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Gazetteer
Bulloch -- U.S. County in Georgia
Population (2000): 55983
Housing Units (2000): 22742
Land area (2000): 682.071858 sq. miles (1766.557928 sq. km)
Water area (2000): 6.766290 sq. miles (17.524610 sq. km)
Total area (2000): 688.838148 sq. miles (1784.082538 sq. km)
Located within: Georgia (GA), FIPS 13
Location: 32.415900 N, 81.781930 W
Headwords:
Bulloch
Bulloch, GA
Bulloch County
Bulloch County, GA
Wikipedia
Bulloch

Bulloch is a surname, and may refer to

  • Angela Bulloch (born 1966), British artist
  • Archibald Bulloch (c.1730–1777), American lawyer and politician
  • Gordon Bulloch (born 1975), Scottish rugby player
  • Irvine Bulloch (1842–1898), American Confederate Navy officer
  • James Dunwoody Bulloch (1823–1901), American overseas agent for the Confederate States
  • James Stephens Bulloch (1793–1849), Scottish-American settler of Georgia and grandfather of Theodore Roosevelt
  • Jeremy Bulloch (born 1945), British actor
  • Martha Bulloch (1835–1884), mother of Theodore Roosevelt
  • William Bellinger Bulloch (1777–1852), American politician

Usage examples of "bulloch".

The two vessels were close enough for Captain Bulloch to read the ship's name.

Send runners tae Bulloch and Ingram - there's nae time fer the others.

He dressed, wrote a long letter to a former delegate, Archibald Bulloch, who was the new president of Georgia, and following breakfast, walked to the State House, knowing what was in store.

Most of all Frank had con­tempt for him for holding on to the Confederate gold, when honest men like Admiral Bulloch and others con­fronted with the same situation had turned back thousands to the Federal treasury.

I wandered along the cobbled sidewalk of Oglethorpe Avenue to the Colonial Park Cemetery, full of moldering monuments and densely packed with the gravestones of people famous to the state's history-Archibald Bulloch, the first president of Georgia, James Habersham, "a leading merchant," and Button Gwinnett, who is famous in America for being one of the signatories of the Declaration of Independence and for having the silliest first name in Colonial history.