Down by the tracks, Wrightsville, Ga.

Along the tracks, Wrightsville, Ga.
Along the tracks, Wrightsville, Ga.

Wrightsville, Ga., bills itself as the “friendliest town in Georgia,” but conditions don’t look too great along the railroad tracks. The above shack on East Trilby Street appeared to be abandoned, but you can imagine how the walls rattled when trains clicked by in the old days.

Wrightsville, county seat for Johnson County in east middle Georgia, is home to about 2,200 people, 35 percent of whom live in poverty.  Some 46 percent of the town’s residents are white; 53 percent are black.

Johnson County, part of the Dublin Micropolitan Statistical Area, has just under 10,000 people, 21 percent of whom live in poverty.

Photo is copyrighted 2014 by Andy Brack.  All rights reserved.

Gopher tortoise, Ridgeland, S.C.

Gopher Tortoise Square, Ridgeland, S.C.

Gopher Tortoise Square, Ridgeland, S.C.

This bronze of a gopher tortoise is the focal point of a community square in Ridgeland near the southern tip of South Carolina.

According to a marker at the park, which is adjacent to the railroad tracks around which the town grew after 1860, Ridgeland originally was known as “Gopher Hill” because of the abundance of tortoises (Gopherus Polyphemus) that inhabited the sand hills of the area.  The reptiles, which live up to 60 years, spend much of their life in deep burrows.  Now an endangered species, they’re not too abundant these days.

Ridgeland has been the seat of Jasper County since it was created in 1912.  Before then the railroad tracks of the Charleston & Savannah Railroad served as the boundary between Beaufort and Hampton counties and Ridgeland was split between them.

Ridgeland grew by 60 percent from 2000 to 2010, when the population was just over 4,000 people, according to Census figures.  Jasper County, population 25,833, is just over the river from Savannah, Ga.  Its location near the metro area likely is why poverty in Jasper County (21.4 percent) is half that of Allendale County to the north.  Ridgeland has a poverty rate of more than 24 percent.

Photo by Andy Brack, taken on March 2, 2014.  All rights reserved.

Parched, Dublin, Ga.

Neglected door, Dublin, Ga.
Neglected door, Dublin, Ga.

The peeling paint on the doors of this building on Madison Street in Dublin, Ga., illustrates the tough time that parts of the Laurens County community are having.  Nearby in one direction is the tallest building in town, an old bank now empty.  A few doors away on the other side, a pool hall is for sale.

Dublin suffered during the recent recession as the unemployment rate for Laurens County, where Dublin (population 16,201) is the county seat, rose to  13.8 percent in July 2011.  Two years later it was about two points lower, but was down to 9.4 percent in December 2013, according to federal government data found at this site.

Some 23.6 percent of residents of Laurens County (population 48,434) live in poverty, according to Census data

Photo taken Feb. 16, 2014 by Andy Brack.  All rights reserved.

Old gin, Allentown, Ga.

Old gin, Allentown, Ga.
Old gin, Allentown, Ga.

Behind the Four Corners Bank in Allentown, Ga., is this decaying facility, the old Hardwicke-Etter Ginning Systems building.

It’s located in Wilkinson County across a field from the old Melton store, also closed.

Today, Wilkinson County has fewer people (9,577 in the 2012 Census estimate) than it did in the 1940s (11,025 people) when my dad was a boy here before moving to the “big city” of Macon with his family.  About three in five people are white, with most of the rest being black.  Poverty is about 20 percent.

Copyrighted photo taken Feb. 16, 2014, by Andy Brack.  All rights reserved.

Melton store, Allentown, Ga.

H.C. Melton General Merchandise, Allentown, Ga.
H.C. Melton General Merchandise, Allentown, Ga.

Here’s a recent picture of the H.C. Melton store in the Wilkinson County town of Allentown, Ga., which we featured here back in August.

This photo, taken by longtime Georgia journalist Elliott Brack, holds a special place in his heart, he explains in GwinnettForum.com:

“Several of my relatives lived and still live in this town and I was born near there.  One cousin is on the City Council. My uncle once clerked for H.C. Melton. I remember spending many a day with my cousins in the area, often visiting the store, and pulling soft drinks for five cents out of the circulating cold water of the coolers, then emptying a package of peanuts into the drink bottle. We sat on the bench on the porch at the front of the store and enjoyed our purchase. Yes, this photo holds special memories.”

