6 entries match your criteria.
Related Historical Markers
By Tom Bosse, April 5, 2018
African American Heritage Site Marker
SHOWN IN SOURCE-SPECIFIED ORDER
| On Georgia Route 255, on the left when traveling north. |
| | The African American Heritage Site preserves one of North Georgia’s few surviving slave dwellings and interprets the lives of black people in bondage in Appalachia before the Civil War. Framed by 19th century landscaping and displaying antebellum . . . — — Map (db m173162) HM |
| Near Georgia Route 255, 0.2 miles north of Unicoi Turnpike (Georgia Route 17), on the left when traveling north. |
| | Abraham Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation on January 1, 1863, legally freeing slaves in rebellious states and regions controlled by Union forces. According to oral tradition, E.P. Williams stood on a rock wall surrounding his home to read . . . — — Map (db m173153) HM |
| On Georgia Route 255, on the left when traveling north. |
| | Slaves quarried and hand-chiseled this two-ton stone trough. Cool water preserved perishable foods, such as butter, cream and milk, in clay pots on the shelves of this 19th century refrigerator. Slave labor contributed to the settlement of this area . . . — — Map (db m173154) HM |
| On Georgia Route 255, on the left when traveling north. |
| | Quarriers cut millstone blanks from an exposed ledge of gneiss rock adjacent to Mill Rock Branch, a small stream at the upper end of Sautee Valley. They used hardened steel hammers known as mill picks to cut grooves (lands) and ridges to shape the . . . — — Map (db m173155) HM |
| On Georgia Route 255, on the left when traveling north. |
| | Many masters allowed their slaves to work a garden patch near their dwellings for personal consumption, to supplement limited rations, or to sell surplus produce to acquire “luxury” items like fish hooks or farm tools. Slaves cultivated . . . — — Map (db m173156) HM |
| Near Georgia Route 255, 0.2 miles north of Unicoi Turnpike (Georgia Route 17), on the left when traveling north. |
| | Essential to settlers in the 19th and early 20th centuries, many small farm blacksmith shops dotted the landscape in these hills and valleys. Larger industrial foundries and commercial blacksmith shops were located at intersections of commerce, . . . — — Map (db m173157) HM |
Jun. 15, 2024