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On Saturday, September 23, 2017 the Old Van Cortlandtville Cemetery Association held a Plaque Dedication to unveil a new marker for the John Paulding gravesite. I was honored to be a part of the ceremony and also to secure the funds needed to create the plaque. Knowing of my interest and involvement in promoting history and being a Revolutionary War Reenactor for over 40 years, members of the association approached me hoping I would help in the creation of the plaque. I was glad to have the opportunity to have a hand in the initiative to create the plaque and was able to obtain the funding required to have the plaque created and installed.

 

The act of John Paulding and his comrades Isaac Van Wart and David Williams capturing British spy Major John Andre was a turning point in our nation’s history. In recent years, the story has a renewed interest due the background setting of West Point, George Washington, Benedict Arnold and especially the new details regarding the spy ring involved in the war. A number of books and even a television series has appeared in just the last few years giving renewed interest in the story.

 

John Paulding, the lead figure in the capture of Andre, is buried in the Old Van Cortlandt Cemetery just yards from the historic Revolutionary War Era Old St. Peter’s Church. He died in 1818 at the age of 60 and was honored with a prominent site and stone/obelisk structure. Over time, the words engraved into the marble monument have faded and it is just a matter of time until they are lost forever. The new plague that was installed replicates the engraved words exactly so as to preserve them for generations to come.

 

www.Marcia Todd.com

 

100 Ryan Trail, Dallas, GA 30157

 

Great Condition Ready For You To Move In Immediately! Spacious Family Room On Main. Lovely Setting, Located on a LARGE Corner Lot with a Spacious Fenced Yard For Your Kids To Play! Refrigerator and ALL Kitchen Appliances Remain with Home! Washer & Dryer Also Stays with Home!

Elementary School: Mcgarity

Jr. High School: East Paulding

High School: East Paulding

 

For More Information:

Marcia Todd, REALTOR

 

678-409-7704

www.MarciaTodd.com

E-mail: Info@MarciaTodd.com

 

Who do YOU know that wants to Buy, Sell and/or Lease Real Estate?

 

Proudly serving all of your real estate needs in Marietta, Kennesaw, Dallas, Ball Ground, Powder Springs, Smyrna, Canton, Woodstock, Vinings, Atlanta, and much more!

On Saturday, September 23, 2017 the Old Van Cortlandtville Cemetery Association held a Plaque Dedication to unveil a new marker for the John Paulding gravesite. I was honored to be a part of the ceremony and also to secure the funds needed to create the plaque. Knowing of my interest and involvement in promoting history and being a Revolutionary War Reenactor for over 40 years, members of the association approached me hoping I would help in the creation of the plaque. I was glad to have the opportunity to have a hand in the initiative to create the plaque and was able to obtain the funding required to have the plaque created and installed.

 

The act of John Paulding and his comrades Isaac Van Wart and David Williams capturing British spy Major John Andre was a turning point in our nation’s history. In recent years, the story has a renewed interest due the background setting of West Point, George Washington, Benedict Arnold and especially the new details regarding the spy ring involved in the war. A number of books and even a television series has appeared in just the last few years giving renewed interest in the story.

 

John Paulding, the lead figure in the capture of Andre, is buried in the Old Van Cortlandt Cemetery just yards from the historic Revolutionary War Era Old St. Peter’s Church. He died in 1818 at the age of 60 and was honored with a prominent site and stone/obelisk structure. Over time, the words engraved into the marble monument have faded and it is just a matter of time until they are lost forever. The new plague that was installed replicates the engraved words exactly so as to preserve them for generations to come.

 

Paulding County, GA

2021 Ford F250 XL

 

Rescue 4 serves countywide as 1 of 3 A.L.S units.

 

Paulding County Fire Station 4:

624 Harmony RD

Temple, GA 30179

From the 1917 Standard Atlas of Paulding County, Ohio. Used courtesy of Historic Map Works.

 

This structure's roof was supported by purlins and a ridgepole, rather than conventional hewed, pole, or sawed rafters.

