Category Archives: Historic Photos

Mt. Zion Baptist Church and the Albany Civil Rights Institute

Located on W. Whitney Avenue in the southwest part of Albany, Georgia, the Mt. Zion Baptist Church and the Albany Civil Rights Institute visually connect Albany’s past with Albany’s present. Founded in 1865, Mt. Zion Baptist Church has long been a fixture in the Black community in Albany. As a freedmen’s church, it was the first African American Baptist church in Albany. On November 25, 1961, the first Albany Movement meeting occurred at the church. The church played a pivotal role during the Civil Rights Movement and galvanizing activists in Southwest Georgia. It was also the location where the Freedom Singers held their first performance. The meetings were so well attended that people would overflow into the street into Shiloh Baptist Church, serving as a meeting place for activists and a sanctuary for those seeking justice. Leaders such as Martin Luther King Jr, John Lewis, and Ralph David Abernathy attended and spoke at the meetings.

Adjacent to the church, the Albany Civil Rights Institute is dedicated to preserving the rich history of the Civil Rights Movement in Southwest Georgia. Housed in the rehabilitated Old Mt. Zion Baptist Church, the institute features exhibits, interactive displays, and a digital oral history database that bring the stories of the past to life1. Visitors can explore the struggles and triumphs of the movement through photographs, documents, and artifacts that detail the fight for voter registration, nonviolent protest, and economic boycotts. The church underwent significant restoration after the “Great Flood of 1994,” which caused extensive damage to the church.

Connected to the church, The Albany Civil Rights Institute, originally known as the Albany Civil Rights Movement Museum, opened in November 1998. Its mission is to educate about the Civil Rights Movement, especially in Southwest Georgia.

Below are images of the church from the National Register of Historic Places application before it is restored.

In this image, Shiloh Baptist Church can be seen. It would co-host Albany Movement meetings since they were so well attended that people would overflow into the street. Often, presenters would finish at one church, walk across the street, and speak to those who had gathered in the other building.

Willingham-Watkins House of Lexington, Georgia

The Willingham-Watkins House was built by Thomas Brewer in 1832 as a plantation plain. It was converted to a Greek Revival home in the 1850s.

The photo below is from the Library of Congress’s Historic American Buildings Survery collection.

Hidden in the Trees, the Historic Stamper House of Talbot County, Georgia

The Martin and Lucretia Stamper house is near the Meriwether and Harris County lines in Talbot County. It is also known as Merrywood. The two-story I-house with Classic Revival details was built in 1833. The Stampers, who moved to the area from Upson County, were among the early families to settle there. Their two-story home is a rarity and indicates how wealthy the family was. According to the 1840 census, the Stampers enslaved 40 people and owned just over 700 acres.

In 1850, the Stampers sold their property to John Harris and James Weaver. While the National Register of Historic Places does not state this, it seems the land was divided, and the Harris family occupied the house. In 1860, Weaver sold his acreage to Harris. The Harrises lived in the house until 1890.

The home was put on the National Register of Historic Places in 2007. The photos below are from the NRHP application.

The Home of Elizur and Ann Patton in Pisgah Forest, North Carolina

Pisgah Forest is located northeast of Brevard, North Carolina, near the Davidson River. The Elizur and Ann Patton Federal-style home was built in 1846 in Transylvania County. The rear-ell was built in 1860 to accommodate the growing family. According to the 1860 census, there were seven children.

Patton owned over 600 acres and farmed on some of that land. According to the 1850 Slave Census, the Pattons enslaved one woman. The 1860 Slave Census contained one woman and one child. It is not known where they lived on the land.

This image and the ones below are from the DigitalNC Collection.
The curved wall is an unusual architectural feature for Western North Carolina homes.

Saved by the Neighborhood, the Jarrett House of West Asheville, North Carolina

The Thomas Jarrett House is in the Falconhurst neighborhood of West Asheville, North Carolina. It was built in 1894 by Thomas Jarrett, a millwright for a nearby mill. The two-story I-house was built with Queen Anne influences. The home fell into disrepair, but the surrounding community raised funds to preserve it in 2006.

A 1978 photo shows the home after a snowfall. (Image courtesy of the Southern Appalachian Digital Collections.)
Jarrett HouseJarrett House 23 Jul 2007, Mon Asheville Citizen-Times (Asheville, North Carolina) Newspapers.com

Mulberry AME Church-Abbeville, South Carolina

Mulberry AME Church was organized in 1871. Like many churches in the South, the congregation began meeting in a brush arbor, a shelter constructed with poles covered in tree limbs and hay. It was named after a mulberry tree near the church.

A log structure was completed in 1872. Another building was built in 1878 and used until 1918 when it was lost to fire. The current Carpenter Gothic church was completed in 1919. Mulberry is the mother church to the St. Paul, St. Peter, and Shady Grove AME churches in Abbeville County.

This is a 1939 drawing of the church created during a WPA Survey of State and Local Historical Records.