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127:, who had been the commission's staff historian. Eventually the commission had a staff of 15 and a nine-member board, headed for 15 years by Joseph B. Cumming. Such specialists as the architectural historian William R. Mitchell Jr. and the archaeologist Lewis H. Larson Jr., who was involved in a
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The commission began its life inauspiciously: because the act that created it forbade state funding, it had no budget. In 1952, however, this roadblock was lifted, and the
Commission emerged as a significant state agency. C. E. Gregory, a retired political editor of the
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The commission also gained national recognition as a pioneer in state historic preservation. The most impressive of its major achievements was the acquiring, restoring, excavating, and developing of 20 historic sites, 15 of them staffed and seven with
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centennial inspired the commission to set 750 Civil War markers in place before the observance in 1965. After 1966 the commission served as the state's review board for the
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These projects often needed not only financial and technical help but a way to coordinate plans with other state projects. Three
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Ben
Fortson thought the project should be placed within his department, which already handled Georgia archives.
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took over the marker program. The responsibility of maintaining several sites now belongs to local groups.
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took over the commission's functions and maintains most of the sites and museums, and the
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Georgia's
Historic Preservation Beginning: The Georgia Historical Commission (1951-1973)
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who was appointed chairman of the first board of commissioners; Joseph Jacobs, a
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civic leaders lobbied for a state historical commission: Henry A. Alexander, an
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22:"Georgia Historical Commission" stamped on one of old Georgia
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261:State history organizations of the United States
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92:, a Georgian who was the first person to use
218:former Georgia Historical Commission markers
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256:State agencies of Georgia (U.S. state)
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153:National Register of Historic Places
49:was an organization created by the
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251:History of Georgia (U.S. state)
164:Department of Natural Resources
139:, including New Echota and the
141:Chief Vann House Historic Site
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235:Fulton County Civil War Vol 1
229:Dekalb County Civil War Vol 1
200:Georgia Historical Commission
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47:Georgia Historical Commission
237:historical markers on a map.
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185:Georgia Historical Quarterly
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223:Cobb County Civil War Vol 1
198:New Georgia Encyclopedia -
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213:Georgia Historical Society
168:Georgia Historical Society
88:who wanted a memorial for
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179:Jann Haynes Gilmore,
59:historic preservation
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125:Mary Gregory Jewett
158:In 1973, Governor
149:American Civil War
145:historical markers
104:Secretary of State
67:historical markers
63:history of Georgia
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187:63 (spring 1979).
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57:for purposes of
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98:anesthetic
82:pharmacist
51:U.S. state
37:on an old
86:physician
204:Archived
108:Governor
78:attorney
137:museums
74:Atlanta
55:Georgia
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