Home Blog Page 670

Gainesville’s Hall named GHSF Daily state Player of the Week

Gainesville RB Gavin Hall is this week's GHSF Daily state Player of the Week. (Photo Twitter )

Gainesville expected Gavin Hall to be a difference-maker when the all-state running back transferred from Hebron Christian, and he’s been that. Hall has rushed for 203, 170 and 180 yards.

His touchdowns have been the difference in all three Gainesville victories. He scored 12 points in an eight-point win over Coconut Grove of Florida, 18 points in a 13-point win over Mountain View and 12 points in a 34-26 victory over Marist.

Hall is GHSF Daily’s state Player of the Week. The award, sponsored by Sports Turf, will be presented to Hall at his school on Wednesday.

November city election in Cleveland canceled

FILE PHOTO - Cleveland City Council (wrwh.com)

There will be no municipal election in the City of Cleveland in November. The city canceled the election since only one candidate qualified for each of the open seats.

Mayor Josh Turner will return to office for a second term next year, as will Ward 1 Councilmember Nan Bowen.

Former Ward 2 Councilmember Annie Sutton will return to the council. She succeeds Rebecca Yardley who resigned at the end of August.

Missing Clarkesville teen found safe

Avery Haynes has been found safe, police say. (Clarkesville PD)

Six days after he went missing, authorities say they found a 15-year-old Clarkesville teen.

“Avery has been located and he is healthy,” the Clarkesville Police Department posted to its Facebook page on August 27.

Police issued a lookout for Avery Haynes after his family reported him missing. He had last been seen on the evening of August 21 near the McDonalds on Washington Street in Clarkesville. The lookout post on social media was shared hundreds of times.

The 15-year-old’s mother, Kati Kenney, made a public appeal for help finding her son.

“As a mother, I just want him found and to know that my son is okay — [that] somebody is helping him. We just want them to do the right thing and reach out to law enforcement,” she says.

While the Clarkesville Police Department did not say where or how Haynes was located, the department did express its gratitude to the community saying, “Thank you all for your help!”

Lady Lions Blanked in Losses to No. 10 Wash U and Centre

(Photo by Mooreshots LLC)

The Piedmont women’s soccer team was unable to find a goal in a pair of losses on Monday afternoon and evening in Danville, Kentucky.

After falling to No. 10 Washington Univ. (St. Louis) by an 8-0 margin in an afternoon neutral site contest, Piedmont fell to Centre 3-0 in the evening.

Game 1: No. 10 WashU 8, Piedmont 0

Playing its second consecutive game against a nationally-ranked opponent, the Lady Lions surrendered four goals in a 10-minute span in the first half and were unable to recover from the offensive onslaught.

WashU went on to add four more goals in the second half and tallied 38 shots. Madeline Allburn scored WashU’s first two goals, while the next five goals were all scored by a different player.

Haylee Dornan made seven saves in goal for the Lady Lions in 75 minutes of action.

Game 2: Centre 3, Piedmont 0

In the finale of the four-game road trip to start the season, the Lions hung tough through most of the first half, but the Colonels’ Lilly Zehnder broke through in the 32nd minute and then scored again just over seven minutes later to extend the lead to 2-0 going into the break.

Out of halftime, Centre’s Bella Nelson put away the third and final goal of the contest to make it 3-0 Colonels.

Piedmont tallied six total shots for the game, led by two from Dornan, who shifted to the field for game two. Sophomore Maggie Leger earned the start in goal for Piedmont and made five saves.

Man slips on dock, falls into Lake Lanier and drowns

The Labor Day weekend got off to a tragic start at Holiday Marina on Lake Lanier Saturday when a 23-year-old man drowned.

The Georgia Department of Natural Resources (DNR) confirmed the fatal drowning in a press release early Sunday. A spokesperson for the agency says game wardens responded to a report of a drowning shortly after 10 p.m. on September 2.

“An adult male was running down a dock, slipped, fell in, and did not resurface,” says Georgia DNR Law Enforcement Division spokesperson Mark McKinnon.

McKinnon identified the victim as Gavrie Alexander Whitlock of Snellville. Hall County Fire Rescue recovered his body in 17 feet of water.

