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“Bite-Size Bits of Local, National, and Global History”
 
 
 
 
 
 
185 entries match your criteria. The first 100 are listed.                                               The final 85 

 
 

Historical Markers and War Memorials in Muscogee County, Georgia

 
Clickable Map of Muscogee County, Georgia and Immediately Adjacent Jurisdictions image/svg+xml 2019-10-06 U.S. Census Bureau, Abe.suleiman; Lokal_Profil; HMdb.org; J.J.Prats/dc:title> https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Usa_counties_large.svg Muscogee County, GA (185) Chattahoochee County, GA (19) Harris County, GA (30) Talbot County, GA (13) Lee County, AL (74) Russell County, AL (77)  MuscogeeCounty(185) Muscogee County (185)  ChattahoocheeCounty(19) Chattahoochee County (19)  HarrisCounty(30) Harris County (30)  TalbotCounty(13) Talbot County (13)  LeeCountyAlabama(74) Lee County (74)  RussellCounty(77) Russell County (77)
Columbus is the county seat for Muscogee County
Adjacent to Muscogee County, Georgia
      Chattahoochee County (19)  
      Harris County (30)  
      Talbot County (13)  
      Lee County, Alabama (74)  
      Russell County, Alabama (77)  
 
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1 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — "Kinfolks' Corner"
On West 10th Street at Front Avenue, on the left when traveling west on West 10th Street.
From the 1840's, this building stood among others of its type at this historic downtown intersection. Known traditionally as "Kinfolks' Corner," the area was the meeting place for generations of citizens from Columbus and neighboring Alabama . . . Map (db m101317) HM
2 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — 106-2 — "Torch Hill"
On Victory Drive (U.S. 27) at Fort Benning Road, on the right when traveling north on Victory Drive.
On the summit of the rise to the east is the site of "Torch Hill", home of Dr. Francis Orray Ticknor (1822-1874), author of the famed war story, "Little Giffen of Tennessee". Dr. Ticknor was a physician at the Confederate Hospital on Upper Broad St. . . . Map (db m49073) HM
3 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — “Columbus Stockade Blues”
On 10st Street at Seventh Avenue, on the right when traveling east on 10st Street.
“Way Down in Columbus, Georgia, Wanna be back in Tennessee, Way down in Columbus Stockade, Friends have turned their back on me.” The “Columbus Stockade Blues” by Thomas Darby and Jimmie Tarlton, was written and . . . Map (db m43077) HM
4 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — “Ma" Rainey Home
On 5th Avenue, 0 miles north of 8th Street, on the left when traveling north.
Gertrude Pridgett “Ma” Rainey, 1886-1939, famed “Mother of the Blues”, lived in this house after 1935, during retirement in her native city. In 1904 she introduced “blues” as part of her traveling act. For 30 years her performances contributed to . . . Map (db m42592) HM
5 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — “The Folly”
On 1st Avenue, 0 miles north of West 5th Street, on the left when traveling north.
A dwelling has existed at 527 First Avenue since 1831 when Alfred Iverson wed Julia Forsyth, daughter of Georgia Governor John Forsyth. Elected to Congress in 1846, Iverson served in the Senate until Georgia seceded from the Union. Two sons served . . . Map (db m22408) HM
6 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — 106-5 — “Wildwood”
On Wildwood Avenue at Wildwood Circle, on the left when traveling east on Wildwood Avenue.
Augusta Jane Evans Wilson, author of St. Elmo and other popular Victorian novels, was born May 8, 1835, in "Wildwood" the early Georgian home northeast of this marker. She was the daughter of Sarah Howard and Matthew R. Evans. This historic . . . Map (db m42359) HM
7 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — 1918 Diamond Jubilee 1993 Camp Benning / Fort Benning
On 15th Street at Dixon Drive, on the right when traveling east on 15th Street. Reported missing.
Side 1: In October 1918, the Infantry School of Arms was established on 80 acres of land near here. Camp Benning, later Fort Benning, was named in honor of Confederate Infantry General Lewis Benning, a Columbus resident. The camp’s first . . . Map (db m23176) HM
8 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — 700 Broadway
On Broadway at 7th Street, on the right when traveling north on Broadway.
Situated on a lot that was part of Edward Lloyd Thomas’ original 1828 plan for the city, this c. 1870 Victorian townhouse is the only one of its design in Columbus. Among the families which inhabited this house was that of Stirling Price Gilbert . . . Map (db m22940) HM
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9 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — Alma Woodsey Thomas
On 21st Street at 5th Avenue, on the right when traveling west on 21st Street.
