Augusta Budget Inn - Augusta (Georgia) - United States
Augusta Budget Inn hotel city: Augusta (Georgia) - Country: United States
Address: 441 Broad Street; zip code: GA 30901
Augusta Museum of History and Imperial Theatre are within an 8-minute walk of this motel, which features an outdoor pool. The spacious rooms at Augusta Budget Inn offer cable TV with HBO.
-- Doté d'une piscine extérieure, l'Augusta Budget Inn se situe à moins de 8 minutes de marche du musée d'histoire et du théâtre Imperial d'Augusta. Ce motel propose des hébergements spacieux pourvus d'une télévision par câble recevant la chaîne HBO.
-- Este motel cuenta con piscina al aire libre y se encuentra a menos de 8 minutos a pie del Museo de Historia de Augusta y del teatro Imperial. Las habitaciones del Augusta Budget Inn son amplias y tienen TV por cable con canales HBO.
-- O Museu de História e o Teatro Imperial de Augusta estão a cerca de 8 minutos a pé deste alojamento, que dispõe de uma piscina exterior. Os quartos espaçosos do Augusta Budget Inn apresentam televisão por cabo com canais HBO.
-- Augusta Budget Innはオーガスタ歴史博物館、帝国劇場から徒歩8分以内のモーテルで、ケーブルテレビ(HBOチャンネル付)が備わる広々とした客室、屋外プールを提供しています。 伝統的な内装の客室には電子レンジ、冷蔵庫、コーヒーメーカー、無料Wi-Fi、シーティングエリアが備わります。 Budget Inn Augustaは24時間対応のフロントデスク(ファックスサービスあり)、スナックとドリンクの自動販売機を提供しています。 ...
-- 奥古斯塔历史博物馆和皇家剧院距离这家汽车旅馆有8分钟的步行路程。该旅馆设有一个室外游泳池。Augusta Budget Inn旅馆宽敞的客房提供带HBO频道的有线电视。 客房拥有传统风格的装潢,配备了微波炉、冰箱和咖啡机,也提供免费无线网络连接和一个休息区。 Budget Inn Augusta酒店的24小时前台提供传真服务。酒店还设有出售小吃和饮料的自动售货机。 Riverwalk Augusta河滨和James Brown...
-- Мотель Augusta Budget Inn расположен в 8 минутах ходьбы от Музея истории Огасты и Императорского театра. К услугам гостей открытый бассейн и просторные номера с кабельным телевидением с каналами сети HBO.
-- يقع كل من متحف أوغوستا للتاريخ ومسرح Imperial على بعد 8 دقائق سيرا على الأقدام من هذا الموتيل، الذي يضم مسبح في الهواء الطلق. توفر الغرف الفسيحة في نزل Augusta Budget تلفزيون الكابل مع HBO.
-- Augusta Museum of History og Imperial Theatre ligger mindre enn 8 minutters gange fra dette motellet, som har utebasseng. De romslige rommene på Augusta Budget Inn har kabel-TV med HBO-kanaler.
--
12 Bands of Christmas Grande Finale
12 Bands of Christmas concert at Imperial Theatre, Augusta, Ga., Dec 18, 2010
Augusta GA! A little History; River Walk and Brewery!
Augusta GA! A little History; River Walk and Brewery
Pizza Joint Augusta GA
Savannah River Brewing Company
Map Retrieved from Library of Congress web site,
• Creator: U.S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service, Historic American Engineering Record. Survey number HAER {{{1}}}
• Source: U.S. Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division, Built in America Collection.
• Copyright: The original measured drawings and most of the photographs and data pages in HABS/HAER/HALS were created for the U.S. Government and are considered to be in the public domain.
Description English: Sibley Mill ca. 1880 and Confederate Powder Works Chimney ca. 1862, located on the Augusta Canal at 1717 Goodrich St, Augusta, Georgia.
Date circa 1903 Black and white image
Detroit Publishing Co. [Public domain]
Annalisa.frazier or Judson McCranie - Own work: Image boyhood home of Woodrow Wilson
Image: Ezekiel Harris House, 1934 before it was purchased and restored. Photo by Branan Sanders for the Historic American Building Survey (HABS), courtesy of the Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division.
