Thursday, November 30, 2006

Block Tobacco Barn,
Player Cemetery Road,
Ben Hill County, Georgia, 2002.
c. Brian Brown

Block Tobacco Barn,

Old Robitzsch Farm,

Ben Hill County, Georgia, 2002.

c. Brian Brown

These are two good examples of the durable style of red block tobacco barns that were built after the Great Depression in South Georgia. While the walls of these structures have generally held up to the elements, the roofs are falling in on most that remain, and like all tobacco barns, they are an endangered species.


Corn,
Mystic, Irwin County, Georgia, 2002.
c. Brian Brown
South Georgia farmers routinely utilize recycled materials to advertise their crops. This old cable spool on the Mystic Highway is one of my favorites.

Red Farmhouse (Now Demolished),
Valley Grove Church Road,
Irwin County, Georgia, 2001.
c. Brian Brown
Roadhouse,
Rochelle Highway, (Georgia Hwy 90),
Ben Hill County, Georgia, 2001.
c. Brian Brown
I call this a roadhouse, because that's what my late grandmother always called it. I believe it may have had many incarnations in its seventy-odd years, from store to juke joint. I am sure in the days right after Prohibition was repealed, it sold alcohol, probably benefitting from its far-flung location at the fork of Highway 90 and Sibbie Road, just south of the Wilcox County line. It has been removed to the property of the owners in the past few months.
Contains Lead,
Queensland, Ben Hill County, Georgia, 2001.
c. Brian Brown
This old gasoline pump, a relic of the days of leaded fuel, once served the Queensland School, seen in the background of this photograph. Queensland, a predominately African-American community in northern Ben Hill County, was never incorporated, but has been around nearly as long as Fitzgerald. African-American schools such as Queensland provided education for grades 1-12, and nearly all were closed by 1970. They were often grossly underfunded, but Queensland was a rare exception, and many of its active alumni hold occasional reunions.

Winter Pecan Orchard,
Dave Bishop, Sr. Road,
Ben Hill County, Georgia, 2002.
c. Brian Brown
This year's pecan harvest is one of the smallest in recent years, but the impact of this crop on the South Georgia economy remains large. While the cost of operating large-scale pecan operations has risen dramatically in the last decade, it is still one of the region's primary agricultural activities in the fall and early winter.
West Brothers Grocery,
Rebecca, Turner County, Georgia, 2006.
c. Brian Brown


Irwinville, 1935.
Irwinville, Irwin County, Georgia.
c. Arthur Rothstein.
Image courtesy of the Library of Congress.
People often say that little has changed around Irwinville since the Great Depression. A look at this photograph would beg to differ. None of the buildings seen here remain, though the oak trees in the background do. The white two-story building to the rear left is the old courthouse, used during the Depression as an apartment complex.

Tuesday, November 21, 2006

Dorminy Homestead, circa 1850,
Ben Hill County, Georgia, 2006.
c. Brian Brown

Dorminy Homestead,

Ben Hill County, Georgia, 2006.

c. Brian Brown

Completed around 1850, by area pioneer Bradford Dorminy, this house (on the Jacksonville Highway, US 319) is to my knowledge the oldest still standing in its original location in Ben Hill County. Several outbuildings survive on the property, though the original kitchen does not. According to one of his descendants, who is in the process of renovating the property, Mr. Dorminy died in 1852, and lost two sons in the War Between the States. The Dorminy clan is one of the most prolific in Ben Hill and Irwin counties, and this grand old house stands as a testament to their early prosperity.

Friday, November 17, 2006

Collection House,
Riverbend Bluegrass Park,
Irwin County, Georgia, 2006.
c. Brian Brown
The Riverbend Bluegrass Festival, begun in 1986, has grown to be one of the most popular bluegrass festivals in South Georgia. Founders Reggie and Elaine Paulk have seen their little festival in the pecan orchard grow to a big business that seems to be enjoyed by fans of bluegrass and traditional music from all over.
LINK