Hardee County, established in 1921, was named in his honor.
Saunders of Jackson Citizen Patriot Michigan, for distinguished editorial writing during the year. File 11 Mary Henderson Kirkland to her parents Mr. Minutes of Meeting of the Board of Directors, Hartford, Conn. Hendry County, established in 1923, was named for him. Grimes, The Wall Street Journal, for his distinguished editorial writing during the year. He was a graduate in industrial engineering of the University of Florida. The Pulitzer Prize for Editorial Writing, awarded since 1917. Macon's commercial history is written in brick and stone upon its mercantile buildings downtown. Harrison, Gainesville Sun Florida, for his successful editorial campaign for better housing in his city.
Commerce, liaison for the State Welfare Board and Chairman of the American Red Cross Drive. In 1933 he was elected to Congress, a seat he held until 1951. Extension Agent for the black farmers of Columbia County. Brantly Walker Helvenston was born February 16, 1866. In 1929, the Fairburn Railway and Electric Company made its last run to College Park. Cardoza, Reno Evening Gazette and Nevada State Journal, for editorials challenging the power of a local brothel keeper. Several churches were organized, including a Baptist and a Methodist church.
Piedmont Plateau, above which the Ocmulgee River is no longer navigable. As the commercial hub of a productive agricultural region, the city's fortunes were tied to a southern cotton culture that brought substantial wealth, war, and subsequently genteel poverty for its first hundred-plus years. Park Trammell, Florida’s 21st Governor, was born April 9, 1876 in Macon County, Alabama. Thus did Wesleyan College become the first college in the United States chartered to grant degrees to women. John Sidney Jackson was born in 1922 in Pratt City, Alabama. In 1906, the city limits were extended to a one mile radius from the depot.