Category Archives: –IRWIN COUNTY GA–

Demolition of the Irwinville Hotel

There’s just something unsettling about this picture of the Irwinville Hotel.  Many people have contacted me with complaints about the destruction of this mid-1880s landmark. The most common comments (and they’ve been numerous) have been: “Just what the world needs, another Dollar General” and “Dollar General is a plague on the landscape“.  I tend to agree. While I agree that anyone has the right to sell their land to anyone whom they wish to, I’m amazed that the community couldn’t come together for a better solution. In the past few years, Irwinville lost their post office, can barely keep the capture site of Jefferson Davis open, and now, is losing this. All this while a local state representative and state senator made no overtures to do anything about it. I don’t believe it’s the government’s responsibility to “save” these places, but a little input would have been nice.

While I’ve seen interior shots of the hotel posted on other sites, I was unable to get such images. At any rate, the property has long been used as a residential rental and retained very little of its historic interior appearance.

Progress is never a bad thing, as I’ve said numerous times over the past ten years. But the loss of landmarks in our smallest towns shouldn’t be a part of that progress.

 

Tenant Farmhouse, Irwin County

This is located on or near the Bostick farm in the Riverbend community. It was originally a board-and-batten single pen cottage and was later expanded. I don’t think it will be around much longer but these old houses often surprise me.

McMillan’s Jewelers, Ocilla

Mr. Emory McMillan [along with Mrs. Eula] and his jewelry store were synonymous with style and good taste in Ocilla for much of the later half of the 20th century. He was a no-nonsense gentleman who, like the best of small-town merchants, knew his community and his customers well. Since his passing in 2012, the storefront has been repainted and another business located here. To many, it will always be remembered as McMillan’s Jewelers.

Lichens & Mosses, Irwin County

The sandy ridges of the Alapaha River bottomlands are abundant with these lichens and mosses. On Crystal Lake Road, near the river, they blanket the right of way for nearly a mile.

I don’t know enough about these species to say much about their biology, but they’re a beautiful sight and seem almost otherworldly. The dominant blueish-green variety in most of these photos is known as Dixie Reindeer Lichen, or reindeer moss locally, (Cladonia subtenius). It’s widespread in protected areas throughout South Georgia.

The species seen above is known as British Soldiers (Cladonia cristatella), for the bright red “blooms”.

These often overlooked landscapes and the unusual life they support may seem trivial, but they’re highly important to ecosystems South Georgia has always depended on for recreation and survival. I hope they are always appreciated.

Free Will Baptist Church, 1919, Ocilla

Joe Aycock wrote that the cornerstone of this structure, which I didn’t locate when I photographed it, identified the building as Ocilla Chapel, AD 1919. Karen Phillips writes: For most of its history this was known as the Free Will Baptist Church, located on 7th Street between Oak Street and Maple Street. It was probably built in the early 1900s. It was moved to its present location in the mid-2000s and is now occupied by an African-American congregation known as the Church of Deliverance. To me, it’s the most unique church building in Ocilla. I hope it can be preserved in its present appearance.

E. G. M. Fletcher House, 1880s, Irwin County

If you’ve ever traveled Georgia Highway 125 between Fitzgerald and Tifton, you probably recognize this house, situated slightly west of Irwinville. I’ve been seeing it my entire life and only learned some of  its history today. It was the home of Elbert George McClellan Fletcher (1866-1952), likely built around 1889, when he married his first wife, Mary Jane Elizabeth (Polly) Hobby Fletcher, who died in 1916. Upon Polly’s death, Elbert married Ruth Turner Fletcher (1870-1956) in 1917. The house was built as a dogtrot, and originally contained an annexed kitchen, which has since been removed. It would have been a “fancy” dogtrot compared to the cruder log structures usually associated with the style.

Winston McDuffie shared these memories of the house: Elbert was quite dignified, handle-bar mustache, and walking stick, sitting on the front porch in his rocking chair. I can’t remember him talking much, and Toby and Ruth were together talking so there was not too much for a 5-6 yr old boy to do. There was a fence across the front, the gate had a chain with a weight to pull it closed, and there was a pomegranate bush beside the gate, always a pleasure to pick one. There was a cane-grinding set-up in the right-hand corner (towards Tifton), under the Oak tree. We attended a cane-grinding a couple of times. There was a barn on the left side, back behind the house. I remember Mama and Deal would pick cotton for John (son) all during school. The house had a dog-trot hallway, with 4 doors (2 per side), and opened onto a porch all across the back of the house. There was another dog-trot off the porch to the separate kitchen. The first door on the left was the sitting room, and the other 3 were bed-rooms. Toby and I slept in the one adjacent to the sitting room when we spent the night. There was a full grand-father clock in the room, but I can’t remember what any other furniture was like. No grass in the yard, it was swept clean with gall-berry brooms.

Single-Pen Tenant Farmhouse, Irwin County

I was amazed that this house on Five Bridge Road is still standing. I began photographing it around 2005 and it looks essentially the same today.

Vernacular Greek Revival House, Ocilla

Though not a Greek Revival in the truest sense, this is a nice vernacular interpretation.

Neoclassical Revival House, 1920s, Ocilla

This is another of Ocilla’s grandest homes, and it’s been recently restored. Mary Lou Paulk writes: “I own this property and restored in exterior and landscaped the grounds. Today I was searching for an old photograph of the house that had previously had been posted on this site several years ago and happily found this photograph. The house was originally built in the 1920’s. It is one of three houses called the sister houses in Ocilla. All three of the houses are still standing and are occupied by their owners. The interior of this house was extensively remodeled in the 1990’s. I did some additional remodeling.