The old residence of George Walton, Augusta Ga, formerly known as Meadow Garden
• Type of Resource: From The New York Public Library, and provide a link back to the item on our Digital Collections site.
Frederick, Prince of Wales attr. to Joseph Highmore.jpg
• Created: circa 1740 date
Kneller - George II when Prince of Wales.png
• Created: 1716date
AugustaOfSaxe-GothaFamilyVanLoo.jpg
• Created: 1739date
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Kirby's Augusta - Pearl Harbor and Augusta, Georgia
Seventy three years ago this week Augusta -- like many communities around America -- reacted quickly to the 1941 news of the attack on Pearl Harbor.
Our mayor at the time -- a building supply owner named James Cement Jim Wooddall -- quickly convened a meeting of the city's public safety leaders, and the result? They made Woodall the civil defense czar.
As The Chronicle put it Dec. 9, 1941, Augusta will not be caught napping should the Axis powers decide to strike in this vicinity.
Mayor Wooddall, Safety Commissioner John B. Kennedy, Fire Chief G. Walton Scott and City Engineer E.E. Pund discussed at length possible means of guarding strategic points of the city's defenses.
We are going to take every precaution against possible sabotage at the utility plants, industrial centers and other important centers such as telegraph, railroad and airport facilities, the mayor said. We may never have any trouble here, but it won't be a bad idea to be ready just in case an emergency presents itself.
With that everyone got ready for a possible sneak attack on the Garden City.
Guards were posted at the bridges over the Savannah River and at the lock and dam.
A special contingent was sent to the water pumping station on Highland Avenue and curiosity seekers were warned to avoid the area.
But many didn't want to check out the sights.
They wanted a piece of THE ENEMY.
An Associated Press dispatch out of Atlanta said recruiting offices in Georgia were jammed by fighting mad Americans.
And here's where Augusta might have been different - there was no local rush to the Army recruiting office.
Such was not the case, however, for the Navy.
The Navy recruiting office was the scene of another busy day yesterday when more than 50 youngsters crowded the small office, all seeking to enter the naval service,The Chronicle reported Dec. 9.
The days passed and the nation remained on edge.
In New York, The Chronicle reported, the nation's largest city was briefly paralyzed when a nervous defender set off an air-raid siren alert following a rumor that there was a sneak air attack sweeping down from Massachusetts. (There wasn't.)
On Dec. 11, 1941, Mayor Wooddall considered the advantages of a citywide blackout.
Blackouts are one of the most important defense measures in present warfare the mayor said, although it is unclear where he came up with this information.
Some sought reliance on a higher authority
The Rev. R. Paul Caudill, of First Baptist Church, opened up the sanctuary at Greene and Eighth for prayers.
A new feature appeared inside The Chronicle called On Augusta's Defense Front with news that folks back home could use. An example was instructions for behavior during air raids: Turn out the lights.
We also find out why Augusta, which had always been such a big Army town, was letting the best of its inspired young recruits join the Navy.
There was no Army recruiting office here in December 1941.
A notice in the back of the Dec. 12 edition informs readers that the Army would reopen its recruiting office in the third floor of the Post Office Building -- which we now know as the Federal Courthouse.
If we need any better example of America's military preparedness in December of 1941 or its complete surprise at the Japanese attack, it could be this -- that the U.S. Army had closed its Augusta recruiting office a month before Pearl Harbor pushed us into World War II.
In Memorium - Augusta's Haunted Pillar
A rememberance of Augusta, GA's Haunted Pillar that unfortunately met with some asshat's car...
Kirby's Augusta - Augusta's Patriotic Mystery - William Few
In Bill's latest installment of Kirby's Augusta, we learn about a man who many only know by a well-traveled roadway in Augusta - William Few Parkway. But there is much more than this. He was a signer of the constitution, governor, senator and leader.
Kirby's Augusta - Confederate Memorial - Confederate Monument - St. James Methodist Church
The Confederate Monument in Augusta Georgia was the first monument erected in the United States honoring the Confederate soldiers who lost their lives in the Civil War. Conceived in 1865 and dedicated in 1873 to mark the loss of 24 men of the St. James Methodist Church Sabbath School.
