Category Archives: –ELBERT COUNTY GA–

Old Elbert County Jail + Jim-Ree Museum, 1937, Elberton

The old Elbert County Jail. located adjacent to the courthouse, was built with funds from the Public Works Administration, a New Deal agency. Local architect Hunter J. “Chigger” Price (1896-1959) designed the building. Many such jails were built during the Great Depression, replacing older and less secure facilities. When this jail was replaced by an even newer facility, its future was uncertain. It is now home to the Jim-Ree African-American Museum.

Elberton Commercial Historic District, National Register of Historic Places

Neoclassical Revival House, Elberton

Realtor listings date this house to 1861, but it’s present appearance dates to circa 1900. If the 1861 date can be documented further, the most likely scenario is that the house was a much simpler form to begin with, possibly even one-story, but certainly a more vernacular style.

Elberton Residential Historic District, National Register of Historic Places

Cason-Thurmond House, Circa 1884, Elberton

The Cason-Thurmond house is a stunning Queen Anne cottage strongly influenced by the Gothic Revival, an architectural form defined in residential examples by steeply pitched rooflines. Though its name wouldn’t immediately indicate it, the Gothic Revival is also a Victorian aesthetic.

Elberton Residential Historic District, National Register of Historic Places

Folk Victorian House, Circa 1880, Elberton

This two-story gabled-ell Folk Victorian home is set back from the street on a spacious shaded lot. According to a 1975 Georgia Historic Resources survey, a parallel one-story gabled addition was added to the rear of the house circa 1890 and a similar addition on the right rear was added in 1910.

Elberton Residential Historic District, National Register of Historic Places

Josiah Freeman Auld House, Circa 1860, Elberton

The home of Josiah Freeman Auld is one of the most conspicuous landmarks in downtown Elberton and its origins are likely earlier than the generally given dates of 1860 and 1860 in real estate listings and tax digests. As the view from the sidewalk on McIntosh Street (above) illustrates, the house is set on a steep promontory above the surrounding neighborhood, so as not to be missed. As is evident from the photographs, the home was originally a simple Plantation Plain or I-House, with a wing, added later no doubt. The Victorian porch and its details are later additions, perhaps closer to the 1869 date, or a bit later.

A 1975 survey noted that Mrs. Fred Auld was still living in the home and had painted it red to cheer it up a bit. The surveyor wondered if the chimneys had all fallen, since none were present. He also noted: “the house has the “Elberton Doorway” (trabeated with narrow sidelights) found on some of the houses of the 1850s and perhaps later, such as the Adams, James-Kay, and Swift-Oliver Houses.”

The home is named for and associated with Josiah Freeman Auld (1832-1895) and Rachel Amanda McFall Auld (1836-1922), though many resources mistakenly identify him as Joshua Freeman Auld. Auld was a prominent citizen of Elberton and owned a successful blacksmith and carriage shop, adjacent to this house at the corner of McIntosh and Church Streets, where the old Norman Garage stands today. The area was known as Auld’s Corner in its day. I believe the home remained in the Auld family well into the 20th century.

Elberton Residential Historic District, National Register of Historic Places

St. Mary’s Catholic Church, 1941, Elberton

One of two outstanding granite-sided churches on Forest Avenue, St. Mary’s Catholic Church was built in 1941 for a growing congregation that, according to the Archdiocese of Atlanta, held Mass in private homes and at the American Legion Hall before its construction. There is no mention of the origins of the congregation, but considering that Elberton was settled in the late 18th century, I imagine there were a few Catholics around long before 1941. After the church was dedicated on 23 November 1941, Saint Mary was a mission of Saint Joseph in Athens and then Saint Joseph in Washington until administration was transferred to Sacred Heart of Jesus in Hartwell in 2014.

Forest Avenue Historic District, National Register of Historic Places

Prairie Style House, Circa 1919, Elberton

This house is a neighbor to the Mediterranean Revival example in the previous post, and is an indication that the Forest Avenue neighborhood embraced a wide variety of architectural styles in the 1910s and 1920s, as did middle- and upper-class neighborhoods throughout the country at the time. The Prairie School is most often associated with Frank Lloyd Wright and was quite modern for its time. While the shingle siding on this house is a bit unusual for the style, there are numerous interpretations of the style.

Forest Avenue Historic District, National Register of Historic Places

Mediterranean Revival House, Circa 1924, Elberton

This is one of the most modern of Elberton’s historic homes, built during the peak of popularity of exotic architectural revivals. It has been restored in recent years but looks much as it would have when first built. While the style was most popular in California and Florida, there are scattered examples throughout Georgia, notably on Sea Island. One has to imagine that someone the builder of a house of this type in Elberton in the 1920s was quite progressive and knowledgeable of architectural styles of the era. I imagine it was met with quite a bit of disdain from its neighbors, as it would have been viewed as quite unconventional at the time.

Forest Avenue Historic District, National Register of Historic Places

Holy Trinity Lutheran Church, 1946, Elberton

I’ve been unable to locate a congregational history for Holy Trinity Lutheran Church, but it’s a great example of the use of local granite in the construction of public buildings in Elberton. The church, built in 1946, actually sits atop a sloping lot, with a lower floor incorporating Sunday School rooms and offices. This is the street view of the sanctuary.

Forest Avenue Historic District, National Register of Historic Places

Montevideo, Georgia

Montevideo is another crossroads community of Elbert County, located just up the road from Rock Branch. While this old store is located in Elbert, most of the settlement is located in Hart County, which is just across the road. In fact, Montevideo Road itself makes up much of the southern border Hart County. Presumably named for the South American city, Montevideo may have originated as an earlier plantation or farm. A post office served the community from 1857-1903.