This is the eighth fatal drowning in Lake Lanier in 2023.

In an unrelated incident, game wardens issued one BUI citation on Lake Lanier Saturday. No other incidents, injuries, or deaths have been reported this weekend on state waterways.

Maxwell’s playoff projections heading into Week 3

Playoffs? You kidding me? Playoffs?

Yeah, Jim Mora, it’s September, and we’re talking playoffs. Loren Maxwell, creator of the Maxwell Ratings, publishes his playoff predictions weekly on ajc.com, where he talks playoffs.

If nothing else, they’re newsworthy for the bracket alignment and region matchups, which change each year. And they’re great topics of motivation for the disrespected.

Below are the most likely first-round matchups 10 weeks out, according to Maxwell’s computer model.

Class 7A

Those Buford-Mill Creek (Oct. 13) and Carrollton-Westlake (Oct. 20) region games sure look good. And there’s about to be a run on thumbtacks in Kingsland. Camden County is projected to miss the playoffs.

R4 #3 Newton at R1 #2 Lowndes
R3 #4 McEachern at R2 #1 Westlake
R7 #3 Peachtree Ridge at R6 #2 Lambert
R8 #4 Mountain View at R5 #1 Walton
R1 #3 Valdosta at R4 #2 Grayson
R2 #4 Pebblebrook at R3 #1 Harrison
R6 #3 West Forsyth at R7 #2 North Gwinnett
R5 #4 Cherokee at R8 #1 Mill Creek
R5 #3 Wheeler at R8 #2 Buford
R6 #4 Denmark at R7 #1 Norcross
R2 #3 East Coweta at R3 #2 Marietta
R1 #4 Richmond Hill at R4 #1 Parkview
R8 #3 Collins Hill at R5 #2 North Cobb
R7 #4 Meadowcreek at R6 #1 Milton
R3 #3 North Paulding at R2 #2 Carrollton
R4 #4 Brookwood at R1 #1 Colquitt County

Class 6A

Not sure Houston County is really going to finish in fourth place again, but if the Bears do, that could produce a Houston County-Marist first-round game. In fact, Marist and all of Region 4 will be under a sweep warning come November, according to Maxwell.

R4 #3 St. Pius at R1 #2 Thomas County Central
R3 #4 Jonesboro at R2 #1 Brunswick
R7 #3 Alpharetta at R6 #2 Creekview
R8 #4 Shiloh at R5 #1 Hughes
R1 #3 Northside (Warner Robins) at R4 #2 North Atlanta
R2 #4 Evans at R3 #1 Woodward Academy
R6 #3 River Ridge at R7 #2 Blessed Trinity
R5 #4 South Paulding at R8 #1 Gainesville
R5 #3 Alexander at R8 #2 North Forsyth
R6 #4 Etowah at R7 #1 Roswell
R2 #3 Effingham County at R3 #2 Mundy’s Mill
R1 #4 Houston County at R4 #1 Marist
R8 #3 Lanier at R5 #2 Douglas County
R7 #4 Sprayberry at R6 #1 Rome
R3 #3 Lovejoy at R2 #2 Glynn Academy
R4 #4 Riverwood at R1 #1 Lee County

Class 5A

No. 2 Creekside, No. 3 Warner Robins and No. 4 Coffee are in the same quarter of this projected draw. The winners of regions 1 (projected to be Ware County) and 7 (Calhoun) might like what they see.

R4 #3 Chamblee at R1 #2 Coffee
R3 #4 Harris at R2 #1 Warner Robins
R7 #3 Dalton at R6 #2 Cambridge
R8 #4 Eastside at R5 #1 Creekside
R1 #3 Statesboro at R4 #2 Decatur
R2 #4 Ola at R3 #1 Northgate
R6 #3 Greater Atlanta Christian at R7 #2 Cartersville
R5 #4 Banneker at R8 #1 Jefferson
R5 #3 Chapel Hill at R8 #2 Flowery Branch
R6 #4 Centennial at R7 #1 Calhoun
R2 #3 Jones County at R3 #2 Northside (Columbus)
R1 #4 Jenkins at R4 #1 Tucker
R8 #3 Clarke Central at R5 #2 Mays
R7 #4 Hiram at R6 #1 Kell
R3 #3 McIntosh at R2 #2 Dutchtown
R4 #4 Arabia Mountain at R1 #1 Ware County

Class 4A

No. 1 Benedictine and No. 2 North Oconee will be in the same quarter of the draw if they win their regions. No. 6 Wayne County at No. 5 Perry would be a strong first-rounder, though both are bent on finishing higher than projected. Maxwell predicts Baldwin will go to the semifinals for the first time since 2005.

