Today was chilly with cold wind, so we didn’t spend a lot of time outside.
We did get out and look around the park. There is much history here, but I’m not energetic enough to type it all out this evening. The stone buildings, as is common in state parks in the region, were built by the CCC under Franklin D. Roosevelt.
The swimming and boating areas are beautiful. Picnic shelters and areas are very
attractive, and there is a nice playground for children, as well as miniature golf and a museum in season. Unfortunately, it’s not in season now. 🙂
The spring, touted (and marketed) in the past as having medicinal powers, puts out an underwhelming one gallon per minute year round. Even so, in the early 1820’s, the area grew into a resort community.
An illegal treaty that dispossessed the Creek Indians of their Georgia lands was signed here, as was a later legal treaty.
According to park literature, the mineral spring has been open to the public since 1825, making it the oldest state park in the nation. But there is also a warning in the brochure that the water is not potable!