Today, Wilkinson County has fewer people (9,577 in the 2012 Census estimate) than it did in the 1940s (11,025 people) when my dad was a boy here before moving to the “big city” of Macon with his family.  About three in five people are white, with most of the rest being black.  Poverty is about 20 percent.

Copyrighted photo by Elliott Brack.  Used by permission.  All rights reserved.

Lambs, Dudley, Ga.

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If you’re driving on U.S. Highway 80 through Dudley, Ga., just after the big “Jesus is coming soon” sign, you’ll see a pasture full of sheep on the left inside the town limits near Sixth Street.  Here’s another shot highlighted on March 11.

Dudley, home to fewer than 500 people, is about seven miles west of Dublin, Ga., the county seat of Laurens County.  Some 23.6 percent of residents of Laurens County (population 48,434) live in poverty.

Photo taken in Feb. 16, 2014, by Andy Brack.  All rights reserved.

B-a-a, Dudley, Ga.

Sheep, Dudley, Ga.
Sheep, Dudley, Ga.

 

If you’re driving on U.S. Highway 80 through Dudley, Ga., just after the big “Jesus is coming soon” sign, you’ll see a pasture full of sheep on the left inside the town limits near Sixth Street.

Dudley, home to fewer than 500 people, is about seven miles west of Dublin, Ga., the county seat of Laurens County.  Some 23.6 percent of residents of Laurens County (population 48,434) live in poverty.

Photo taken in Feb. 16, 2014, by Andy Brack.  All rights reserved.

Happy Taxi, Ridgeland, S.C.

Happy Taxi Cab Co., just outside of Ridgeland, S.C.

Happy Taxi Cab Co., just outside of Ridgeland, S.C.

Despite the high fence and signs warning people to “keep back” and “no trespassing” and “video surveillance,” we got a kick out of the Happy Taxi Cab Co. just outside Ridgeland, S.C., on S.C. Highway 336.  You can see old trucks from days gone by and get a feel of thrift mixed with entrepreneurship.

Ridgeland, the county seat of Jasper County, grew by 60 percent from 2000 to 2010, when the population was just over 4,000 people, according to Census figures.  Jasper County, population 25,833, is just over the river from Savannah, Ga.  Its location near the metro area likely is why poverty in Jasper County (21.4 percent) is half that of Allendale County to the north.  Ridgeland has a poverty rate of more than 24 percent.

Photo by Andy Brack, taken on March 2, 2014.  All rights reserved.

Old filling station, Coosawatchie, S.C.

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Old gas station, Coosawatchie, S.C.

 

This old filling station, located near this dilapidated store in Coosawatchie, S.C., recalls days gone by in which cars headed between the North and Florida tumbled through the Palmetto State.  The one-bay garage along what is now S.C. Highway 462 may have been part of U.S. Highway 17 in years before Interstate 95.

Coosawatchie is in Jasper County, population 25,833, which is just over the river from Savannah, Ga.  Its location near the metro area likely is why poverty in Jasper County (21.4 percent) is half that of Allendale County to the north.  However, parts of the county around Ridgeland and Coosawatchie, which are further away from the Savannah area, feature a lot of the same strife as in Allendale County.

Photo by Andy Brack, taken on Feb. 28, 2014.  All rights reserved.

Peeling paint, Coosawatchie, S.C.

Dilapidated storefront, Coosawatchie, S.C.
Dilapidated storefront, Coosawatchie, S.C.

Paint peeling from this shuttered storefront along S.C. Highway 462 in Coosawatchie, S.C., reflects deep poverty that is found in rural areas along Interstate 95 in the Palmetto State.  This photograph was taken just a few hundred  yards away from the beautiful, meandering Coosawatchie River.

Jasper County, population 25,833, is just over the river from Savannah, Ga.  Its location near the metro area likely is why poverty in Jasper County (21.4 percent) is half that of Allendale County to the north.  However, parts of the county around Ridgeland and Coosawatchie, which are further away from the Savannah area, feature a lot of the same strife as in Allendale County.

Photo by Andy Brack, taken on Feb. 28, 2014.  All rights reserved.