R4 #3 Whitewater at R1 #2 Cairo
R3 #4 New Hampstead at R2 #1 Baldwin
R7 #3 Northwest Whitfield at R6 #2 Stephenson
R8 #4 Cedar Shoals at R5 #1 Stockbridge
R1 #3 Westover at R4 #2 Trinity Christian
R2 #4 Howard at R3 #1 Benedictine
R6 #3 Hapeville Charter at R7 #2 Central (Carrollton)
R5 #4 McDonough at R8 #1 North Oconee
R5 #3 Lovett at R8 #2 Madison County
R6 #4 Westminster at R7 #1 Cedartown
R2 #3 Spalding at R3 #2 Burke County
R1 #4 Hardaway at R4 #1 Troup
R8 #3 North Hall at R5 #2 Pace Academy
R7 #4 Sonoraville at R6 #1 Holy Innocents’
R3 #3 Wayne County at R2 #2 Perry
R4 #4 LaGrange at R1 #1 Bainbridge

Class 3A

No. 7 Monroe Area at No. 6 Carver of Atlanta would be a first-round treat. Maxwell is projecting Stephens County to the semifinals for the first time since 1992.

R4 #3 Hephzibah at R1 #2 Carver (Columbus)
R3 #4 Long County at R2 #1 Peach County
R7 #3 Pickens at R6 #2 Ringgold
R8 #4 Hebron Christian at R5 #1 Cedar Grove
R1 #3 Crisp County at R4 #2 Morgan County
R2 #4 Jackson at R3 #1 Calvary Day
R6 #3 Bremen at R7 #2 White County
R5 #4 Douglass at R8 #1 Stephens County
R5 #3 Carver (Atlanta) at R8 #2 Monroe Area
R6 #4 Coahulla Creek at R7 #1 Dawson County
R2 #3 Mary Persons at R3 #2 Savannah Christian
R1 #4 Dougherty at R4 #1 Harlem
R8 #3 Oconee County at R5 #2 Sandy Creek
R7 #4 Wesleyan at R6 #1 Adairsville
R3 #3 Savannah Country Day at R2 #2 Upson-Lee
R4 #4 Richmond Academy at R1 #1 Thomasville

Class 2A

Maxwell projects North Cobb Christian to win its first region title and Redan to make the playoffs for the first time since 2007.

R4 #3 Washington County at R1 #2 Cook
R3 #4 Vidalia at R2 #1 Northeast
R7 #3 Fannin County at R6 #2 South Atlanta
R8 #4 East Jackson at R5 #1 Callaway
R1 #3 Dodge County at R4 #2 Putnam County
R2 #4 Southwest at R3 #1 Pierce County
R6 #3 Mount Paran Christian at R7 #2 North Murray
R5 #4 Redan at R8 #1 Fellowship Christian
R5 #3 Columbia at R8 #2 Athens Academy
R6 #4 Washington at R7 #1 Rockmart
R2 #3 ACE Charter at R3 #2 Appling County
R1 #4 Jeff Davis at R4 #1 Thomson
R8 #3 Union County at R5 #2 Eagle’s Landing Christian
R7 #4 Model at R6 #1 North Cobb Christian
R3 #3 Toombs County at R2 #2 Spencer
R4 #4 Laney at R1 #1 Fitzgerald

Class A Division I

The 2022 finalists – No. 1 Prince Avenue Christian and No. 2 Swainsboro – are projected to meet in the quarterfinals. Also under this theory, Mount Vernon will win its first region title, Bryan County will host its first state playoff game, and Jasper County will host its first since 1992.

