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Georgia Museum of Agriculture & Historic Village

Living museum in Tifton, Georgia, US From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Georgia Museum of Agriculture & Historic Villagemap
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The Georgia Museum of Agriculture & Historic Village, formerly known as Agrirama, is a 19th-century living museum located in Tifton, Georgia. It opened on July 4, 1976. The grounds consist of five areas: a traditional farm community of the 1870s, an 1890s progressive farmstead, an industrial sites complex, rural town, national peanut complex, and the Museum of Agriculture Center.

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Sign and building to purchase tickets
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Turpentine distilled here as it was circa 1900

Over 35 structures have been relocated to the 95-acre (380,000 m2) site and faithfully restored or preserved including the Vulcan Steam Train running on 3 ft (914 mm) narrow gauge[1] track. Costumed interpreters explain and demonstrate the lifestyle and activities of this time in Georgia's history.[2] It is located at 1392 Whiddon Mill Road off I-75 at Exit 63B.

The museum is a facility of Abraham Baldwin Agricultural College.

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Notable facilities

Like many living museums, this one includes residences, a grist mill, saw mill and stores. More notable demonstrations include a turpentine still and a cotton gin.

The cotton gin is a reconstruction designed to demonstrate ginning technologies of the period 1890–1900.[3] During this period, mid-nineteenth century gins were being replaced by the system gin invented by Robert S. Munger. This gin demonstrates all the system ginning technologies, but does not operate as efficiently as a system gin because it only contains one gin stand. Its equipment was made by Lummus of Columbus, Georgia.[3][4] In 1999, Lummus moved to Savannah, Georgia, where it continues to make cotton gins.[5] The museum operates the gin for the public annually.

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References

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