Walking Tour of Oxford
A Self-Guided Driving or Walking Tour
The town, named <![if !supportLists]>1. <![endif]>The 2. <![endif]>The Yarbrough Oak <![if !supportLists]>3. <![endif]>The Dearing/Atchison House 104 <![if !supportLists]>4. <![endif]>The Harris/Williams/Adams House <![if !supportLists]>5.
<![endif]>The Ellis House <![if !supportLists]>6. <![endif]>Allen Memorial United <![if !supportLists]>7. <![endif]>The Stephens/Forney House <![if !supportLists]>8. <![endif]>The Bonnell/Cowan/Turner
House <![if !supportLists]>9. <![endif]>The Mabry/Dickey/Izen
House <![if !supportLists]>10. <![endif]>The Ficquets/Milligan
House <![if !supportLists]>11. <![endif]>The Turner/Budd/Phillips House <![if !supportLists]>12. <![endif]> In 1836 the
Georgia Methodist Conference founded A detailed
brochure of the <![if !supportLists]>13. <![endif]>“Soldier’s Cemetery” c. 1864 <![if !supportLists]>14. <![endif]>The Cobb House, “Cobb’s Cottage” <![if !supportLists]>15. <![endif]>The Haygood/Wearing
House, “The Haygood
House” 905 Wesley
Street, c. 1894. This Greek revival
house was built by Atticus G. Haygood,
eighth president of Emory College and later bishop of the Methodist Episcopal
Church, South. <![if !supportLists]>16. <![endif]>The Starr/Park/Wallace House 1001 Wesley
Street, c. 1915. Originally a one-story
cottage to which the dormered seconed story was added
in 1982. <![if !supportLists]>17. <![endif]>The Paine/McCanless
House 1003 Wesley
Street, c. 1885. The original two-story
structure had several rooms added to both floors around 1915. This home features 12 fireplaces and is
currently under restoration. <![if !supportLists]>18. <![endif]>“Old Church” Wesley Street,
c. 1841. This building, more than any
other, represents the ties uniting Oxford, Emory, and Methodism. During the Civil War it served as a hospital
for the wounded. In 1880, the two wings
were added to the central section. It is
currently owned by the Oxford Historical Shrine Society and is used by the
College and community for special occasions. <![if !supportLists]>19. <![endif]>“Kitty’s Cottage” Wesley Street,
c. 1842. This former slave cabin stands
near its original location. Bishop James
O. Andrew lived on the property next to Old Church. He had inherited a slave, Kitty Andrew Shell;
this presented a problem because he could not own a slave according to church
law, and he could not set a slave free according to state law. This dispute over Kitty was the impetus for
the 1844 split between the Mehodist Church, North and
South. The cabin is in the process of
restoration. <![if !supportLists]>20. <![endif]>The Carr/Corley/Watterson
House, “High Point at Chestnut Grove” 1105 Wesley
Street, c. 1830. A late Federal style
house that was moved from Covington to Oxford in 1975. The house features delicate Ionic columns,
detailed balconies, and fan-lighted doors on both floors. The house was included in the Historic
American Building Survey of 1935 as a structure of outstanding merit. <![if !supportLists]>21. <![endif]>The Hopkins/Bryan House, “The Hopkins House” 1111 Wesley
Street, c. 1847. Dr. Isaac Hopkins, who
lived here from 1884-1888, was the ninth president of Emory College where he
introduced courses in technology. He
went on to become the first president of Georgia Institute of Technology. This Greek revival style house is currently
operating as a bed and breakfast inn. <![if !supportLists]>22. <![endif]>“The President’s House” 1205 Wesley
Street, c. 1836. A Greek revival built
by Ignatius Few, first president of Emory College. This house features two projecting front
rooms which are not attached to the main house and were added in the
1840’s. The Victorian trimmings were an
even later addition. From 1837 to 1889
the house was a private residence for many of the Emory College presidents. In 1889 it was given as a gift to the college
and has since housed the college presidents and deans. <![if !supportLists]>23. <![endif]>The Branham/Sitton
House, “The Branham House” 1223 Wesley
Street, c. 1845. A Greek revival house,
this was home for 130 years to one of Oxford’s early and prominent families,
the Branhams.
The house is a “4 over 4” with wide central halls and has had extensive
restoration to its 1840’s configuration. <![if !supportLists]>24. <![endif]>The Thomas/Stone/Eady
House, “The Stone House” 1222 Wesley
Street, c. 1837. Edward Thomas, the
surveyor of both the town of Oxford and Emory College, built this home. In 1854 it was purchased by George W. W.
Stone, a member of the college faculty.
He and his descendants had direct association with the college for 125
years. <![if !supportLists]>25. <![endif]>The Giles/Whitsitt
House, “Fierol
Place” 206 W. Soule Street, c. 1900.
