3,262 research outputs found

    Rutledge, D, NX14295

    No full text
    This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/414853Surname: RUTLEDGE. Given Name(s) or Initials: D. Military Service Number or Last Known Location: NX14295. Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 1634.234905 Item: [2016.0049.47114] "Rutledge, D, NX14295

    Rutledge

    No full text
    J. D. Rutledge - parenthttps://stars.library.ucf.edu/cfm-ch-memoranda-1918/1152/thumbnail.jp

    Town Marker, Rutledge, GA

    No full text
    Town Marker, Rutledge, GA. This marker is located opposite City Hall in Rutledge, Morgan County, Georgia. The marker reads as : On the occasion of its Bicentennial, Morgan County placed this marker here to commemorate the community of RUTLEDGE In the 1840s, the heirs of Hezekiah Rutledge deeded right-of-way to the Georgia Railroad. The farm came to be referred to as Rutledge Place by the railroad workers, which probably gave rise to referring to the town as Rutledge. In the early years of the railroad, Rutledge served as the terminus of the line, and a turn table (or round house) was located here to turn engines back toward Augusta. As with many Georgia towns, the railroad brought development to the area, and a thriving civic and commercial center emerged. The city of Rutledge was formally incorporated on December 13, 1871 by act of the Georgia legislature. Early religious institutions included a Baptist Church founded in 1845 and a Methodist Church in 1902. By 1915, a six-room brick school building had been constructed in Rutledge. After the Great Depression in the early 20th century, Rutledge became the site of two Civilian Conservation Corps camps created as part of the public works program initiated by President Franklin D. Roosevelt. Their task was to create Hard Labor Creek Park, north of the city, which was originally a federal recreation demonstration area. The recreational opportunities offered by Hard Labor Creek Park brought tourists to the Rutledge area, and it is still enjoyed by visitors in the 21st century as part of the Georgia State Parks system. BECAUSE OF THE INDIVIDUALS WHO TAKE PRIDE IN THIS COMMUNITY, RUTLEDGE IS RECOGNIZED AS A SIGNIFICANT PART OF OUR COUNTY HISTORYhttps://digitalcommons.unf.edu/historical_architecture_main/4343/thumbnail.jp

    Edward Rutledge Sternwheeler

    No full text
    A photograph of ""Edward Rutledge,"" an old sternwheeler on lake Coeur d' Alene

    Religious nationalism

    No full text
    John Stone (Editor), Rutledge M. Dennis (Editor), Polly Rizova (Editor), Anthony D. Smith (Editor), Xiaoshuo Hou (Editor

    Lyman Rutledge of Kittery Point is the author of several books on the Isles of S

    No full text
    Lyman Rutledge of Kittery Point is the author of several books on the Isles of Shoals. He started visiting there to conduct chapel services in 1911, and his accumulation of Shoals material is now housed at the Portsmouth, N.H., Public Library

    Dr. and Mrs. Guy Rutledge with Wedding Cake, 1949 Wedding of Dr. Guy Rutledge and Ms. Beth Cole

    No full text
    Beth Cole, daughter of Jacksonville State University President Houston Cole and Leone Pruett Cole, married Dr. Guy Leslie Rutledge, Jr. on March 19, 1949 at St. Paul Methodist Church. Following the ceremony a wedding reception was held in Boaz at the home of Beth Cole\u27s grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph D. Pruett. Shown Dr. and Mrs. Guy Rutledge stand behind the wedding cake during the reception. Beth Cole Wedding Photographs | Finding Aidhttps://digitalcommons.jsu.edu/lib-ac-histimg/48785/thumbnail.jp

    Rutledge, Byers and D\u27Aniello publish article in the Daily Report

    No full text
    Dean Peter B. Bo Rutledge and second-year students Rachel L. Byers and Jacqueline G. D\u27Aniello published A Quintet of Arbitration Cases Hit the Supreme Court\u27s Docket in the Daily Report on 3/18/22. Read the articl

    Claud Cross, Edward D. Rutledge and Kennedy Clapp at Knights Templar of Texas convention

    No full text
    Delegates arrived from all over Texas for the grand conclave of the Grand Commandery, Knights Templar of Texas. Three of the leaders looking over a conclave program are, left to right, Claud Cross, Fort Worth, Texas, general chairman of arrangements; Edward D. Rutledge, Fort Worth, Texas, deputy grand commander, who is slated for the highest office of the order in Texas; and Kennedy Clapp, Lubbock, Texas, grand senior warden. All three men are sitting down and are wearing suits. Mr. Rutledge is holding a cigar in one hand. Mr. Cross and Mr. Clapp are wearing eyeglasses.https://mavmatrix.uta.edu/specialcollections_startelegram1940s/7865/thumbnail.jp

    Rutledge featured on Law360

    No full text
    Dean Peter B. Bo Rutledge was featured on Law360 regarding his thoughts on the naming of Harold D. Melton — who previously served as the chief justice of the Georgia Supreme Court — as the holder of the Carl E. Sanders Chair in Political Leadership at the School of Law. The article titled Former Ga. Chief Justice To Teach At His Alma Mater was written by Emily Sides and published 10/21/21. Read the full articl
    corecore