Education.com

Family Friendly Must-Sees in Georgia (page 2)

Family Friendly Must-Sees in Georgia

Related Articles

Related Topics

(not rated)

6. Savannah Music Festival – Over two weeks of programming, this is Georgia’s largest musical arts festival. It features one show after another of diverse musical styles and talent, staged in theaters and venues all over a beautiful city. Cajun, classical, Latin, bluegrass, folk, jazz, world – something for all ears.

7. Agrirama– Georgia’s Museum of Agriculture is a living history museum located in the south-central village of Tifton. Numerous historic 1870s-1890s structures have been restored and furnished, then staffed with costumed interpreters. A grist mill, turpentine still and blacksmith shop hum with activity, fields are plowed and a steam train runs through the entire complex. It’s particularly lively during the Victorian Christmas celebration and springtime Georgia Folklife Festival.

8. Okefenokee Swamp and National Wildlife Refuge– The Creek natives called it “land of the trembling earth,” and the best way to see it is to stay overnight in one of the Stephen C. Foster State Park cabins and paddle through the blackwater and cypress on a guided boat tour with Okefenokee Adventures, Inc. The water lilies, slider turtles and gators are teeming March through May, and the Okefenokee Festival is held in October in the historic Chesser Island “swamper’s” home.

9. Atlanta History Center – The Center includes a museum, two restored period homes and extensive gardens, but it’s noteworthy for special programs and events. The Margaret Mitchell (Gone with the Wind) House is also part of the complex and sponsors a writing camp for kids, there are weekend family programs, history summer camps and a July Civil War encampment.

10. Explore Georgia music – Macon’s beautiful historic district houses the Georgia Music Hall of Fame, featuring the history of state musical notables like Otis Redding, the Allman Brothers, TLC and Trisha Yearwood. The University of Georgia’s hometown, Athens, has a busy live music scene and is home to R.E.M., the B-52s, Indigo Girls and Widespread Panic (plus the North Georgia Folk Festival.) Grab a bite at R.E.M. lead singer Michael Stipe’s favorite local vegetarian restaurant, The Grit.

11. SAM Shortline Excursion Trainfont> – The Savannah, Americus and Montgomery (SAM) is part of a rail system that used to connect Savannah and Montgomery, Alabama. Nowadays, it’s a good way to visit President Jimmy Carter’s home and museum at Carter National Historic Sitefont> in Plains, and Habitat for Humanity’s headquarters in Americus. Visitors can tour u>Habitat’s Global Villagefont>; 15 representative Habitat houses from around the world, including Papua New Guinea and Ghana.

12. National Civil War Naval Museum – See an ironclad up close; the largest surviving Confederate warship and only remaining Confederate gunboat are both housed in this museum. There is a replica of the famous turret from the Union’s “Monitor,” multimedia exhibits, summer weekend “Cool History” events (in the air conditioning!) and the annual RiverBlast naval reenactment to bring the Civil War to life on the Chattahoochee River.

View Full Article

Add your own comment

Washington Virtual Academies

Tuition-free online school for Washington students.