Side 1: Alma Thomas, nationally known African-American artist, was the eldest of four daughters born to John Maurice Thomas and Amelia Whitaker Cantey. Highly cultured and socially involved, the Thomas family owned this Victorian home . . . Map (db m58269) HM
10 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — Augusta Jane Evans (1835-1909)
Near Front Avenue north of West 6th Street, on the right when traveling south.
Augusta Jane Evans (Wilson), one of the most popular American novelists of the nineteenth century and a native of Columbus, at the age of fifteen wrote her first novel, "Inez: A Tale of the Alamo," as a Christmas gift for her father. She is . . . Map (db m101321) HM
11 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — Baker High School
On Victory Drive (U.S. 27) at Benning Drive, on the right when traveling north on Victory Drive.
Side 1 Baker High School, originally Baker Village School, opened in 1943 to serve primarily military and Muscogee County students. It was named for Newton D. Baker, U.S. Sec. of War during World War I. During World War II the school contained a . . . Map (db m173498) HM
12 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — Battle of Columbus
On 14th Street at Broadway, on the right when traveling west on 14th Street.
South face At 8:00 P.M. Easter Sunday, April 16, 1865, Federal forces, trying to secure the crossing of the Chattahoochee River, attacked strong defences near Columbus, Georgia. In the face of heavy musketry and artillery fire, the . . . Map (db m101340) HM WM
13 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — Battle of Columbus
Near Front Avenue near West 6th Street.
Unaware of Robert E. Lee's surrender, General James H. Wilson's Union Cavalry swept across Alabama as boys and old men tried to defend Columbus. Cannon from the C.S.S. Chattahoochee, similar to nearby replicas, were mounted here to . . . Map (db m101488) HM
14 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — Birthplace of Georgia's Woman Suffrage Movement
On East 10th Street at 2nd Avenue, on the right when traveling east on East 10th Street.
In 1890, Augusta Howard founded the Georgia Woman Suffrage Association in Columbus at her family's antebellum mansion. It was Georgia's first organized effort to gain the vote for women. In 1894, Howard persuaded the National American Woman . . . Map (db m173538) HM
15 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — Birthplace of Robert Winship WoodruffDecember 6, 1889
On Second Avenue (Georgia Route 85) 0 miles north of 14th Street, on the right when traveling north.
Son of Ernest and Emily Winship Woodruff. Honored citizen, noted industrialist and philanthropist, a Georgian of universal friendships and acclaim. Through his vision and leadership the product “Coca-Cola” became the world’s refreshment. . . . Map (db m17808) HM
16 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — Bricks & Clay Products — Heritage Park —
Near Front Avenue at West 7th Street.
For millions of years, the Chattahoochee River flooded its banks, dropped its silt, and created vast deposits of clay. Because of this accumulation of clay, brick making began south of Phenix City at least as early as 1940. The Bickerstaff family . . . Map (db m101353) HM
17 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — Brigadier General Henry Lewis Benning
Near Linwood Boulevard at 7th Avenue.
Born in Columbia County, Georgia, on April 2, 1814, Henry L. Benning attended Franklin College prior to practicing law in Columbus. As a local attorney and state Supreme Court Judge, Benning played an active role in Georgia’s secession in 1861. . . . Map (db m57107) HM
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18 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — Bullard-Hart-Sampson House
On Third Avenue just north of 14th Street, on the right when traveling north.
Built 1887 by Dr. William L. Bullard, Columbus physician and pioneer ear, eye, nose and throat specialist, this house is a splendid example of Second Empire Victorian architecture. It was designed by L.E. Thornton of New York. The Bullard . . . Map (db m44423) HM
19 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — Calhoun
Near 14th Street north of Front Avenue, on the left when traveling west.
Calhoun-Griffin-Mott House A beautiful mansion once stood at this riverfront location. This opulent urban home overlooking the Chattahoochee River and adjacent to a busy manufacturing district was sequentially the residence of three of the . . . Map (db m217745) HM
20 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — Camp Benning
On South Dixon Drive at Mimosa Street, on the left when traveling south on South Dixon Drive.
Camp Benning established on this site in 1918 as the U.S. Army infantry school. Originally embracing 85 adjoining acres in 1919, the garrison was permanently located nine miles southeast of Columbus and is now designated Fort Benning.Map (db m223053) HM
21 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — 106-16A — Camp Conrad
On Second Avenue (Georgia Route 85) at 32nd Street, on the right when traveling north on Second Avenue.
Main entrance to site of Camp Conrad, where a brigade of 3,500 troops was stationed in the winter of 1898-99 (Spanish-American War). Camp site occupied space between Third and Sixth Avenues and 29th and 33rd Sts. Brigade was composed of 160th . . . Map (db m42184) HM
22 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — Carson McCullers — 1917 - 1967 —
On Stark Avenue north of 15th Street, on the left when traveling north.
