The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Charming Milledgevi­lle, a treat for ‘Flanatics’

Legions of Flannery O’Connor devotees make the trek to her peaceful, bucolic homestead.

- By Mary Ann Anderson

When the Savannah-born Flannery O’Connor, widely regarded as the queen of Southern Gothic literature, moved home to Georgia from Connecticu­t in 1951, she was diagnosed with lupus, an incurable, crippling autoimmune disease. Her mother brought the then-25-year-old to live with her at Andalusia, the family farm just north of Milledgevi­lle, a town of some 17,000 in the heart of Georgia’s lake country. Environmen­t is everything to a writer, and the venerable yet charming two-story white house rising on a hill and overlookin­g a quietly serene pond where Regina Cline O’Connor and her daughter lived is set among the hardwoods and pines on more than 500 acres of bucolic pastures and woodlands. It is peaceful here, despite the hectic four-lane U.S. 441 a stone’s throw away, and was the ideal place for the young writer to spend the last dozen years of her life writing much of her two novels and 32 short stories before she died at age 39 from the illness that also claimed her father.

To the fans and scholars who appreciate Flannery O’Connor, Andalusia is the holy grail to absorb and understand all that is and was the writer and from where her creativity sprang.

“We call them ‘Flanatics,’” says Suzy Parker, a lively student-docent at Andalusia from nearby Milledgevi­lle’s Georgia College and State University and expert on all things Flannery. (O’Connor is a GCSU alum.)

Among that number are Ethan Hawke — who directed, produced and co-wrote “Wildcat,” a 2023 biopic that brings O’Connor to life and rolls out nationally this month — and his daughter, Maya Hawke, who portrays the radical if not groundbrea­king O’Connor. Laura Linney, whose mother is from Georgia, plays the steel magnolia of Regina. “Wildcat” weaves together O’Connor’s life story with reenactmen­ts of her short stories, with Hollywood heavyweigh­ts Liam Neeson, Steve Zahn and Vincent D’Onofrio rounding out the stellar cast.

Southern Gothic literature captures the essence of the rural South that we sometimes really don’t want to admit is real. If you’ve read O’Connor, you know her stories and characters are disturbing, strange and specialize­d.

Outside of these peaceful redclay landscapes and small towns is a side of Georgia that O’Connor conjures in her mind, among them the sinister murderer called The Misfit in “A Good Man is Hard to Find,” the loquacious Tom T. Shiflet in “The Life You Save May Be Your Own,” with Shiflet a name that O’Connor plucked from the Milledgevi­lle phone book, and the ungrateful, selfish Julian in “Everything that Rises Must Converge.”

Equally impressive is that in a Bible Belt state dominated by Baptists and Methodists, O’Connor, who was Catholic, managed to somehow incongruou­sly weave threads of religion onto almost every page that she wrote.

“People come from all over the world for Flannery,” Parker said. “Spain, California, India, England. She is considered a saint by Europeans. They come here to understand who she is and where she came from and can relate more to her writing by coming here. It humanizes her.”

Andalusia Farm, dating to 1814 when it produced primarily cotton, isn’t the only Flanatic stop in Milledgevi­lle. The first stop, even before the farmhouse tour, should be GCSU’s Andalusia Interpreti­ve Center, perched on a hill as you drive through the gate of Andalusia and up a gravel road. Open for just more than a year, the bright barn-like structure encompasse­s more than 5,000 square feet of exhibition and conference space, a gift shop and, most important, an extremely detailed timeline of O’Connor’s life and artifacts, including a few of her dresses.

I visited Andalusia with family members, and as we begin the house tour after visiting the interpreti­ve center, Parker tells us that about 90% of the furnishing­s in the house are original. We walk through the kitchen, dining room and other rooms before we come to O’Connor’s bedroom.

“Flannery’s health didn’t allow her to climb the stairs,” said Parker, so familiar with the writer that she calls her by her first name. “So her first-floor bedroom served double-duty as her office.”

The room is much the way O’Connor left it; the crutches she used when she couldn’t walk on her own anymore lean against the armoire. Her bed with its plaid quilt is there, as are the dark blue plaid matching curtains. A typewriter is on the desk beside the bed and looks at the back of the armoire.

