Today’s Mystery Photo may remind us of a photograph taken in New York at the end of World War II. But this is a statue. Can you figure out where it is? Send your answer to ebrack2@gmail.com, including your hometown.
Today’s Mystery Photo is a monument which looks like it is in the middle of nowhere. Identify it and tell us where it is located, and why. Send your answer to ebrack2@gmail.com, and include your hometown.
Check out this eight-man-tall statue. Now can you figure out where this statue is located? If you realize where it is, send your answer to ebrack2@gmail.com, and include your hometown.
Yep, our fascination with lighthouses brings this mystery to you. Tell us where this tower is located, and you’ll solve today’s mystery. Remember to tell us your home town when you send your thoughts to ebrack2@gmail.com.
Today’s Mystery Photo is a monument to somebody…but who? Try to figure out today’s mystery, and submit your idea to ebrack2@gmail.com. Be sure to list your hometown.
Our readers should think broadly about this edition’s Mystery Photo. That’s all we’ll say. Just tell us where it is and what the photo is about. Send entries to ebrack2@gmail.com, including your hometown.
There’s more going on in this photograph than you may at first recognize. See if you can pinpoint the location and the activity of this modern scene. Also tell us about the building now…and in the past. Send your thoughts to a new address, ebrack2@gmail.com, and include your hometown.
Sometimes things are not what they see. Perhaps you can identify this Mystery Photo, but we warn you, be careful. Once you make identification, send your answer to a new email: click here. And be sure to list your hometown.
Here is an impressive city entrance gate, no doubt loaded down with history. See if you can identify this photo, and tell what it signifies. Send your ideas to elliott@brack.net, and include the town where you live.
Springtime brings out lots of winter-delayed activities. Today’s Mystery Photo speaks to that. Just where is this building located, and what is it? Send your answer to elliott@brack.net, and include your home town.
“I have learned that our greatest blessings come when we are able to improve the lives of others, and this is especially true when those others are desperately poor or in need.”
–The 39th president of the United States, Jimmy Carter (1924-2024), via Cindy Evans, Duluth.
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Continuing objectives
Gwinnett Forum publisher Elliott Brack suggests Gwinnett County needs a long-range list of continuing objectives for improving the county. His 2025 list:
Move statewide non-partisan judicial and school board elections to the date of the General Election.
More creative efforts to support the arts in Gwinnett.
Advancement and expansion of city historical societies.
Require establishments that serve alcoholic beverages to halt sales of such products at 1 a.m., and close by 2 a.m.
Require the Georgia Legislature to meet only once every two years.
Eliminate single-use plastic packaging and straws in Gwinnett and require instead the use of paper products.
Gwinnett planners to encourage condos and townhouses instead of apartments.
Interested in Gwinnett history?
Now re-printed in its third edition, Gwinnett: A Little Above Atlanta, the award-winning history of Gwinnett County, is once again available for purchase. It sold out of its first two printings. The book won the 2010 Award of Excellence in Documenting Georgia History from the Georgia Historical Records Advisory Board. The book is available at Old Town Antiques at 93 Main Street in Lilburn.
The history of Gwinnett is also available as an e-book from Amazon or Barnes and Noble for $9.95.
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