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Dec. 22—Editor's note: The Aiken Standard is counting down its top 10 local news stories of 2021. This is No. 9 in the 10-part series beginning Dec. 22 and ending Dec. 31. Numerous Aiken County ...
Dec. 29—Editor's note: The Aiken Standard is counting down its top 10 local news stories of 2021. This is No. 3 in the 10-part series, beginning Dec. 22 and ending Dec. 31. In early 2019, the ...
The newspaper closed out the old operation with its issue of Friday, September 26, 1969, and published its first issue from the new plant on September 29, 1969. By this time, the newspaper's name had been shortened, and it became the Aiken Standard of today. Samuel A. Cothran was the modern Aiken Standard's first Publisher and Editor. Under the ...
September 18, 2024 at 11:12 AM. Clashing narratives about secret cameras that videoed intimate scenes of unsuspecting nude and partially dressed renters in an Aiken rental cottage dominated the ...
Aiken is the most populous city in, and the county seat of, Aiken County, South Carolina, United States. [9][10] According to 2020 census, the population was 32,025, [11] making it the 15th-most populous city in South Carolina, and one of the two largest cities of the Central Savannah River Area. Founded in 1835, Aiken was named after William ...
Aug. 23—More houses could be coming to the downtown Aiken area. The Aiken City Council voted unanimously on Aug. 22 to approve the second and final reading of an ordinance entering into a ...
Sep. 22—Aiken County Council on Tuesday approved a plan for how to spend funds provided by the American Rescue Plan Act, or ARPA. The action was taken during a meeting of the panel at the Aiken ...
Information on Aiken's early life is largely unknown; his date of birth, city of birth, and even his full name varies depending on source. His official birth records, as well as the 1840 and 1850 census records, indicate that he was born Frederick Augustus Aiken on September 20, 1832, in Lowell, Massachusetts, to Susan (née Rice) and Solomon S. Aiken. [2]