Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Haygood Seminary's property at the time was valued at $5,000. [1] George L. Tyus In late 1894, the Reverend George L. Tyus, a graduate from Paine College in Augusta, Georgia, and the first African American man in southwest Arkansas to hold an earned academic degree, became the president of the seminary. [1]
Originally started as a college and as a high school, by 1903 sufficient college-level work was provided to justify changing the school's name from Paine Institute to The Paine College. From 1921 to 1923, Tomlin served as an interim president of Paine College in Augusta, Georgia; followed by serving as president from 1923 to 1929.
This category is for baseball topics pertaining to Paine College in Augusta, Georgia.
Geography Paine, Chile Paine College, a defunct Historically Black college in Augusta, Georgia Paine Field, an airport in Everett, Washington, United States Paine Lake, a lake in Minnesota Paine River, a waterstream located in the Magallanes Region of Chile Cuernos del Paine, a mountain group in Chilean Patagonia
Lake Olmstead Stadium is a closed baseball park in Augusta, Georgia, United States. It was built between the 1994 [1] and 1995 seasons [2] to replace Heaton Stadium on the same site [8] and can hold 4,822 people.
He persuaded his grandmother to move to Augusta, Georgia, so that he could complete high school. [1] Gipson became interested in science when he studied geology in junior high school and read The Earth and Life Upon It. [2] He studied science and mathematics at nearby Paine College, financed initially by his mother, who borrowed money to get ...
Randy Tomlin (born 1956), American professional baseball player Ray S. Tomlin (fl. 1889–1929), American educator; president of Paine College in Augusta, Georgia Robyn Tomlin (born 1971), American journalist and newspaper editor Thomas Tomlin, Baron Tomlin (1867–1935), British jurist William Tomlin, (1866–1910) English cricketer
The Augusta metropolitan area, officially the Augusta-Richmond County metropolitan statistical area according to the U.S. Office of Management and Budget, Census Bureau and other agencies, is a metropolitan statistical area centered on the city of Augusta, Georgia.