Noteworthy was that five years after the dedication of this monument to the fallen soldiers of the Civil War a church Sexton named Richard Hall passed away. What was noteworthy was the fact Richard Hall was a black man who was revered by the church during a time of great division was this seemingly small contradiction.
It stands as a testament that times change and history remembers and love endures.
THESE MEN DIED
IN DEFENSE OF
THE PRINCIPLES
OF THE
DECLARATION OF
INDEPENDENCE
Find more news about Augusta GA on the Augusta Chronicle -
A Tour of The Partridge Inn
a tour of the partridge inn in stowe vermont please come in if you live close make reservations at 253 8000 we are open at 4:00 to 9:30
Kirby's Augusta - Tubman Girls School
Until the 1870s, if you were a high school age girl in Augusta, you had limited educational options. Female education was carried on by private teachers and in few private seminaries of learning.
But Emily Tubman changed that.
Special Thanks to:
Georgia Regents University Reese Library Special Collections
To view Tubman yearbooks in digital format go to:
Or call: 706-667-4904
Watch More!
Fire the Teachers! -
The Disappearance of James Hamilton Lewis -
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South Augusta 1940's
I created this video with the YouTube Slideshow Creator (
Georgia 2016
Tybee Island Girls Trip
Kirby's Augusta - Remaking Downtown Again
In this episode of Kirby's Augusta, Bill Kirby talks about which plans to improve downtown were made, and which fell through.
Watch more!
The Last Mayor of the City -
Augusta's Birthday in 1935 -
Like the Augusta Chronicle's Facebook Page!
Kirby's Augusta - Anne Bootsie Calhoun: A Grand Augusta Lady
You have to wonder about Bootsie Calhoun's timing.
This grand Augusta lady, who died last week just short of her 91st birthday, was special.
But in the summer of 1974, the well-liked mother of three and wife of Augusta City Councilman Billy Calhoun, announced she was going run for the Georgia Legislature.
Bootsie became the first Augusta woman to be elected to state office, and the first Augusta woman to be elected to the Georgia Legislature.
Four decades later, few of us today question her timing.
Colonial Times in Living History Park North Augusta, SC
Colonial Times in Living History Park North Augusta, SC
I got to visit on Sunday after church and it was so cool! It was as if I was there back in the day when they used Muzzle Loaders and there was no cell phones! Lord....please can somebody invent a time machine!!
Madison Morse - Augusta Idol Tryouts - 8/15/11
August 5, 2011, Kenny from Augusta's Choice hungout for part of the morning in front of the Imperial Theater where Fox 54 (wfxg) held registration for the Augusta Idol competition which ran at 7 pm that night. Madison Morse sings Before He Cheats by Carrie Underwood. How'd she do?
Kirby's Augusta - River Reasons
Ever wonder why Augusta is here?
The river is the reason.
Kirby's Augusta - Handing Over Texas
History books tell us the first shots of the American Civil War were those fired at Charleston's Fort Sumter.
But did you know it almost happened a few months earlier at the Alamo in Texas?
In fact every February the city of San Antonio holds a ceremony to remember that the American Civil War could have started there, but didn't ... because of an Augusta native -- Gen. David Twiggs
Kirby's Augusta - Georgia's Presidential Assassination Conspirator
We're here in Augusta's Summerville Cemetery surrounded by the impressive monuments to some of our town's most impressive former citizens.
But one of the most important men buried here has one of the most modest grave markers.
I'm talking about George Crawford, who was not only governor of the state of Georgia (the only one born in Columbia County) a congressman and U.S. secretary of war, but also, some suggest, the man who killed the 12th president of the United States.
And this is the story of that.
On a summer day 163 years ago the president of the United States died.
Some said the heat got to Zachary Taylor, who had spent July 4th 1850 enduring a sweltering ceremony dedicating the Washington Monument.
Some said he got a fatal stomach disorder by trying to later cool off with a concoction of buttermilk and cherries (or cabbage or cucumbers.).
