Monroe County Courthouse

monroe courthouse

The Monroe County Courthouse, built in the Romanesque Revival/High-Victorian style in 1895, is still used today. It features stone columns and historic wood and glass entryways. The beautiful terracotta detailing and ornamentation, as well as the hand painted, pressed metal ceiling make the courthouse a truly historic destination. The courthouse was placed on the National […]

Old Mary Persons High School Building

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The original building for Mary Persons High School was built in 1929. It was named after two residents who were instrumental in promoting education in Monroe County.

Forsyth’s Original City Hall

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Once the Forsyth Welcome Center, this was originally City Hall, built in 1897 and has been home to the city’s police and fire departments. The bell tower still houses the old fire bell.

Birthplace of Jo Ann Gibson Robinson

Historical Marker

The memorial to Jo Ann Gibson Robinson’s life and birth place. It reads: “Jo Ann Gibson Robinson was born near Culloden. Robinson attended Hudson High School in Macon, later graduating from Fort Valley Normal and Industrial School and Atlanta University. In 1949, she became a professor at Alabama State College in Montgomery, and joined the […]

Uncle Remus Comes of Age

Roadside historic marker in front of large brick historic courthouse

One block east stood the old office of The Monroe Advertiser, where Joel Chandler Harris, creator of “Uncle Remus,” came in 1867, as a boy of nineteen, to work until 1870. Here he advanced from printer’s devil to accomplished journalist. Of his duties, Harris said: “I set all the type, pulled the press, kept the […]

Site of the Battle of Culloden

Roadside Historic Marker for Battle of culloden

Culloden is one giant history stop. Part of the Civil War, the Battle of Culloden was fought 10 days after General Robert E. Lee’s surrender.

Grave of William Culloden

Grave marker in field

Monroe County’s oldest town, Culloden, Ga., was first settled in the late 1700s by William Culloden, a Scotsman.

Culloden’s Historic Slave Cemetery

Grave Marker for Slave Cemetery

Tradition holds that in this area of the Culloden Cemetery slaves were buried in a section separate from white burials. Almost never in the Antebellum period were the graves of slaves marked with permanent markers. In 2000, the City Council of Culloden placed this marker reading, “We know not who they are, but they are […]