Tag Archives: Georgia Houses

Winter Storm Enzo 2025: Liberty County

Liberty County received historic snowfall on Tuesday night as a result of Winter Storm Enzo, a weather system that brought blizzard conditions to the Gulf Coast and lower Southeast. I’m sharing a few random landmarks from my local rambles of the past week. My only regret is that I couldn’t photograph everything. I hope you enjoy seeing these as much as I enjoyed making them. I’ll be sharing some shots from Long County, as well.

Bacon-Fraser House, built circa 1839, Hinesville

Old Liberty County Jail, Hinesville

Liberty County Justice Center, Hinesville

Old Liberty County Courthouse, Hinesville

Hinesville Coca-Cola Bottling Company, Hinesville

Zum Rosenhof, Hinesville

Flemington Presbyterian Church, built in 1852, Flemington

Miller Park Fire Station, near McIntosh (the lost village, not the county)

Hall and Parlor Cottage, Liberty County

Midway Congregational Church of Christ, established in 1872, Midway

Dorchester Academy Boys Dormitory, Midway

Lambright House, Freedmen’s Grove

Midway Churchyard, Midway

Midway Congregational Church, built circa 1792, Midway

Top Ten Posts of 2024

Wishing everyone a safe and happy 2025! It’s been another great year traveling around Georgia, looking for the obscure, as well as the well-known places and people that make our state so interesting. As always, I’m grateful to you all for coming along with me. From murder and mayhem (always popular for some reason) to soul food and some preservation success stories, I think I covered a lot this year.

#1- The 1937 Murders That Shocked Quitman

#2- Georgia State Prison, 1937, Reidsville

#3- Snow-Wasden House Saved from Demolition

#4- Jimmie’s Hot Dogs, 1947, Albany

#5- Maryland Fried Chicken, 1968, Albany

#6- Paradise Park Fishing Camp, Wayne County

#7- Sugar Ray Robinson Childhood Home, Circa 1910s, Ailey

#8- Boatright House, Washington County: An Update

#9- Harris-Turner House, Circa 1836 + 1903, Covington

#10- Savannah’s Last Historic African-American Theatre Faces Uncertain Future

Dr. Augustus S. Clark House, 1941, Cordele

This American Foursquare house is located across from the Girls Dormitory of the Gillespie-Selden Institute. It was the home of Dr. Augustus S. Clark (1874-1959) and his wife Anna Clark, visionaries who established the institute, and is also known as the Founder’s Home. Tax records and real estate listings date the house to 1941. This seems a bit late for the style, but variations of American Foursquare are still popular today, so the date may be correct.

Dr. Clark, a native of North Carolina, received his theological training at Lincoln University in Pennsylvania and after teaching for a year at the Haines Institute in Augusta, was sent by the National Board of Missions of the Presbyterian Church to Cordele in 1898 to help revive the struggling congregation of the Portis Presbyterian Church, a Black congregation. A new church was built and named St. Paul Presbyterian.

In 1902, the Clarks established the Gillespie Normal School to improve the educational opportunities of local African-American children. It was named for a Pittsburgh family who gave money for the school. It quickly outgrew the basement of St. Paul, where its first classes were held, and moved into two wooden buildings. By 1904, donations made it possible for the construction of three more buildings. The school continued to grow and attract students from all over the Eastern United States and eventually included a hospital. Though the school closed in 1956 due to consolidation, most of its structures survive to this day, and some have even been restored.

Gillespie-Selden Historic District, National Register of Historic Places

Central Hallway Cottage, Cordele

This simple central hallway cottage is one of numerous residential properties within the Gillespie-Selden Historic District, a traditionally African-American neighborhood in Cordele. The community contains a surprisingly wide variety of early 20th century house types, with this home being among the simplest forms present.


Gillespie-Selden Historic District, National Register of Historic Places

Single-Pen Cottage, Montezuma

I’m always fascinated by single-pen cottages, and while this one was later expanded by the addition of a second room, the original section, at left, is a great example of this humble form. This home is located in the Duncan’s Bottom neighborhood and appears to have been abandoned for quite some time.

Lustron Houses of Albany


The Lustron houses that can be found on the tree-lined avenues off Dawson Road [specifically on 2nd, 7th, and 9th Avenues] are a significant modernist architectural resource, hiding in plain sight, and are little known outside a small circle of architectural historians. There are 8 Lustrons in Albany, and while at least three have been significantly altered from their original appearance, the group represents the most concentrated collection of these mid-century marvels in one area in the state of Georgia. There’s also one in nearby Americus. All the Albany houses, and the Americus example, were built by the Hav-A-Home Lustron franchise which was open in Albany circa 1948-1956. While there are also 8 Lustrons in Atlanta, those examples are much more widely scattered than in Albany.

Lustron, which was patented by Roy Strandlund, was the name for the enameled steel panels used in the construction of these houses, which were some of the earliest prefabricated homes available to American consumers after World War II. The material was promoted for durability and ease of maintenance, though it never quite caught on. The prototype for the houses was known as the “Esquire” model and designed by architects Roy Blass and Morris Beckman for the Chicago Vitreous Corporation.

I photographed three of the least altered Albany examples, but will add the others when road work is completed in some of the neighborhoods. I spoke with a nice young man at one of the houses and he noted that others had documented it in the past and he didn’t mind me photographing.

Only two of the Lustrons in Albany in are presently listed on the National Register of Historic Places, but they should all be further documented.

National Register of Historic Places

Bartow F. Powell House, Circa 1890, Albany

This historic Queen Anne home (circa 1890-1910) is located near historic Mt. Zion Baptist Church and has been in this condition for quite some time. It appears to be in worse condition than when I first documented it five years ago. It may have a connection to the church. Much of the neighborhood in which it is located was once part of, or adjacent to, the South Albany Historic District, which has been de-listed from the National Register of Historic Places. This was traditionally one of the most historic Black neighborhoods in Albany.

Gothic Revival Cottage, Circa 1880, Shellman

Shellman Historic District, National Register of Historic Places

Eclectic House, Circa 1900, Shellman

Shellman Historic District, National Register of Historic Places

Colonial Revival Cottage, Shellman

Shellman Historic District, National Register of Historic Places