September 20, 2024. Engine 2, Truck 2 (Reserve Engine 5), Squad 1, and Battalion 1 tackle a trash compactor fire in Hiram

Ohio Historical Society marker:

 

Front Text : Paulding County

Named for John Paulding, a Revolutionary War soldier whose capture of a British spy implicated Benedict Arnold in treason, Paulding County was formed in 1820 from the last remaining unorganized area of Ohio. Sparsely settled, it remained under the jurisdiction of Wood County until 1824 and then Williams County until 1839. Paulding's first county seat was established at New Rochester in 1839, then moved to Charloe in 1841. Neither village exists today. Centrally-located Paulding Center became the county seat in 1851, and a courthouse was built the following year. The present courthouse, built during the region's timber boom of the late 19th century, was designed by architect Edward Oscar Fallis and patterned after his Lenawee County courthouse in Adrian, Michigan. The four-faced Romanesque style building was completed in 1888 at a cost of $40,000. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1974.

 

Back Text : Paulding County

Named for John Paulding, a Revolutionary War soldier whose capture of a British spy implicated Benedict Arnold in treason, Paulding County was formed in 1820 from the last remaining unorganized area of Ohio. Sparsely settled, it remained under the jurisdiction of Wood County until 1824 and then Williams County until 1839. Paulding's first county seat was established at New Rochester in 1839, then moved to Charloe in 1841. Neither village exists today. Centrally-located Paulding Center became the county seat in 1851, and a courthouse was built the following year. The present courthouse, built during the region's timber boom of the late 19th century, was designed by architect Edward Oscar Fallis and patterned after his Lenawee County courthouse in Adrian, Michigan. The four-faced Romanesque style building was completed in 1888 at a cost of $40,000. It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1974.

 

Latitude / Longitude

41.137485 ° / -84.58102 ° - Map Marker

 

Address

115 N. Williams Street

Paulding, OH 45879

Paulding County

Paulding County, GA. Station 2 houses Engine, Truck, and Rescue 2 and serves the city of Hiram.

 

Paulding County Fire Station 2:

535 Seaboard AVE

Hiram, GA 30141

At the site of the Battle of New Hope Church in the War Between the States, Paulding County, Georgia.

On Saturday, September 23, 2017 the Old Van Cortlandtville Cemetery Association held a Plaque Dedication to unveil a new marker for the John Paulding gravesite. I was honored to be a part of the ceremony and also to secure the funds needed to create the plaque. Knowing of my interest and involvement in promoting history and being a Revolutionary War Reenactor for over 40 years, members of the association approached me hoping I would help in the creation of the plaque. I was glad to have the opportunity to have a hand in the initiative to create the plaque and was able to obtain the funding required to have the plaque created and installed.

 

The act of John Paulding and his comrades Isaac Van Wart and David Williams capturing British spy Major John Andre was a turning point in our nation’s history. In recent years, the story has a renewed interest due the background setting of West Point, George Washington, Benedict Arnold and especially the new details regarding the spy ring involved in the war. A number of books and even a television series has appeared in just the last few years giving renewed interest in the story.

 

John Paulding, the lead figure in the capture of Andre, is buried in the Old Van Cortlandt Cemetery just yards from the historic Revolutionary War Era Old St. Peter’s Church. He died in 1818 at the age of 60 and was honored with a prominent site and stone/obelisk structure. Over time, the words engraved into the marble monument have faded and it is just a matter of time until they are lost forever. The new plague that was installed replicates the engraved words exactly so as to preserve them for generations to come.

 

Fossil coral & brachiopod & trilobite in the Devonian of Ohio, USA.

 

At top is a coral fossil. Corals are essentially sea anemones (polyps) that make a skeleton, which is usually mineralized. Most corals are colonial, but some are solitary. This is a solitary rugose coral, also known as a "horn coral", in reference to the tapered solid skeleton (best seen on weathered-out specimens).

 

At left is a spiriferid brachiopod fossil. Brachiopods are sessile, benthic, filter-feeding, marine invertebrates. They first appear in Cambrian rocks and were abundant in Earth's oceans throughout the Paleozoic. They were also common in Mesozoic oceans, but are scarce in modern oceanic biotas. Brachiopods have two shells, called valves, that are usually calcareous (made of calcite - CaCO3 - calcium carbonate). Each shell of a brachiopod is bilaterally symmetrical, unlike each shell of a bivalve (clam).

