
Religious Sign, Hall County
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Located at the corner of Lula Road and Persimmon Tree Road just north of Lula, this oversized rocking chair is well-known landmark to travelers in the area. Dwight Oliver built it around 2006 for children visiting his Goldbrook Pumpkin Farm, but it has since become a permanent fixture. Stop by and take a picture when you’re in the area.

Before it was absorbed by Lula in the 1950s, this community was known as Bellton. This was the post office and later a rural medical clinic.
I thought it might have been an old sore, as well, but Jim Grier writes: “My grandmother, Carrie Wheeler Grier, was the Last Postmaster of Bellton. She served as postmaster (or postmistress) from 1943 until the Bellton post office was finally closed in April 1957. This building, located at Main Street and 6th Street, was built soon after she became postmaster to house only the post office. Prior to that time, the post office was in the back of a store building at the other end of the block at Main Street and 5th Street.“
“This building had a small room at the front that had a wall of open boxes where the postmaster placed mail for the families of Bellton. There was no need for doors on the boxes. People only took mail from their box. There was a dutch door in the center of that wall that opened to the back of the post office where mail was sorted, and bagged before being carried across the street ti be hung on a pole beside the railroad, That bag of mail would be snatched by a train going to Atlanta, GA or Greenville, SC.“
Joseph Buffington notes: “After the post office moved, this place became an inoculation clinic for the black residents of Belton. All the kids had to go there to get their TB, Polio, Tetanus Measles and Chickenpox immunization shots before entering Fair Street Elementary School where they were bused to school because of segregation laws. I was born about 100 yards north of this building.”

The placement of the front doors suggest this house was a double shotgun, at least at one point in its history.
Gillsville Historic District, National Register of Historic Places

No longer at this location, Sims Pottery has been in business in Gillsville since 1982. They began making handmade white pottery but are no longer involved in production. They now do wholesale distribution of products from around the world. As to the history of the building, Pam Perry writes: This building was once my grandfather’s general store. DC House and Son was purchased from the Meaders brothers in the early 1940’s as a store and warehouse. My uncle Bob House was the co-owner. I have memories of helping him there as a child. After grandfathers death mid-1960’s uncle Reo Frankum purchased and ran for several years. Note, Meaders brothers lived in Maysville, GA.
Gillsville Historic District, National Register of Historic Places

Gillsville is located in Hall and Banks counties but the section I photographed is all in Hall. These historic storefronts are what remain of the commercial core of the town. The two-story building, that for a time housed Hall’s Pottery, was originally a general store. D. C. House & Sons ran the store after purchasing it from the Meaders family.
Gillsville Historic District, National Register of Historic Places

This is likely one of the older structures around Gillsville, and may have been part of a farm at one time.