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Once the colonial estate of the first settlers to Georgia, the historic site, Wormsloe, dates back to 1733.
This stagecoach inn and plantation home was built around 1815 along the the Unicoi Turnpike; a busy highway over the Appalachian Mountains.
Visit Franklin D. Roosevelt’s Little White House in Warm Springs and see the small town that inspired many presidential deals.
Visitors to Pickett’s Mill Battlefield Historic Site can explore earthworks used in the American Civil War.
Jarrell Plantation Historic Site, located in Jones County, represents the change from an agricultural to an industrial-based economy.
The Hofwyl-Broadfield Plantation is a historic plantation along the Altamaha River where rice was produced from 1800 until 1915.
The Sautee Nacoochee Indian Mound is one of the best-known features of the Hardman Farm Historic Site, located just south of Helen.
Representing where Native American and European cultures met, Fort King George is the oldest English fort remaining on Georgia’s coast.
Located on the Medway River, the fort played a role in the defending Georgia’s coast during the American Revolution and War of 1812.
Kennesaw Mountain National Battlefield State Park covers nearly 3,000 acres in Cobb County, just outside Atlanta.