Farmer Grove AME Church and School
On a quiet stretch of Jefferson County countryside stands one of Georgia’s rarest treasures: a two-classroom schoolhouse that also served as a church. Farmer Grove African Methodist Episcopal (AME) Church and School tells the powerful story of freedom, faith, and education in the years after the Civil War.
The congregation was organized in 1880 by former enslaved men, Nathan Grant, Rhuben Robinson, and Gabe Fort, who became the first trustees. Land for the church and school was sold to them by Robert L. Farmer, a former Confederate soldier and legislator. His stipulations were clear: the property must always be used for worship and education.
For the freedmen and freedwomen of Jefferson County, education was essential to building a secure future. Parents who had once been forbidden to read or write were determined that their children would learn. Nathan Grant’s daughter, Jennie Grant Morris, became one of the county’s earliest Black women teachers. She taught at Farmer Grove, later asking to be buried on its grounds—a wish her children honored.
The original church and school burned in the 1930s, but were rebuilt as the simple frame building that still stands today. With wood plank siding, a gable roof, rows of tall windows, and brick chimneys, the structure embodies the resilience of its builders. For decades, it served not only as a school but as the center of worship, community, and hope for local families. Though now empty, Farmer Grove remains one of the few surviving two-classroom school buildings in the South. It stands as a monument to the generations who believed education was the key to freedom and a better life.
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