2012 Ford Escape Augusta Aiken, SC #NTC13196 - SOLD
SOLD - Call or visit for a test drive of this vehicle today!
Phone: 866-930-8761
Year: 2012
Make: Ford
Model: Escape
Trim: Limited
Engine: 2.5L I4 Duratec Engine
Transmission: Automatic
Color: Ingot Silver Metallic
Mileage: 43949
Stock #: NTC13196
VIN: 1FMCU0E75CKC13196
Priced below Market!* *CarFax One Owner!* This 2012 Ford Escape Limited Includes *Bluetooth* *Satellite Radio* *Leather Seating* *Heated Seats* Popular color combo! *Please let us help you with finding the ideal New, Used, or Certified vehicle.along with getting you the best prices and incentives available and explaining the purchase, lease, and financing options.* *Our vehicles are value priced and move quickly. Be sure to call us to confirm availability and to schedule a hassle free test drive! We are located at: 5590 Jefferson Davis Hwy, North Augusta, SC 29842.*
At our dealership, we are dedicated to providing our customers with top-tier automotive service. When you shop at Bob Richards Nissan, you’ll discover such conveniences as:
Shuttle service available
Parts and accessories center
ASE-Certified technicians in our service center
State of the art Service Department
Bob's Pledge: We’ll do better on any advertised price on a new Toyota, or we’ll give you $1,000!*
Whether you are looking for a new or used Nissan car, truck, or SUV you will find it here at Bob Richards Nissan. As a premier South Carolina Nissan dealer, we also offer Nissan service & parts, an online inventory and outstanding financing options. We have helped many customers from Beech Islands, North Augusta, Clearwater and other surrounding locations, find the Nissan of their dreams! And, we look forward to creating a hassle-free car-buying experience for your next new or pre-owned Nissan purchase. You can always turn to Bob Richards Nissan for all your automotive needs!
Bob Richards, Serving the Central Savannah River Area for over 30 years. Bob
Richards Nissan,Our Service Hours are 8am to 6pm Monday through Friday. Our Sales hours are 9am to 8pm Monday through Saturday.
Address:
5590 Jefferson Davis Hwy
Augusta Aiken, SC 29842
Live PD: The Best of Richland County, SC | A&E
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Check out Richland County PD's best and most intense moments, including finding several couples in compromising positions. #LivePD
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On Live PD, ABC's Dan Abrams and Dallas Police Department Detectives Rich Emberlin and Kevin Jackson offer insight and commentary as live cameras capture the work of a mix of urban and rural police forces around the country on a typical Friday night.
A&E leads the cultural conversation through high-quality, thought provoking original programming with a unique point of view. Whether it's the network's distinctive brand of award-winning disruptive reality, groundbreaking documentary, or premium scripted drama, A&E always makes entertainment an art. Visit us at for more info.
258 Golden Oak in The Reserve at Woodside Plantation
This stunning, custom, single story was built in 2007 by Carolina Signature Homes. No detail has been overlooked in either design or construction and it shows. Beautiful, spacious rooms with easy flow, wonderful views and well chosen, top quality materials & finishes. In pristine, immaculate condition, it's easy to imagine moving right in straightaway. Situated on a premium, beautifully landscaped lot backing up to the 16th hole of the Nicklaus Course, The Oaks is a quiet, exclusive, cul-de-sac community within The Reserve section of Woodside Plantation Country Club. The Reserve Club has been an outstanding addition to the Woodside community offering members world-class amenities in their own neighborhood. Breathtaking golf courses, fine dining, a spectacular clubhouse, and state-of-the-art sports facilities combined with a friendly atmosphere and full social calendar to make The Reserve Club the premier club to join. Welcoming, livable and impressive, you'll never want to leave!
Gun Dog Broker: In The Field with Mark Fulmer with Sarahsetter Kennels, What is S.P.E.N.D.?
Kirk Driskell with Gun Dog Broker in the field with Mark Fulmer of Sarahsetter Kennels in Aiken South Carolina. Mark has been a professional breeder and trainer with more than 30 years experience in the field. Mark's passion for sporting dogs has created an amazing line of hunting companions.
S.P.E.N.D. the Sarahsetter Way. Mark's secret revealed.
S. = Sarahsetter
P. = Progressive
E. = Early
N. = Natural
D. = Development
Mark has developed the S.P.E.N.D. training program after years of in the field experience. His program has developed over the years to enhance very early puppy development while in a prenatal state and up to 12 weeks of age.