The family of author Carson McCullers moved to this house in 1927. Here Lula Carson Smith spent her formative years 10-17 and here she began to write, putting on shows in the two sitting rooms, using the sliding doors as curtains and drafting . . . Map (db m43085) HM
23 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — Carson McCullers (1917 - 1967)
Near Front Avenue north of West 6th Street, on the right when traveling south.
With her critically acclaimed first novel, "The Heart is a Lonely Hunter," published at age twenty - three, Carson McCullers was on her way to becoming one of the most widely read writers of her time. Born Lula Carson Smith in Columbus, McCullers . . . Map (db m101320) HM
24 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — Church of the Holy Family
On 12th Street at Veterans Parkway (U.S. 27), on the left when traveling west on 12th Street.
Front: This is the mother church of Roman Catholicism in this area, serving as the only Catholic Church in Columbus from 1880 to 1958. The first Catholic church, the Church of Sts. Philip and James, was built in 1835 on what is now Chapel . . . Map (db m43639) HM
25 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — Circus Train Wreck MemorialCon. T. Kennedy Shows
Near Victory Drive at 4th Street.
In memory of their comrades who lost their lives in a railroad wreck near Columbus, GA. Nov. 22, 1915. Reverse We’ll not forget thee, we who stay To work a little longer here. Thy name, thy faith, . . . Map (db m101662) HM
26 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — 106-24 — City Mills<------<<<<
On First Avenue at 18th Street, on the right when traveling north on First Avenue.
Site of the oldest manufacturing operation on the Chattahoochee River at Columbus. April 3, 1828, the State of Georgia, through Governor George R. Gilmer, issued a grant to Seaborn Jones for Lot No. 1 (5 1/2 acres) in the reserve at the Coweta Fall. . . . Map (db m42192) HM
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27 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — 106-3 — City of Columbus
On Broadway, 0 miles north of 11th Street, in the median.
This city of Columbus was created as a trading town by an act of the General Assembly of Georgia, December 24, 1827. The location designated was on the Chattahoochee River near the Coweta Falls. This spot was selected because it was at the head of . . . Map (db m22802) HM
28 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — 106-2 — Civil War Women’s Riot
On Broadway, 0 miles north of 13th Street, in the median.
On April 11, 1863, during the American Civil War, sixty-five Columbus women armed with knives and pistols rallied at this site and marched down Broad Street raiding the stores of speculators before police could restore order. During the war many . . . Map (db m42506) HM
29 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — 106-26 — Col. W. L. Salisbury
On Broadway, 0 miles north of 7th Street, in the median.
This park is named for Col. W. L. Salisbury (1830-1878), soldier, editor, banker, distinguished citizen of Columbus whose contribution to progress and culture in his native city was outstanding. His home was on the east side of this block. He was a . . . Map (db m22772) HM
30 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — Colored Department of the City Hospital / Doctors and Nurses
On 17th Street at 8th Avenue, on the left when traveling east on 17th Street.
Colored Department of the City Hospital The first City Hospital, c. 1841, was located on the South Commons. Called “the Pest House,” its clients were charity patients. The second City Hospital, c. 1894, was built across from . . . Map (db m45385) HM
31 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — Columbian Lodge No. 7, Free & Accepted Masons Columbus, Georgia
On 2nd Avenue north of 11th Street, on the left when traveling north.
Organized October 9, 1828, Columbian Lodge was chartered by the Grand Lodge of Georgia in December 1828, as No. 28. In 1849 it became No. 7. It is the oldest Lodge in western Georgia. First Worshipful Master was Luther Blake. The Lodge was organized . . . Map (db m23053) HM
32 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — Columbus' First Jewish Cemetery
Near Linwood Boulevard at 7th Avenue.
Since Biblical times when Abraham purchased land to bury his wife Sarah, it has been considered a religious obligation for Jews to set aside land for interring their dead. Often before congregations were established burial societies were formed to . . . Map (db m57359) HM
33 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — Columbus Iron Works
Near Bay Avenue south of West 9th Street.
Organized in 1853, this facility produced steam engines for the Confederate Navy before being burned by Federal troops in April of 1865. Functioning again by September of the same year, the firm manufactured cast and wrought iron . . . Map (db m101522) HM
34 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — 106-13 — Columbus Iron Works»→
On Front Avenue, 0 miles south of 9th Street, on the right when traveling south.
Established 1853, was operated by the Confederate government as Naval Iron Works, making cannon, other war munitions, and two gun boats. This plant was credited with making the first breech-loading cannon. At south end of Dillingham Street . . . Map (db m43729) HM
35 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — Columbus Museums
Near Front Avenue north of West 6th Street, on the right when traveling south.
