Sugarloaf parkway kindercare: Daycare, Preschool & Child Care Centers in Sugarloaf Parkway, GA

Опубликовано: June 2, 2023 в 4:56 am

Автор:

Категории: Miscellaneous

Daycare, Preschool & Child Care Centers in Sugarloaf Parkway, GA

KinderCare has partnered with Sugarloaf Parkway families for more than 50 years to provide award-winning early education programs and high-quality childcare in Sugarloaf Parkway, GA.

Whether you are looking for a preschool in Sugarloaf Parkway, a trusted part-time or full-time daycare provider, or educational before- or after-school programs, KinderCare offers fun and learning at an affordable price.

  1. McKendree Church Rd KinderCare

    Phone:
    (770) 339-9520

    1191 McKendree Church Rd
    Lawrenceville
    GA
    30043

    Distance from address: 2.28 miles

    Ages: 6 weeks to 12 years
    Open:

    Tuition & Openings

  2. Suwanee KinderCare

    Phone:
    (770) 271-8206

    2725 Lawrenceville Suwanee Rd
    Suwanee
    GA
    30024

    Distance from address: 5. 70 miles

    Ages: 6 weeks to 12 years
    Open:

    Tuition & Openings

  3. Liddell KinderCare

    Phone:
    (770) 497-1001

    2120 W Liddell Rd
    Duluth
    GA
    30096

    Distance from address: 6.41 miles

    Ages: 6 weeks to 12 years
    Open:

    Tuition & Openings

  4. Sugar Hill KinderCare

    Phone:
    (678) 482-2356

    4540 Nelson Brogdon Blvd
    Sugar Hill
    GA
    30518

    Distance from address: 10. 97 miles

    Ages: 6 weeks to 12 years
    Open:

    Tuition & Openings

  5. Buford KinderCare

    Phone:
    (678) 714-7021

    3966 S Bogan Rd
    Buford
    GA
    30519

    Distance from address: 11.36 miles

    Ages: 6 weeks to 12 years
    Open:

    Tuition & Openings

  6. Old Chamblee-Tucker KinderCare

    Phone:
    (770) 938-9828

    3520 Old Chamblee Tucker Rd
    Atlanta
    GA
    30340

    Distance from address: 12. 59 miles

    Ages: 6 weeks to 12 years
    Open:

    Tuition & Openings

Sugarloaf Parkway KinderCare – CLOSED in Lawrenceville, Georgia

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  • Sugarloaf Parkway KinderCare – CLOSED
Name: Sugarloaf Parkway KinderCare – CLOSED
Type: Prek
Enrolling: No
Prek Address: 1720 Marathon Blvd., Lawrenceville, GA 30045
Prek Phone: (770) 339-3068
Child ages: 6 weeks – 12 years
Rate: n/a
Prek Website: http://www. kindercare.com/our-centers/lawrenceville/ga/301544/

Prek Description

THIS CENTER IS PERMANENTLY CLOSED.

Welcome to Sugarloaf Parkway KinderCare located on Marathon Blvd. near Sugarloaf Pkwy. in Lawrenceville!  We are so excited you are here!  Our NAEYC (National Association for the Education of Young Children) accredited child care center is designed to help prepare your child for success in school and beyond. With a challenging curriculum and safe environment as our priorities, your children have the opportunity for rich social play and child-initiated discovery. You’ll also find that our classrooms feature a print-rich environment full of carefully selected materials, written charts and labels, stimulating displays, and children’s literature. By helping your child connect spoken words and print, we’re helping develop early literacy and writing skills. Whether your child has first words or first grade on the horizon, we’re excited to show you how everything in our center is designed for learning!

View profile on Mom Trusted: Sugarloaf Parkway KinderCare – CLOSED in Lawrenceville, GA


Accept vouchers
No
Inspection URL
n/a
Special Needs
n/a
Operating hours

m-f 6:30 AM-6:30 PM,sat closed sun closed

Contact prek

Check Availability and RatesGet Info PacketContact

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Sugarloaf Parkway KinderCare – CLOSED on Map


Sugarloaf Parkway KinderCare – CLOSED

(770) 339-3068

1720 Marathon Blvd. , Lawrenceville, GA 30045

City of Sevastopol, Settlement Sugar Loaf, Boulevard of Tractors


FIAS object card:
KLADR code:
92000000034000800
FIAS code:
6266fd9f-365a-4337-8078-66efa7e850d5
GAR code:
1456814

Administrative address: City of Sevastopol, Settlement Sugarloaf, Tractor Boulevard
Abbreviated address: Sevastopol, p. Sugar head, b-r. Tractor drivers

Municipal address: City of Sevastopol, intracity territory (intracity municipality) of the city of federal significance Balaklavsky municipal district, Settlement Sugar head, Tractor drivers boulevard
Abbreviated address: Sevastopol, vn.ter.g .. Balaklavsky municipal district, p. Sugarloaf, blvd. Tractor drivers

Region: 92 Sevastopol city
City/Town:
sugar head
P
Street: Tractorists B-R

OKATO: 67263000004
OKTMO: 67302000121
Register: 673020000000000116102
IFTS code: 9200 Federal Tax Service of Russia for the city of Sevastopol

Tractor drivers Blvd. includes:

31
house

house


house 1
D 2
page 3
d. 3
page 4
d. 4
Ms 4
page 5
d. 5
building 5
Ms 5
d. 6
D 7
Ms 8
d. 8
page 8
building 8
building 9d. 9
page 9
d. 10
page 10
Ms 10
d. 11
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Ms 14
d. 14
building 14
page 14
d. 9a

“Sugar Loaf” by Anthony the Roman | Portal 53

Together with the monk, who sailed to Novgorod on a stone, a bell arrived, which is considered the most ancient in Russia.