 

At right is a trilobite tail, technically called a pygidium. It is from a Phacops trilobite (also referred to by the subjective junior synonym Eldredgeops). Trilobites are extinct marine arthropods that range in age from the Cambrian to the Permian. They had a calcitic exoskeleton with soft parts underneath (gills, legs, guts, etc.). From front to back, the trilobite body consists of a head (cephalon), a body of many segments (thorax), and a tail (pygidium). The exoskeleton is also divided into three parts longitudinally, with an axial lobe running down the middle, and two pleural lobes (side lobes).

 

Stratigraphy: Silica Formation, Middle Devonian

 

Locality: Paulding Quarry (= Lafarge Paulding Quarry), north-northwest of the town of Paulding, northern Paulding County, northwestern Ohio, USA (41° 10' 57.96" North latitude, 84° 37' 21.23" West longitude)

 

Took the kids to see the Paulding Light in the Upper Peninsula.

VID00001

On Saturday, September 23, 2017 the Old Van Cortlandtville Cemetery Association held a Plaque Dedication to unveil a new marker for the John Paulding gravesite. I was honored to be a part of the ceremony and also to secure the funds needed to create the plaque. Knowing of my interest and involvement in promoting history and being a Revolutionary War Reenactor for over 40 years, members of the association approached me hoping I would help in the creation of the plaque. I was glad to have the opportunity to have a hand in the initiative to create the plaque and was able to obtain the funding required to have the plaque created and installed.

 

The act of John Paulding and his comrades Isaac Van Wart and David Williams capturing British spy Major John Andre was a turning point in our nation’s history. In recent years, the story has a renewed interest due the background setting of West Point, George Washington, Benedict Arnold and especially the new details regarding the spy ring involved in the war. A number of books and even a television series has appeared in just the last few years giving renewed interest in the story.

 

John Paulding, the lead figure in the capture of Andre, is buried in the Old Van Cortlandt Cemetery just yards from the historic Revolutionary War Era Old St. Peter’s Church. He died in 1818 at the age of 60 and was honored with a prominent site and stone/obelisk structure. Over time, the words engraved into the marble monument have faded and it is just a matter of time until they are lost forever. The new plague that was installed replicates the engraved words exactly so as to preserve them for generations to come.

 

Redbox DVD rental machine in Paulding, Ohio.

Limestones and dolostones in the Devonian of Ohio, USA.

 

This is an active quarry in far-northwestern Ohio. We were forbidden from closely approaching the walls. Large, loose blocks of rock were piled on the quarry floor for close examination and mineral collecting.

 

Many of the gray-colored rocks are from the the Dundee Limestone, a Middle Devonian unit equivalent to the upper Columbus Limestone and Delaware Limestone elsewhere in Ohio. At this site, the Dundee is principally light gray to gray-brown micrite and dismicrite. These lithologies are sometimes referred to as lithographic limestone and sublithographic limestone. Stylolites are present, as are numerous patches of coarsely-crystalline calcite.

 

The brownish-colored rocks are from the Lucas Dolomite of the upper Detroit River Group. The Lucas appears to consist of both dolostone and limestone. Finely-laminated, brown dolostone is a common lithology in this unit. Lack of stratigraphic control in the loose quarry blocks makes specific lithologic assessments difficult. Stylolites are also present in the Lucas.

 

Stratigraphy: Dundee Limestone & Lucas Dolomite, Middle Devonian

 

Locality: Auglaize Quarry (= Shelly Company, Stoneco's Auglaize Facility), southeast of the town of Junction, northeastern Paulding County, northwestern Ohio, USA (41° 10' 27.83" North latitude, 84° 25' 19.75" West longitude)

 

Limestones and dolostones in the Devonian of Ohio, USA.

 

This is the active wall at a functioning quarry in far-northwestern Ohio. We were forbidden from closely approaching the walls. Large, loose blocks of rock were piled on the quarry floor for close examination and mineral collecting.