And some said he was assassinated, poisoned in a conspiracy of powerful Southern politicians furious at his obstruction to the expansion of slavery.
Some have even suggested a suspect - George Crawford, his secretary of war.
Did this really happen? Well a man named Michael Parenti wrote a book called History as Mystery, which made a case that Zachary Taylor was poisoned by a Southern conspiracy because he was making noises against the expansion of slavery.
Millard Fillmore, the vice president who moved into the White House with Taylor's death, was a New Yorker born near Canada. And while he might have favored the North, he was not known for taking strong political stands.
Mounting curiosity about President Taylor's mysterious death prompted a well-publicized exhumation f from a Kentucky grave more than 20 years ago.
But when they dug up Old Rough and Ready they didn't find any signs of arsenic poisoning and modern medical experts concluded, that he got an infection from the unsanitary conditions of his times, or suffered a stomach ailment or received medical treatment that botched any hope for recovery.
But why would anyone suspect Crawford's involvement in Taylor's demise?
Probably because he was the only Deep South member of Taylor's cabinet with the access that would bring.
Crawford had also killed someone before.
In 1828 he got the better of Thomas Burnside in a duel that sprang out of comments made about Crawford's father in an anonymous letter published in The Augusta Chronicle.
That incident doesn't seem to have hurt his reputation. Crawford later served in the Legislature and U.S. Congress. He was also Georgia's governor - the only one ever born in Columbia County - in the 1840s.
Crawford died in 1872. His funeral was held at St. Paul's Church in downtown Augusta and he was buried here in Summerville Cemetery.
It's a pretty modest resting place for a man of so many accomplishments and so many suspicions.
United Nations smash Japanese in the South Pacific - 1942
The Solomon Islands campaign was a major campaign of the Pacific War of World War II. The campaign began with Japanese landings and occupation of several areas in the British Solomon Islands and Bougainville, in the Territory of New Guinea, during the first six months of 1942. The Japanese occupied these locations and began the construction of several naval and air bases with the goals of protecting the flank of the Japanese offensive in New Guinea, establishing a security barrier for the major Japanese base at Rabaul on New Britain, and providing bases for interdicting supply lines between the Allied powers of the United States and Australia and New Zealand.
The Allies, in order to defend their communication and supply lines in the South Pacific, supported a counteroffensive in New Guinea, isolated the Japanese base at Rabaul, and counterattacked the Japanese in the Solomons with landings on Guadalcanal (see Guadalcanal Campaign) and small neighboring islands on 7 August 1942. These landings initiated a series of combined-arms battles between the two adversaries, beginning with the Guadalcanal landing and continuing with several battles in the central and northern Solomons, on and around New Georgia Island, and Bougainville Island.
In a campaign of attrition fought on land, on sea, and in the air, the Allies wore the Japanese down, inflicting irreplaceable losses on Japanese military assets. The Allies retook some of the Solomon Islands (although resistance continued until the end of the war), and they also isolated and neutralized some Japanese positions, which were then bypassed. The Solomon Islands campaign then converged with the New Guinea campaign.
Source:
This video is part from The United Newsreel (1942 - 1946).
TPEP Symposium - Understanding the Gaps & Needs (Session A)
“Session A: Understanding the Gap and Needs” from Day 1 of the Symposium on Accessibility & Development of Tissue Products for Emergency Preparedness held on May 11-12, 2015 at the National Archives, Washington, DC.
00:00:00 Discussion Leader Introduction • Chad Hrdina, MS. EMT, GC-WMD
00:02:54 “Operational Aspects of Using Products in a Constrained Environment” • MAJ Ian Driscoll, MD, MC
00:25:27 “Boston Marathon Bombing: Lessons in Teamwork” • Matthew Carty, MD & Edward Caterson, MD
01:01:25 “Emergency Case Study: 2008 GA Sugar Refinery Explosion” • Robert F. Mullins, MD
01:27:35 “Improvised Nuclear Device Detonation” • C. Norman Coleman, MD & Kenneth Cliffer, PhD
01:52:45 “Emergency Preparedness: Role of the American Burn Association” • James Jeng, MD, FACS
02:11:38 Panel A: Questions and Discussion
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