Parker said that O’Connor wrote religiousl­y every morning for three to four hours, facing the bleak rearmost of the armoire so that she wouldn’t be distracted from the goings-on around the farm, including birds galore and her famous peacocks that roamed the yard. The room was simple, dark, maybe a little musty — the home was built in

the early 19th century — but it also had an ambiance that led to great stories being created within these walls.

Later, as we stand and talk on the long, screened-in front porch with its row of white rocking chairs, a fat black rat snake suns itself in the garden, oblivious and uncaring as it enjoys the warmth of the springtime sun. Andalusia is in the countrysid­e, and snakes, coyotes and other varmints are not uncommon.

Moving past Andalusia

Several historic sites dotting Milledgevi­lle also tell the literary legacy of O’Connor. GCSU’s Heritage Hall in downtown houses a special collection­s library including the Flannery O’Connor Gallery of Southern Literary Works. Other memorabili­a and papers include the works of Pulitzer Prize winner Alice Walker, author of “The Color Purple,” and former U.S. Sen. Paul Coverdell, as well as collection­s related to Milledgevi­lle’s contributi­ons to the music industry.

Other places represent O’Connor’s childhood and life, including the Gothic Revival-style Sacred Heart Catholic Church, built in 1874 and where the writer attended church. You also can drive by the Cline-O’Connor-Florencour­t House, often referred to as simply the Cline Mansion, where O’Connor lived throughout high school and college. The 1820 federal-style home is adorned with Ionic columns and Victorian touches. The house remains in the family as a private residence.

Also visit O’Connor’s plain grave at Memory Hill Cemetery, where she’s buried next to her parents. Fans have left tokens such as peacock feathers, coins, pebbles, poems and journals.

Milledgevi­lle is more than O’Connor

There is more to do in Milledgevi­lle than chase the ghost of Flannery O’Connor. Long before the state capital moved to Atlanta, it rotated between Augusta and Savannah, then Augusta alone, and after that Louisville. In 1807, Milledgevi­lle became the capital, and a new capital building reshaped the city’s low-set skyline. Partially because it was the capital, Milledgevi­lle was built in gorgeous, flower-lined squares still in place today. It remained the capital until Atlanta was named in 1868, but the bonus is that you can visit the Old Governor’s Mansion and state legislativ­e chambers.

Popping into the Milledgevi­lle-Baldwin County Convention and Visitors Bureau, I meet Rebekah Snider, its executive director.

“People come for the lake and for the history and culture,” she said, noting that nearby Lake Sinclair covers some 15,300 acres of coves, marinas and vast open stretches of water perfect for fishing, swimming and boating. She also says that two “high demand” trolley tours are offered on weekends by reservatio­n only, including a one-hour history tour that will take you past some of the most beautiful antebellum architectu­re in Georgia.

The other is a two-hour tour of the 2,000-acre Central State Hospital, the state’s former mental institutio­n. Now almost completely abandoned — a few patients still are housed at the hospital — the site, dating to 1842, gained national recognitio­n as the U.S.’s largest mental institutio­n with more than 12,000 patients and 6,000 employees scattered across the then-massive 8,000-acre complex.

Dining

Milledgevi­lle is a small town with big flavor. We stopped in at the Reel Grill of Milledgevi­lle right in the heart of downtown. My sister-in-law raved about the crab bisque, as did her sister about the bourbon salmon. I chose blackened shrimp with cheese grits as a side, and since then have been trying to figure a way to get back to Milledgevi­lle to have them again. For the drinking Flanatics, try the Flannery O’Connor Love Letters, a unique bourbon cocktail.

Greene’s Fresh Farmhouse is a well-liked weekday lunch spot that offers traditiona­l Southern fare. Think pulled pork, mac-andcheese and sweet potato souffle. And biscuits. Oh, those biscuits. For breakfast, brunch and lunch, you’ll love the Local Yolkal, known for its Eggs Benedict and indoor and outdoor dining.

Milledgevi­lle, with GCSU and its global students, has gone internatio­nal with Kai Thai for traditiona­l Thai and sushi. Go for curry, stirfry, noodles or hibachi or all of the above. If you’re hankering for Italian, then hop to The Brick, known for its pizza, calzones, pastas and sandwiches. But don’t miss its Stuffed Sticks, a bit of heaven with fresh pizza dough, stuffed with mozzarella and a choice of other fresh ingredient­s.

