#1.
Golf Club Drive, Montezuma, Georgia 31063, United States
McKenzie Memorial Golf Course is a 9-hole regulation length golf course in Montezuma, Georgia. This short layout provides for a fun golf experience for golfers of all skill levels. Online tee times... More on TheGolfCourses.net
The 18-hole "McKenzie Memorial" course at the McKenzie Memorial Golf Course facility in Montezuma, Georgia features 2,868 yards of golf from the longest tees for a par of 35 . The course rating is ... More on golflink.com

#2.
1305 Mennonite Church Rd Montezuma, GA

#3.
115 Cherry St, Montezuma, GA 31063

#4.
212 N Dooly St, Montezuma, GA 31063, USA

#5.
Oglethorpe GA 31068, United States of America

#6.
110 Chatham Street, Oglethorpe GA 31068, United States of America
Inscription. This County, created by Act of the Legislature Dec. 14, 1837, is named for Nathaniel Macon of North Carolina, President Pro-Tem of the U. S. Senate. The first County Site at Lanier was moved to Oglethorpe in 1854 to be ... More on HMDB

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Oglethorpe GA 31068, United States of America
Inscription. Timothy Barnard, first white settler known to live on land now in Macon County, operated an Indian Trading Post on the west bank of the Flint River one mile southeast of here from pre-Revolutionary days until he died ... More on HMDB

#8.
Oglethorpe GA 31068, United States of America
Inscription. Horace T. Lumpkin (1857-1930) A Virginia native and son of exslaves, is credited with introducing formal education to black children in Macon County. Lumpkin, who was educated at Knoxville College, Tennessee and Atlanta ... More on HMDB

#9.
Andersonville GA 31711, United States of America
Inscription. This memorial erected in 1934 by the National Woman's Relief Corps, Auxiliary to the Grand Army of the Republic, as a tribute to the heroism of the sons of the following states who are buried in Andersonville National ... More on HMDB

#10.
Andersonville GA 31711, United States of America
Inscription. During a heavy rainstorm on August 14, 1864, a spring suddenly gushed from this hillside. The prisoners were desperate for fresh water, and over time the event became legendary. Several men claimed to have seen lightning ... More on HMDB