R4 #3 Heard County at R1 #2 Brooks County
R3 #4 Claxton at R2 #1 Swainsboro
R7 #3 Pepperell at R6 #2 Whitefield Academy
R8 #4 Athens Christian at R5 #1 Prince Avenue Christian
R1 #3 Pelham at R4 #2 Temple
R2 #4 Jefferson County at R3 #1 Metter
R6 #3 Mount Pisgah Christian at R7 #2 Darlington
R5 #4 Oglethorpe County at R8 #1 Rabun County
R5 #3 Social Circle at R8 #2 Elbert County
R6 #4 St. Francis at R7 #1 Trion
R2 #3 Dublin at R3 #2 Bryan County
R1 #4 Bacon County at R4 #1 Lamar County
R8 #3 Commerce at R5 #2 Jasper County
R7 #4 Dade County at R6 #1 Mount Vernon
R3 #3 Screven County at R2 #2 Bleckley County
R4 #4 Crawford County at R1 #1 Irwin County

Class A Division II

Macon County beat Clinch County last week, and Early County plays Schley County this week. If these projections hold, those games will be replayed in the second round. Maxwell also thinks that GHSF Daily’s second-ranked team in the class, Manchester, is the third-best team in Region 6.

R4 #3 Telfair County at R1 #2 Mitchell County
R3 #4 Portal at R2 #1 Clinch County
R7 #3 Christian Heritage at R6 #2 Macon County
R8 #4 Lincoln County at R5 #1 Johnson County
R1 #3 Terrell County at R4 #2 Dooly County
R2 #4 Lanier County at R3 #1 McIntosh County Academy
R6 #3 Manchester at R7 #2 Mount Zion
R5 #4 GMC Prep at R8 #1 Aquinas
R5 #3 Hancock Central at R8 #2 Greene County
R6 #4 Chattahoochee County at R7 #1 Bowdon
R2 #3 Charlton County at R3 #2 ECI
R1 #4 Miller County at R4 #1 Wilcox County
R8 #3 Washington-Wilkes at R5 #2 Wilkinson County
R7 #4 Bye vs. R6 #1 Schley County
R3 #3 Jenkins County at R2 #2 Turner County
R4 #4 Wheeler County at R1 #1 Early County

Produced by Georgia High School Football Daily, a free e-mail newsletter. To join the mailing list, click here.

Fatal wreck south of Toccoa kills 1, injures 4 others

A Toccoa man was killed, and four others were injured in a two-vehicle wreck south of Toccoa this weekend.

Troopers with Georgia State Patrol Post 7 in Toccoa investigated the crash, which occurred Friday night on GA 106/Mize Road at Old Mize Road.

Crashed at ‘high rate of speed’

According to the preliminary crash report, 33-year-old Lacitrus Gholston was driving north on GA 106 at a “high rate of speed.”

“While negotiating a curve to the left, Mr. Gholston lost control of his vehicle,” the reports states.

The Charger crossed into the southbound traffic lane and collided with a Ford SuperDuty pickup truck driven by Brian Caleb Phillips of Toccoa.

After impact, the pickup flipped onto its roof, slid, and struck a traffic sign before stopping upright on the right shoulder of the highway. The Charger came to an uncontrolled rest on the right shoulder of the road.

The 21-year-old Phillips and three passengers in his vehicle sustained minor injuries. One of the passengers was a 15-year-old boy. Troopers did not release his name. They identified the two other passengers as Brooke Alyssa Phillips, 24, and Breelin S. Reece, 18, both of Toccoa.

Emergency personnel transported all four occupants of the pickup to Northeast Georgia Medical Center in Gainesville with non-life-threatening injuries.

Troopers say Gholston was unrestrained. He died at the scene.

No active pursuit

While some local news outlets quoted family sources as saying Gholston was fleeing from law enforcement at the time of the crash, the commander of the state patrol post that investigated the crash says there was no active pursuit.

