Metal farm building, Jenkins County, Ga.

Farmhouse and cotton field, Jenkins County, Ga.
Farmhouse and cotton field, Jenkins County, Ga.

It won’t be long before its time to pick cotton in rural counties across the South.  This photo, by VanishingSouthGeorgia.com photographer Brian Brown, shows an old corrugated metal farm building on the plantation that includes the Mathew Sheppard Brinson house (1888) in Jenkins County, Ga.

Jenkins County, whose county seat is Millen, was home to 9,213 people, according to the U.S. Census in 2012, an increase of 10 percent from two years earlier. Almost 30 percent of residents live in poverty.

Photo by Brian Brown, 2013.  Photo originally posted on this site in September 2014.  All rights reserved.

Old commercial building, Millen, Ga.

Old hotel or bank, Millen, Ga.
Old hotel or bank, Millen, Ga.

VanishingSouthGeorgia.com photographer Brian Brown believes this three-story building in Millen, Ga., once served as a hotel or a bank.  Another view.

Millen, which had a population of 3,492 in 2000, is the county seat of Jenkins County, which was home to 9,213 people, according to the U.S. Census in 2012, an increase of 10 percent from two years earlier. Almost 30 percent of residents live in poverty.

Photo by Brian Brown, 2013.  All rights reserved.

 

Well driller, Emmalane, Ga.

Hand-painted sign on old store, Emmalane, Ga.
Hand-painted sign on old store, Emmalane, Ga.

VanishingSouthGeorgia.com photographer Brian Brown likes the hand-painted sign on this door of this old building in Emmalane, about four miles southwest of Millen, Ga.:  “L.P. Mons, Well Driller.”

“There are lots of cotton farms in this area off the Old Savannah Highway south of Millen. In fact, the oldest cotton farm in America (Juanita M. Joiner Farm)   and the oldest timberland company (Southern Woodland Company) are operated by the 8th generation of the family on lands dating to 1783.This relic, located in the vicinity of the farm, probably served the now-forgotten community of Emmalane as a general store or commissary.”

Jenkins County, whose county seat is Millen, was home to 9,213 people, according to the U.S. Census in 2012, an increase of 10 percent from two years earlier. Almost 30 percent of residents live in poverty.

Photo by Brian Brown, 2013.  All rights reserved.

Farmhouse and silos, Emmalane, Ga.

Old farmhouse and silos, Emmalane community, Jenkins County, Ga.
Old farmhouse and silos, Emmalane community, Jenkins County, Ga.

VanishingSouthGeorgia.com photographer Brian Brown sent along this typical Georgia country scene about four miles southwest of Millen — an old Victorian farmhouse surrounded by silos, farm implements, dirt roads and mud puddles.

Remind you a little bit of some of the descriptions of eastern Georgia from Tobacco Road (1932) author Erskine Caldwell?  Nearby on Brown’s photoblog, you can find other neat stuff around the Emmalane community:  Brinson’s Bar-B-Que (“a well-loved institution in Jenkins County … three slices, of Sunbeam bread, a generous helping of potato salad and Brinson’s sweet tea complete this classic Southern meal”), Skull Creek Baptist Church and an old general store.

Jenkins County, whose county seat is Millen, was home to 9,213 people, according to the U.S. Census in 2012, an increase of 10 percent from two years earlier. Almost 30 percent of residents live in poverty.

Photo by Brian Brown, 2013.  All rights reserved.

Car wash, Millen, Ga.

Car wash, Millen, Ga.
Car wash, Millen, Ga.

The bright color and mural on this car wash in Millen, Ga., caught the discerning eye of VanishingSouthGeorgia.com photographer Brian Brown.

Millen, which had a population of 3,492 in 2000, is the county seat of Jenkins County, which was home to 9,213 people, according to the U.S. Census in 2012, an increase of 10 percent from two years earlier. Almost 30 percent of residents live in poverty.

Photo by Brian Brown, 2013.  All rights reserved.

Abandoned house, Millen, Ga.

Joseph and Lucinda Applewhite House, Millen, Ga.
Joseph and Lucinda Applewhite House, Millen, Ga.

VanishingSouthGeorgia.com photographer Brian Brown writes that this old Neoclassical Revival home is currently for sale in Millen in eastern Georgia.  The house, said to have been built in 1892-93 and named the “Joseph and Lucinda Applewhite House,” reportedly did not have the columns when originally built in the Queen Anne style.  The columns were said to have been added in the 1980s during a renovation.

One person who saw the photo of the home in Millen, which had a population of 3,492 in 2000, wrote, “There’s nothing lonelier than an abandoned house.  Oh, the memories that were made there.”

Millen is the county seat of Jenkins County, which was home to 9,213 people, according to the U.S. Census in 2012, an increase of 10 percent from two years earlier. Almost 30 percent of residents live in poverty.

Photo by Brian Brown, 2013.  All rights reserved.

Historic church, Jenkins County, Ga.

Carswell Grove Baptist Church, Jenkins County, Ga.
Carswell Grove Baptist Church, Jenkins County, Ga.

The historic Carswell Grove Baptist Church, pictured above, about 10 miles northwest of Millen, Ga., has a complicated history, writes Georgia photographer Brian Brown in this post on VanishingSouthGeorgia.com.  The current church building, now on the National Register of Historic Places, was constructed in 1919 after a lynch mob burned down its predecessor during a time of racial violence that was known as “Red Summer.”

According to an excerpt of an article in the Harvard Divinity Bulletin, the church had one of the largest black congregations in eastern Georgia in 1919.  An April 13 of that year as hundreds gathered to celebrate its founding, an altercation broke out after two white police officers arrived.  Both police officers and a black man were killed.  Another man, Joe Ruffin, was severely wounded.  According to the story, which writer Cameron McWhirter published as a book in 2011(Red Summer:  The Summer of 1919 and the Awakening of Black America):

“A white mob quickly formed and went on a rampage. The mob burned the church down, then killed two of Ruffin’s sons—one of them a thirteen-year-old. Rioters threw the bodies in the flames, then spread out through the area, burning black lodges, churches, and cars. They killed several other people; no one knows how many. The wounded Joe Ruffin was saved from the lynch mob only because a white county commissioner drove him at high speed to the nearest big city, Augusta, and put him in the county jail there.”

Brown said efforts were ongoing to preserve and stabilize the current church structure.

Jenkins County, whose county seat is Millen, was home to 9,213 people, according to the U.S. Census in 2012, an increase of 10 percent from two years earlier. Almost 30 percent of residents live in poverty.

Photo by Brian Brown, 2013.  All rights reserved.