Tag Archives: house

The Spalding-Clark House of Ridgeville, Georgia

The Spalding-Clark House is on Highway 99 in the Ridgeville Community of McIntosh County, Georgia. It went on sale in April 2025, and while on the Spring Ramble for The Georgia Trust for Historic Preservation, it was open for a tour.

The listing can be seen on The Old House Life. According to the listing, it was owned by Randolph Spalding, a planter and politician from McIntosh County, and Dr. Peter. S. Clark, a local doctor and horticulturist.

Randolph Spalding was born on December 22, 1825, in Darien, Georgia, to the planter Thomas Spalding and his wife, Sarah Leake Spalding. Using enslaved labor, Thomas Spalding was the largest producer of Sea Island cotton.

Because of his family’s wealth, by the age of 25, Randolph Spalding enslaved 87 people. By 1860, he held over 300 people in bondage. The house would have been built with enslaved labor.

Dr. Peter S. Stratton (1857-1919) was a local physician and noted horticulturist. The yard still contains many of the plants and flowers he grew.

The house was expanded several times in the early years. It appears it started as a plantation plain, and the Folk Victorian details were added during one of the expansions. There are other historic buildings on the property. The house is a contributing property to The Ridge Historic District.

Cherokee Cottage of Jekyll Island, Georgia

Built in 1904 for Dr. George Frederick Shrady (the former physician for General Ulysses S. Grant) and his wife Hester, this 20-room Italian Renaissance-style cottage was later purchased in 1925 by Walter B. James, the President of the Jekyll Island Club, who named it “Cherokee.” The house is also known as the Shrady-James House. Renovated in 2001, it now serves as a hotel.

Image courtesy of the Digital Library of Georgia

The Home of Architect Cormac McGarvey-Brunswick, Georgia

Cormac McGarvey Sr. (1902–1991) was a modern architect whose work built upon the architectural identity of Glynn County, Georgia. Born in Brunswick, McGarvey studied in Paris and worked in New York before returning to Georgia. Frank Lloyd Wright greatly influenced his work.

McGarvey played a role in designing many of Jekyll Island’s mid-century modern homes. These residences, built between the 1950s and 1970s, starkly contrasted the ornate Gilded Age mansions that Jekyll Island was known for. His designs featured flat roofs, concrete breezeblocks, expansive glass windows, and an integration into the natural surroundings.

Built in 1957, his home is located near the FJ Torras Causeway on Lanier Boulevard, and it illustrates the features his designs were known for.

The Reynolds Mansion and the Paintings of Athos Menaboni

Reynolds Mansion is located on the southern part of Sapelo Island. Its origins trace back to the early 1800s, when Thomas Spalding, a prominent planter and politician, established a plantation on Sapelo Island. Using enslaved labor, Spalding introduced sugarcane cultivation to Georgia. The mansion was designed by Roswell King and constructed using tabby, a mixture of lime, sand, and oyster shells, a common building material in the Southern coastal States.

In 1912, Howard E. Coffin, an automobile magnate, acquired the island and undertook significant renovations of the Spalding estate, which had fallen into disrepair after the Civil War. The mansion was essentially completely rebuilt. Architect Albert Kahn designed the reconstruction.

The estate changed hands again in 1934 when tobacco heir Richard J. Reynolds Jr. purchased it. Reynolds further expanded the mansion and used it as a private residence and a venue for entertaining guests, including notable figures such as Presidents Calvin Coolidge and Herbert Hoover. 

Prominent Atlanta architect Phillip Trammell Shutze was responsible for the home’s redesign and expansion. Shutze engaged noted painter Athos Menaboni to paint murals throughout the home. Menaboni was an Italian American artist who came to the United States after World War I. The artist was known for his bird paintings, but his work also expanded into other areas. He designed the murals of the Reynolds Mansion’s ground-floor game room, sunroom, and top-floor banquet hall, known as the Circus Room. Photos are below.

The painting of Richard J Reynolds greets visitors in the main entrance.
The painting of Katherine Reynolds is also in the front entranceway.
One of the curved walls in the library highlights Reynolds’s book collection.
Located in the library
Another view of the library
One of several owls that sits atop the bookshelves
Decorative window hqndles
Decorative tassel on chandelier
Hallway from library to children’a nursery
Decorative shade in chileren’a wing
View from children’s wing
Menaboni mural in sunroom
One of the monkey lights in the circus room
Lounge area in front of gameroomj
Image in front lobby of gameroom
Located inside of gameroom

Dr. Scipio Johnson House of Augusta, Georgia

Dr. Scipio S. Johnson was a prominent member of Augusta’s Black community and lived at 1420 Twiggs Street in the Bethlehem neighborhood He lived in the Craftsman-style brick home from its construction in the 1920s until he died in 1940.  Dr. Johnson graduated from the Haines Normal and Industrial Institute in Augusta. He graduated from Lincoln University in Oxford, Pennsylvania, and Howard University in Washington, DC.  Dr. Johnson was a pharmacist and operated Johnson Drug Store out of his house on Twiggs Street.

I am glad to say that this home was fully restored. Images of the house can be seen in an article on The Augusta Chronicle.

Shotgun House and Azaleas in Augusta, Georgia

Built in 1911, this shotgun house has seen some better days, but the folk Victorian porch details, the blue paint color, and the azaleas highlight what a picturesque home this once was.