Forgotten Graveyard of Plantation Families Documented!

Hidden down a quiet rural road in Georgia is the historic Bethel church graveyard—a cemetery with deep roots in the plantation era. Once the final resting place for some of the wealthiest and most influential families in the region—names like Jarrett, Sparks, and Copeland—this cemetery has now slipped into silence. Bethel was one of those churches with two graveyard sections: one for the white landowners, and another for the enslaved church members and their descendants. But unlike most cemeteries of this kind, it’s the section for the African American members that’s still cared for today. The once-pristine section for the plantation class? Now overgrown and forgotten. We explore the neglected graves, read what inscriptions we can, and reflect on what this place tells us about time, memory, and who history chooses to remember. If you believe in preserving what’s left before it’s gone, you’re in the right place. Places like this don’t last forever. If we don’t document them now, they vanish. Help support our preservation efforts and future explorations: https://www.paypal.me/rwrightphotography Want to see the hands-on restoration work we do?    / @therandomadventureschannel   This mission continues thanks to viewers like you.