Category Archives: Eudora GA

Hall-and-Parlor Cottage, Eudora

This house has caught my eye for many years when passing through the forgotten village once known as Eudora, and I finally stopped and made a photograph a few days ago. As long as I can remember, it’s been overgrown. Eudora means “generous gifts” in Greek, and Ken Krakow’s Georgia Place-Names suggests that was the origin of the name. The community is certainly situated among some of the most beautiful and productive countryside in Jasper County. While it had a post office from 1874-1902, Eudora nearly vanished from memory, but according to a 31 October 2013 article in the Monticello News, residents were proud of its history and wanted signs placed along the highway to signal its presence. [It is also sometimes referred to as Prospect, for the old Prospect Methodist Church.] A planned railroad, known as the Monticello, Eudora, and Social Circle, was set to come through the area in 1884, but was routed toward Madison instead. Perhaps this was a slight at the time, but 140 years later, the people of this community are still proud of their history and have made sure the name is remembered.

Allen Grave House, Eudora

One of the best surviving grave houses I’ve found in Georgia is the final resting place of two pioneers of the nearly forgotten Eudora community, John Ashbury Allen (11 January 1815 – 5 October 1891), and Nancy Goodman Crawford Allen (6 September 1816 – 30 May 1882). The Allen family were involved in farming and also owned a store and ran the post office in Eudora at one time, I believe.

NOTE: The Allen Family Cemetery is private and can only be seen from the roadside.