Georgia Photos

A collaborative effort between Georgia educators and their cameras.

July 11th, 2009
November 2nd, 2008
August 10th, 2008

Whistle Stop Cafe

Some relatives of mine and I went to Juliette Georgia to eat at the Whistle Stop Cafe on Saturday. Juliette is very small town on the Ocmulgee River and is very picturesque. We did have Green Fried Tomatoes and Vidalia Onion Rings. We have eaten both of the dishes when in season for years. Juliette is a lovely place to visit if you are passing through.

View from Bridge

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May 27th, 2008
May 5th, 2007

Historic Homes of Adairsville

Downtown Adairsville has some very nice homes that were built in the early 1900s. Here are a few. Each image is linked to a larger version.

Franklin House – circa 1904

 

Stegall House – circa 1900

 

Hamilton House – circa 1900

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January 5th, 2007
November 5th, 2006

New Echota State Park Photos

November 4th, 2006

New Echota

The town of New Echota was made the capital of the Cherokee Nation in 1819. It was here in 1835 that the Treaty of New Echota was signed, which gave up all Cherokee lands in Alabama and Georgia. Only three years later, the Trail of Tears started.

New Echota is located just north of Calhoun, and I spent a couple of hours there today.

Here is a link to the entire set of photos.

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September 11th, 2006

Henry Ford and Berry College

Martha Berry was able to convince Henry Ford to visit Berry College. He was so impressed that he became one of the college’s greatest benefactors. Here are some of the buildings that are part of the Ford Complex at Berry.

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August 17th, 2006

“Not to be Ministered Unto, but to Minister”

That is the motto of Berry College, and it was how Martha Berry lived her life. Her grave is on the campus right next to the college chapel, and there is an eternal flame for all to see.

Click on each image for a larger version.

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August 3rd, 2006

Salzburgers in Georgia

In 1734 a group of Austrian immigrants from Salzburg were granted land on the Savannah River by General James Oglethorpe. Many of the current residents of Effingham County are Salzburgers. I am a Salzburger myself, and there is a nice historical site located at Ebeneezer landing.

Each picture is linked to a larger version.

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June 27th, 2006

The Smith House

The Smith House
Photo taken inside the Smith House.

There are two places I love to eat, the Smith House and the Dillard House. They both serve old Southern dishes in the family style which means that they put family sized portions in dishes and have you pass them around the table.

The Smith house has made the news recently with the discovery of an old mining shaft under its basement. The old story goes that no one really knew how the founders got their money and mining was not allowed in the city of Dahlonega. Rumors had it that the founder had found gold under his house and mined it. With the proceeds he created the house. Whether or not there is gold under there, finding the shaft struck gold for the Smith house as it pushed it into the news again. When I was there several months a go, they were expanding.

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April 22nd, 2006

Columbia Square

Savannah is often referred to as the City of the Squares. At one time there were 24 squares in the downtown area, but development claimed three of them before the restoration of the city really begain in the 1960s.

Columbia Square is the home of the Isaiah Davenport House, which you can see in the right of the photo. It was completed in 1820, and was the first restoration project of the Historic Savannah Foundation in 1955.

The house on the left is the Kehoe House, which is now a popular bed and breakfast inn. It was completed in 1892.
One other note, the photo was taken on St. Patrick’s Day several years ago. That’s why the water in the fountain is green!

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April 19th, 2006

Heirloom Flowers

Mama flake's roses

My great grandmother was a 5′2″, 92 pound dynamo till the day she died. She had eight children and many nieces and nephews and lived to be 102. Due to the fertility of her and her sisters I have over 100 cousins in this small town of Camilla.

It is confusing for newcomers. There’s a saying down here, “Don’t say anything bad about anyone because you don’t know who they are related to.”

Family runs deep. These flowers have been transplanted several generations and now grow in my yard too. I don’t know the species but we call them “heirloom old fashioned roses” and they bloom on long spindly vine like extensions of a sort of a bush each spring. I prune them severely after they quit blooming and they spread profusely.

When I look at these, I think of my family and how what I do will be passed down long after I’m gone. Flowers, habits, traditions, kindness, love, and even my faults. I am reminded to pass down the good.

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April 19th, 2006

Kennesaw Mountain

This was taken from atop Kennesaw Mountain, about 25 miles north of Atlanta. There are several cannon on top of the mountain, and the area is a national park. A Civil War battle was fought here in 1864.

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April 17th, 2006

Wisteria

Wisteria

Wisteria is one of the most beautiful spring vines but is so very invasive that in the throes of summer we are often sweating and swearing as we deal with its winding tendrils and running roots. This particular vine was killed last summer using several applications of round up after being cut to the root and pulling up many roots by hand. I guess I’m glad it resurrected this spring (amidst my old fashioned roses) because it was truly a beautiful display, but I dread the work that will be coming in a week or two.

Wisteria, like the azalea, was an Oriental import that took exceptionally well to our southern acidic soil. Many people do not know that the azalea and wisteria aren’t native to Georgia but were brought from the Orient in the early 1800’s as trade opened between China and England. I found a copy of a sales bulletin for an azalea in a London catalog from the 1810’s. You can learn a lot about trade and the world in the 1800’s simply by studying the azalea (and wisteria), its proliferation and uses.

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