Thomaston Upson County Airport

havaalanı hakkında bilgi - Thomaston Upson County Airport, Amerika Birleşik Devletleri (ABD)

Açıklama değer
IATA
(Uluslararası Hava Taşımacılığı Birliği havaalanı kodu)
Hayır IATA kod
tip küçük havaalanı
Yerel havaalanı kodu OPN
GPS havaalanı kodu KOPN
Boylam 32.95460129
Enlem -84.26319885

Şehirler yakın Thomaston Upson County Airport, Amerika Birleşik Devletleri (ABD)

Şehir ülke Mesafe (km)
Atlanta, GA 89.5 km

yakın Resimleri Thomaston Upson County Airport, Amerika Birleşik Devletleri (ABD)

Weaver Park, Downtown Thomaston, GA "How do you like to go up in a swing, Up in the air so blue? Oh, I do think it the pleasantest thing ever a child can do!  Up in the air and over the wall, Till I can see so wide, Rivers and trees and cattle and all over the countryside.  Till I look down on the garden green, Down on the roof so brown, Up in the air I go flying again, Up in the air and down!"  Robert Louis Stevenson 1850-1894 The Rose Hill Mill is a three story frame structure of mortise and tenon construction.  Built in 1859 by Dr. J. W. Herring who named the mill.  In 1887 the property was purchased by Dr. G.W.W.Hannah, a prominent Thomaston physician, and since that time has been known as Hannah's Mill. Cherry blossoms in full bloom along Griffin Avenue.  Lincoln Park, Georgia.  Here, it's easy to find many shotgun houses all in a row.
 
Georgia Forestry Commission's Fire tower.  The old site of Martha Mills, a branch of the B.F. Goodrich Company tire manufacturers.  The mill represented one of the world's largest plants for the exclusive manufacture of tire cord.  With 135,000 spindles in operation, 325 bales of cotton were used daily. Shotgun house.  Home of Mrs. Frances Walker for over 70 years.  It has been moved from it's original location and is now an African-American Museum.  It contains furniture and artifacts illustrating the lives of african-americans in Thomaston Georgia. This beautiful rock wall was built in 1857 under the direction of Judge James Trice who leased a slave from Barnesville who was a qualified rock mason.  The wall surrounds the largest family cemetery in the country, Trice Cemetery. Piggy Park - Thomaston, GA
 
An old railroad trestle ~ still active. The Robertson House at 308 South Green Street is an excellent example of a well-kept early Georgian Colonial type house, with it's two-story frame structure and white columns with balcony.  The site was the home of Susan P. Hartsfield, wife of W.H. Hartsfield, pioneer citizen of Thomaston.  It was later purchased in 1860 by Edmond B. Atwater, and in the 1880's was bought by Dr. Alfred H. Black, who added the second story and built the stables and cook's cottage, which are still standing in the r There is beauty in every leaf The R.E. Lee Institute.  This Neo-classical structure was chartered in 1875 as the Thomaston High School. The name was changed in 1882 to The Robert E. Lee Institute.  It was reconstructed in 1922 following a severe fire, and today it is used as the city and county office complex. In the auditoriun there are full length oil portraits of General Robert E. Lee, for whom the school was named, and General John B. Gordon, who was born in Upson County.
 
The RITZ Theatre & Cafe.  Built in 1927 in the Mission Style, the facade was altered in the 1930's to it's present Art Deco design. Old water tower off of Railroad Street An old favorite The C.E. Bethel Home, built in the 1870's. The large living area was once a part of the Thomaston Female Academy. This section was the auditorium of the academy and became the nucleus around which the remainder of the house was built. Unknown Confederate Soldiers
 

Resimleri Thomaston Upson County Airport