Created in the early 1950s as the city's first comprehensive museum, the Columbus Museum of Arts and Sciences, 1251 Wynnton Road, features permanent exhibits of fine and decorative arts, southeastern Indian artifacts, and regional history and . . . Map (db m101324) HM
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36 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — 106-23 — Columbus Steamboat Wharf
On Dillingham Street (County Road 28) at Bay Avenue, on the right when traveling east on Dillingham Street.
The Columbus Steamboat Wharf, about 700 ft. from here, was used as a river boat landing for 111 years. 210 steamers arrived from Jan. 26, 1828 when the first steamer, the "Fanny" docked at the wharf until Apr. 1, 1939 when the "George W. Miller" . . . Map (db m101254) HM
37 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — Columbus Symphony Orchestra
On Broadway at 10th Street, on the right when traveling north on Broadway.
The second orchestra to be formed in America, the Columbus Symphony Orchestra was founded in 1855 by Herman Saroni, a German conductor and student of Mendelssohn, who was drawn to the city because it "had built for herself a reputation of culture." . . . Map (db m109739) HM
38 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — Columbus’ First Theater
On Broadway, 0.1 miles 8th Street, on the right when traveling north.
(Side 1): A pioneer theatrical entrepreneur, Sol Smith, 1801-1869, built many theaters in the Deep South, including New Orleans and Mobile and the first permanent theater west of the Mississippi in St. Louis, a city that he and partner Noah . . . Map (db m22838) HM
39 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — Confederate Boats
Near Front Avenue south of West 6th Street.
Located on the bank immediately to the north was the C.S.A. Naval Yard. The facility which built the ironclad Ram "Muscogee" and renovated the gunboat "Chattachoochee." Sunk in the river in 1865, these boats were salvaged during the . . . Map (db m101486) HM
40 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — 106-27 — Confederate Dead
On Linwood Boulevard at 7th Avenue, on the left when traveling east on Linwood Boulevard.
More than 200 soldiers from every Confederate state are buried in two separate plots in Linwood Cemetery. Many of these men died in the several Confederate hospitals located in Columbus, 1862-1865. Numbers fell in the battle here, Easter Sunday, . . . Map (db m45985) HM
41 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — 106-28 — Confederate Hospitals
On 10th Street, 0.1 miles west of Second Avenue, on the left when traveling west.
In February 1864, to relieve the serious overcrowding of Confederate hospitals in the Atlanta and Dalton areas, Columbus was chosen as the site of a 1,500 bed army hospital. Eight buildings on Broad Street, including two saloons and the Court House, . . . Map (db m45732) HM
42 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — 106-15 — Confederate Memorial Day
On 2nd Avenue at 11th Street, on the right when traveling north on 2nd Avenue.
The first Confederate Memorial Day service in Columbus was held on this site (St. Luke Methodist Church) on April 26, 1866. The program was under the auspices of the Ladies’ Memorial Association, which was organized in the early Spring of 1866 for . . . Map (db m56674) HM
43 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — Confederate Siege GunNational Civil War Naval Museum
1861-1865 Mounted by Camp Benning, U.C.V. Aug. 1898.Map (db m61860) HM
44 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — Confederate Supply
Near Front Avenue south of West 6th Street.
Columbus industries supplied more goods to the Confederacy than any other southern city except Richmond. Existing factories expanded; merchants launched new manufactories; and the C.S.A. established an arsenal and a quartermaster . . . Map (db m101491) HM
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45 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — Cotton Warehouses
On Bay Avenue north of 11th Street, on the left when traveling north.
The massive, brick cotton warehouses along Bay and Front Avenues were the heart of the Columbus economy for over a century. Cotton factors and commission merchants built their warehouses here on this bluff, high above the river, yet close to the . . . Map (db m112285) HM
46 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — Creek Agriculture — Creek Heritage Trail —
Near South Lumpkin Road, on the right when traveling south.
Cusseta lay on the rich flood plain of the Chattahoochee River, making it a fertile area for agriculture. Like Creeks throughout the Chattahoochee River valley the Cussetas grew a variety of vegetables, especially corn, squash, beans, and pumpkins. . . . Map (db m113718) HM
47 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — Cusseta: A Center for International Diplomacy — Creek Heritage Trail —
Near South Lumpkin Road, on the right when traveling south.
Cusseta was both an important political center for the Lower Creeks and a critical place for interaction with European colonial officials and later, American settlers. Occupying a strategic position in a vast trading network stretching from the Gulf . . . Map (db m113780) HM
48 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — Daily Life in Cusseta — Creek Heritage Trail —
Near South Lumpkin Road, on the right when traveling south.
The men and women of Cusseta had very defined roles in day to day life. Men were responsible not only for hunting and fishing, but for building homes and clearing ground for planting. Men made political decisions, including the decision to go to . . . Map (db m113759) HM
49 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — Dedicated to the American Revolutionary War InfantrymanAmerica's First Soldier
Near Legacy Way east of South Lumpkin Road.
