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Big Buckhead Church |
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Historic
District: |
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The main commercial area of Millen is
located on Cotton Avenue. The buildings on this street along with
some side streets are listed on the National Register of Historic
Places. Most buildings are retail shops built between 1880 and 1930.
The Jenkins County Court House, built in 1910, is also on the National
Register. |
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Railroad Town: |
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Cotton
Avenue is an excellent example of a railroad commercial district. The
Central Railroad
Company
built a line between Savannah and Macon via Millen in the 1830's; a
north-south line from Millen to Augusta
built by the Savannah Railroad in
1852 turned Millen into a major trade post. Two major depots
located along Cotton Avenue indicate the
significance of rail transportation in Millen. Both built in the
early 1900's, one is currently in used by Norfolk Southern and the
other houses the Millen-Jenkins County Museum and Chamber of Commerce.
Railroad activity continues to be
important in Millen. The terminal serves as a switch station where
trains are made up. As many as fifteen trains pass through Millen
daily. Train watching is an attraction for train enthusiasts. |
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Jenkins
County Museum: |
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The museum is located in one of the two
railroad depots still in use in Millen. The museum contains local
histories, Native American Indian artifacts, tools, and cotton mill
equipment.
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Magnolia Springs State Park: |
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Jenkins County is home to one of Georgia's
most beautiful state parks. Magnolia Springs State Park is known for
its crystal clear springs that flow at an estimated nine million
gallons of water per day and the boardwalk which spans the cool water
along the natural spring interpretive boardwalk. During warmer
months, visitors may watch for alligators, turtles and other wildlife
near the springs. The 1,070-acre park attracts over 100,000 visitors
annually and includes playgrounds, a swimming pool, a lake, picnic
shelters, campsites, cottages, and meeting rooms. The park includes
a number of hiki ng/biking
trails. Private boats are allowed and fishing boats and canoes are
available for rent. A number of annual
events take place at Magnolia including an Arts and Crafts Festival
(April), Federal Encampment and Spring Run (April), Children's
Fishing Rodeo (June), 8K Cross-country Run (November),
and Clogging and Square Dancing
Weekend (November). The Bo Ginn Aquarium is
located across the stream from the main park area. It features a
variety of fish (catfish, bass, sunfish) and reptiles (turtles,
alligators), some native to the freshwater streams, lakes, and swamps
of Georgia. Fishing rodeos are available for youth groups. Aquarium
tours and interpretive programs are
also available. For more information visit
www.gastateparks.org. |
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Fort Lawton:
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Magnolia
Springs State Park is also home to the National Register of Historic Places-
listed Fort
Lawton. Camp
Lawton, a huge prisoner of war camp occupying 40 acres and designed to
hold 40,000 men, was built in September, 1864, to relieve congestion
at Camp Sumter in Andersonville and to remove the possibility of
Sherman's
army freeing prisoners there. Built by a force of 300 prisoners and
500 slaves, the camp was a
log stockade with guard towers on the walls and a ditch dug within the
walls for a deadline. Magnolia
Springs was chosen for the site because of the fresh water supply from
a natural spring, abundance of timber to construct the stockade and
close proximity to the Central of Georgia Railroad. If the camp were
threatened, prisoners could be loaded on trains and moved north to
Augusta or south to Savannah.
The first prisoners began arriving in October,
1864. By November, 10,299 were held here. In the late months of
1864, the camp was abandoned in advance of Sherman's
March to the Sea and prisoners were first sent to other camps. In a
brief span of four months, the largest prison camp in the world had
been conceived, erected, used, and abandoned. The earthworks, two
large timbers recovered from the stream, and historical markers both
inside and outside the park tell the story of the Camp. The Fort
Lawton Historic Trail begins at the Camp Lawton Interpretive Kiosk
across from the park office. |
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Big Buckhead
Church: |
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Big
Buckhead Church is one of the oldest structures in the State. The
third oldest Baptist church in Georgia was organized in 1774 before
the Revolution. The present Greek Revival structure was completed and
dedicated in 1855. This is the fourth church to stand on or near this
same site. The first was of logs ,
the second was framed and completed in 1807 and worth about three
hundred dollars, and the third was built of brick in 1830, costing
about four thousand dollars. Because
of some defect in construction
it was
deemed unsafe and gave way to the
present building. Some important
events have
occurred at Buckhead Church. Here the Hephzibah Association was
organized in 1794. The Georgia Baptist Convention met there in 1831
for its annual session and adopted a resolution to establish a
classical and theological school known today as Mercer University.
