On State Highway 119 at Tuckasee King Road (County Route 84), on the right on State Highway 119.
Soon after 1767, the Rev. Benjamin Stirk, who had been baptized at the Orphan House, visited Tuckasee King and, finding a number of Baptists there, began to preach to them. As there was then no Baptist Church in Georgia, an arm of the church at . . . — — Map (db m7537) HM
On Clyo-Stillwell Road at Sisters Ferry Road, on the right when traveling north on Clyo-Stillwell Road.
On these lands stood the home of John Adam Treutlen, the first Governor of Georgia after the State obtained Independence, being elected in 1777 under the first Constitution of Georgia. A Salzburger, born about 1733, John Adam Treutlen came to . . . — — Map (db m7255) HM
On Clyo-Kildare Road (County Route 81) at Taylor Chapel Road, on the right when traveling west on Clyo-Kildare Road.
Two miles east of here, on a bluff fronting Savannah River, is the site of Mt. Pleasant, a former Uchee Indian town and English trading post. Even before the foundation of Georgia, the spot was a key point on an arterial Indian path which had long . . . — — Map (db m7775) HM
On Railroad Avenue (State Highway 119) at Williams Avenue, on the right when traveling north on Railroad Avenue.
On the Savannah River, near here, two historic Ferries operated in Colonial Days, linking South Carolina and the Northern overland trade paths with Georgia and the routes leading South to the Savannah and East Florida markets. In 1739, General . . . — — Map (db m7194) HM
On Ebenezer Road (Georgia Route 275), on the left when traveling east.
[Marker's East face]:
To the Memory of the
Salzburgers
and
their faithful pastors.
Rev. John Martin Bolzius
and
Rev. Israel Christain Gronau
who for their faith in the doctrines
of Gods Word as taught
in . . . — — Map (db m14739) HM
On Louisville Road (U.S. 80) at Fox Bow Drive, on the right when traveling east on Louisville Road.
On Dec. 8, 1864, the Right Wing (15th and
17th Corps) of Gen. Sherman's army (US), which
had left Atlanta on Nov. 15th on its destructive
March to the Sea, was moving through
Effington County toward Savannah. Hq. Right
Wing, Maj. Gen. O.O. . . . — — Map (db m169866) HM
On State Highway 21 at Goshen Road, in the median on State Highway 21.
Goshen Church was built about 1751. It was served by the early pastors of the Salzburgers, and later for a short time by the Moravian missionaries. The church remained a part of the Ebenezer Charge until after the Revolutionary War.
In 1820, the . . . — — Map (db m7961) HM
Near Central Boulevard (Georgia Route 17) at Wakefield Drive.
Camp Davis was one of three Camps of Instruction authorized January 1862, by Governor Joseph B. Brown of Georgia, to enlist, determine fitness for duty, and train for the Confederate States of America Army. Camp Davis opened March 2, 1862, training . . . — — Map (db m107229) HM
On Central Boulevard (State Highway 17) at Springfield Avenue (State Highway 119), on the left when traveling north on Central Boulevard.
In May 1862 the Confederate Government established a General Hospital in Guyton, Georgia. This hospital was located on a nine acre tract of land between Central Railroad, a determining factor in locating hospitals, and current Georgia Highway 119, . . . — — Map (db m7979) HM
On Central Boulevard (Georgia Route 17) near Simmons Street, on the left when traveling north.
The Pilgrim Missionary Baptist Normal and Industrial Institute for Colored Students was established here in 1880 by the Pilgrim Missionary Baptist Association. The school was established, organized, funded and staffed by African Americans. The . . . — — Map (db m7965) HM
On Noel C Conaway Road (State Highway 30) at State Highway 17, on the right when traveling north on Noel C Conaway Road.
On the night of Dec. 8, 1864, Hq. Military Division of the Mississippi (USA), Maj. Gen. W.T. Sherman, USA, was established here at Zion Church. Hq. Right Wing (15th and 17th Corps), Maj. Gen. O.O. Howard, USA, was at Eden (3 mi. SW). Hq. Left Wing . . . — — Map (db m7964) HM
On Ebenezer Road (State Highway 275) at Rincon-Stillwell Rd, on the right on Ebenezer Road. Reported missing.
Five miles South on this road, George Washington spent Sunday night, May 15, 1791, at the house of "one Spencer." The occasion was Washington's Southern tour, and he was traveling in his carriage over this road from Savannah to Augusta.
Four . . . — — Map (db m7688) HM
On Ga 21 at Ga 275, on the right when traveling west on Ga 21. Reported missing.
Built in 1767- 69 by Lutheran Protestants who came to Georgia in 1734 after being exiled from Catholic Salzburg in Europe, the church is officially name Jerusalem Church. It stands on the site of a wooden building probably erected soon after the . . . — — Map (db m7629) HM
On Ebenezer Road (County Route 275) 0.1 miles east of Old Augusta Road (County Route 284), on the left when traveling east.