Accommodat­ions

Milledgevi­lle offers a variety of hotel and lodging options with standard hotels, RV sites and campground­s. Vacation rentals offer a variety of accommodat­ions from antebellum homes to cozy lakeside cottages. For a unique stay and to soak up the local ambience, try the Inn on North Jefferson, a well-appointed bed-and-breakfast in a 200-yearold home, or the Rockwell House, a stunning 1838 home and events center where you can rent the entire home or one of four individual suites.

The last word

As I make the two-hour drive home to South Georgia from Milledgevi­lle, I ponder a great deal about O’Connor and her impact, even some 50 years after she died, on how others view Georgia and the South in general. Expressing her view of the region’s identity, if you will, she wrote in an essay in 1963 for The Regional Writer, “Southern identity is not really connected with mocking-birds and beaten biscuits and white columns any more than it is with hookworm and bare feet and muddy clay roads.”

And snakes, I think, as I’m reminded of the rat snake at Andalusia. When you visit the farm, and watch “Wildcat,” you just might gain a better understand­ing of where she came from, too.

 ?? MARY ANN ANDERSON/TNS ?? Andalusia Farm, on the northern edge of Milledgevi­lle, was the home of author Flannery O’Connor and her mother, Regina Cline O’Connor. Now a house museum, about 90% of its artifacts are original to the home. The town where O’Connor did much of her writing is getting attention because of Ethan Hawke’s new movie “Wildcat,” a biopic that brings O’Connor to life and rolls out nationally this month.
MARY ANN ANDERSON/TNS Andalusia Farm, on the northern edge of Milledgevi­lle, was the home of author Flannery O’Connor and her mother, Regina Cline O’Connor. Now a house museum, about 90% of its artifacts are original to the home. The town where O’Connor did much of her writing is getting attention because of Ethan Hawke’s new movie “Wildcat,” a biopic that brings O’Connor to life and rolls out nationally this month.
 ?? EXPLORE GEORGIA/TNS ?? Family photos, including one of Flannery O’Connor, are among the artifacts at Andalusia Farm, where she lived the final 14 years of her life. The farm, where O’Connor wrote most of her books and short stories, is set on more than 500 acres near Milledgevi­lle.
EXPLORE GEORGIA/TNS Family photos, including one of Flannery O’Connor, are among the artifacts at Andalusia Farm, where she lived the final 14 years of her life. The farm, where O’Connor wrote most of her books and short stories, is set on more than 500 acres near Milledgevi­lle.
 ?? MARY ANN ANDERSON/TNS ?? About 90% of the artifacts are original at Andalusia Farm, including the cookbook of Regina Cline O’Connor, who helped her daughter as she battled lupus for the last 14 years of her life. Flannery O’Connor died at 39.
MARY ANN ANDERSON/TNS About 90% of the artifacts are original at Andalusia Farm, including the cookbook of Regina Cline O’Connor, who helped her daughter as she battled lupus for the last 14 years of her life. Flannery O’Connor died at 39.
 ?? PHOTOS BY MARY ANN ANDERSON/TNS ?? Student-docent Suzy Parker from Georgia College and State University points out the items remaining in the bedroom of Flannery O’Connor, including the crutches she used late in life. The room doubled as a study, and O’Connor did most of her writing in the room.
PHOTOS BY MARY ANN ANDERSON/TNS Student-docent Suzy Parker from Georgia College and State University points out the items remaining in the bedroom of Flannery O’Connor, including the crutches she used late in life. The room doubled as a study, and O’Connor did most of her writing in the room.
 ?? ?? Milledgevi­lle may be a small town but it is big on restaurant­s that serve everything from Southern cuisine to world-class pizza to amazing seafood to Thai food. In short, Milledgevi­lle has a plethora of top-notch “local” restaurant­s.
Milledgevi­lle may be a small town but it is big on restaurant­s that serve everything from Southern cuisine to world-class pizza to amazing seafood to Thai food. In short, Milledgevi­lle has a plethora of top-notch “local” restaurant­s.

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