Category Archives: Bainbridge GA

Paul Kwilecki: The Best Georgia Photographer You’ve Never Heard Of

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Paul Kwilecki is likely the best Georgia photographer you’ve never heard of. He’s a personal favorite of mine. After selling his family’s hardware business in Bainbridge he took up photography full-time, but as a self-taught photographer he was often isolated from the larger art world. That proved to be a good thing, as this beautiful new book, One Place: Paul Kwilecki and Four Decades of Photographs from Decatur County, Georgia will attest. For nearly forty years he photographed the people and places of Decatur County and did so with an eye not turned on Georgia in such a way since the FSA photographers of the Great Depression visited the state. Though he published one book in his lifetime (Understandings: Photographs of Decatur County, Georgia; UNC Press, Chapel Hill, 1981) and had hoped to see this one to print before his death, One Place will go far in establishing his place in the larger canon of American documentary work. I’m lucky to have briefly corresponded with Mr. Kwilecki before his death and he was a real gentleman, encouraging me to pursue my own passion for photography.

If you’re a fan of photography, you will want to purchase this book, or request it at your local library. Tom Rankin, who directs Duke University’s wonderful Center for Documentary Studies, edited the work and draws from his association with the photographer, as well as Kwilecki’s own descriptions of his work.

Decatur County Courthouse, 1902, Bainbridge

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Architect Alexander Blair designed this structure in the Neoclassical Revival style, but added intrigue with the campanile-like clock tower.

National Register of Historic Places

Harrell-Gragg-Livingston House, Circa 1905, Bainbridge

The historic district around Shotwell Street is one of the most beautiful in South Georgia. And this house, like many others in the district, features a variety of architectural influences. It was built by Mart Harrell and was the first house in Bainbridge to be built of concrete blocks. The concrete was made by the local express agent in his back yard.

Bainbridge Residential Historic District, National Register of Historic Places

H. B. Ehrlich House, 1898, Bainbridge

Henry Bartow Ehrlich (1849-1929) came to Bainbridge from Germany in 1871, to take over the business of his brother, Abraham, who had been wounded in the Civil War and later died as a result of those wounds. In addition to a booming merchandising business, Mr. Ehrlich was a founder and first president of the Citizens Bank & Trust Company. This was the first home in Decatur County with electricity and one of the finest surviving Queen Annes in South Georgia. Thanks to Sarah Gail Ehrlich Hytowitz, the great-granddaughter of the builder, for the identification.

Evan Thibeault shared this: According to a front page article in the March 31, 1898 Bainbridge Democrat, the superintendent of construction of this house was W. H. Carr, who was, at the time of the article, handling the design and construction of the “Belcher Block” on the northwest corner of Broad and Water Streets. The article mentions the Ehrlich house being under construction and was to cost $5000! It was to be “two stories, with all modern improvements and conveniences, steel ceilings, plate glass windows, etc. and will be the finest in the city.”

Bainbridge Residential Historic District, National Register of Historic Places

Coleman-Vickers-Newton House, 1898, Bainbridge

This home [possibly a George Barber pattern book design] was built by George O. Smith and was purchased in 1918 by Robert C. Coleman. The Coleman’s daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. E. F. Vickers, lived here until their deaths. Mrs. Vickers’ sister-in-law, Ingrid Coleman, inherited the house, but she lived in New York City and never even saw the house. She left it to the Decatur County Historical Society in 1975. The Newton family purchased it in 1986.

Bainbridge Residential Historic District, National Register of Historic Places

First Presbyterian Church, 1900, Bainbridge

First Presbyterian Church of Bainbridge dates to 1852, with official founding members coming from the Quincy, Florida, congregation. The first church building was built in 1854; it burned in 1874 with much of the business district; a replacement was built in 1877.  The third and present structure was built in 1900 and dedicated in 1910.

Bainbridge Commercial Historic District, National Register of Historic Places

King Building, 1931, Bainbridge

The green brick building is the King Building.

Bainbridge Commercial Historic District, National Register of Historic Places

Abandoned Storefront, Bainbridge

Bainbridge Commercial Historic District, National Register of Historic Places

Nelson Piano Company, Bainbridge

I believe this was originally a hotel, but it was home to the Nelson Piano Company for many years.

Bainbridge Commercial Historic District, National Register of Historic Places

Bainbridge Hardware Company

This building served several purposes. According to Susan Weathersby Mann it was originally a tobacco warehouse, then Jesse Gunn’s automobile dealership, then Willis Motors, and finally Bainbridge Hardware. Gary Hodges Sullivan writes [2019]: This great building was leveled and a Dollar General built. Sad.