This cemetery has been the primary burial site for the town of New Ebenezer and the congregation of Jerusalem Lutheran Church since at least the mid-1740’s. An earlier burial ground dating from 1734 was located at the site of Old Ebenezer near . . . — — Map (db m156763) HM
One mile north, on December 9, 1864, during the American Civil War, U.S. Gen. Jeff. C. Davis crossed Ebenezer Creek with his 14th Army Corps as it advanced toward Savannah during Gen. William T. Sherman’s March to the Sea. Davis hastily removed the . . . — — Map (db m31226) HM
On Ebenezer Road (Georgia Route 275), on the left when traveling north.
The Old River Road, one of Colonial Georgia's leading thoroughfares and the first highway to connect Savannah and Augusta, passed here. It was initially opened as a horse path by direction of General
Oglethorpe in the 1730's. During the early . . . — — Map (db m7649) HM
Silk culture began at Ebenezer in 1736, when each Salzburger was presented with a mulberry tree and two were instructed in the art of reeling. Two machines were soon in operation in Mr. Bolzius' yard near
the church, and in 1749, 762 lbs. of . . . — — Map (db m7694) HM
In this cemetery are buried the Rev. John Martin Bolzius and the Rev. Israel Christian Gronau, ministers who came to Georgia with the first company of Salzburgers. In March 1734, the Rev. Mr. Bolzius was Superintendent of the Latin Orphan House at . . . — — Map (db m7631) HM
On Ebenezer Road (County Route 275), on the right when traveling north.
Ebenezer was laid off in 1736, after the plan of Savannah, covering an area of a quarter of a mile square. Besides the homes, the plan included a church, parsonage, an academy, orphan house, public storehouse and market places. A thriving town at . . . — — Map (db m7576) HM
On Augusta Road (Georgia Route 21) just south of Old Augusta Road, on the right when traveling north.
Near here the Village of Abercorn was laid out, in 1733, and ten families assigned to it. In 1734, when the Salzburgers arrived in Georgia, many of them were stationed in Abercorn to wait for their homes to be built in Ebenezer and a road cut . . . — — Map (db m156762) HM
On Ebenezer Road (State Highway 275), on the right when traveling north.
(South Face)
John Adam Treutlen
1733 - 1782
First Constitutional Governor
of
The State Of Georgia
Elected May 1777
(East Face)
John Adam Treutlen
He was a member of the First Provincial Congress Of Georgia, . . . — — Map (db m7645) HM
On Stillwell-Clyo Road at Bethany Road, on the right when traveling north on Stillwell-Clyo Road.
The settlement of Bethany was effected near here in 1751 by John Gerar William DeBrahm, His Majesty's Surveyor General for the Southern District of North America. Comprised at first of 160 Germans, the group was joined 11 months later by an equal . . . — — Map (db m14587) HM
On North Oak Street near Jackson Street, on the left when traveling east.
1861 1865 To Honor The Confederate Heroes
Of Effingham County
Reverse
Erected by Salzburger Chapter
United Daughters Of The Confederacy
April 26, 1923 — — Map (db m7504) HM
On N. Pine Street near Rabun Street, on the left when traveling east.
This is one of the eight original Counties created by the Georgia Constitution in 1777 and is named for Lord Effingham who was an ardent supporter of Colonial Rights. By Act of Feb. 26, 1784, the first County Site was located at Tuckasee-King near . . . — — Map (db m7505) HM
On South Laurel Street (Old Georgia Route 21) 0 miles north of Ash Street Extension, on the right when traveling north.
Effingham Camp Meeting has the longest record of continuous service in South Georgia - from 1790 according to oral tradition. The first camp ground was off Sister’s Ferry Road on land of George Powledge, later sold to Gideon Mallette. In 1864 this . . . — — Map (db m14592) HM
[Front]:
In grateful memory of those from Effingham County who made the supreme sacrifice in the service of our country that freedom might live and grow and increase its blessings
[Along the base of the memorial are the seals for each . . . — — Map (db m7695) HM
On State Highway 21 near Log Landing Road, on the right when traveling west.
About .5 miles East on this Road is the site of Old Ebenezer, the first settlement of the Salzburgers in Georgia. They selected this location and named it Ebenezer -- the stone of help. General Oglethorpe
marked out their town, and soon they . . . — — Map (db m7617) HM
On South Laurel Street (State Highway 21) at East 3rd Street, on the right when traveling north on South Laurel Street.
On Dec. 8, 1864, the Left Wing (14th and 20th Corps) of Gen. Sherman's army (USA), which had left Atlanta on Nov. 15th on its destructive March to the Sea, was moving through Effingham County toward Savannah. Hq. Left Wing, Maj. Gen. H. W. Slocum, . . . — — Map (db m7686) HM
On Wallace Drive at Rawls Drive, on the right when traveling south on Wallace Drive.
Georgia Governor Herman Talmadge created the Minimum Foundation Program in 1949 as part of a statewide equalization effort to improve school buildings and yet maintain racial segregation. Completed in 1956, Springfield Central High School . . . — — Map (db m238216) HM