RAW VIDEO: Sheriff Anthony Dennis on escape, capture of Sumter County inmate
A Sumter County inmate is back in custody after escaping during a riot. He was jailed for murder.
SC Man Gets 3 Years in Prison for Sex With Horse
A South Carolina man caught on video having sex with a horse has been sentenced to three years in prison after pleading guilty for the second time in two years to abusing the animal. (Nov. 4)
SEGMENT 2: South Carolina Games
SEGMENT 2: South Carolina Games
Escaped SC inmate captured after 40 years on the run
Romero was serving an 18-year sentence for armed robbery from Aiken County when he escaped on Dec. 13, 1979.
Drunk driver pursuit
Drunk driver caught by police after being followed before they or someone else gets hurt or worse. There is no reason to ever drink and drive. There is means to get home and get your vehicle home including keys please, drive my ride and many more. We were in a head on collision with a drunk driver that had no clue he was even in an accident, on top of it we were expecting so we were worried about the pregnancy. Luckily we had a healthy baby girl.
New 2017 Nissan Rogue Augusta Aiken, SC #C760062 - SOLD
SOLD - Call or visit for a test drive of this vehicle today!
Phone: 866-930-8761
Year: 2017
Make: Nissan
Model: Rogue
Trim: FWD SL
Engine: 2.5L DOHC 16-Valve I4 Engine
Transmission: Automatic
Color: Palatial Ruby
Interior: P/ALMOND
Stock #: C760062
VIN: 5N1AT2MT4HC760062
This 2017 Nissan Rogue FWD SL is offered to you for sale by Bob Richards Nissan. This Nissan includes: [P01] SL PREMIUM PACKAGE Sun/Moon Roof Sun/Moonroof Dual Moonroof [B92] BLACK SPLASH GUARDS (SET OF 4) (PIO) [L92] FLOOR MATS Floor Mats [C03] 50 STATE EMISSIONS [B93] CHROME REAR BUMPER PROTECTOR (PIO) PALATIAL RUBY [K03] SL PLATINUM PACKAGE Aluminum Wheels Lane Departure Warning Lane Keeping Assist Adaptive Cruise Control ALMOND, LEATHER APPOINTED SEAT TRIM Leather Seats *Note - For third party subscriptions or services, please contact the dealer for more information.* Want more room? Want more style? This Nissan Rogue is the vehicle for you. Stylish and fuel efficient. It's the perfect vehicle for keeping your fuel costs down and your driving enjoying up. Marked by excellent quality and features with unmistakable refined leather interior that added value and class to the Nissan Rogue
At our dealership, we are dedicated to providing our customers with top-tier automotive service. When you shop at Bob Richards Nissan, you’ll discover such conveniences as:
Shuttle service available
Parts and accessories center
ASE-Certified technicians in our service center
State of the art Service Department
Bob's Pledge: We’ll do better on any advertised price on a new Toyota, or we’ll give you $1,000!*
Whether you are looking for a new or used Nissan car, truck, or SUV you will find it here at Bob Richards Nissan. As a premier South Carolina Nissan dealer, we also offer Nissan service & parts, an online inventory and outstanding financing options. We have helped many customers from Beech Islands, North Augusta, Clearwater and other surrounding locations, find the Nissan of their dreams! And, we look forward to creating a hassle-free car-buying experience for your next new or pre-owned Nissan purchase. You can always turn to Bob Richards Nissan for all your automotive needs!
Bob Richards, Serving the Central Savannah River Area for over 30 years. Bob
Richards Nissan,Our Service Hours are 8am to 6pm Monday through Friday. Our Sales hours are 9am to 8pm Monday through Saturday.
Address:
5590 Jefferson Davis Hwy
Augusta Aiken, SC 29842
Inside South Carolina Department of Juvenile Justice's Broad River Road Complex
A look inside the South Carolina Department of Juvenile Justice as they discuss the ongoing changes that are taking place.
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Aiken's Wooden Hotels and their Fires
“The Highland Park Hotel may be said to be the cornerstone of Aiken, for it is the original, the mouthpiece that has made Aiken known to the world. It has been in existence for twenty years or more, growing every year and keeping pace with the times and the demands upon it – until now it is one of largest and best hotels in the State. It is a handsome building, spreading out over a great extent of surface, and extraordinary care has been taken in the matter of drainage and water supply to keep it perfectly pure and healthy.”
