From the stately Gothic Revival and Regency-style houses of
Savannah to the majestic, multicolumned plantation homes that
punctuate rolling farmlands throughout the state, David King
Gleason presents a splendid pictorial record of Georgia's fines
pre-Civil War residences.The book begins with the town houses of
Savannah, which include such landmark residences as the Andrew Low
House, built in 1848 in the style of an early Victorian Renaissance
villa, and the imposing Gree-Heldrim House, a Gothic Revival
mansion that was the most expensive house built in Savannah prior
to the Civil War. Wild Heron, located just south of Savannah on the
Little Ogeechee River, is the oldest plantation house still
standing in Georgia. A one-and-a-half story farmhouse built in the
style of a West India cottage, it is being restored to reflect the
period of the early 1800s.
Farther to the interior, in the area around Augusta, are such
homes as Fruitlands, now the clubhouse of the Augusta national Golf
Club; Meadow Garden; Ware's Folly; and Montrose, built in 1849 and
one of the Loveliest Greek Revival houses in the area. Houses
photographed along the Plantation Trail, from Athens to Macon,
include the white-columned President's House, home since 1949 to
the presidents of the University of Georgia; the Howell Cobb House,
in Athens; Whitehall, in Covington; Glan Mary, in Sparta; and the
Woodruff House, in Macon.
Gleason devotes considerable attention to the homes of the
western side of the state, from Chickamauga to Thomasville. The
Gordon-Lee House, constructed in 1847, was headquarters fro the
Union army during the battle of chickamauga. Other houses in this
part of Georgia are valley View, which overlooks the Etowah River,
west of Cartersville; the Archibald Howell House, near downtown
Marietta; Lovejoy, in Clayton Country; The oaks, in the vicinity of
LaGrange; and Greenwood and Pebble Hill, near Thomasville.
In all, Gleason captures more than one hundred of Georgia's most
beautiful antebellum homes, including many lesser-known houses. In
addition to exterior photographs, Antebellum Homes of Georgia
contains a number of interior views as well as aerial photographs
that show the relationship between the houses and their environs:
outbuildings, formal gardens, and recd clay fields that were once
white with cotton. Captions provide brief histories of the houses
and their owners as weel as notes on construction and outstanding
architectural details.
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