Open in App
  • Local
  • U.S.
  • Election
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • Lifestyle
  • Education
  • Real Estate
  • Newsletter
  • Vanishing Georgia

    The Marsh House: A Historic Home in LaFayette

    2024-05-17
    User-posted content
    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=3vhq6U_0t6md2MH00
    LaFayette's Historic Marsh House, built in 1836Photo by©Brian Brown/Vanishing Media

    Designed by Spencer Stewart Marsh (1799-1875) around the time of LaFayette’s founding, this was home to his family and their descendants until 1989. It’s also referred to as the Marsh-Warthen House. Spencer Marsh was born in Chatham County, North Carolina, and married Ruth (Rutha) Terrell Brantley in 1824. They first migrated to Covington, Georgia, around 1833, and then to Walker County. He was a justice of the Inferior Court and a state senator and Walker County’s wealthiest and most prominent citizen with farming and real estate interests all over the area. He was also, along with Andrew P. Allgood and and William K. Briers, a founder of the Trion Factory [in Chattooga County], said to be the first cotton mill in Northwest Georgia, in 1845. It was later known as Marsh & Allgood. During the Civil War, the Marshes sought refuge in Cassville.

    Marsh’s daughter, Sarah Adaline, married Nathaniel Greene Warthen in 1859. Due to the large presence of Union troops in Northwest Georgia, the young couple relocated to the relatively safer Warthen homeplace in Warthen, Washington County at the height of the war. Afterwards they returned to LaFayette and also resided here with Sarah’s family.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=3wMe92_0t6md2MH00
    Reconstructed slave dwelling, built to o enhance the interpretation of the African-American experience at the Marsh House.Photo by© Brian Brown/Vanishing Georgia

    It’s a near certainty that Spencer Marsh’s slaves were responsible for the construction of the house. He owned 12 in 1850. One of them, 16-year-old Wiley Marsh, was Spencer’s son according to widely accepted oral history. [Interestingly, Wiley Marsh is mentioned on a Department of the Interior marker honoring the African-American presence on the property but it doesn’t note that he was Marsh’s son]. Built in the Greek Revival style popular by 1840, the house was expanded between 1895-10 by Marsh’s grandson, Spencer Marsh Warthen, who also added minimal Colonial Revival features, including the balustrade, around 1935. Almost every architectural element and update of the house has been extensively catalogued. Addie Augusta Wert, great-granddaughter of Spencer Marsh, was the last family member to reside here, removing to a nursing home in 1989. Patrick and Donna Clements bought the house from the estate in 1992 and sold it to the Walker County Historical Society in 2003. The Marsh House of LaFayette is now operated as museum.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=3xSTSu_0t6md2MH00
    A view of the main house from boxwood garden.Photo by©Brian Brown/Vanishing Georgia


    Expand All
    Comments / 0
    Add a Comment
    YOU MAY ALSO LIKE
    Local Georgia State newsLocal Georgia State
    Most Popular newsMost Popular

    Comments / 0