 

The gray-colored rocks in the top third of the photo are the Dundee Limestone, a Middle Devonian unit equivalent to the upper Columbus Limestone and Delaware Limestone elsewhere in Ohio. At this site, the Dundee is principally light gray to gray-brown micrite and dismicrite. These lithologies are sometimes referred to as lithographic limestone and sublithographic limestone. Stylolites are present, as are numerous patches of coarsely-crystalline calcite.

 

The brownish-colored rocks in the middle and lower portions of the picture are the Lucas Dolomite of the upper Detroit River Group. The Lucas appears to consist of dolostone and limestone. Finely-laminated, brown dolostone is a common lithology in this unit. Lack of stratigraphic control in the loose quarry blocks makes specific lithologic assessments difficult. Stylolites are also present in the Lucas.

 

Stratigraphy: Dundee Limestone over Lucas Dolomite, Middle Devonian

 

Locality: Auglaize Quarry (= Shelly Company, Stoneco's Auglaize Facility), southeast of the town of Junction, northeastern Paulding County, northwestern Ohio, USA (41° 10' 27.83" North latitude, 84° 25' 19.75" West longitude)

 

LCC sophomore Desi Kirkman and Paulding junior Jayson Dangler watch as the free throw Kirkman shot sinks into the basket in the game between the Lima Central Catholic Thunderbirds and Paulding Panthers at LCC on Friday night, Jan. 11, 2008.

On Saturday, September 23, 2017 the Old Van Cortlandtville Cemetery Association held a Plaque Dedication to unveil a new marker for the John Paulding gravesite. I was honored to be a part of the ceremony and also to secure the funds needed to create the plaque. Knowing of my interest and involvement in promoting history and being a Revolutionary War Reenactor for over 40 years, members of the association approached me hoping I would help in the creation of the plaque. I was glad to have the opportunity to have a hand in the initiative to create the plaque and was able to obtain the funding required to have the plaque created and installed.

 

The act of John Paulding and his comrades Isaac Van Wart and David Williams capturing British spy Major John Andre was a turning point in our nation’s history. In recent years, the story has a renewed interest due the background setting of West Point, George Washington, Benedict Arnold and especially the new details regarding the spy ring involved in the war. A number of books and even a television series has appeared in just the last few years giving renewed interest in the story.

 

John Paulding, the lead figure in the capture of Andre, is buried in the Old Van Cortlandt Cemetery just yards from the historic Revolutionary War Era Old St. Peter’s Church. He died in 1818 at the age of 60 and was honored with a prominent site and stone/obelisk structure. Over time, the words engraved into the marble monument have faded and it is just a matter of time until they are lost forever. The new plague that was installed replicates the engraved words exactly so as to preserve them for generations to come.

 

Paulding Exempted Village Schools 1 - 2006 Blue Bird Vision - Retired; Cardinal Bus Sales - Lima, Ohio. One of many Blue Birds in the fleet.

My brother-in-law planting soybeans in one of his Paulding County, Ohio fields. Video taken with a Sony DSC-HX1.

Limestones and dolostones in the Devonian of Ohio, USA.

 

This is the active wall at a functioning quarry in far-northwestern Ohio. We were forbidden from closely approaching the walls. Large, loose blocks of rock were piled on the quarry floor for close examination and mineral collecting.

 

The gray-colored rocks in the top third of the wall are the Dundee Limestone, a Middle Devonian unit equivalent to the upper Columbus Limestone and Delaware Limestone elsewhere in Ohio. At this site, the Dundee is principally light gray to gray-brown micrite and dismicrite. These lithologies are sometimes referred to as lithographic limestone and sublithographic limestone. Stylolites are present, as are numerous patches of coarsely-crystalline calcite.

 

The brownish-colored rocks in the middle and lower walls are the Lucas Dolomite of the upper Detroit River Group. The Lucas appears to consist of dolostone and limestone. Finely-laminated, brown dolostone is a common lithology in this unit. Lack of stratigraphic control in the loose quarry blocks makes specific lithologic assessments difficult. Stylolites are also present in the Lucas.

 

Stratigraphy: Dundee Limestone over Lucas Dolomite, Middle Devonian

 

Locality: Auglaize Quarry (= Shelly Company, Stoneco's Auglaize Facility), southeast of the town of Junction, northeastern Paulding County, northwestern Ohio, USA (41° 10' 27.83" North latitude, 84° 25' 19.75" West longitude)

 

Hexagonaria sp. - fossil coral in limestone in the Devonian of Ohio, USA.

