Camera Maker | Canon | Camera Model | Canon EOS-1Ds Mark III |
Aperture | f/2.8 | Exposure Value | 0 EV |
Exposure Program | Manual | Exposure Time | 1/250 sec |
Flash | No Flash | Focal Length | 27 mm |
ISO | 100 | Metering Mode | Pattern |
Date/Time | 2008:04:20 12:06:17 | Resolution Unit | Inch |
X Resolution | 72 dots per ResolutionUnit | Y Resolution | 72 dots per ResolutionUnit |
Exposure Mode | 1 | Keywords | First Presbyterian Church historic marker SC attraction destination display education information landmark marker sign tourist Columbia South Carolina attractive D.E. Dunlap educating F.H. Elmore H.W. DeSaussure historical marker Historical Site Historical Sites info Jonathan Maxcy Pamela Cuningham Place of Interest Places of Interest Richland County road side Road sign Roadside signage tour tourism tourist attraction Tourist Destination Tourist Destinations travel Travel Destination Travel Destinations William F. DeSaussure Woodrow Wilson South South America appealing no people sightseeing text Latin America United States attract history nobody Jason O. Watson / historical-markers.org sightsee word Colombian daytime destinations displays historic markers landmarks markers signs tourists United States of America appeal color image educate historic outdoor vertical day historical markers Latin American road sides tourist attractions tours colour image historical outside day time South American day-time US words CO color images daylight outdoors USA verticals colour images natural light outsides U.S. U.S.A. historic site sign with text |
Caption | FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH First congregation organized in Columbia (1795). The churchyard, allotted as a public burying ground in 1798, was granted to this church 1813. Here are buried: D.E. Dunlap, first pastor; Chancellor H.W. DeSaussure; Jonathan Maxcy, first President of S.C. College; Ann Pamela Cuningham, founder of Mt. Vernon Ladies' Association; U.S. Senators F.H. Elmore and Wm. F. DeSaussure, and the parents of Woodrow Wilson. Erected 1938 by The Columbia Sesquicentennial Commission of 1936. |