Background Information About Andalusia |
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| Andalusia
is located in Baldwin County, Georgia about four miles northwest of
Milledgeville, on the west side of U.S. Highway 441. Rolling
hills, red clay, pine trees, and hardwoods characterize this part
of the state. Native Americans inhabited this region for at
least 12,000 years, leaving behind an impressive array of earthen
mounds, pottery, tools, weapons, and place names. In fact, several
major trading paths converged at a site near Milledgeville. When
the city was surveyed in 1803, it was on the very edge of the Georgia
frontier. The 544-acre estate is composed of gently rolling
hills divided into a farm complex, hayfields, pasture, man-made
and natural ponds, and forests. Tobler Creek, a spring fed waterway,
intersects the property entering near the west corner and meandering
down to exit at the middle of the southeast boundary. |
| The
farm complex at Andalusia consists of the Main House, Jack & Louise Hill's House,
the Main Barn, an equipment shed, the milk-processing shed, an additional
smaller barn, a parking garage (also called the Nail House), a water
tower, a small storage house (formerly a well house), a horse stable,
a pump house, and three tenant houses. |
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This complex, which also includes a man-made pond south of the Main House, comprises roughly twenty-one acres of the property. Andalusia is more than just an author’s home. It is a place that attracts the interests of diverse groups of people. For historians and archaeologists this is a place where Europeans and Native Americans intersected and developed trade agreements. Tobler Creek that runs through the property has been documented as one of the “rum-running” creeks in this area going back to the 18th century. The history of the farm itself provides insight into agrarian trends and patterns in Georgia. The property has an abundance of wildlife: white-tail deer, wild turkey, red-tail hawks, beaver, raccoons, foxes, aquatic birds, and a whole host of reptiles and amphibians. There is also an interesting range of ecosystems from marshes and bogs to beautiful hardwood clearings |
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The Flannery O’Connor – Andalusia Foundation,
Inc. is a tax-exempt 501(c)3 organization.
All rights reserved -- Copyright 2002. All photos and images used with express permission of the owners. These images may not be reproduced or transmitted in any form, by any means, electronic, mechanical photocopying, photography, recording, or by or through any other medium. |