The Euharlee Covered Bridge was designed and built by Washington W. King, son of Georgian bridge-builder and freed slave Horace King. It crosses Euharlee Creek at 138 feet, made of pine in the town-lattice style.
Starting in the 1950s, AT&T dotted America with “Long Lines” towers that relayed phone calls via microwaves from distinctive horn-shaped antennas. Now obsolete, many remain abandoned in place or repurposed as cell towers.
After the boll weevil decimated cotton crops in the mid 1910s, many Georgia communities began farming peanuts. While this drying and storage facility is no longer used, Georgia is still the nation’s top peanut producer.
The Euharlee Covered Bridge was designed and built by Washington W. King, son of Georgian bridge-builder and freed slave Horace King. It crosses Euharlee Creek at 138 feet, made of pine in the town-lattice style.
Starting in the 1950s, AT&T dotted America with “Long Lines” towers that relayed phone calls via microwaves from distinctive horn-shaped antennas. Now obsolete, many remain abandoned in place or repurposed as cell towers.
After the boll weevil decimated cotton crops in the mid 1910s, many Georgia communities began farming peanuts. While this drying and storage facility is no longer used, Georgia is still the nation’s top peanut producer.