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Welcome to the
Fayette
Front Page... the better side of news for the citizens of Fayette
County! First to bring you complete daily community news you can use.
Enjoy some of the best news in the county and the state of Georgia!
The Genealogical Society of Henry and Clayton Counties, Inc. invites
the public to join them at their quarterly meeting at the National
Archives, SE Region, Morrow, June 20, 10:00 am. The guest speaker will
be John Vogt, who will give a program on the "American South Following the
Revolution: Picking up the pieces 1780-1820" and "From Revolution to
Session; Families Divided by the Rising Tide of Sectionalism, 1820-1860".
There is no charge to attend.
We cannot live only for ourselves. A thousand
fibers connect us with our fellow-men; and along those fibers, as
sympathetic threads, our actions run as causes, and they come back to us as
effects.
- Henry Melville
The
Fayette Front Page offers a FREE page to all non-profits!
Visit the
Directory to see
more civic groups and non-profits. If you'd like to add your
non-profit organizations information to the site please
send us an email!
Six essential qualities that
are the key to success: Sincerity, personal integrity, humility, courtesy,
wisdom, charity. - William Menninger
Public Notices and Public Meetings
Westmoreland Reflects on the US Constitution with Fayetteville's DAR
L - R: Carolyn Balog, Georgia State Constitution Week
Chairman Mary Simonds, Regent Betty Harrah, Congressman Lynn Westmoreland,
Ann Eldredge, Rachel Colbert
8/21/07 (Guest Article) The sun was gently beginning to warm
the air on this August morning in Fayetteville. Inside Southern Oaks was a blur
of activity as the ladies of the James Waldrop Chapter Daughters of the American
Revolution eagerly awaited the arrival of their guest speaker. "He's here,"
murmured the crowd assembled.
Chapter Regent Betty Harrah and Chapter Constitution Week Chairman Ann Eldredge
escorted Georgia's Third District Congressman Lynn Westmoreland into the room.
Members of the Marquis deLafayette Sons of the American Revolution Color Guard
marched in with the US and Georgia Flags. The crowd stood, placed their hands
over their hearts and proudly recited the Pledge of Allegiance.
Westmoreland electrified the air as he spoke to the audience on the meaning of
the US Constitution in his life and on the efforts of the James Waldrop Chapter
DAR to teach the children about the Constitution.
Westmoreland commented, "We need to make sure that every child
in this country learns about the founding fathers, the blood that was sacrificed
and the reason the Constitution was made. It's a document where men govern
themselves. We need to make sure our young people understand that."
He concluded his talk by thanking the ladies of the Daughters of the American
Revolution, and in particular, the James Waldrop Chapter, for their efforts in
teaching the youth of America about the Constitution.
"Tell the children what their ancestors were like and what
sacrifices they made for their generation. What they did for this country and to
promote the cause of freedom. Where they served. How they served and what they
did. Right now, too many people have forgotten."
This year marks the 220th anniversary of the framing of the United State
Constitution. National Constitution Week will be celebrated across the land
September 17-23rd.
"Please join our nation in proclaiming our freedoms given us
by the Constitution at 4 pm on Monday, September 17 by ringing bells," Eldredge
invited. "How glorious for all the land to hear the bells proudly ring. We are
America and our Constitution is still the backbone of our great nation. In the
words of Congressman Westmoreland, 'It's a responsibility we have. It's the
responsibility our forefathers took very seriously.'"