The writer, who is only mysteriously identified in the New York Times article of February 28, 1892 as “W. L.”, goes on to say that Mr. B. P. Chatfield, the owner of the Hotel, gave him an “interesting account of his going to Aiken and establishing a hotel there when the place was little known and its future extremely uncertain”.
The Highland Park Hotel was built in Aiken between 1866 and 1870, just a few years after the end of the Civil War, by the Connecticut native. The Reconstruction Period was not a time when Northerners were especially welcome in the South. Despite this fact, the hotel prospered in its location at the west end of Park Avenue. The Hotel sat on what today is an area between Highland Park Drive and Hayne Avenue and its verandas faced toward what would become Hitchcock Woods. It could accommodate from 250 to 300 guests at a time. People flocked to Aiken because it was regarded as a health resort.
Just six years later, another New York Times article on February 6th, 1898 reported that: “The Highland Park Hotel was destroyed this morning by fire that started in the laundry room.” The 168 guests, who were awakened by the blaze, were able to get out safely with their bags (with the exception of one Bostonian who was shot and wounded by a hotel engineer). The impressive Highland Park Hotel burned to the ground. A second hotel was built on the site in 1914 but also fell victim to fire in 1945.
Within a two short years, another grand, wooden hotel was being constructed: and not far from where the Highland Park had lay in ashes. The Park in the Pines Hotel was built on forty acres of land that had been purchased from a section of city property called Eustis Park. Presently, the Aiken County Administration building (originally the Aiken County Hospital building) stands on the site of what was later known as Toole Town in the 1930s and 40s.
By 1906, the accolades began pouring in about The Park in the Pines Hotel from Northern writers. It was reported to be “among the most elegantly equipped and liberally conducted hotels of the South.” In fact, it had 300 guest rooms and was nestled amidst the pine trees that were thought to deliver a “soothing and purifying effect exerted upon the mucous membrane of the respiratory passages by the exhalations from this tree,” and “that the climate of Aiken owes much of its well-deserved reputation as a health resort for persons suffering from all forms of disease affecting the respiratory tract.”
But the fire that struck early on a Sunday morning in February of 1913, burned even more swiftly that it had fifteen years earlier.
After fleeing for their lives amidst a savage blaze, the Pine’s winter residents lost all that they had brought with them for the season. The speed with which the hotel burned was blamed on low water pressure so that the firemen who were fighting the flames not extinguish the flames. The wealthy and well-known hotel guests were quickly given shelter by locals and the smaller, but elegant, Willcox Inn.
And so it was the twin February fires that ultimately brought an end to the era of the massive wooden hotels that made Aiken a destination as a winter health resort.
Police Shootout in South Carolina!(new)
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Game Night Live: South Aiken vs. Silver Bluff (Part 2)
Game Night Live: South Aiken vs. Silver Bluff (Part 2)
9-1-1 Call Released Of Escaped Inmate
On June 24th, 2016, Donald Little Jr. was one of three inmates who escaped from the Dorchester County Jail in St. George, S.C. Two of the inmates were eventually captured several days later in Berkeley County. Little eventually decided to turn himself in to authorities.
12.16.13 - MYA - GRANITEVILLE, SC
MEDIA LINKS:
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INCIDENT REPORT: AIKEN COUNTY SHERIFF'S OFFICE
INCIDENT REPORT: CAD (DISPATCHER)
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LINK TO THIS YOUTUBE VIDEO:
Fred Astaire in Aiken
Fred Astaire will always be remembered as one of the most famous dancing movie stars of all time. During the height of his popularity in the 1930s and 40s, he spent much of his free time in Aiken. Although he owned a house in Beverly Hills, he wanted to escape the hectic life of a star to focus on his family in the quiet and relative anonymity of this small southern town.
Frederick Austerlitz, was born in Omaha, Nebraska, in 1899 to parents who immigrated to the United States from Germany just a few years before his birth. His mother, Johanna, dreamed of escaping the mundane life of Nebraska by promoting her children in a vaudeville dancing act when his sister, Adele, showed an early talent for singing and dancing. Although young Fred wouldn’t take dancing lessons, he quickly learned the steps his sister showed him. Astaire was the stage name they adopted in 1905 in preparation for the start of their dancing career. By the next year, Fred and Adele were touted as the “greatest child act in vaudeville.”
