Related Web Sites and Areas of Interest

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18th Century Garden Research from Williamsburg

18th Century Song book - coutesy of American Revolution.Org

Alabama State MuzzleloadersAssociation - Contact Joyce Gladden

The Almost Complete List of Muzzleloading and Buckskinning Links
Courtesy of Coon-n-Crockett Muzzleloaders

AMERICANREVOLUTION.ORG
Your Internet Gateway to the AMERICAN WAR OF INDEPENDENCE 1775 - 1783

 American Towns Find information about events and happenings in any town across America.

Auburn, GA Information for the City of Auburn

British Night Watch Parade - In the city of Saint Augutine.

Brushy Creek Muzzleloaders

Carolina Po Boy Muzzleloaders

Charles Towne Long Rifles - Contact Dennis Darling

The Coalition Of Historical Trekkers - A National organization of Living Historians. Most of the Living historians involved with the Fort Yargo Living History Society are also affiliated with the CoHT.

Early Arkansas Reenacters Association (EARA), is a non-profit organization dedicated to preserving their Arkansas heritage. They specialize in the activities and concerns of the "common folk" that populated that area before Arkansas became a state in 1836. They are an all-volunteer organization, and work in cooperation with public schools, parks and museums to provide programs in which the public can experience frontier life first-hand.

Events hosted by the Society of Interpretive Historians, Inc.

Fort King George

Fort Loudoun

Fort Yargo State Park - Winder, GA

Gwinnett Archaeological Research Society

Historical and Histyerical Tours

Jas Townsend & Son, Inc.

Lazy B Farm

Marble Springs Historic Site

Muscogee Longrifles

Peace Treaty between the United States of America and the Creek Indian Nation, 1796 - The text of the Treaty of 1796, signed in Georgia on June 29, 1796. Courtesy of Oklahoma State University.

Piedmont MuzzleLoaders - Contact George T. MacDonald

Rendezvous Ohio

SavoryFare2     An email group for those interested in the foodways of the 18th Cenutury.

SavoryFare_Too    Another email group for those interested in the foodways of the 18th Century.

Smoke and Fire Company Providing goods for Living History Re-enactors

South West Point

Suggested Guidelines for Portrayals

Tebarco they helped getting our supplies we needed for our water...THANKS

William Harris Homestead - 3636 Georgia Highway 11  Monroe, GA 30656 Visit the past!    

 The William Harris Homestead is one of the few early Georgia plantations which remains sufficiently intact to depict the culture and lives of Walton County's first settlers. The William Harris Homestead provides a rare glimpse into how the earliest homesteaders in the "new frontier" of northeast Georgia tamed the land and created a legacy for future generations. Experience how early settlers carved out a self-sufficient lifestyle in an area that was little more than a wilderness.  The grounds feature original 19th Century buildings that were raised from the land itself:  The log house (circa 1825), build of 6"x8" timbers, The cellar lined with emormous river rock, The Smokehouse made of handmade brick, The corncrib and barn, The natural spring which provided drinking water and "wash place" for laundry days.
     Demonstrations may include:  spinning raw cotton and wool into thread, weaving thread into fine cloth, candlemaking, butter churning, and open-hearth cooking, meat and food preservation, historical relevance of the Creek Indians, and Civil War interpretations.

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