Bishop Frances Asbury, first American Bishop of the Methodist Church,
preached at Buckhead on January 23, 1793. Big Buckhead Church was also
the scene of fierce cavalry action resulting in a Confederate victory
during Sherman's March to the Sea. |
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Carswell
Grove Church: |
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Carswell Grove Baptist Church and
Cemetery, organized in 1867 and listed on the National Register of
Historic Places, grew out of Big Buckhead Baptist Church approximately
two hundred yards away. The church was organized by African Americans
after the Civil War in 1867. In 1919 the church was destroyed by
fire. The rebuilt church is a unique example of Late Gothic Revival
architecture and since the Civil war has been an important place for
the African American community in Burke and Jenkins Counties. |
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Dukes Pond:
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Big Dukes Pond Heritage Preserve (BDPHP)
is a Carolina Bay, a wetland found along the Atlantic Costal Plain
that has an oval shape and a raised sand rim along the south and east
margins. Dukes Pond provides
habitat for one of Georgia's largest breeding colonies of wood stork,
a federally listed rare species. It also provides a habitat for the
rare black-crowned night-heron and yellow-crowned night-heron, as well
as the state-protected spotted turtle. Rare or uncommon plant species
can also be found on the site. BDPHP covers about 1200 acres. It was
declared a Heritage Preserve@
by Governor Sonny Purdue in January 2004, ensuring that the property
will be conserved for wildlife habitat management, scientific
research, environmental education, historic preservation, hunting,
fishing and other outdoor activities. An informational kiosk at the
site provides additional information. |
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The Ogeechee
River: |
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The Ogeechee River, the longest river in
Georgia to keep its name throughout its course, runs through Jenkins
County. For those who enjoy the outdoors, it can be a never-ending
source of pleasure. It begins as two small streams between Siloam and
Union Point in Eastern Greene County. These streams merge just south
of I-20 to form the Ogeechee River. The river then flows 245 miles
through east Central Georgia until it empties into the Atlantic Ocean
north of Ossabaw Island. The Ogeechee is one of Georgia's
few remaining free flowing streams. This blackwater river for the
most part remains in its natural, primitive state. It is popular with
canoeists exploring the river and its swamps; with fishermen seeking
the red breast, suckers, shad, rock crappie, bass, shellcracker and
catfish; with ministers baptizing believers; and with children
enjoying natural swimming holes. The swamps and bottomland hardwoods
adjoining the river provide food, water, and shelter to a rich variety
of birds and wildlife and trees and other vegetation, including rare
plants. Water snakes and alligators are quite common.
Public access to river is available at the
Bull Hole located in the Herndon Community, Scarboro Landing located
in the Scarboro Community, and Highway 25 landing located on the south
side of Highway 25. |
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Bike Trails:
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State Bicycle #85,
"The
Savannah River Run" goes
through Jenkins County from the Screven County line to the Burke
County line. The 314 mile route goes from North Carolina to
Savannah. In the near future when the widening project on SR 25 is
completed between Augusta and Statesboro there will be a bike lane
from Millen to Magnolia Springs State Park. |
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Hanging Rocks:
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An interesting attraction on SR 23 about
five miles from Millen is a natural outcropping of hanging rocks
located on Hanging Rocks Plantation, a hunting preserve. A ledge of
rock along a hillside that rises some 20 to 25 feet above the earth,
makes a picturesque scene, overlooking a beautiful pond. Underneath
the rock is clay that has eroded over a period of time, leaving the
rock extended into space. Indians once lived in, around, and on the
rocks. Artifacts and signs indicate that an Indian village was once
located there, probably as late as the 1700's, when they traded their
land to the English. Geologists from California studied the rocks in
the 1980's. They determined that the rock formation is a
"fault"
from an earthquake that it pushed up to the surface from a depth of
about 200 feet. They also determined that there has been no movement
for maybe millions of years and probably there is no danger from
further movement. |
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Historic
Communities:
Butts
Elam
Four Points
Herndon
Perkins
Scarboro
National Register of Historic Places Sites in Jenkins County
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Building in Perkins |
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Millen/Jenkins County Chamber of Commerce
548 Cotton Avenue - Millen, GA 30442
Phone: (478) 982-5595 - Fax: (478) 982-5512
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