Calvary United Methodist

Calvary Methodist Episcopal Church was founded in 1857, first meeting on the Madison Road about two miles north of Shady Dale. A small cemetery still marks the site where early Jasper County pioneers once gathered for worship. Two years later, in 1859, Mathew Whitfield conveyed two acres of land on the Monticello–Madison road to local settlers for $20, and a new church and cemetery were built there. That sanctuary still stands today, more than 150 years later.

Shady Dale itself has deep roots. Long before English settlement, it was a Creek Indian village. By the early 1800s, it had become a small trading post and later grew into the only other incorporated city in Jasper County besides Monticello. Its location made it a natural crossroads: the old Seven Islands Road passed just to the north, carrying traders and travelers between Augusta and New Orleans. Later, railroads from Augusta to Milledgeville and on to Atlanta crossed through Shady Dale, making it an active shipping and tourist town.

On the eve of the Civil War, Shady Dale stood on the busy road between Covington and the state capitol at Milledgeville. The growing town was home to two of Georgia’s wealthiest men, Mathew Whitfield and J.W. Walton. Whitfield owned the Shady Dale Hotel, where General Sherman reportedly spent the night during his March to the Sea. Remarkably, the village itself survived the war relatively unscathed.

Railroads brought new prosperity in the late 19th century. By 1887, the Macon–Covington line cut through Shady Dale, intersecting with the earlier route and boosting trade. The town became a major shipping point for cotton, peaches, and farm machinery, though the boom was short-lived, collapsing with the Great Depression of the 1930s.

Today, Shady Dale is a proud reminder of East Georgia’s history, with its old homes and historic churches like Calvary Methodist. Services are still held each Sunday at 9:30 and 11:00, and visitors are always welcome.

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