 

Corals are essentially sea anemones (polyps) that make a skeleton, which is usually mineralized. Most corals are colonial, but some are solitary. This particular fossil is Hexagonaria, a colonial rugose coral having many hexagonally-shaped corallites, as seen in plan view.

 

Classification: Animalia, Cnidaria, Anthozoa, Rugosa, Phillipsastraeidae

 

Stratigraphy: loose quarry block possibly derived from the Dundee Limestone, Middle Devonian

 

Locality: Paulding Quarry (= Lafarge Paulding Quarry), north-northwest of the town of Paulding, northern Paulding County, northwestern Ohio, USA (41° 10' 57.96" North latitude, 84° 37' 21.23" West longitude)

-----------------------------------

See info. at:

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rugosa

and

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hexagonaria

 

Paulding Exempted Village Schools 1 - 2006 Blue Bird Vision - Retired; Cardinal Bus Sales - Lima, Ohio. One of many Blue Birds in the fleet.

Built in 2006-08 using the designs of Facility Group of Smyrna, the Paulding County Courthouse is located on the southwestern edge of Dallas, Georgia.

Paulding County Court House

Dallas, Ga.

Limestones and dolostones in the Devonian of Ohio, USA.

 

This is the active wall at a functioning quarry in far-northwestern Ohio. We were forbidden from closely approaching the walls. Large, loose blocks of rock were piled on the quarry floor for close examination and mineral collecting.

 

The gray-colored rocks in the top third of the wall are the Dundee Limestone, a Middle Devonian unit equivalent to the upper Columbus Limestone and Delaware Limestone elsewhere in Ohio. At this site, the Dundee is principally light gray to gray-brown micrite and dismicrite. These lithologies are sometimes referred to as lithographic limestone and sublithographic limestone. Stylolites are present, as are numerous patches of coarsely-crystalline calcite.

 

The brownish-colored rocks in the middle and lower walls are the Lucas Dolomite of the upper Detroit River Group. The Lucas appears to consist of dolostone and limestone. Finely-laminated, brown dolostone is a common lithology in this unit. Lack of stratigraphic control in the loose quarry blocks makes specific lithologic assessments difficult. Stylolites are also present in the Lucas.

 

Stratigraphy: Dundee Limestone over Lucas Dolomite, Middle Devonian

 

Locality: Auglaize Quarry (= Shelly Company, Stoneco's Auglaize Facility), southeast of the town of Junction, northeastern Paulding County, northwestern Ohio, USA (41° 10' 27.83" North latitude, 84° 25' 19.75" West longitude)

 

This is the Paulding Quarry in far-northwestern Ohio. The quarry opened in 1949 and the rocks are used to make cement on-site. The target unit is the Middle Devonian Dundee Limestone.

 

The upper part of the quarry wall seen here consists of interbedded fossiliferous limestones and shales of the Middle Devonian Silica Formation. The fossils are typical mid-Paleozoic marine invertebrates such as brachiopods, bryozoans, corals, crinoids, and trilobites. Below the Silica is the Dundee Limestone, which lacks interbedded shales.

 

Locality: Paulding Quarry (= Lafarge Paulding Quarry), north-northwest of the town of Paulding, northern Paulding County, northwestern Ohio, USA (41° 10' 57.96" North latitude, 84° 37' 21.23" West longitude)

 

Pfc Jason Estopinal from Paulding County, GA. The Patriot Guard once again turned out in honor and support of the family of this Hero.

militarytimes.com/valor/marine-pfc-jason-h-estopinal/4502...

Fossil coral & brachiopod & trilobite in the Devonian of Ohio, USA.

 

At top is a coral fossil. Corals are essentially sea anemones (polyps) that make a skeleton, which is usually mineralized. Most corals are colonial, but some are solitary. This is a solitary rugose coral, also known as a "horn coral", in reference to the tapered solid skeleton (best seen on weathered-out specimens).

