The Historic Square is a paid
attraction located on the north side of the mountain, along Robert E. Lee Boulevard across from the
Crossroads area and adjacent to
Stone Mountain Inn.
It is open on selected dates from March through December.
Historic Square Map
Sparked by interest in the film Gone With The Wind, the Stone Mountain Memorial Association decided to reconstruct an antebellum plantation at Stone Mountain.
They hired Mrs. Christie McWorther, an expert on antiques. She located most of the structures and furnishings for the plantation.
Historic Square was opened in 1963 and was originally known as Stone Acres Plantation and later as the Antebellum Plantation before being renamed Historic Square.
The plantation was hosted for the first few years by actress Butterfly McQueen. She was known as Prissy for her role in Gone With the Wind.
J. J. Maddox General Store
Allen House
Storage Crib
Well
Doctor's Cabin
Thornton House
Slave Cabins
Barn
Farmyard
Coach House
Smokehouse
Necessary House
Vegetable Garden
Cookhouse
Davis House
Formal Garden and Gazebo
Brides Cottage
Schoolhouse
J. J. Maddox General Store
The main entrance and gift shop was formerly known as Shelton's Store and is now the J. J. Maddox General Store.
The building was constructed in the 1830s and was located in Orange, Georgia.
Allen House
The Allen House was formerly known as the Kingston House. It represents the home of the plantation's overseer.
The Allen House was built around 1845 as the manor house of the Bryan Allen family plantation about six miles from Kingston, Georgia.
The unusual tapered, octagonal front columns were each made from eight single pieces of heart pine all from the same tree.
Dining Room
Dining Room
Parlor
Parlor
Child's Bedroom
Keeping Room
Kitchen
Kitchen
Master Bedroom
Loom Room
Storage Crib
Well
Doctor Chapmon Powell's Cabin
Originally called Mammy's Cabin, the building served as Dr. Powell's home, office, and pharmacy.
It was built in northeast Atlanta in 1826 at what is now 1218 Clairmont Road. It features keyed log construction.
Thornton House
Built in 1790, The Thornton House is the oldest at the plantation and is the oldest
restored house in Georgia. It was relocated to Atlanta's High Museum of Art in 1959
and then given to the Stone Mountain Memorial Association in 1968.
Boys' room
Dining room
Dining room
Dining room
Girl's room
Girl's room
Master bedroom
Parlor
Parlor
Photo from the 1930s shows large former front porch and taller chimneys
Photo from the 1960s after relocation
Slave Cabins
Historic Square's clapboard slave cabins were moved intact from the
Graves Plantation near Covington, Georgia, where they were built between
1825 and 1840.
Barn
The barn comes from Calhoun, Georgia. It was built in the early 1800s.
Here you'll find a Daniel Pratt cotton gin and many other farm tools.
Farmyard
The farmyard has its own page
here.
Coach House
The Coach House was built at Stone Mountain using antique timbers and handmade bricks.
The Coach House and Barn features several antique carriages.
Smokehouse
The Smokehouse was built between 1825 and 1848. It was moved intact from
the Graves plantation near Covington, Georgia. All of the framing and most
of the siding are original.
Necessary House
The Necessary House was built of handmade brick. It was moved intact from
an old plantation near Talbotton, Georgia.
Vegetable Garden
Vegetable gardens were a key part of antebellum plantations.
Cookhouse
Food was cooked in a separate house for fire safety.
Like the Coach House, the Cookhouse was built at Stone Mountain using
antique lumber and handmade bricks. It has many antique utensils including a
wooden butter churn.
Davis House
The Davis House was formerly known as the Dickey House. It is the manor
house of the plantation. It was built in the 1840s at Dickey, Georgia, near
Albany, Georgia on a one-thousand-acre plantation. It remained occupied by
the ancestors of the original owners until it was moved to Stone Mountain in
1961.
The roof, porches, and chimneys were removed and the house was quartered
when it was moved over two hundred miles to Stone Mountain, where master
carpenters lovingly reassembled it.
The Davis House was destroyed by a fire in 2023.
Boy's room
Children's room
Dining room
Dining room
Dining room
Dining room
Girl's room
Girl's room
Master bedroom
Master bedroom
Mother-in-law's room
Mother-in-law's room
Music room
Music room
Parlor
Parlor
Parlor
Study
Study
Study
Summer dining room
Warming kitchen
Warming kitchen
Washroom
Formal Garden
The Formal Garden was used for relaxing and for entertaining visitors.
Bride's Cottage
The Bride's Cottage is used as the plantation office and is not open to the public.
Schoolhouse
Powell Academy Schoolhouse was built around 1875. Relocated to Stone
Mountain in 1987, it was one of the latest major additions to the plantation.
It was originally located on South Goddard Road in the Klondike
community of southern DeKalb County. Named after George Washington
Powell, who donated the land, it housed 25 to 30 students.