Strength In Numbers Wormsloe Plantation Art
by Reid Callaway
Title
Strength In Numbers Wormsloe Plantation Art
Artist
Reid Callaway
Medium
Photograph - Photography
Description
Strength In Numbers.....by Reid Callaway
Wormsloe Plantation Art
Imagine driving down a majestic rural avenue, lined on either side by over 400 stately live oak trees, and emerging at the site of Georgia�s oldest plantation. These trees have been here for hundreds of years. The 1.5 miles entrance to Wormsloe Historic Site in Savannah evokes a different era, turning back the hand of time to 18th-century Georgia.
Wormsloe is the only standing architectural remnant in Savannah from the founding of Georgia,� explains Wormsloe�s ranger Michael Jacobs. A State Historic Site, today Wormsloe is run by the Department of Natural Resources.
The former home and plantation of Noble Jones, one of the original colonists who arrived in Savannah with General James Oglethorpe in 1733, Wormsloe offers a precious glimpse into the lives of Georgia�s earliest European settlers. The Jones house was originally constructed of �tabby,� a mixture of sand, water, lime and oyster shells. Much of the oyster shells used to build the house came from shell mounds left behind from ancient Indian settlements on the site thousands of years earlier.
The tabby ruins of the original Jones house lies nestled within 822 acres of Georgia forest, sheltered by peaceful marshes to the east and the south. When the Jones family lived at Wormsloe in the mid-1700�s, their home was strategically surrounded by eight-foot-tall tabby walls to protect Jones and him family from Spanish or Indian attack.
An enormous stone monument and a wrought iron fence mark the first family burial site at Wormsloe. Noble Jones was buried at Wormsloe in 1775 alongside his wife Sarah and, later, their youngest son Indigo. In 1875, George Wymberley Jones DeRenne, a descendent of Noble and Sarah Jones, had Nobel Jones�s remains moved to another cemetery and subsequently placed the monument �to save from oblivion the graves of his kindred.�
Wormsloe also features a Colonial Life Area, representing some of the typical outbuildings on the property and information about the gardens and crops grown at Wormsloe in the 18th century.
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Uploaded
February 23rd, 2017
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Viewed 573 Times - Last Visitor from New York, NY on 03/28/2024 at 6:05 PM
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Comments (7)
Reid Callaway
Thank you Frozen In Time for featuring my artwork in our group.... Your Very Best Photography! 2/14/2022
Reid Callaway
Thank you Judy Vincent for featuring my artwork in our group... USA Photographers! 2/9/2022
Reid Callaway
Thank you Bruce Bley for enjoying my artwork and for making this image one of your personal Favorites!