 

At left is a spiriferid brachiopod fossil. Brachiopods are sessile, benthic, filter-feeding, marine invertebrates. They first appear in Cambrian rocks and were abundant in Earth's oceans throughout the Paleozoic. They were also common in Mesozoic oceans, but are scarce in modern oceanic biotas. Brachiopods have two shells, called valves, that are usually calcareous (made of calcite - CaCO3 - calcium carbonate). Each shell of a brachiopod is bilaterally symmetrical, unlike each shell of a bivalve (clam).

 

At right is a trilobite tail, technically called a pygidium. It is from a Phacops trilobite (also referred to by the subjective junior synonym Eldredgeops). Trilobites are extinct marine arthropods that range in age from the Cambrian to the Permian. They had a calcitic exoskeleton with soft parts underneath (gills, legs, guts, etc.). From front to back, the trilobite body consists of a head (cephalon), a body of many segments (thorax), and a tail (pygidium). The exoskeleton is also divided into three parts longitudinally, with an axial lobe running down the middle, and two pleural lobes (side lobes).

 

Stratigraphy: Silica Formation, Middle Devonian

 

Locality: Paulding Quarry (= Lafarge Paulding Quarry), north-northwest of the town of Paulding, northern Paulding County, northwestern Ohio, USA (41° 10' 57.96" North latitude, 84° 37' 21.23" West longitude)

 

This is the sign that you will see at at the entrance of the Paulding Light. Nope we couldnt figure it out.

www.Marcia Todd.com

 

100 Ryan Trail, Dallas, GA 30157

 

Great Condition Ready For You To Move In Immediately! Spacious Family Room On Main. Lovely Setting, Located on a LARGE Corner Lot with a Spacious Fenced Yard For Your Kids To Play! Refrigerator and ALL Kitchen Appliances Remain with Home! Washer & Dryer Also Stays with Home!

Elementary School: Mcgarity

Jr. High School: East Paulding

High School: East Paulding

 

For More Information:

Marcia Todd, REALTOR

 

678-409-7704

www.MarciaTodd.com

E-mail: Info@MarciaTodd.com

 

Who do YOU know that wants to Buy, Sell and/or Lease Real Estate?

 

Proudly serving all of your real estate needs in Marietta, Kennesaw, Dallas, Ball Ground, Powder Springs, Smyrna, Canton, Woodstock, Vinings, Atlanta, and much more!

Limestones and dolostones in the Devonian of Ohio, USA.

 

This is the active wall at a functioning quarry in far-northwestern Ohio. We were forbidden from closely approaching the walls. Large, loose blocks of rock were piled on the quarry floor for close examination and mineral collecting.

 

The gray-colored rocks in the top third of the wall are the Dundee Limestone, a Middle Devonian unit equivalent to the upper Columbus Limestone and Delaware Limestone elsewhere in Ohio. At this site, the Dundee is principally light gray to gray-brown micrite and dismicrite. These lithologies are sometimes referred to as lithographic limestone and sublithographic limestone. Stylolites are present, as are numerous patches of coarsely-crystalline calcite.

 

The brownish-colored rocks in the middle and lower walls are the Lucas Dolomite of the upper Detroit River Group. The Lucas appears to consist of dolostone and limestone. Finely-laminated, brown dolostone is a common lithology in this unit. Lack of stratigraphic control in the loose quarry blocks makes specific lithologic assessments difficult. Stylolites are also present in the Lucas.

 

Stratigraphy: Dundee Limestone over Lucas Dolomite, Middle Devonian

 

Locality: Auglaize Quarry (= Shelly Company, Stoneco's Auglaize Facility), southeast of the town of Junction, northeastern Paulding County, northwestern Ohio, USA (41° 10' 27.83" North latitude, 84° 25' 19.75" West longitude)

 

This flower, when fully open, is approximately 1.5 to 2.0cm diameter (maximum). Several unopened buds also in photo.

Paulding County Georgia Car Show

Ricoh KR-10

Ricoh XR Rikenon 28mm f/3.5

Wild blueberry flowers (Vaccinium sp., possibly V. fuscatum). Unlike Elliott's Blueberry, which I have been finding on sandy creek bottoms, this bush was in a upland location. Furthermore, the stems are not green. Pickett's Mill State Historic Site, Paulding County, Georgia.

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