson Woman's Clubhouse in Dawson, Georgia, was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1982, with listing address being 311 6th Ave., as appears in NRIS2013a and in the NRHP document linked from the article. However a 2012 photo of the building at the NRHP listing address of 311 6th Avenue in Dawson is not the clubhouse building, which is a log cabin. Instead the building is now known as the Log Cabin Club House, and is located at 360 6th Avenue, NE, in Dawson. No indication of having been moved. Seems like original listing address was wrong, or the address numbering system was changed. --
Doncram (
talk)
23:01, 11 October 2018 (UTC)reply
User:Bubba73 has since photographed the building, and added to the article that "As of 2018, it had been moved to the southwest corner of 7th Avenue and Stonewall Street." Which, per Google maps, is a different location than 360 6th Avenue address still asserted to be current by
this source. So it seems like it has been moved twice? --
Doncram (
talk)
22:51, 5 November 2018 (UTC)reply
I got email back from the local historical society. They think the 311 vs. 360 on 6th Avenue was a typographical error. The building was moved to the corner of 7th and Stonewall in October 2017.
Bubba73You talkin' to me?18:04, 9 December 2018 (UTC)reply