Georgia State Patrol Post 7 Commander Donnie Saddler tells Now Habersham that Gholston was speeding and passing on a double yellow line. He says the trooper noticed and was turning around, but Gholston was “never fleeing.”
SEE ALSO

At least 10 killed on Georgia’s roads this Labor Day weekend

Georgia jobs plentiful but working conditions not best, new report says

(Source: OXFAM America)

(GA Recorder) — Peach State politicos on both sides of the aisle like to tout Georgia as the best state in the nation to do business. But a new report from Oxfam America says Georgia may be one of the worst states to be a worker.

“If you want to come in here and run a big business, I’m sure it’d be great,” said Hannah Perkins, political and campaign director for the Georgia AFL-CIO. “The statistics show that it would be great. However, what the numbers show and what the people say is that it’s not the number one place to work.”

The report rates Georgia as No. 50 in the nation for best places to work, although because Washington D.C. and Puerto Rico are included, Georgia is not dead last – Mississippi and North Carolina score lower.

Oxfam dinged Georgia for its low minimum wage, $7.25, as low as it is legally possible to pay most hourly workers in the United States. Oxfam says that amounts to just under 19% of the cost of living for a family of four in Georgia.

In response to the study, the Georgia Department of Labor presented statistics showing the median wage in Georgia was $18.43 in 2022, which would be just under 48% of the cost of living for a family of four.

The department’s communications director Shawna Mercer also touted Georgia’s low unemployment rate, 3.2 percent, compared to 3.8 percent nationwide, which she said places Georgia at No. 29 nationwide but No. 3 among the 12 states with populations greater than 8 million.

She said Georgia added more than 88,000 jobs between July 2022 and 2023, making it No. 11 among states for that statistic.

But Oxfam America found those Georgia jobs came with a lot more risk than in other states for the workers who perform them. Georgia lost points for its worker protection policies, coming in at No. 49 in that metric. While the researchers gave the state some credit for instituting some protections like child labor safeguards, Georgia lost points for many policies it does not require, such as paid sick leave, advanced notice of shift scheduling or a heat safety standard for outdoor workers.

“Elected officials and everyone at the top can just read these stats, these are more than just stats for us,” Perkins said. “These are people, this is their lives, and we want to make sure that every worker has the right to a good paying job, a safe job where they are free and can fairly organize if they choose to.”

Georgia certainly did not pick up any points for being friendly to organized labor. Oxfam noted the state has a so-called right-to-work law, does not provide collective bargaining and wage negotiations to teachers, does not protect workers from wage theft retaliation and does not require collective bargaining for public workers.

“When we’re looking at wages, workers in labor unions make 18% more,” Perkins said. “We also ensure that there are better health care benefits and safer places to work and especially given we are a right to work state.”

The researchers found Georgia’s average working Josephine may have a slightly better time than the working Joseph.

Georgia ranked 49 out of 52 for working women in the report, above Mississippi, Alabama and North Carolina.

The auditors gave Georgia some kudos for mandating paid pump breaks for breastfeeding workers and requiring equal pay across gender and race, but they found Georgia is lacking in policies that other states have in place to help women, including protection against sexual harassment in state law, worker protections for domestic workers and paid family leave.

Oxfam found that most of Georgia’s neighbors are not providing a good example. In the overall ranking, Tennessee comes in at No. 45, North Carolina at 52, South Carolina at 49 and Alabama at 48.

Virginia scored the highest in the Southeast at No. 28, with a minimum wage of $12 per hour, 29.5% of the cost of living for a family of four, and Florida was not far behind at No. 30, with a minimum wage of $11, which represents just of 28% of the cost of living.

California scored highest, according to the report. Minimum wage workers there take home $15.50 per hour, representing more than 34.25% of the average cost of living, and workers there enjoy some mandated benefits that Georgians do not.

Simple safety tips for the lake on Labor Day

Personal Flotation Devices - PDFs - are required for all children under 13 and are highly recommended for all boat and jet ski riders to avoid accidental drowning.

On this Labor Day Monday, people across the U.S. will be hitting the beaches and lakes for summer’s last hurrah. Public safety officials want you to make it a safe one. Hall County’s Marine Rescue Team and state game wardens will continue patrolling Lake Lanier throughout the day. They urge everyone planning to visit Lanier or other area lakes, to follow these basic safety measures.

