Cities:Jasper, Talking Rock, Ellijay, Cherry Log, Blue Ridge, Blairsville,
Hiawassee
Whether you are heading north to visit one of Georgia's
great mountain lakes, hike to a waterfall, ride a train to bygone days, learn
at a history museum, go to the local jail or enjoy one of the famous mountain
festivals, the Georgia Mountain Parkway should be on your itinerary. This quick,
easy way deep into the backcountry of north Georgia significantly reduces the
amount of time it takes to get to your destination. You don't have to fight
high volumes of traffic or travel on those winding two-lane roads and there's
a wide array of fun things to do, everything from outdoor activities to high
culture.
Along the Georgia Mountain Parkway
A portion of the Georgia Mountain Parkway is also known as the Zell
Miller Mountain Parkway
Crane Creek Winery
Historic court house museum in Blairsville, Georgia
Pickens County Jail
The Georgia Mountain Parkway is the name given to the road
that begins at the end of Interstate
575. It starts as GA 515, the Appalachian Development Highway. In Ellijay
U. S. Route 76 joins, which the Parkway follows to the eastern Towns
County line. In between the road winds through small mountain towns into the spectacular
beauty of Georgia's Blue Ridge Mountains,
and
the centerpiece
of the Blue Ridge, the Chattahoochee National
Forest. In fact, most of
the forest is within the five counties
that
the parkway
bisects: Pickens,
Gilmer, Fannin, Union and Towns.
You won't have to walk very far to find a hiking trail.
These counties contain all of the
Appalachian Trail in Georgia and many other hiking destinations including
the remote Benton
MacKaye (rhymes with sky) Trail. Significant portions
of the nearby land have been designated wilderness, from Rich Mountain
to the Cohuttas. Jimmy
Carter liked Rich Mountain
so much he moved here! Looking for more hiking
near the Georgia Mountain Parkway? Check out Vogel
State Park as a hiking
destination, or the trails near Brasstown
Bald.
In addition to
the hiking, there are some great lakes for fishing, boating and,
well, cooling off. Carters
Lake is Georgia's best kept secret, and that's only a few
miles from the Georgia Mountain Parkway in Gilmer County. Lake Blue Ridge,
one of
the first
lakes
built in North Georgia, is near the Parkway in Fannin County,
and Lake Chatuge, spanning the Georgia-North Carolina border, crosses
underneath the parkway
in Towns County. Hunting, fishing, boating, its all within
feet of
the parkway.
If a train ride is your idea of fun, then the Blue
Ridge Scenic Railway is a great idea. You can cruise from Blue Ridge
to McCaysville and back (that's 26 miles round trip) through
the Toccoa River Valley during Spring, Summer
and Fall. There's an hour and a half layover in McCaysville,
which allows for shopping and dining in the local establishments.
While each of the towns along the parkway have antique
shops, the destinations for most antique shoppers are Ellijay and Blue Ridge.
Browsing the stores
here, buyers frequently come away with bargains that you simply won't find
in Atlanta.
Many of the towns along the parkway have historic attractions,
starting with the Pickens County Jail in Jasper. Built in 1906, the two-story
ediface
features a marble facade and held local criminals and the jailers family
until the federal government forced its closure in 1981. Further north, in
Ellijay, one of the Cherokee
forts built to house the First Americans before
they were forced west on a travesty known as the Trail
of Tears sat near
the parkway. Ellijay is the oldest continually inhabited town in Georgia's
present-day boundaries. It is mentioned in writing as early as 1731, beating
Savannah by at least two years.
Blue Ridge is a relatively new town, built along the route
of the railroad in the 1880's. It wrested the title of county seat from
Morganton, a few miles to
the east, and the rest is history. The Fannin County Heritage Foundation
has a museum downtown (West First St.). Blairsville has the Union County
Historical Society which runs a museum in the old courthouse in downtown
and a second building a couple of blocks away. Three memorial parks are
within a mile
of the Georgia
Mountain Parkway, in Fannin, Union and Towns County (the Towns County memorial
park is directly on the parkway).
Throughout the region there are many other highlights.
Crane Creek Winery offers a full-bodied red wine, one of Georgia's finest
wines. Young Harris College is noted for its contribution of both a governor
and a senator, Zell Miller! And from the Appalachian Education and Historical
Society comes The Reach of Song, which depicts life in the Southern Appalachians
through the eyes of Georgian Byron Herbert Reece