Tuesday, May 12, 2015

Guess What???

To all my followers, readers and whoever else is out there!

I have just got home from my Gold Award Final presentation meeting and.............. I HAVE MY GOLD AWARD!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
I am so excited! Thank you, guys for being there and for helping me get this award! Without you, I wouldn't have a beautiful Gold Award pin on my vest!

Thank you!

MJ

Wednesday, May 6, 2015

Ft. King George and Adventures On The Altamaha

Any history buff cruising the Georgia Coastal area will want to see Ft. King George. This historic site is the oldest English fort remaining on Georgia's coast. According to the Georgia Department of Natural Resources, “From 1721 until 1736, Fort King George was the southern outpost of the British Empire in North America. A cypress blockhouse, barracks and palisaded earthen fort were constructed in 1721 by scoutmen led by Colonel John “Tuscarora Jack” Barnwell. For the next seven years, His Majesty’s Independent Company garrisoned the fort. They endured incredible hardships from disease, threats of Spanish and Indian attacks, and the harsh, unfamiliar coastal environment. After the fort was abandoned, General James Oglethorpe brought Scottish Highlanders to the site in 1736. The settlement, called Darien, eventually became a foremost export center of lumber until 1925.”
Visitors can enjoy touring a replica of the original fort, watching a video of its history and learning about the city of Darien where it is located. If you are lucky you might even see an alligator lurking in ponds on the grounds!
Check the Ft. King George information site at http://gastateparks.org/FortKingGeorge/ for the dates of their annual Revolutionary War reenactment days held in November.

While in the Darien area, don’t forget to check out Sapelo Island just up the road from Ft. King George. A ferry ride will take you from the visitors’ center to the barrier island which features guided tours highlighting the African-American community of Hog Hammock, Reynolds Mansion, Nanny Goat Beach, University of Georgia Marine Institute and a restored 1820 lighthouse.
If you’re traveling the Altamaha River area on Wednesday through Sunday, it’s also worth a stop at the Hofwyl-Broadfield Plantation. This historic site offers a look at the culture of Georgia’s rice coast. Built in the early 1800s by William Brailsford of Charleston, this plantation grew rice along the Altamaha River until 1913. Visitors of the plantation can enjoy dreaming of a bygone day when, “The plantation and its inhabitants were part of the genteel low country society that developed during the antebellum period.”
 
~Kelly C.
English Teacher
MJ

Tuesday, May 5, 2015

Ancient Mounds

In the beautiful North Georgia Mountains, history hunters can find the remnants of some of our most ancient residents at the Etowah Indian Mounds. This 54-acre archaeological site is in Bartow County in northwest Georgia. Archaeologists believe the mounds were built and occupied in three phases, from 1000–1550 AD, and it’s considered to be the most intact Mississippian culture site in the Southeastern United States.
The mound builders were ancestors of the historic Muscogee, or Creek, people who inhabited Georgia in pre Colonial times. According to Wikipedia, “Etowah is a Muskogee word derived from italwa meaning ‘town’. The federally recognized Creek Nation considers Etalwa to be their most important ancestral town.”
Visitors to the site may see artifacts from the different phases of civilization that lived along the river banks in this location. Guests are able to walk and sit beside the river and climb the mounds for a beautiful view of the surrounding area. Historical documentation of the preservation of the site is also displayed for history enthusiasts to read and enjoy.
 
~Kelly C.
English Teacher
MJ