Center of the home goes up in flames (Stone Mtn Park Dept. of Public Safety) |
“It appears at this point to
be a total loss. The fire was concentrated in the center and upper portions of
the home,” John Bankhead, park police spokesman, told the Picket in an email.
Bankhead said in an email two days later that tests on fire debris and other evidence collected at the Davis-Dickey house led the state fire marshal's office to determine "that an electrical fault in conduit near the entrance to the home was the cause of the fire and not arson."
The Davis-Dickey home is among a collection of relocated antebellum structures in the park’s Historic Square. The residence was built in the community of Dickey, west of Albany, Ga., for the family of Charles Milton Davis, who left Aiken, S.C., in 1850.
Davis served as a colonel in the Calhoun County cavalry. Other websites indicated he served as well in the 12th Battalion Georgia Cavalry and the 10th Georgia State Troops. All of the units appeared to be stationed in Georgia.
A marker outside the 14-room home says the colonel was made to sign the oath of allegiance to the United States after the war. The family moved to Apopka, Fla., in the 1870s and raised oranges. Davis died in 1902 at age 79.
Stone Mountain rises behind the home before the fire (Jason Armstrong, HMdb.org) |
A tarp covers the home and a fence was erected (Picket photo) |
Road to Historic Square was closed for a few days (Picket photo) |
Gordon Jones, senior military historian at the Atlanta History Center, 25 years ago said: “In short, the Stone Mountain Park which emerged in the 1960s comprised a comical orgy of Lost Cause, Old South, and even Western movie clichés, clearly removed from the more serious and hateful Ku Klux Klan past, but also clearly rooted in it.”
Architectural historian Lydia
Mattice Brandt and associate professor of history Philip Mills Herrington,
writing in the March 2022 Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians,
detailed the history, timeline and goals of the antebellum plantation now known
as Historic Square.
They write that the
plantation complex buttressed Georgia’s resistance to desegregation in the late
1950s and early 1960s, and it was mixture of fact and fantasy.
“That seeming authenticity coincided with the well-worn tropes of Lost Cause storytelling, marginalizing the history of slavery and the enslaved while depicting White consumption as virtuous and White pleasure as paramount. The plantation, past and present, was an amusement park.”
The authors suggest a
reinterpretation of the square is critically important. (Click photo at left for a rendering of Historic Square.)
“The site provides an
exceptional opportunity for visitors to question how their own experiences,
education, consumption, and assumptions also perpetuate the Old South myth.”
The Picket reached out to the Stone Mountain Memorial Association for comment on the current role and possible future of Historic Square, which remained closed after the fire.
Many years ago I remember another plantation that was moved and stored just behind the Davis-Dickey house. I read that it was moved to a final destination and restored. Do you know of this structure and it's story, final location?
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