His patriotism, courage and sacrifice won independence from colonial rule for the United States of America American Revolution 1775 ~~ 1783 The 13 Original Colonies Virginia Massachusetts Maryland Connecticut . . . Map (db m113728) HM
50 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — Dedicated to the Veterans of 1898 to 1902
On Broadway, 0 miles south of 5th Street, in the median.
“You triumphed over obstacles which would have overcome men less brave and determined” President McKinley Dedicated to the Veterans of 1898 to 1902 Camps and Auxiliaries of the Department of Georgia United Spanish War . . . Map (db m57362) HM
51 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — Dr. Pemberton’s Country Home
On Broadway, 0 miles north of 7th Street, on the right when traveling north.
This house served as the residence of Dr. Pemberton between 1860-1869. Dr. Pemberton enjoys international prestige as the originator of the formula for Coco-Cola. He moved into this house from the white frame cottage located at 11 Seventh Street. . . . Map (db m22646) HM
52 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — Dr. Thomas H. Brewer
On 1st Avenue, 0 miles north of 10th Street, on the left when traveling north.
A Pike County, Alabama native of African-American descent, Dr. Brewer was born November 16, 1894. His office was located at 1025 1/2 First Avenue. Brewer emerged as a chief spokesman for the Civil Rights of the Negro and was described by Roy Wilkins . . . Map (db m10975) HM
53 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — 106-18 — Eagle & Phenix Mills
On Front Avenue, 0 miles north of West 12th Street, on the left when traveling north.
In 1851 the Eagle Mill, one of the pioneer textile plants of Columbus, was built on this site to manufacture cotton and woolen goods. During the War the mill manufactured goods for the Confederacy and the State of Georgia. Products included grey . . . Map (db m43730) HM
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54 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — Early Industrial Center
Near Front Avenue north of West 6th Street.
The tremendous energy of the Chattahoochee made Columbus an important manufacturing center. Falling water powered textile, grist, saw, and paper mills. By 1860, the city's production of cotton and woolen goods ranked second within . . . Map (db m101495) HM
55 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — Early Residences
On Broadway south of West 9th Street, on the right when traveling south.
On this block stood the residences of families who contributed to the early development of the city. These included the house built prior to 1840 by William Waters Garrard, planter, adjacent to his cotton warehouses at the north end of the block; . . . Map (db m43093) HM
56 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — Educational Institutions
Near Front Avenue north of West 6th Street, on the right when traveling south.
Built in 1843, the Wynnton Male Academy (now Wynnton School Library) is considered the oldest such school facility in continuous use in the state. This building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1972. Industrial High School, . . . Map (db m101326) HM
57 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — Empire Mills
On Front Avenue, 0 miles south of 9th Street, on the right when traveling north.
G. W. Woodruff began grist operations in 1861 on this site previously occupied in 1847 by E.T. Taylor Cotton Gin Company and in 1841 by William Waters Garrard’s cotton warehouse. Empire Mills ran night and day during the Civil War and was spared in . . . Map (db m46944) HM
58 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — Ernest Woodruff / Robert Winship Woodruff
On 2nd Avenue (Georgia Route 85) north of 14th Street, on the right when traveling north.
Ernest Woodruff Ernest Woodruff was born in 1863 at 1420 2nd Avenue. He first worked for his father, George Waldo Woodruff, in his Columbus Empire Flour Mills, then as President of Joel Hurt’s Atlanta Streetcar Company, and as . . . Map (db m101269) HM
59 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — Establishment of Memorial Day
Near Linwood Boulevard at 8th Avenue, on the left when traveling east.
In commemoration of the Establishment of Memorial Day Here in Old St. Luke Church, on April 26, 1866. The Ladies Memorial Association of Columbus who had urged the entire South to join them in similar exercises, held its first . . . Map (db m176236) HM WM
60 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — Eugene J. Bullard, 1895-1961 / World’s First Black Combat Aviator
On Talbotton Road (Georgia Route 85) at Ashley Station Road, on the left when traveling east on Talbotton Road.
Eugene J. Bullard, 1895 - 1961 Bullard grew up in a small shotgun style house near this site. His father, William, was a laborer for the W. C. Bradley Company. Eugene completed the fifth grade at the 28th Street School. Shaken by the death . . . Map (db m45865) HM
61 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — First African Baptist Church
On Fifth Avenue at Ninth Street, on the left when traveling north on Fifth Avenue.
The initial congregation of this church was formed by slaves who had attended Ephesus Baptist Church (later First Baptist), since its organization on February 14, 1829. When a new church was built in 1840 the slaves worshipped in the older building. . . . Map (db m44025) HM
62 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — First Baptist Church
On 12th Street, 0 miles west of Third Avenue, on the left when traveling west.
