Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

Bridge House (Albany, Georgia)

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Built
  
1857 (1857)

Opened
  
1857

Architectural style
  
Italianate architecture

NRHP Reference #
  
74000672

Area
  
4,000 m²

Added to NRHP
  
19 November 1974

Bridge House (Albany, Georgia)

Location
  
112 N. Front St., Albany, Georgia

Similar
  
Turtle Grove Park, Thronateeska Heritage Center, Albany Municipal Auditorium, Tift Park, Albany Civil Rights Institute

The Albany Welcome Center, formerly known as the Bridge House, is a historic residential building in Albany, Georgia. It was designed by African American architect and engineer Horace King and built in 1858. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places on November 19, 1974. It is located at 112 North Front Street.

Born into slavery, King was granted special rights by the Alabama Legislature in 1858 and was a successful engineer and architect of bridges in the American South. Colonel Nelson Tift hired him in 1858 to build a covered bridge across the Flint River at Albany and King's design included an adjoining Bridge House that served as a gateway to the city.

The home's cellars were used during the American Civil War for a meat packing operation to feed Confederate soldiers, and ground were used as for the slaughter of thousands of cows, hogs and sheep that were pickled in barrels.

On the second floor is a room known as "Tift's Hall" that was made into a theater. It was described as the social center of Albany. Tift hired artists from New York to decorate the hall's walls and ceilings with ornate frescoes. The room was used to host actors, hold dances, stage plays, and was also used for Ku Klux Klan meetings.

In 1887, Nelson Tift sold his bridge rights to Dougherty County, which later built a new bridge south of the Bridge House. The building was home for several decades to an auto parts store, and following the Flood of 1994, was purchased by Dougherty County as part of downtown Albany's redevelopment. The Bridge House was meticulously restored under the direction of David Maschke, a local architect, and reopened as the Albany Welcome Center in August 2008.

References

Bridge House (Albany, Georgia) Wikipedia