History Makers Call Georgia Home
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: Stefanie
Paupeck Georgia Department of Economic
Development 404-962-4075 spaupeck@georgia.org
History Makers Call
Georgia Home Historical Sites
Prompt Visits From Across the Globe
ATLANTA, May 6,
2009 - Georgia has a long tradition of
placing stars on the national and international stages. Drawing on an eclectic
mix of personalities, professions and communities, Georgia
has produced many famous Americans. U.S. presidents, musicians, literary masters and
civil rights leaders have all left their mark on the world after being shaped
and influenced by Georgia. Explore these famous
Georgians and the sites associated with them and see where history is
made.
With intimate ties to three
U.S. presidents, Georgia
has played a unique role in shaping our nation. President Jimmy Carter is well known for his actions
on the national and international stages, but he is also remembered in
Georgia as a young, forward-thinking
Governor. Today, families can take a trip to Jimmy Carter's boyhood farm in Plains for
an educational journey to another time. Restored to the 1930's time period, it
documents the childhood and life of America's 39th president
through exhibits, videos and buildings. Open to the public daily, the Jimmy Carter Presidential Library and
Museum in Atlanta includes photos and memorabilia from
Carter's presidency, an exact replica of the Oval Office, gifts received by the
Carters while in the White House, and permanent exhibits of significant events
during his life with timeless photographs and insightful interpretation. One of
America's most-loved leaders
of all time, Franklin D.
Roosevelt, also has strong ties to Georgia. In fact, the only house he
ever owned was his Little White House
in Warm Springs. He built the house while Governor of New York, and
would come down to swim in the springs to treat his polio. His experiences here
in rural Georgia are thought to have inspired
many of his New Deal programs, and he was in Warm Springs when he passed away in
1945. Now a protected historic site preserved much as he left it, Roosevelt's Little White House is home to rare artifacts
such as his 1938 Ford convertible with custom hand controls, his stagecoach and
the "Unfinished Portrait" of him that was never completed due to his death. The
32nd president is also honored by the largest state park in
Georgia: Franklin D. Roosevelt State Park. More
than 9,000 acres encompass sites such as Dowdell's Knob, Roosevelt's favorite
picnic spot, and Pine Mountain, the southernmost edge of the
Appalachian Mountain range. Another famous Georgian was President Woodrow Wilson. Affectionately referred to
as "Tommy," Wilson spent the formative years of
his youth in Augusta. The Boyhood Home of President Woodrow
Wilson is listed on the National Register of Historic Places and has
been designated an official "Save America's Treasures" site. This National
Historic Landmark is where Wilson began his education, first tasted
leadership and experienced the hardships of the Civil War and Reconstruction.
Take a trip to the home and learn how Wilson's
childhood in Georgia affected
him as he later served as President of the United
States.
Georgia's famous
musicians have had a lasting effect on America's musical and cultural
traditions. No one can forget names like James Brown, Ray Charles, Otis Redding, the Allman Brothers Band, Alan Jackson, Jennifer Nettles and Emma Kelly. And these names represent only a
fraction of the state's diverse musical heritage. Experience part of
Georgia's musical legacy by
visiting sites like the James Brown
Cam in Augusta. Simply find the statue, follow the
instructions for dialing a special number on your cell phone, and in just 10
minutes you can download a picture of you standing with The Godfather of Soul.
Ray Charles Plaza in Albany, the city where he
was born, is a tribute to the performing legend. Part of Albany's Flint River
Walk, the plaza includes a rotating bronze statue of Charles , walkways engraved
to look like piano keys and the soft music of the man who put
Georgia on everyone's mind. In
Statesboro, the Emma Kelly Theater
welcomes performers and musicians in memory of the "Lady of 6,000 Songs."
Rising to international fame in 1994 with a chapter devoted to her in the
bestselling book Midnight in the Garden of
Good and Evil, Miss Emma became a household name, performing
everywhere from rural Georgia towns to New York City. All of these performers
and even more famous Georgia musicians, such as Christopher "Ludacris" Bridges, Gladys Knight, Dallas Austin, "Blind Willie" McTell, and the B-52's, can be found in the Georgia Music Hall of Fame. This
43,000-square-foot museum in Macon houses thousands of artifacts, documents,
sound records, costumes, instruments and memorabilia from hundreds of the
state's celebrated musicians.
Any consideration of famous
Georgians would be incomplete without turning to the literary world. One of the
most popular novels of all time, Gone With
the Wind, was written in Atlanta by native Georgian Margaret Mitchell. Located on Atlanta's renowned
Peachtree
Street, the Margaret Mitchell House is a full-blown
experience for any Gone With the
Wind fan. Discover the apartment where the novel was written, see
exhibits detailing Mitchell's life and journey through The Gone With the Wind Movie Museum. The
tour will last for an hour or more, and will tell the story of the woman who won
both of the United States' highest honors for fiction - the Pulitzer Prize and
the National Book Award. After learning about the author, make your way to
Jonesboro, setting for Gone With the Wind's fictional plantation,
Tara. Clayton County and Jonesboro have been designated by the Mitchell
Trust and the Georgia State Legislature as the official "Home of Gone With the Wind." To honor this
tradition, The Road to Tara Museum, located in the 1867
Train Depot in historic Jonesboro, highlights the bestselling book, the
blockbuster film it inspired and the area's history as the setting of both.
