Old Liberty County Jail Historical Marker
N 31° 50.733 W 081° 35.792
17R E 443559 N 3523471
Old Liberty County Jail Historical Marker in Hinesville Georgia on Main St. 1 block south of courthouse
Waymark Code: WM1KPD
Location: Georgia, United States
Date Posted: 05/27/2007
Views: 38
While this building was not Liberty County's first jail, it served longer than any previous jail. When it was built in 1892 the jail had "all the modern improvements and conveniences of a first class prison." Eighty years later it was condemned by Georgia Governor Lester Maddox as "a rotten, filthy rathole."
Although there is no record of its construction or its architect, it is known that the contractor, a Mr. Parkhill, had completed the two-story, three-bay brick structure by October 1892.
The interior of the jail is divided by a brisk wall into two sections housing (or drunk tank) and two cells downstairs and two cells and the upper part of the bull-pen upstairs.
A new county jail was opened in 1969 and the Old Jail was sold at auction on March 3, 1970 to the Liberty County Historical Society, which eventually donated the building to the City of Hinesville. The Old Jail is now on the National Register of Historic Places.
Erected 1998 by the Liberty County Historical Society"
Type of Marker: Building
Date: 1998
Sponsor: Liberty County Historical Society
Marker #: Not listed
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