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Bath Presbyterian Church and Cemetery

Buildings and structures in Richmond County, GeorgiaChurches completed in 1814Churches on the National Register of Historic Places in Georgia (U.S. state)Greek Revival architecture in Georgia (U.S. state)National Register of Historic Places in Richmond County, Georgia
Presbyterian cemeteries in Georgia (U.S. state)Presbyterian churches in Georgia (U.S. state)Use mdy dates from August 2023
Bath Presbyterian Church, Blythe, GA, US
Bath Presbyterian Church, Blythe, GA, US

Bath Presbyterian Church and Cemetery is a historic church in Blythe, Georgia. It was built in 1814 and was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2004. It has a Greek Revival Sunday School wing.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Bath Presbyterian Church and Cemetery (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Bath Presbyterian Church and Cemetery
Bath Edie Road, Augusta

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Wikipedia: Bath Presbyterian Church and CemeteryContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 33.33641 ° E -82.1728 °
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Address

Bath Edie Road 3900
30805 Augusta
Georgia, United States
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Bath Presbyterian Church, Blythe, GA, US
Bath Presbyterian Church, Blythe, GA, US
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Nearby Places

Seclusaval and Windsor Spring
Seclusaval and Windsor Spring

Seclusaval and Windsor Spring is a historic property in Richmond County, Georgia that includes a Greek Revival building built in 1843.It was deemed notable historically in several ways: for its association with the historic Windsor Spring Water Company that sold water from the spring on the property for having a short but intact part of historic Tobacco Road, a road which connected Savannah River docks to the big tobacco plantations of the county. Tobacco was brought to the river in hogsheads drawn by mules. This road section was never paved. for being the nucleus of a settlement of relatives of Valentine Walker, a settlement that might have been the basis for a town or city, but which remained a small family settlement.It is also significant for the architecture of the main house on the property, Seclusaval, which is a "Sand Hills-type cottage". Sand Hills-type cottage architecture is a local, modified form of Greek Revival architecture. The form has symmetry, wide entablatures, and classic columns of the Greek Revival style. And the front doorway of the house has a rectangular transom with side lights, also consistent with Greek Revival style. But it also has a "one-story, high-pitched side gable roof, three gable dormers, and a full-facade porch" that characterize the Sand Hills variation. Seclusaval is "an excellent example" of this type.The property has eight contributing buildings and two other contributing structures (a spring house and a pavilion). The buildings are the main house, a slave cabin, a playhouse, a well house, a privy, a pantry, a smoke house, and a barn.The property was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1988.