As they traveled across the country, young Fred was inspired to add a freestyle type of tap dance to his repertoire after meeting Bill Bojangles Robinson. From another vaudeville performer, he mastered the tango, waltz, and various dances that were popular at the time. By 1933, he signed a contract with RKO pictures and became a favorite dancing partner of Ginger Rogers, with whom he made ten films. He became a very popular Hollywood “star” who had remained single until he was 34 years old.
It was then that Astaire was married, for the first time, to the 25-year-old Phyllis Livingston Baker. She was a New York socialite whom he had been pursuing for almost two years until she finally agreed to marry him. They had two children, Fred, Jr. in 1936 and Ava in 1942. The family began coming to Aiken shortly after they married for much of the year. They stayed at the estate of Mrs. Astaire’s aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Worthington Bull.
As a passionate golfer, Fred found Aiken to be brimming with enthusiastic partners and well-established courses. Thoroughbred horse racing was also very important to him. In 1946, his horse Triplicate, partially trained in Aiken, won the Hollywood Gold Cup and San Juan Capistrano Handicap.
While he played golf, raced horses and relaxed with his family, he also found creative time to work out new dance routines. Pictures in a 1940 issue of Life Magazine show a nimble Fred Astaire leaping high above a polo field and swaying along while watching himself dance on the screen of the Rosemary Movie Theater on Laurens Street. The story most often told by locals is how he would arrive early each morning to pick up his mail at the main post office and then lightly dance down the ten or so steps while a crowd of excited onlookers watched with delight.
Fred Astaire’s career, in all, spanned a full 76 years during which he made 31 films. He continued to play golf and be active well into his eighties. When he died in 1987, his friend, and fellow dancing star, Gene Kelly said, The history of dance on film begins with Astaire.
Two SCDOT workers killed in hit-and-run identified
The state Department of Transportation is mourning the loss of two of their own that were struck Monday morning in a hit-and-run accident that also injured a third person.
The Aiken County Coroner's Office has identified the pair killed as Anthony J. Redmond, 54, and Robert Clark, 64. The coroner's office says they both died at the scene.
RELATED: See photos from the incident in Aiken County.
Redmond and Clark were on the side of Augusta Road near Interstate 520 around 8:30 a.m. when a 2004 Pontiac Grand Prix ran off the side of the road and struck them, Highway Patrol investigators said.
A third person, who has not yet been identified, was also struck but suffered only minor injuries.
Investigators are still piecing together what happened, hoping to find a suspect. They urge drivers to be cautious, especially when crews are on the road working.
We don’t know why that vehicle ran off the roadway, Highway Patrol Sgt. Bob Beres said. In general, obviously, you want to limit your distractions everywhere you go, especially in work zones and on the roadway. We have more things today in our vehicle that distract us more than we ever have.
The car troopers say hit the workers was found thanks to assistance from a witness and is being investigated. But even a SWAT team in a nearby mobile home park couldn’t find its driver.
Christy Hall, state transportation secretary, said in a statement the entire agency is stunned by this tragic incident.
“Our SCDOT family has suffered the loss of two of our team members this morning. While we mourn these losses, I would urge all South Carolinians to be cautious at all times while on the roads, and use extra care when approaching work zones. The men and women of SCDOT are dedicated public servants and we want them all to return home each night to their families,” said Hall. “Our hearts go out to the families and co-workers of Tony Redmond and Robert Clark during this terrible time.
DOT says Redmond and Clark worked in the Aiken County Maintenance office. Redmond had been employed by SCDOT since 1996. Clark had been employed by SCDOT since 2012.
SCDOT has recorded 35 incidents in modern times when employees have been killed on the job. Since 2007, six SCDOT workers lost their lives. Three of those deaths occurred in 2015 and 2016.
An autopsy has been scheduled for Redmond and Clark in Newberry County for Tuesday.
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Father of shooting suspect Joshua Tremaine Jones speaks about his son.
James Jones, father of shooting suspect Joshua Tremaine Jones speaks about his son Saturday evening during a press conference held to announce the death of Master Corporal Sandra E. Rodgers, 49, of the Aiken Public Safety department.
Teen with gun arrested prior to basketball game where three people were shot
Public Safety officials say a 15-year-old boy was arrested before the basketball game between Aiken High School and South Aiken High School where three people were shot.