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historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMVSB_1814-boundary-founding-of-fort-gaines_Fort-Gaines-GA.html
1814 BoundaryThe boundary line defined in the Treaty of Fort Jackson (August 1814) between the confederated Creek tribes and the United States extended eastward from the mouth of Cemochechobee Creek south of here to a point near Jesup, Georgia. Si…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMVRX_mt-gilead-baptist-church_Fort-Gaines-GA.html
This church was constituted on July 21, 1822, under the leadership of the Rev. Jim Davis, when Fort Gaines was part of Early County. Land for the church was donated and deeded by J. Hugh Edge. The first building, which also served as a schoolhouse…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMVRT_historic-sites_Fort-Gaines-GA.html
DILL HOUSE ~ John Dill (1788-1856) of S.C., military aide to Gen. Gaines, commander of Fort Gaines, and leading pioneer citizen, is said to have built this, "the finest home on the frontier," with money his wife had saved while a captive of the In…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMVPV_old-cotton-hill-seminary_Morris-GA.html
Here stood the Cotton Hill Male and Female Seminary incorporated by an Act of the Legislature March 6, 1856, but in existence before that time. Professor Norman Flavius Cooledge, uncle of President Calvin Coolidge, who had come to Georgia for the …
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMVPS_queen-city-of-the-chattahoochee_Fort-Gaines-GA.html
Known by the Indians as A-Con-Hollo-Way Tal-lo fa (Highland Town), Fort Gaines, established as a frontier fort in 1816 by Gen. Edmund P. Gaines, was chartered as a town in 1830 and named for Gen Gaines. A shipping point for cotton planters for man…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMVPQ_fort-gaines-guards_Fort-Gaines-GA.html
Organized in 1836 under the command of Col. J. E. Brown, for 74 years the Fort Gaines Guards was one of the best and, later, the oldest military organization in western Georgia. Kept intact between wars, the Guards fought in the Indian and Mexican…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMVLT_in-the-confederacy_Fort-Gaines-GA.html
CONFEDERATE FORT - To protect Fort Gaines from Federal gunboats, Confederate Army engineers in 1863 laid out a fort here, commanding a full view of the river for two miles below. A large magazine of lumber and sand was built about 60 feet from the…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMFHT_new-lowell-united-methodist-church-new-lowell-school_Georgetown-GA.html
New Lowell United Methodist ChurchMethodist Episcopal Church worship services were conducted in this area during the early 1840's in a brush arbor. The original church, known as Lowell, was destroyed by fire during the Civil War. From 1865 to 1890…
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