On February 14, 1829, twelve persons met and organized under the name Ephesus Baptist Church of Columbus. The northern half of this block had been designated for religious purposes in the state survey of 1828, and a small meeting house was built for . . . Map (db m44359) HM
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63 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — First Black Public School
On 1st Avenue, 0 miles north of 12th Street, on the right when traveling south.
Near here, in July 1872, the first local public school for black students was opened. The school was the result of an action by the City Council directing the Trustees of the Columbus Public Schools to set up classes for blacks. For the first of . . . Map (db m23120) HM
64 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — First Presbyterian Church
On First Avenue at 11th Street, on the right when traveling north on First Avenue.
(Side 1): The Presbyterians were granted one of the original church lots in the 1828 Columbus plan. It was on the North side of Chapel St. between Second and Third Avenues. The fourteen charter members, received in 1830, were: Edward . . . Map (db m43943) HM
65 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — Fit for Man and Beast
On Broadway at 10th Street, in the median on Broadway.
This watering fountain at Broadway and 10th Street represents the last one of several located in each block down Broadway. It is Columbus' oldest public fountain, dating back to the earliest days of the city. Called the Man and Beast fountain, it . . . Map (db m22376) HM
66 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — Fort Benning
Near Front Avenue north of West 6th Street.
Camp Benning began on Macon Road in 1918 as a temporary World War I encampment. The present fort was created in 1922 and was named in honor of Columbus lawyer, legislator, jurist, and Confederate Major General Henry L. Benning. The . . . Map (db m101496) HM
67 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — Fortson General Store
On Fortson Road at Almond Raod, on the left when traveling north on Fortson Road.
An 1884 Georgia map shows this area was once called Blanchard's Crossing. It was a stop on a narrow-gauge railway that ran to Kingsboro,Georgia just beyond Cataula. When the Central of Georgia Railroad was builtin the 1880's, a station was . . . Map (db m194406) HM
68 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — Fourth Street Baptist Church
On 5th Street at 3rd Avenue, on the right when traveling east on 5th Street.
In 1900 the Mt. Canaan Baptist Church was established under the leadership of the Reverends John Bellamy and Willis Carter when a few men and women met under a fig tree on Third Avenue to worship. In 1901 Rev. Bellamy separated from Mt. Canaan to . . . Map (db m57846) HM
69 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — Friendship Baptist Church
On 6th Avenue, 0 miles south of 9th Street, on the right when traveling south.
Founded in 1892 at 4th Avenue and 6th Street, the church moved to its permanent home here in January of 1897. The first minister was Rev. J. S. Kelsey, who served the church from 1897-1901. The present building was completed under his leadership. . . . Map (db m57857) HM
70 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — Frontier Wars
Near Front Avenue south of West 6th Avenue.
The Creek Indian War of 1835-1836, which centered on Columbus, began when a group of Indians revolted rather than move from East Alabama to Oklahoma they attacked travelers and settlers and threatened Columbus. State militia . . . Map (db m101487) HM
71 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — Garrett and Sons / Cargill-Wright Company
On 9th Street, 0 miles west of Broadway, on the right when traveling west.
Garrett and Sons Joseph Simpson Garrett, a whiskey, tobacco, and groceries merchant, constructed this building in 1883 for his business, Garrett and Sons. This wholesale business was regarded as the first of its kind in Columbus. Garrett . . . Map (db m44518) HM
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72 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — 106-8 — General Benning
On TSYS Way, 0 miles 14th Street.
Opposite this marker stood the home of Henry Lewis Benning (1814-1875), the Confederate Brigadier General for whom Fort Benning was named. He was married in 1839 to Mary Howard Jones, daughter of Colonel and Mrs. Seaborn Jones. General . . . Map (db m46996) HM
73 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — George Parker Swift I
On 14th Street at Broadway, on the right when traveling west on 14th Street.
George Parker Swift, I, pioneer cotton manufacturer of Georgia, was born Sept. 1, 1815, in Fairhaven, Massachusetts. He moved to Georgia in the early 1840’s and started the Tribune Mills at Waymanville, Upson County, first making cotton thread and . . . Map (db m42159) HM
74 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — Gertrude "Ma" Rainey1886 – 1939 — "Empress of the Blues" —
Near Front Avenue south of West 6th Street.
. . . Map (db m101400) HM
75 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — Griffin
Near 14th Street north of Front Avenue, on the right when traveling west.