Flannery O'Connor is another
highly-praised Georgia author whose works have
continued to win awards and receive praise decades after her passing. She won
three O. Henry awards for short fiction, received prestigious grants and
fellowships from the National Institute of Arts and Letters, the Kenyon Review and the Ford Foundation and
was awarded honorary doctoral degrees by Smith and St. Mary's colleges. She
also received a National Book Award (for her collected stories) and a National
Book Critics Circle Award (for her collected letters) posthumously. Many of her
best works were written and published while she was living at Andalusia,
the O'Connor family farm in Milledgeville. Today, visitors to Andalusia can discover that sense of place that is
palpable in many of her works. O'Connor buffs can also visit her childhood home
in Savannah.
The Flannery O'Connor Childhood
Home allows visitors to experience part of the great writer's
childhood, which is important in understanding her works according to the author
herself: "I think you probably collect most of your experience as a child - when
you really had nothing else to do - and then transfer it to other situations
when you write." One of Flannery O'Connor's greatest admirers, Alice Walker is world-famous Georgia
author hailing from Eatonton. She shares her hometown with Joel Chandler Harris, creator of the "Uncle
Remus" character and second in popularity only to Mark Twain at the time of his
death. Harris' retelling of African American folktales not only cemented
characters like Brer Rabbit into American culture, but also helped to preserve
and dispense rich oral traditions. In Eatonton, The Uncle Remus Museum is full of authentic
period mementos and articles associated with Harris' lovable
character.
Civil rights and black history have
deep roots in Georgia, from its founding as a
British colony to the present. Born in 1807, Horace King was one of the most respected
bridge builders in the Southeast in the middle of the 19th century.
Born as a slave of African, European, and Native American ancestry, he gained
his freedom in 1846. Local writers and chambers of commerce in the Lower Chattahoochee River Valley still proudly proclaim their Horace
King bridges or buildings even when there is little or no real historical
evidence to verify many of the claims. King's legendary status stems from
several factors, including the fact that he was the best bridge builder in the
region, a career that was rare for a man of color at the time. Visitors can see
his covered bridges still standing around Columbus, Gay and LaGrange. Lucy Craft Laney has gone down in history
as one of Georgia's most influential
educational leaders. After graduating in the first class of Atlanta University, she went on to start a
teaching career that would touch homes throughout the state. She started the
first kindergarten for black boys and girls in Augusta, as well as the first black nursing
school in the city. She grew her institutions into successes, despite having
troubles securing funding. In honor of her strength and dedication to the
children of Georgia, a
portrait of her was commissioned and unveiled in the Georgia State Capitol, and
her Augusta home
was restored in 1991 and opened as the Lucy
Craft Laney Museum of Black History, the only African American Museum
in the Central Savannah River Area. The Roland Hayes Museum in Calhoun honors
another black Georgian who broke down barriers, and he rose to international
prominence in the process. Roland Hayes was the first African American man to
win international fame as a concert performer. Born to former slaves in 1887,
his talent was recognized by the president of Fisk University, who invited him to become the lead tenor
for the Fisk Jubilee Singers' tour in Boston. With determination he made a name for
himself, becoming wildly popular and performing at top venues in cities such as
New York, Boston
and London. By
the 1920s he had become the highest-paid tenor in the world and performed for
British royalty, breaking through racial barriers and prejudices with his
commanding performances and unrivaled talent. Georgia's most famous and influential
civil rights leader was Dr. Martin Luther
King, Jr. Born in Atlanta's "Sweet
Auburn" neighborhood, Dr. King was a figurehead in the community as well as the
world, co-pastoring local Ebenezer Baptist Church with his father from 1960 until his
death. The Martin Luther King, Jr. National
Historic Site in the Sweet Auburn district includes several facilities, including the
International World Peace Rose Garden, the birth home of the great civil rights
leader, historic Ebenezer Baptist Church and The King Center. Everything
from exhibits to special events are offered throughout the year so be sure to
check the site's calendar before you go. The park even offers visitors a
self-guided multimedia tour of the site.
Whether politician, musician, author
or civil rights leader, all of these Georgians made an indelible mark on the
state and the nation. Visiting the sites associated with them is an authentic
and educational way to experience history – history that has, at times, changed
the world. Visit www.exploregeorgia.org today to plan
your next trip.
The Georgia
Department of Economic Development (GDEcD) is the state's sales and marketing
arm, the lead agency for attracting new business investment, encouraging the
expansion of existing industry and small businesses, locating new markets for
Georgia products, attracting tourists to Georgia, and promoting the state as a
location for film, video and music projects, as well as planning and mobilizing
state resources for economic development.
### Andalusia Farm – http://www.andalusiafarm.org F.D.R.'s Little White House – http://www.fdr-littlewhitehouse.org Franklin
D. Roosevelt State
Park – http://www.gastateparks.org/info/fdr Georgia
Music
Hall of Fame – http://www.georgiamusic.org/ James Brown Cam – http://www.augustaarts.com/jamesbrowncam.htm Jimmy Carter National Historic Site
(Boyhood Farm) – http://www.nps.gov/jica Jimmy Carter Library and Museum – http://www.jimmycarterlibrary.org/ Lucy
Craft Laney Museum – http://www.lucycraftlaneymuseum.com/ Margaret Mitchell House – http://www.gwtw.org/ Martin Luther King, Jr. National
Historic Site – http://www.nps.gov/malu/ Roland
Hayes Museum – http://harrisartscenter.com/Events/RolandHayes/tabid/67/Default.aspx The Boyhood Home of President
Woodrow Wilson – http://www.wilsonboyhoodhome.org The Flannery O'Connor Childhood Home
– http://www.flanneryoconnorhome.org The Road to Tara Museum – http://visitscarlett.com/roadtotaramuseum.html Uncle
Remus Museum – http://www.uncleremus.com/museum.html
For more information: Additional info can be found on the Web:
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