One of the best ways you can protect yourself and your family on the water is to wear a properly fitted personal flotation device (PFD). Georgia’s boating law requires children under the age of 13 to wear a life jacket and everyone onboard to have easy access to one.

“This prevents potential drownings, especially in the event that an individual is thrown from a water vessel or involved in a boating accident,” says Hall County Fire Rescue Public Information Officer Kimberlie Ledsinger.

At Lake Lanier, many designated swim areas have Life Vest Loaner Stations provided by the Army Corps of Engineers.

If you’re going to be swimming in the lake, it’s highly recommended you swim only within supervised areas. Also, avoid potential exhaustion and stay within a reasonable distance from the shore.

“Parents and guardians, please keep constant watch over your children, even if they are considered to be strong swimmers,” urges Ledsinger.

Drinking while boating? Make sure to have a designated operator onboard. Game wardens are issuing BUI citations and, more importantly, a sober driver can help keep everyone safe. Also while boating, make sure to stay focused and aware of your surroundings. The law requires you to stay at least 100 feet away from other boats, structures, and the shoreline if you’re above idle speed.

Charles “Chuck” McLeroy

Evans Funeral Home of Jefferson announces the death of Mr. Charles “Chuck” McLeroy, age 54, of Athens, Georgia, who entered rest Thursday, August 24, 2023.

Mr. McLeroy was born in Athens, Georgia, a son of the late James and Barbara McLeroy. In addition to his parents, Chuck is preceded by his sister, Tammy Wilkes, and two brothers, Greg McLeroy and Rusty McLeroy, and was the last survivor of his immediate family.

Chuck is survived by a loving family that will cherish his memory forever, and that consists of five children. Christina McLeroy (Cynthia) of Commerce, Cody Bass of Colbert, Taylor McLeroy (Savannah) of Jefferson, Mark McLeroy of Athens, and Jaden McLeroy of Athens.

A very special thanks to Cindy McLeroy.

A celebration of life service will be held 6:00 – 8:00 P.M. September 7, 2023, at the Jefferson Club House, 302 Longview Drive, Jefferson, Georgia.

Online condolences at www.evansfuneralhomeinc.com.

Evans Funeral Home, Inc., 1350 Winder Highway, Jefferson, Georgia. 706-367-5467

Stephen K. Wilbanks

Stephen K. Wilbanks, age 74, of Baldwin, Georgia, went home to be with Jesus on Sunday, September 3, 2023.

Mr. Wilbanks was born on November 6, 1948, in the Charm House in Clarkesville, Georgia, to the late Telford and Ostine Elizabeth Smith Wilbanks. In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by his sisters, Priscilla Waters and Leila McDowell.

Stephen was a Combat Injured Veteran, having served in the United States Army during the Vietnam War. He was a member of Broad River Baptist Church and was a devoted man of God. Stephen spent as much time possible witnessing to as many people as he could, even after moving into a memory care home. Stephen will be remembered by his family as a loving and dedicated father, grandfather, and brother and was known to his grandchildren as “G-Daddy.” He will be remembered by the community for his selfless and giving nature.

Survivors include his daughter and son-in-law, Elizabeth and Jay Ebers, of Cornelia; grandchildren, Cara Beth Ebers, Gus Ebers; siblings, Paula (Ken) Hudgins, of Gainesville; Sylvia Mason, of Baldwin; Elaine Maxwell, of Baldwin; Joan (Bobby) Bradley, of Rockmart; Ronnie (Anna) Wilbanks, of Denver, NC; Phyllis (Fred) Johnson, of Baldwin; Rosemary (Johnny) Williams, of Baldwin; Kay (Sam) Graves, of Fayetville; Tim (Nancy) Wilbanks, of Bradenton, FL; and numerous nieces, nephews, great-nieces and great nephews.

Funeral Services will be held at 4:00 p.m., Wednesday, September 6, 2023 at the Whitfield Funeral Home, South Chapel with Mr. Tim Wilbanks officiating. Interment will follow in the Broad River Baptist Church Cemetery with Rev. Connie Berry officiating and military honors provided by the United States Army and the Grave Reeves Honor Guard.

