The house is a Queen Anne-style cottage and was built of brick and wood for $1,500. A six-room home with heart pine flooring, plate glass windows, a fireplace in every room and a large porch. The...
The Methodist Church was part of the Forsyth Circuit of the Cherokee District. Methodist camp meetings were held near this spot in the early 1830s, and there was a meeting house as early as 1834....
J.J. Webb's two-story brick building housed many businesses including Shirley Brothers store, Milton County Bank, Buren Weatherford Grocery and Bates Grocery. In 1934, C.P. Brady and...
Swan house was completed in 1928 for Mr. and Mrs. Edward Hamilton Inman, heirs to a cotton-brokerage fortune. Named for the swan motif found throughout the interior, the house was designed by...
1999 SHINING LIGHT AWARD Honoring HENRY L. "HANK" AARON Baseball's all-time home run and RBI king Member, Baseball Hall of Fame Hammerin' Hank inspires us all to pursue our dreams His...
Hapeville is situated on the Central Railroad of Georgia, eight mile from Atlanta, upon a water- shed extending from Atlanta to Macon. When chartered on September 16, 1891, Hapeville...
Soldiers along the Chattahoochee River Top Listen to the voices of Civil War soldiers sharing common experiences in their letters and diaries. The war was cruel, but there were times of truce...
New Weapons, Old Tactics Top For centuries, common battle tactics included moving large groups of men against each other into close, hand-to-hand combat. Civil War commanders continued...
Controlling the Railroads and the River Top It was hot and humid along with the Chattahoochee River in July 1864. Union soldiers were sick, tired, and injured from months of fighting. They had...
The Civil War in Georgia Civil War had raged for three years as far north as Pennsylvania, into western territories and Midwestern states, and throughout the South. All were weary, longing for a...
The American Civil War The North and the South fault the American Civil War from 1861 to 1865. What began is a bitter dispute over states’ rights ended as a struggle over what it meant to...
Middle-Class Dwelling 497 Auburn Ave Note the stained glass windows on the first floor, the decorative shingles and woodwork on the end of the gable, and the irregular shaped roof. Look for these...
As the Cherokees began their journey along the trail, some were able to carry the embers of the fire of their last counsel in Red Clay, Tennessee; the last council ground of the Cherokee Nation...
In 1838, the majority of the Cherokees, approximately 12,000, were forced onto the “Trail of tears”. Only about 8,000 made it to the new Cherokee Nation - what is now called Tehlequah, Oklahoma....
General Winfield Scott put the Cherokee removal into action in 1838. The Cherokee remained in their homes despite continuous warnings and directives to gather at the forts. “Cherokee!...
This monument is a memorial to the Cherokees who were driven from their land and their homes against their will in 1838. Thousands died on the Nunna-da-ul-tsun-yi, commonly translated as...
This cemetery, the first burying ground of the village from 1840 to 1860. Among the distinguished dead who rest here are Roswell´s founder, Roswell King; Major James Stephens Bulloch, grandfather...
Principal Chief John Ross traveled to Washington, D.C. to deliver a petition to the U.S. Congress signed by nearly every member of the Cherokee Nation. The land belonged to the Cherokees,...
Reverend Daniel S. Butrick ran a mission near Rome and was eyewitness to the events: “thus in two or three days about 8,000 people, many of whom were in good circumstances, and some rich,...
The Cherokee Nation “You asked us to throw off the hunter and warrior state: We did so - you ask us to form a republican government, We did so - adopting your own as a model. You asked us...