Category Archives: Plains GA

Farewell, President Carter (1924-2024)

James Earl Carter, Jr. (1 October 1924-29 December 2024)

As I read reports of President Carter’s transition into hospice care, I recalled my personal encounters with him with great fondness, and was not surprised to read so many tributes to him from all walks of life and political persuasions.

When I first began seriously pursuing photography, I entered and won a contest sponsored by the National Park Service, focused on photographs of the president’s boyhood home in Archery. The prize was a book signed by Mr. Carter. I felt I had come full circle as I had first visited the property during its dedication in November 2000. It was a wet and miserable day, but an overflow crowd gathered under a huge tent, eagerly listening to Mr. Carter’s reminisces about his life there. Since then, I’ve felt a fondness for the place that many others who have visited feel.

I was also privileged to visit Maranatha Baptist Church, like countless thousands of others over the years, and hear one of Mr. Carter’s Sunday School lessons. It was a moving experience, which I will always count among the greatest days of my life. There’s no way you could attend one of those special Sunday services and not understand what a good man he was. No one, certainly not Jimmy Carter, thought he was a saint, but his good works elevated him to a place few of us are able to reach. For his inspiration, I will be forever grateful.

Rosalynn Carter (1927-2023)

Rosalynn Carter at Maranatha Baptist Church, Plains, Georgia

Former First Lady Rosalynn Carter has died at the age of 96, just days after it was announced that she was going into hospice care with husband Jimmy. My thoughts and prayers, as well as a deep appreciation for her legacy, go out to the entire Carter family and all my friends in Plains. They had four children, 11 grandchildren, and 14 great-grandchildren.

Politics, which Mrs. Carter always said she loved, took them from the Governor’s Mansion to the White House in just a few years. As a Georgian who grew up in the 1970s, I was proud to be from the same state as the president of the United States. I still am. I was too young to understand politics at the time, but remember reading that President Carter’s loss to Reagan in 1980 devastated them both. Rosalynn felt completely crushed by it, as she was her husband’s biggest booster. They were married in 1946. President Carter said of her: “Rosalynn was my equal partner in everything I ever accomplished. She gave me wise guidance and encouragement when I needed it. As long as Rosalynn was in the world, I always knew somebody loved and supported me.”

She was known for her advocacy on mental health issues during her time in Washington, and for modernizing the office of the First Lady. After the reality of the post-presidency settled in, she and Jimmy got involved with Habitat for Humanity and other noble causes. They traveled the world in service of humanitarian issues and were well-loved in their church, Maranatha Baptist, and in their little town of Plains. Her legacy is as much her love of Jimmy as her love of Plains and Georgia but in her humble manner she said “I just hope people think I did the best I could.”

Billy Carter’s Service Station, Plains

Billy Carter (1937-1988) bought this station from Mill Jennings in 1971 and owned it until 1981. During Jimmy Carter’s campaign for President in 1976, it became famous as the headquarters for the national media while they were in Plains. He reminisced of those days: There were 20,000 tourists a day pouring into Plains right after Jimmy’s election. Cars would be bumper-to-bumper for about 10 miles, from Americus to Plains. Highway 280 looked like a Los Angeles freeway. At the height of the station’s popularity 2,000 cases of beer and between 40,000 to 50,000 gallons of gas were sold every month.

Billy was a character and often got as much press coverage as his brother. He was perhaps best known, though, for his infamous Billy Beer. His endorsement didn’t go far to save the brew, which many said was the worst they’d ever tasted. Cans of Billy Beer can be seen in the service station, which is now a free museum. A pair of Hee-Haw overalls Billy wore are also in the collection, as well as numerous magazine covers and press clippings.

Plains Historic District, National Register of Historic Places

Jimmy Carter for Cancer Survivor

Upon learning of Jimmy Carter’s cancer diagnosis, the tight-knit community of Plains recently started a campaign that has nothing to do with politics. Signs like this wishing Mr. Jimmy, as he’s known locally, have literally blanketed the town. My parents asked me to buy them a sign if I found myself in Plains, so I stopped by the Plains Trading Post the other day and had a nice talk with Ramona Kurland who said that they were all sold out, but that more would soon be available. I felt this sign had special resonance, since it’s located at the historic Plains Depot.

Happy 90th Birthday President Carter

President Carter Teaching Sunday School, Maranatha Baptist Church, Plains

 

Plains Baptist Church, Circa 1906

Plains GA Sumter County First Baptist Church Gothic Revival Architecture Landmark Picture Image Photograph Copyright © Brian Brown Vanishing South Georgia USA 2013

Plains Historic District, National Register of Historic Places

Hudson House, Plains

Craig Walters writes: This house was built by Milton Leander Hudson (1853-1912), one of the founders of Plains, who donated half the land on which Plains is located. (Side note. My daddy was born in the right front room. Grandparents rented an apartment there when they first married).

Plains Historic District, National Register of Historic Places

Timmerman House, 1890, Plains

Built by A. C. Wellons for Edwin (1854-1922) and Alice Ruth Forth Timmerman (1856-1937) in 1890. The original porch would have featured mill work similar to that still present in the gables.

Plains Historic District, National Register of Historic Places

J. A. McDonald House, 1890s, Plains

After the death of Mr. McDonald’s daughter, this home was willed to the South Georgia Methodist Conference for use by retired pastors. It’s now a private residence.

Plains Historic District, National Register of Historic Places

Oliver House, 1890s, Plains

The original house on this lot was built in late 1880s by Randolph Oliver. In early 1890s, Mr. Oliver moved that structure to the north side of his property and lived in it while he built the two story home you see now. The original home still stands as well. The round tower room on the second floor was known as the “birthing room”. Mr. Oliver was a popular home builder in Plains at that time. This history was shared by Craig Walters, referencing Beth Murray Walters’s (his grandmother) The History of Plains.

Plains Historic District, National Register of Historic Places