Daniel Griffin · Mary Griffin Photograph courtesy of Katherine Carrison Hager and Jane Carrison Bocke Daughters of Henry George Carrison, Great Nephew of Danish Griffin and Mary Powers Griffin Daniel Griffin The second owner of the . . . Map (db m217747) HM
76 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — 106-17 — Haiman's Sword Factory
On 1st Avenue, 0 miles north of 14th Street, on the right when traveling north.
Site of Haiman’s Sword Factory, the largest plant of its type in the South during the War Between the States. Louis and Elias Haiman came to Columbus from Prussia in the 1830s and established a tinsmith shop. At the War’s start they established a . . . Map (db m69948) HM
77 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — 106-25 — He Helped Bring And Keep Fort Benning
On Wildwood Avenue at 16th Street, on the right when traveling north on Wildwood Avenue.
Mallory Reynolds Flournoy (Oct. 21, 1882 - Apr. 26, 1920), leader in establishing Fort Benning and the Infantry School on the 182,000 acre military reservation south of Columbus, lived here. The son of John F. Flournoy, outstanding citizen and . . . Map (db m42531) HM
78 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — 106-6 — Hero's Memorial
On 10th Avenue at 4th Street, on the left when traveling north on 10th Avenue. Reported missing.
North of this marker in the Porterdale Cemetery is the grave of Bragg Smith over which the City of Columbus erected a marble memorial to commemorate an outstanding deed of heroism. The text reads:
“Erected by the City of . . . Map (db m57367) HM
79 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — High Uptown Historic District / Garrett-Bullock-Delay House
On Second Avenue (Georgia Route 85) at 14th Street, on the right when traveling north on Second Avenue.
High Uptown Historic District This area, known as “High Uptown,” contains historic residential structures that were built by affluent business and community leaders of the 19th and early 20th centuries. These homes are . . . Map (db m44465) HM
80 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — Historic Riverdale Cemetery
On Victory Drive (U.S. 27) 0.1 miles south of 10th Avenue, on the right when traveling north.
Side 1: In 1890, availability of lots at Linwood Cemetery, the oldest institution of the Columbus city government, was becoming scarce. At that time, the city acquired additional property on 10th Avenue which became Riverdale Cemetery. . . . Map (db m82689) HM
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81 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — Holsey Chapel Christian Methodist Episcopal Church
On 8th Street at 8th Avenue, on the right when traveling east on 8th Street.
Side 1: In 1884, a group of black citizens banded together to organize a church. They appealed to the Commissioners of Columbus, Georgia, and obtained a lot on Eighth Street. The first church was completed in 1886 and called Everett . . . Map (db m57864) HM
82 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — Horace KingMaster Builder
On Chattahoochee Riverwalk, on the left when traveling south.
Horace King Master Builder (1807-1887)Born a slave in Chesterfield District, S.C., Horace King came to Columbus in 1832 with his master, John Godwin, to construct the first bridge between Columbus and Girard, Alabama. After the completion . . . Map (db m113940) HM
83 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — Horace King (1807 - 1887)
Near Front Avenue south of West 6th Street.
Born a slave in South Carolina, Horace King moved to this region with his master, John Godwin, who secured the contract for the first bridge across the river. King supervised the building of this span in 1833. Freed in 1846, King . . . Map (db m101401) HM
84 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — Industrial District
Near Front Avenue north of West 6th Avenue.
In the south, the best surviving concentration of nineteenth century hydro-mechanical and electrical engineering systems relating to grist and textile mills is located along this river. In 1978, the U.S. Department of the Interior declared the . . . Map (db m101492) HM
85 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — J.S. Pemberton & the Confederacy/The Formula
On 14th Street near Front Avenue, on the right when traveling west.
J.S. Pemberton & the Confederacy John Pemberton joined the 3rd Georgia Cavalry in May 1862 and resigned in October that same year due to “a chronic disease of the stomach,” his life-long malady. He wrote he could better serve his country as . . . Map (db m173640) HM
86 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — Jewish Section of Riverdale Cemetery
On VIctory Drive (U.S. 27) 0.1 miles south of 10th Avenue, on the right when traveling north.
Side 1: The earliest recorded Jewish burials in Columbus were in historic Linwood Cemetery and in the Raphael Moses family cemetery, Esquiline. When the City of Columbus established Riverdale Cemetery in 1890, Temple Israel purchased a . . . Map (db m22943) HM
87 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — John McIlhenny Home
On Broadway, 0 miles south of 6th Street, on the right when traveling north.
John McIlhenny, Civil Engineer, City Council member, and Mayor of Columbus 1873-1874, lived in this house in the 1860’s. Mr. McIlhenny is recognized as the father of the Columbus public school system. Authorized by the Georgia Legislature in . . . Map (db m22799) HM
88 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — John Stith Pemberton — Heritage Park
On Broadway at West 7th Street on Broadway. Reported missing.
