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Georgia Trust for Historic Preservation

The Georgia Trust for Historic Preservation is the United States' largest statewide, nonprofit preservation organization that seeks to preserve and enhance Georgia's communities and their diverse historic resources for the education and enjoyment of all. Founded in April1973, by a group including Mary Gregory Jewett, the Trust became the largest statewide preservation organization in the country by the 1980s.

The Georgia Trust helps find buyers for endangered properties acquired by its Revolving Fund; partners with Georgia’s State Historic Preservation Office in the Department of Community Affairs; has encouraged neighborhood revitalization and provided design assistance to 105 Georgia Main Street cities since 1984; and advocates for funding, tax incentives and other laws aiding preservation efforts. The Georgia Trust operates historic house museums the Hay House (1859, Macon) and Rhodes Hall (1904, Atlanta).

One of its most well-known programs is its annual Places in Peril list which has listed 10 places per year since 2006 with significant historical value and community support that is at imminent risk of being lost.

Places in Peril

Since 2006, the Georgia Trust releases an annual list of endangered historic sites throughout Georgia. The Places in Peril program seeks to identify significant historic, archaeological and cultural properties that are threatened by demolition, deterioration or insensitive public policy or development, and have a demonstrable level of community interest, commitment and support. Through this program, the Trust encourages owners and individuals, organizations and communities to employ preservation tools, partnerships and resources necessary to preserve and utilize selected historic properties in peril.

Historic properties are selected for listing based on several criteria. Sites must be listed or eligible for listing in the National Register of Historic Places or the Georgia Register of Historic Places and must be subject to a serious threat to their existence or historical, architectural and/or archeological integrity. There must also be a demonstrable level of community commitment and support for the preservation of listed sites.

The Trust listed 200 sites from 2006 to 2025, and claimed that 95% of those structures were still standing in February 2026.

2006

2008

2009

2010

  • Central State Hospital, Milledgeville
  • Paradise Gardens, Summerville
  • Morris Brown College, Atlanta
  • Canton Grammar School, Canton
  • Leake Archaeological Site, Cartersville
  • Dorchester Academy, Midway
  • Old Dodge County Jail, Eastman
  • Ritz Theatre, Thomaston
  • Herndon Plaza, Atlanta
  • Capricorn Recording Studio, Macon

2013

2014

2015

2017

2020

2021

2022

2023

  • 223 Auburn Avenue, Atlanta
  • McConnell-Chadwick House, Atlanta
  • Old Campbell Courthouse, Atlanta
  • Beulah Grove Lodge and School in Douglasville (Douglas County)
  • Lee’s Mill Ruins on the Flint River in Forest Park, (Clayton County)
  • Chickamauga Masonic Lodge No. 221 in Chickamauga (Walker County)
  • Dasher High School in Valdosta (Lowndes County)
  • Dudley Motel, Cafe and Service Station in Dublin (Laurens County)
  • Wilkes County Training School in Washington (Wilkes County)
  • Yates House in Ringgold (Catoosa County)

2024

  • Atlanta Constitution Building, Fulton County
  • Piney Grove Cemetery, Fulton County
  • Broad Avenue Elementary in Albany (Dougherty County)
  • Cedar Grove in Martinez (Columbia County)
  • Church of the Good Shepherd in Thomasville (Thomas County)
  • Grace Baptist Church in Darien (McIntosh County)
  • Hog Hammock on Sapelo Island (McIntosh County)
  • Old First Baptist Church in Augusta (Richmond County)
  • Pine Log Mountain (Bartow County)
  • Sugar Valley Consolidated School in Sugar Valley (Gordon County)

2025

  • Southeastern Railway Museum, Duluth
  • 148 Edgewood Avenue, Atlanta
  • Collier-Toomer House, Savannah
  • Crossroads Rosenwald School, Dixie
  • Gaissert Homeplace, Williamson
  • Miami Valley Peach Packing Barn, Fort Valley
  • Historic Nicholsonboro Baptist Church, Savannah
  • Powell Opera House, Blakely
  • Historic Rock House, Thomson
  • Buckhead Town Hall and Jail, Buckhead

2026

See also

References

External links