A Victorian era home that was extensively remodeled in 1968 at which
time the large Victorian porch was removed.
The name “Fierol Place” is Olde
English for “Oak Covered Ground.” <![if !supportLists]>26. <![endif]>The Capers/Dickson/Branham House 202 Fletcher
Street, c. 1838. William H. Mell was the first owner.
Under Judge Dickson’s ownership, the first improved strain of long
staple cotton was propagated on this property. <![if !supportLists]>27. <![endif]>The Gaither/Payne House, “Zora Fair Cottage” 1005 Asbury
Street, c. 1840. An early Oxford house
built by Dr. Henry Gaither. Legend has
it that in 1864 Zora Fair, who had fled to Oxfod from South Carolina, became a Confederate spy. After penetrating Sherman’s headquarters in
Atlanta, she hid in the attic of this house where she escaped discovery by the
Federal soldiers who were pursuing her.
She is known as Oxford’s “Confederate Girl Spy”. <![if !supportLists]>28. <![endif]>The Thompson House 1001 Asbury
Street, c. 1908. Built by the
Decatur-Oxford District of the Methodist Church as the residence for its
district superintendents and is now privately owned. It is built in the Arts and Crafts style. <![if !supportLists]>29. <![endif]>The Worsham/Cline/Smith
House 201 W. Soule Street, c. 1875.
This two-story farmhouse has Victorian features. Its 1979 restoration and addition used old
beams and bricks from the Turner Cotton Warehouse, which once stood on Emory
Street in Covington. <![if !supportLists]>30. <![endif]>The Stone/Gladden House, “The Tudie Stone
Cottage” 208 W. Clark
Street, c. 1905. A Queen Anne style
Victorian cottage that features a large wrap-a-round porch. From 1905 to 1925, the house was owned by
Susan (Tudie) Stone Robinson, eldest daughter of
George W. W. Stone. <![if !supportLists]>31. <![endif]>The Galloway/Oliver House, “Florida Hall” 312 W. Clark
Street, c. 1845. This farmhouse was
built by William Galloway, an early resident of Oxford. The house was used to board Emory College
students and later was a “helping hall” primarily for students from Florida,
thus the name. The house was extensively
restored starting in 1973. <![if !supportLists]>32. <![endif]>The Means/Tanner House, “Orna Villa” 1008 Emory
Street, c. 1820. The oldest house in
Oxford, it was built by an unnamed Virginian.
The name “Orna Villa”, which means “House of
Birds”, was given to the residence by Dr. Alexander Means, Methodist minister,
physician, professor, and Emory College president. On June 2, 1857, Dr. Means demonstrated the
world’s first incandescent light in the Emory College laboratory. This house is featured in Haunted Houses in Georgia because of its
ghost, Toby Means. <![if !supportLists]>33. <![endif]>The Jensen House, “The Old Parsonage” 1015 Emory
Street, c. 1890. This Folk Victorian
house served as the parsonage for Allen Memorial (United) Methodist
Church. It continued to do so until
1966. <![if !supportLists]>34. <![endif]>The Sigma Nu
House <![if !supportLists]>35. <![endif]>The Giles/Coker House 1102 Emory
Street, c. 1905. An early Arts and
Crafts style house. <![if !supportLists]>36. <![endif]>Rust Chapel United Methodist Church Emory Street,
c. 1908. The Rust family donated land
for an African Methodist Episcopal Church to be built on this site. In 1908 Emory College moved the present
structure from the campus to replace the original church building. <![if !supportLists]>37. <![endif]>Oxford Historical Cemetery North Emory
Street, c. 1839. The cemetery was a part
of the original town plan laid out in 1837.
It has been referred to as the “Westminster” of Georgia Methodism;
buried here are eight presidents of Emory College, three of whom became bishops
in the Methodist Church, as well as a number of Methodist ministers and college
faculty members. The bishops buried here
are: James O. Andrew, Atticus G. Haygood, and Warren A.
Candler. Maximillian
Kendall, the first student to die at the college, is buried here. Ignatius Few, the first president of Emory
College, was buried in Athens, Georgia until early in this century when his
remains were brought to Oxford. Kitty
Andrew Shell (see #21) is buried in Bishop Andrew’s family plot and remembered
with a memorial marker. Both Confederate
and Federal soldiers are buried in separate areas of the cemetery. There is one monument dedicated for all the
Union dead and individually marked gravesites for the Confederate dead. Both are located in the southeastern portion
of the cemetery. A walk through the
cemetery reveals much about Oxford’s early families, both black and white, and
its rich heritage. 38. Turkey Creek Nature
Trail
Turkey Creek Nature
Trial - With it's entrance located behind the Old Church and Kitty's
Cottage, this trail exists due to the efforts of many people and
organizations.
Read more about the Turkey Creek Nature
trail.....
