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Reynolds Nature Preserve

Nature centers in Georgia (U.S. state)Nature reserves in Georgia (U.S. state)Protected areas of Clayton County, Georgia
Reynolds Nature Preserve Sign
Reynolds Nature Preserve Sign

Reynolds Nature Preserve is a 146-acre (59 ha) tract of protected forest located in Morrow, Georgia, United States. The nature preserve is owned and operated by Clayton County Parks and Recreation. The park has three miles (5 km) of hiking trails, a Civil War era farm, native plants path, heritage garden, wildlife ponds, native azaleas, a wildflower field, and an interpretive center.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Reynolds Nature Preserve (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Reynolds Nature Preserve
Tamarack Trail,

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Wikipedia: Reynolds Nature PreserveContinue reading on Wikipedia

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Latitude Longitude
N 33.5989 ° E -84.3484 °
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Reynolds Nature Preserve

Tamarack Trail
30297
Georgia, United States
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Reynolds Nature Preserve Sign
Reynolds Nature Preserve Sign
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Spivey Hall
Spivey Hall

Spivey Hall was built in 1991 on the campus of Clayton State University in Morrow, Georgia, near Atlanta, Georgia. Its seating capacity is 492 (476 in the orchestra and 16 box seats). It presents jazz and classical music to the metro Atlanta area. Spivey Hall is home to the Spivey Hall Children's Choir and Spivey Hall Young Artists. The Children's Concert Series won the Abby Award for arts education in Atlanta in 1998. The Hall was the inspiration of Emilie Parmalee Spivey and Walter Boone Spivey, a wealthy real estate developer couple in the Atlanta area. The Walter & Emilie Spivey Foundation donated $2.5 million to the construction which began in November 1988 (total cost $4.5 million). Though intimately involved in the planning, Walter did not live to see the groundbreaking, and Emilie died soon after. The visual centerpiece of Spivey's design is the Albert Schweitzer Memorial Organ, a 79-rank, 3-manual, 4,413-pipe organ, built and installed by Fratelli Ruffatti of Padua, Italy. The creation of this organ was the subject of a PBS special. The majority of Spivey's finishes were designed to be acoustically reflective, in an effort to preserve the sound within and prolong its reverberation.Owing to frequent appearances on National Public Radio's "Performance Today," the hall has earned a national reputation while also reaching an international audience through artist word-of-mouth and exposure in such publications as BBC Music Magazine and International Arts Manager.