Who doesn’t know Novgorod bells? Their voices can be heard from the belfry of St. Sophia Cathedral in the Novgorod Kremlin, next to which there are other huge exhibits of bell art. And inside the belfry, bell rarities are presented at the exhibition “Ancient Bells of Veliky Novgorod”.

Of course, if we are talking about Novgorod bells, any of us will definitely remember the famous Valdai bells with their “delightful ringing” famous in literature.

But few people know that in the Novgorod Museum-Reserve, in the building of the Offices in the Kremlin, in the exposition “History of Novgorod and the Novgorod land from ancient times to the end of the 17th century” there is a unique exhibit – the very first bell that appeared in Russia, main character today’s Treasury.

“Sugar loaf”

Finding this small bell, the shape that experts call “sugar loaf”, is not difficult, knowing the age when it was made. Moreover, there are no other bells in the first part of the exposition. The fact is that in those ancient times in Rus’, the foundry business was not yet developed enough to create chimes on its own. That is why they were brought for churches and monasteries being built everywhere from Western Europe, where at that time there were the best bell makers.

Thus, in the 12th century, a foreign bell appeared in Novgorod, which is by far the oldest surviving bell not only in our city, but throughout Russia. According to church tradition and according to researchers of the 19th century, the Monk Anthony the Roman brought him to us.

Saint Anthony the Roman (about 1067 – August 3, 1147) – Russian Orthodox saint, founder of the Novgorod Antoniev Monastery.

According to the life of the saint, compiled in the 16th century, Anthony was born in Rome to Orthodox parents. At the age of 18, orphaned, he took monastic vows. When the persecution of Orthodoxy began, Anthony prayed for a year on a seaside rock. One day the stone on which Anthony was standing broke off the rock and fell into the sea. Miraculously, he sailed on a rock to Novgorod. With the assistance of the Novgorod Bishop Nikita, Antony founded a monastery in honor of the Nativity of the Most Holy Theotokos, spending for this purpose the remains of his property found in a barrel caught by fishermen. He ruled the monastery for 16 years, on the eve of his death, appointing monk Andrei as his successor, to whom the authorship of the life is attributed.

The life of the saint is mainly of a legendary nature, but Anthony’s activity is confirmed by historical sources: Novgorod chronicles and lists of the saint’s “spiritual literacy”.

He was canonized in 1597. For many years, his remains were considered lost, but in 2016, scientists managed to isolate the relics of Anthony the Roman from the complex of remains stored in St. Sophia Cathedral and transfer them to the church.

It is a pity that the founders of that time rarely stamped their products with the brand of the author and the year of issue. How much easier it would be for scientists and researchers to work! Indeed, today no one can say with absolute certainty whether the bell from the exposition of the Novgorod Museum-Reserve belonged to a Russian saint or not. Scientists claim that it was made a couple of decades after the death of Antony. But when it comes to a period of nine centuries, the error may well be several decades.

What can be absolutely certain today is that of the bells that appeared in Rus’ in the Middle Ages and have survived to this day, there is no older bell than this one. What is very valuable, during the whole time he was part of the bell ringing of the Anthony Monastery. And only in the last century it took an honorable place in the funds of the Novgorod Museum-Reserve.

Who knows, maybe future studies of this exhibit will be able to put an end to the determination that the ancient bell belonged to the Novgorod saint.

From eye to tongue

The exhibits kept in the St. Sophia Belfry were more fortunate. After all, in the 16th century, when the flourishing of bell art began in Rus’, including Novgorod, many craftsmen cast on them not only the year of manufacture, but also their names.

That is why today we know the names of the first Novgorod casters. The exhibition “Ancient Bells of Novgorod” exhibits the works of master Ivan, who lived in Gorodische. In 1554 he cast the Novgorod “plague” bell for the Church of the Sign. Three years later, Ivan, together with another master Philip, cast a 70-pound bell for the church of Philip the Apostle. And in 1556, together with his stepson Mitya, he created two bells for the Church of the Ascension on Prussian Street.

Other Novgorod bell-makers are also known. Their names can be read among the cast inscriptions on the products.

It is worth mentioning that until the 17th century, all manufactured bells were used for the so-called eye ringing. They were tightly attached to the shaft on the bell tower. Ringers with the help of a shaft swung the bell and hit it on a motionless hanging tongue.

And the usual lingual ringing, when the bell-ringer swings his tongue with a rope and beats it against the walls of an immovable bell, appeared only in the middle of the 17th century. But this method of ringing became much more convenient and made it possible to make bells of enormous weight. After all, they did not need to be rocked. You yourself can see this by looking at the hundreds of pounds of bells standing near the St. Sophia Belfry.

The Voice of Carthage in Valdai

Of course, when talking about the Novgorod bells kept in the funds of the Novgorod Museum-Reserve, one cannot bypass the Valdai Museum Bell Center – the only museum in Russia where bells from all over the world are collected. Here you can learn almost the entire history of “voiced” production – from archaic bells from the Punic wars of Rome and Carthage to the bell casting of modern Russian factories.

Of course, the main part of the exposition of the museum center is devoted to the famous arched bell, made in Valdai for the first time. Moreover, the popularity of the products of the Valdai bell foundries and workshops was so great in the 19th century that local bells were often identified with arch bells in general, and craftsmen from other centers sometimes even cast the inscriptions “Valdai” or “Gift of Valdai” on their bells.

The museum bell center also has all kinds of door, ship, station, theater, fire, school, wind and other bells. It now seems that at that time they rang only on bell towers and in Russian troikas. In fact, there were a great variety of uses and forms of bells. Actually, you can verify this by looking at the Valdai Museum.

And start your acquaintance with the history of bells from the Novgorod Kremlin, from the building of the Offices and from the same bell of St.