The family will receive friends from 2:30 p.m. to 3:45 p.m., Wednesday, September 6, 2023, at the funeral home prior to the service.

In lieu of flowers, memorial donations may be made in Stephen’s Memory to the Grant Reeves Honor Guard, 174 Cornelia Crossing Shopping Center, Cornelia, Georgia 30531.

Arrangements have been entrusted to the Whitfield Funeral Homes & Crematory, South Chapel, at 1370 Industrial Boulevard, Baldwin, Georgia 30511. Telephone: 706-778-7123.

Linton Kimzey “Kim” Crawford, Jr.

Linton Kimzey Crawford, Jr. of Cornelia, Georgia, peacefully passed away at his residence on Saturday, September 2, 2023, at the age of 77, after a courageous battle with an extended illness. He was better known as “Kim” and was a lifelong resident of Habersham County, born on July 20, 1946, to his late parents, Gloria Schwager Crawford and Linton K. Crawford, Sr.

Kim’s legacy is deeply cherished by his family, who stood beside him throughout his remarkable journey of life. He is survived by his wife of 52 years, Sonja Martin Crawford; daughter, Derenda C. Cragg (Lorne Cragg), residing in Cornelia; son, David M. Crawford (Jeffery Baggett), residing in Fort Lauderdale, FL; grandsons, Braxton M. Pierce (Whitney R. Carder) of Cornelia, and Spencer Christian Pierce of Homer; brothers, Michael H. Crawford of Cornelia; Brian Crawford of Winder; and his sister, Sharon C. Johnson of Gainesville; in-laws, Richard and Wanda Martin of Ft. Ogelthorpe, GA.

Kim was a proud alumnus of The University of Georgia, holding both a Bachelor of Arts Degree and a Juris Doctor Degree. His dedication to education was mirrored in his military service, where he served honorably in the United States Navy from November 1968 to June 1972, serving two tours to Vietnam. His commitment to his country extended further, as he served in the Navy Reserve’s Intelligence Division from 1972 to 1990, eventually retiring with the rank of Commander.

Kim’s professional life was marked by his commitment to his community. He served as a Real Estate Attorney from 1975 to 2010. He served as Attorney for Habersham Electric Membership Corporation from 1976 to 1996 and again from 2002 to 2012. He served as the Habersham County Board of Education Attorney from 1980 to 1996 and also presided as a Municipal Court Judge for the City of Tallulah Falls and the City of Clarkesville during the same period. He served as Habersham County State Court Judge from 1997 to 2010. In 2010, Kim was appointed to the Superior Court of the Mountain Judicial Circuit, retiring in 2012.

Throughout his life, Kim was an active member of his community and various professional organizations. He served on the Habersham Medical Center Authority and was a proud member of the Georgia State Bar Association, the Georgia State Court Judges Association, the Habersham County Rotary Club, and the Habersham County Chamber of Commerce.

Kim’s life was defined by his unwavering faith and passion for the arts and sports. He was an active member of the First Baptist Church of Cornelia, where he served as a choir member, Sunday school teacher, and Deacon. Kim also enjoyed gardening, golf, and fishing, finding solace in the serenity of nature. An avid supporter of the Georgia Bulldogs and the Atlanta Braves, he cheered fervently for his favorite teams, instilling a love for sports in those around him.

Linton Kimzey Crawford, Jr. will be remembered as a loving husband, a devoted father and grandfather, a distinguished legal professional, a dedicated public servant, and a man of deep faith and character.

Memorial Services honoring Mr. Crawford will be held at 2:00 p.m., Wednesday, September 6, 2023, at the Whitfield Funeral Home, North Chapel, with Dr. Nathan LaShoto and Rev. Steve Doran officiating.

The family will receive friends from 12:00 p.m. to 1:45 p.m., Wednesday, September 6, 2023, at the funeral home prior to the service.

In lieu of flowers, the family respectfully requests that memorials be made to the charity of one’s choice.

Arrangements have been entrusted to the Whitfield Funeral Homes & Crematory, North Chapel at 245 Central Avenue, Demorest, Georgia 30535. Telephone: 706-778-1700.