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Historical Markers

Brooklet

Location: 110 N. Parker St (just north of E. Lee St), Brooklet, Georgia

County: Bulloch

Coordinates: 32.379838, -81.662997

Dedicated:

Marker Type: Bulloch County Historical Society

MARKER TEXT

BROOKLET, GEORGIA

 

     Brooklet, known for its Avenue of Oak trees, took shape at the end of the 19th century on property owned by A. J. Lee. Optimistic citizens built a new town beside the recently completed Savannah & Statesboro Railroad. Dr. H. K. Thayer, an early resident, asked to the U.S. Post Office accept the name of Brooklet for the new town, since a brook ran through it. Before 1899, the area was called Nellwood. The post office was at the home of J. C. Cromley. Brooklet quickly grew, as businesses opened under the names of Clisby Cone, W. C. Parker, J. A. Warnock, and Parrish & Pretorius, Dr. J. M. McElveen and Dr. John I. Lane moved to the new town.

     When the town was incorporated in 1907, Dr. Lane was elected its first Mayor. Brooklet became a thriving community in eastern Bulloch County with a school, bank, electric plant, telephone company, general merchandise store, and a large lumber mill owned by J. N. Shearouse. His Shearouse Railroad interested with the S & S Railroad near the center of town. Early churches were Methodist (1904), Baptist (1907), St. Marys AME Church (1907), and Primitive Baptist (1917). Little Bethel Baptist (1893) located to Brooklet in 1953.

 

Supported by the Jack N & Addie D. Averitt Foundation 

The Bulloch County Historical Society’s historical markers are funded by the
Jack N. & Addie D. Averitt Foundation.

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