Camera Maker | Canon | Camera Model | Canon EOS-1D Mark II N |
Aperture | f/11 | Color Space | Uncalibrated |
Exposure Value | 0 EV | Exposure Program | Program |
Exposure Time | 1/640 sec | Flash | No Flash |
Focal Length | 35 mm | ISO | 400 |
Metering Mode | Pattern | Date/Time | 2007:03:08 12:23:04 |
Copyright | © 2007 Jason O. Watson. All rights reserved. | Orientation | 1: Normal (0 deg) |
Resolution Unit | Inch | X Resolution | 300 dots per ResolutionUnit |
Y Resolution | 300 dots per ResolutionUnit | Compression | Jpeg Compression |
Exposure Mode | 0 | Keywords | travel United States of America United States America USA US Georgia GA history historical historic historical marker famous landmark road side highway popular Place of Interest Places of Interest Tourist Attraction Tourist Attractions Tourist Destination Tourist Destinations Travel Destination Travel Destinations tour tourism tourist attraction destination Sign Signs American Day Daytime Historical Sites Vertical Education Historical Site Marker Markers Outdoor Outdoors Outside Road Road Signs Roadside Roadsign Oconee County Bishop A. G. Haygood Miss Laura A. Haygood Atticus Green Haygood Army chaplain missonary Emory College Wesleyan Christian Advocate Slater Fund Atlanta girls school China Shanghai Methodist birthplace house home |
Caption | Birthplace of Bishop A. G. Haygood and Miss Laura A. Haygood This house, about 150 years old, was the birthplace of Bishop Atticus Green Haygood in 1839 and his sister, Laura Askew Haygood, in 1845. Bishop Haygood was chaplain and missionary to the Army, 1861-65; President of Emory College, 1876-84; editor Wesleyan Christian Advocate, 1878-82; administrator Slater Fund, 1882-91; Bishop from 1890 until his death in 1896. Miss Haygood was principal of an early school for girls in Atlanta and was one of the first missionaries to China. She died in Shanghai in 1900. A brother and sister are buried in the yard of this house, now the Methodist parsonage. Georgia Historical Commission, 1955 |