
Roberts Grocery, Hiltonia
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Kathy Overstreet writes: This home was built by Kinchley and Lucy Overstreet for their cook, Katie. The Overstreets built their house, still standing and operating as Kinchley Place, on Singleton Avenue, circa 1895. I don’t know the year Katie’s house was built, but it still stands behind the home of the current owners, Kathy Overstreet and Bob Owers. Kinchley Place has been beautifully restored as a historic inn. I plan on photographing it next time I’m in Sylvania.

This is a local landmark serving barbecue and soul food.


Double Heads is about 11 miles south of Sylvania on U. S. Highway 301, once among the primary New York-to-Florida routes for travelers along the Atlantic seaboard. All that remains of the community is this abandoned store (also a garage at one time) and an active Baptist church across the highway. Double Heads was named for its proximity to the headwaters of two creeks.



Thanks to John Robert Peavy for the identification. This has most recently served as the Oliver city hall.

According to Dawn Daley, via present pastor Vernon Edenfield, this is the oldest church in Screven County, and thought to be the second oldest Baptist church in Georgia. Robert Peavy writes: Oliver native Miss Pauline Smith (1885-1963) indicated in her three-page historical sketch of the town of Oliver that the present building was erected about 1912 (when the old Methodist Church was built and when the town was incorporated—the School House, now gone, had been built in 1910). An old photograph of the short-lived Lutheran Church shows rather dimly, in the distance with the cemetery separating them, a not-overly fancy church with a neo-classical porch roof supported by four square columns, which would have replaced the original log building of the Little Ogeechee Baptist Congregation; thus, the present structure is at least the third building for this congregation, which dates to 1790. Robin Robbins also notes that the church was used as a set location for the 1974 movie, Buster and Billie.
Gravestone Art at Little Ogeechee Baptist Church Cemetery
Little Ogeechee, like many old cemeteries, is a beautiful showplace for the stonemason’s art. I’ve chosen a few of my favorite decorative headstones to share.
Stephen T. Newton (29 May 1829-6 December 1882)
Naomi Morton (1806-16 October 1887)
Bernard Horton Huggins (25 August 1906-26 March 1908)
Daughter of W.V. & L. O. Lanier (14 March 1917-2 February 1918)
Florie A. Brewer (12 August 1845-17 September 1891)
Oscar W. Brewer (17 October 1872-8 March 1889)
Levina Morton (20 May 1825-16 June 1899)
Martha A. Dugger (14 June 1829-13 February 1897)
Miriam Lee (22 February 1908-22 November 1910)

Thanks to Sharmon Brannen for the identification. It’s not all visible to the eye, but much restoration work has been done on the house by the new owners. I’m so glad that they’re saving this house. It’s though to date to at least the late 1880s.

This Methodist church features three large stained-glass windows with the Star of David motif, traditionally a symbol of the Jewish faith. The Star of David was common among many sects during the late Victorian era. According to Bob Peavy: The congregation of Oliver Methodist Church was established in 1907. My father was christened there in 1919; his father’s farm was a very few miles down Old Louisville Road just across Wallowing Branch (in adjacent Effingham County), and the family likely attended from the congregation’s beginning. The Methodist Church there had no cemetery; the white families of the area had been buried nearby at Little Ogeechee Baptist Church (which had been established in 1790.)
Illuminating the difficulties of tracking down church histories, Bob later wrote: A history of the town of Oliver, written in 1942 by Pauline Smith…indicated that the congregation was founded in 1899, and that this building was erected in 1912. The last church sign indicated that it was established in 1907 (I’ve not yet verified dates).

The church has most recently been used as a restaurant, Oliver on 24.