LocationsHub

Hoffwyl-Broadfield Plantation

Brunswick, GA, 31525 US / GA

Show all photos

Location Description

This beautiful plantation represents the history and culture of Georgia’s rice coast. In the early 1800s, using enslaved African-American laborers, William Brailsford of Charleston carved a rice plantation from marshes along the Altamaha River. The plantation owners were part of the genteel low-country society that developed during the antebellum period. A museum features silver from the family collection and a model of Hofwyl-Broadfield during its heyday. A brief film on the plantation’s history is shown before visitors walk a short trail to the antebellum home. A guided tour allows visitors to see the home as Ophelia kept it with family heirlooms, 18th and 19th century furniture and Cantonese china. The site also includes a nature trail that leads back to the Visitor Center along the edge of the marsh where rice once flourished.

Related WebLink(s)

Website

Location Category

  • AGRICULTURE - [general]
  • AGRICULTURE - Dairy
  • AGRICULTURE - Farms
  • AGRICULTURE - Orchards / Groves
  • BEACHES / COASTAL - [general]
  • BEACHES / COASTAL - Wetlands / Marshes
  • BUSINESSES / BUILDINGS - [general]
  • LAKES / RIVERS - Rivers
  • MUSEUMS / EXHIBITS - [general]
  • PARKS - [general]
  • PARKS - Historic Parks
  • PARKS - Nature Preserves

Architecture Style

  • 1800s / Civil War