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Talking Rock, Georgia
Links:
Current
Reference:
Historical
Reference:
"Several legendary accounts are given
with regard to the naming of Talking Rock; one is the story of an
unusual echo that was supposed to come from a nearby rock cliff;
while another story tells about a rock with which some of the
Cherokees played a trick on one another. The little town is situated
on a creek of the same name. Being on the Old
Federal Road, it was one of the earliest settlements in this
region, and some of the earliest churches and schools in Pickens
were at or near the present site of the town. Talking Rock is also
close to the site of the old Indian village, Sanderstown. One of the
earliest cotton mills in Georgia was started at Talking Rock by
William C Atherton, and flourished until the Civil War when it was
destroyed by Sherman's raiders. The Talking Rock neighborhood was
settled by a number of Presbyterian families, most of whom came to
Pickens County about the time of the Indian removal. It is located
on the old L&N Railroad line."
Today Talking Rock is a quiet
little village off the beaten path along the creek where Cherokees
once farmed. Just a few quaint shops where the conversation is as
interesting as the antiques and collectibles. A tiny Post Office. A
couple of churches on the mountainside and cemeteries with markers
telling stories of a lively past. It is just the setting that makes
one want to abandon big city life forever -- but when this sentiment
was related to one of the town's original residents, he was heard to
remark, "Don't forget to shut the gate behind you!"
...from the History of
Pickens County by Luke E. Tate - 1935

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