Beginning in the 1850s, John Pemberton manufactured wholesale drugs and chemicals in Columbus and operated drug stores here. He moved to Atlanta in 1870 and began selling Coca-Cola from his drugstore. By 1886, he had organized a company to . . . Map (db m192978) HM
89 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — Kirven's Department Store
On Broadway north of 11th Street, on the right when traveling north.
In 1886, J. Albert Kirven and his brother Richard moved their growing department store from No. 90 Broad to this location at 1136 Broadway. With $500 of his own savings and a $2500 loan from his sister, J. Albert Kirven purchased the bankrupted Acee . . . Map (db m101413) HM
90 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — 106-20 — Ladies Defender
On East 10th Street at 1st Avenue, on the right when traveling east on East 10th Street.
A muzzle loading cannon cast in Columbus in 1861 from brass contributed by the ladies of the city from their domestic furnishings and utensils. Used about a year in the Confederate Artillery, it was captured by Federal troops at Shiloh, Tenn., April . . . Map (db m101274) HM
91 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — Last Battle
Near 14th Street north of Front Avenue, on the right when traveling west.
Confederate Command: Major General Howell Cobb Federal Command: Major General James H. Wilson The Last Battle Even though the Confederacy teetered on the verge of collapse by early 1865 the Union worried that the South would never . . . Map (db m217749) HM
92 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — 106-1 — Last Land Battle in War of 1861-65
On Veterans Parkway (U.S. 27) at 14th Street, on the right when traveling south on Veterans Parkway.
The last important land battle of the War Between the States was fought here April 16, 1865, resulting in the capture of Columbus by Federal forces. The engagement began directly west of Columbus in Alabama and ended on the Georgia side of . . . Map (db m42113) HM
93 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — Leonard SpringColumbus’ Original Source of Water
On Country Club Road, 0 miles east of Cherokee Avenue, on the right when traveling east.
In 1839 citizens first called for the development of a water works system. On this site is located the original source of water for drinking and general household use for Columbus. Beginning in 1844, Leonard Spring, with a discharge of 200,000 . . . Map (db m22484) HM
94 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — Liberty Hill Baptist Church
On Forest Avenue at Omaha Drive, on the right when traveling east on Forest Avenue.
Organized in 1869 by slaves, the first church building was built on land donated by Mrs. Emma Jones and Mrs. Nora Felton. The church was called the Bush Arbor Church because of the construction and materials used. Reverend Phil Owens was the first . . . Map (db m22970) HM
95 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — Linwood Cemetery
On Linwood Boulevard at 8th Street, on the left when traveling east on Linwood Boulevard.
A part of the 1828 plan of Columbus, Linwood contains graves of pioneer citizens and their descendents, as well as the tombs of some 200 Confederate soldiers. Among those buried here are Anna Caroline Benning (1853-1935), who formed the . . . Map (db m46947) HM
96 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — Lummus Cotton Gins
On West 9th Street east of Front Avenue, on the right when traveling east.
On this site in 1847 stood the E.T. Taylor Cotton Gin Manufacturing Company. In 1854 it became the W.G. Clemons, Brown & Company and operated as such until the Civil War. In 1867 Franklin H. Lummus controlled the company and the name . . . Map (db m43091) HM
97 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — 106-7 — Martin J. Crawford(1820-1883)
On 13th Street, 0 miles east of 2nd Avenue, on the right when traveling west.
On the adjoining lot stood the large columned home of Martin Jenkins Crawford, Lawyer, Member of the General Assembly of Georgia, twice Judge of the Superior Court of the Chattahoochee Circuit, Member United States Congress, and of the provisional . . . Map (db m43079) HM
98 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — Mass - Produced Ice Machines
Near Front Avenue north of West 6th Street.
Since the 1830s, the city's foundries and machine shops have fabricated a variety of items: cotton gins, steam engines, riverboats, saw and cane mills, pulleys, gears, stoves, pots, and farming implements. The most significant . . . Map (db m101494) HM
99 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — Mathews D. Swift Park
On Front Avenue south of 14th Street, on the right when traveling south.
This park is named in honor of Mathews D. "Mat" Swift who served as President of W.C. Bradley Co. Real Estate for 31 years, retiring in 2017. He was one of the primary visionaries and leaders of the transformation of the declining center city . . . Map (db m218045) HM
100 Georgia, Muscogee County, Columbus — Memorial Stadium
Near Lumpkin Boulevard, 0.5 miles west of Victory Drive, on the right when traveling west.
(side 1) The Columbus City Council authorized the construction of Memorial Stadium in 1925 as a memorial for local citizens who served and died during World War I. In 1932, the Council authorized an ornamental entrance to the stadium that . . . Map (db m238149) HM WM

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Apr. 23, 2024