Hinesville was established in 1837 to replace Riceboro as the seat of Liberty County. Just two years later, on what was then a 23-acre tract, this Federally-influenced Plantation Plain townhouse was built by Mary Jane Hazzard Bacon, the widow of Major John Bacon of Riceboro.
The property was occupied by Union troops under the command of General William T. Sherman in 1864 and several outbuildings were burned. The house was saved by Mrs. Bacon, who displayed her husband’s Masonic apron for protection. Many more generations of the family owned the home until 2017, when it became the headquarters of the Liberty County Chamber of Commerce and the Liberty County Convention and Visitors Bureau.
The beautifully landscaped yard is dominated by historic Live Oaks, some of the largest to be found in inland Liberty County.
Altama Plantation House. Public domain image shared by Eamon Leonard.
George III of England granted 2,000 acres along the south bank of the Altamaha River to William Hopeton in 1763 and Hopeton soon set about creating the rice plantation which bore his name. So began the long modern history of this property, first known as Hopeton and now more widely known as Altama. In 1805, the property was sold to two Scottish immigrants, John Couper and James Hamilton, who grew Sea Island cotton with hundreds of slave laborers. Couper’s son, James Hamilton Couper, vastly improved the property after he acquired it in 1827. He built the original Altama plantation house [pictured above] in the Georgian style circa 1858. Its ruins may remain, per the Glynn County Historic Resources Survey [2009].
Palm-lined Drive, Altama Plantation
After visiting Holland he introduced a system of dikes, canals and rails to move his rice and sugar efficiently to the river for transport into nearby Darien.
Laundry House, Altama Plantation
Couper was perhaps Georgia’s greatest “Renaissance Man” and it’s unfortunate that he isn’t better known today outside a small group of historians.
Laundry House Interior, Altama Plantation
He led the survey party which mapped the Georgia-Florida border, built Christ Church in Savannah and was the first to describe the Indigo Snake to science. He is honored eternally in its Latin name, Drymarchon couperi.
Blacksmith Shop, Altama Plantation
The Civil War was the death knell for Hopeton-Altama as a working plantation.
Blacksmith Shop, Altama Plantation
In 1898 a small colony of Shakers attempted to tame the property, which was long neglected and dotted with ruins of its former glory. Their efforts to grow rice and raise cattle were unsuccessful and they abandoned the project in 1902.
Double-Crib Barn, Altama Plantation
William Dupont bought the adjacent Hopeton and Altama properties in 1914 and renamed the expanse Altama.
William Dupont House, Altama Plantation
Dupont wintered and trained racehorses here and built the main house [pictured above] based on the original plantation house.
Garage behind Dupont House, Altama Plantation
Atlanta entrepreneur Cator Woolford bought the plantation in 1930.
Woolford Swimming Pool, Altama Plantation
He built a swimming pool on the property which remains to this day.
Woolford Playhouse, side view, Altama Plantation
He also built a large “play house” adjacent to the pool to entertain his guests.
Old-growth Oak, Altama Plantation
In 1944, Alfred W. Jones scion of the Sea Island Company, acquired Altama, primarily for use as a hunting reserve.
Guest/Hunting Cabin, Altama Plantation
Cabins and structures supporting the sporting life were constructed in the ensuing years.
Guest/Hunting Cabin, Altama Plantation
The cabins were used for hunters, as well as for general visitors.
Camellia, Altama Plantation
With the Sea Island bankruptcy in 2010, Altama was bought by a private equity firm who planned to develop the property as homes and shops.
Barn, Altama Plantation
With the help of the Nature Conservancy, the Marine Corps and private donors, the property was acquired by the state of Georgia in 2015 for future protection and management and will now serve as a publicly accessible Wildlife Management Area, part of a 120-mile corridor of protected lands stretching from Florida through the Okefenokee Swamp to Fort Stewart. It’s a real conservation success story and the cooperation of state and private entities is commendable.
DNR Check Station, Altama Plantation
Though not particularly historic in terms of age, most of the outbuildings have a cultural value as part of a grand 20th-century hunting plantation.
Many consider moss-draped oaks romantic symbols of Coastal Georgia. This particularly nice one is located on the grounds of the Seabrook Village living history museum in Liberty County.
Spanish-moss-draped Live Oaks (Quercus virginiana) are emblematic of the Southern coastal region and a great place to see them is Gascoigne Bluff, adjacent to Epworth By The Sea. There’s a public park here with ample free parking. The oak grove is quite impressive, but perhaps not nearly as impressive as what a visitor would have seen 200 years or more in the past. The timber used in the construction of the famed USS Constitution, better known as Old Ironsides, was cut at this bluff.
In 1806, Charleston merchant William Brailsford purchased the “Broadface” property on the Altamaha River between Darien and Brunswick and developed one of the most prosperous rice plantations in 19th-century Georgia.
Old rice fields, Broadfield Plantation
He renamed it Broadfield. Upon his death, it passed to his son-in-law Dr. James M. Troup, brother of Governor George Troup. When Dr. Troup died in 1849 Broadfield included 7300 acres and a community of 357 slaves. The marshes are very similar in appearance today to what they were in the early 19th-century.
Broadfield Plantation Rice Mill Ruins
These tabby ruins are all that remain of the once-thriving Broadfield rice mill.
Back of Hofwyl House
Around 1851, Troup’s daughter, Ophelia, and her husband George Dent built the plantation house still standing today.
Kitchen, Hofwyl House
They christened it Hofwyl House, after a school Dent attended in Switzerland.
Vestibule, Hofwyl House
After the Civil War, mounting taxes led to the selling of most of the original lands and by the 1880s when George & Ophelia’s son James took over management of the plantation, Broadfield’s dominance was over.
Dining Room, Hofwyl House
Rice was cultivated until 1913, but without slaves to provide an essentially free labor force, it was hardly a profitable venture.
Parlor, Hofwyl House
When James died in 1913, his son Gratz established a dairy on the site, which was operated until 1942 by his sisters Miriam and Ophelia Dent.
Second Floor Landing, Hofwyl House
When Ophelia died in 1973, she left the house and grounds to the state of Georgia, who operate it today as a state historic site.
Study, Hofwyl House
Unlike most historic homes, Hofwyl House retains the original family antiques and possessions of the Brailsford, Troup and Dent families from five generations.
Bedroom, Hofwyl House
The bedrooms are on the second floor.
Bedroom, Hofwyl House
Hofwyl Dependencies
Dependencies are the barns, outbuildings, laborer dwellings, and other structures dependent upon and integral to the operations of farm or plantation. One of the most remarkable aspects of this property is the large number that survive.
Dent Dairy Barn
Gratz Dent’s dairy was a very modern operation for its time. The open-air dairy barn is where a herd of around 35 Jersey and Guernsey cows were milked daily.
Dent Dairy Bottling House
Just next door is the bottling house.
Dent Dairy Bottling House
Milk was produced here for customers in Glynn and McIntosh counties.
Commissary, Hofwyl-Broadfield Plantation
Central to any plantation operation was the commissary, where laborers were given credit for necessities and staples. Much of their income, however, went to repaying debts incurred here.
Tenant House, Hofwyl-Broadfield Plantation
Essential laborers were provided a basic tenant house like the one seen above.
Tenant bedroom, Hofwyl-Broadfield Plantation
Furnishings were spartan and utilitarian.
Pay Shed, Hofwyl-Broadfield Plantation
The presence of the pay shed indicates a well-managed property and is quite a rare thing to find today.