Click image to read Georgia Trend's feature on the GHS |
Chartered by the Georgia General Assembly in 1839, the Georgia Historical Society is the private, non-profit historical society for the state of Georgia. The oldest cultural institution in the state, and one of the oldest historical societies in the country, GHS fulfills its mission to collect, preserve and share Georgia’s history by presenting a variety of educational programs, authoring publications on Georgia and southern history, and by operating a library and archives at its headquarters, Hodgson Hall , a National Historic Landmark building in Savannah.
GHS is member-supported, has active, mutually beneficial relationships with dozens of local historical society affiliates across Georgia, and in recent years has become a recognized resource for national scholastic and media organizations.
Library and Archives
The Society’s collection includes four million manuscripts, 100,000 photographs, 30,000 architectural drawings, 15,000 rare and non-rare books, and thousands of maps, portraits and artifacts, representing the collective memory of the state of Georgia and relating the stories of the state’s diverse people.
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Publications and Scholarship
GHS has published The Georgia Historical Quarterly, the award-winning journal of record for Georgia and southern history, since 1917. The Society also publishes Georgia History Today, a quarterly member magazine that examines the ongoing presence of the past.
Education and Outreach
GHS partners with school districts statewide to produce high quality programming for the U.S. Department of Education's Teaching American History grant and other programs. GHS also works with university faculty to train teachers and create resources, including curriculum development and onsite workshops like the Landmarks of American History and Culture grant awarded to GHS by the National Endowment for the Humanities. The Society also organizes online exhibits, sponsors essay contests, provides curriculum content, and creates other teacher resources.
Franklin Cromers Mill Covered Bridge |
Historical Marker Program
GHS manages and is the granting authority for the Georgia Historical Marker Program, which educates citizens and visitors about the people, places, and events that have shaped Georgia’s past and present. To date more than 130 of these distinctive black and silver markers bearing the Georgia Historical Society seal have been erected at significant locations statewide.
Programs and Events
GHS lecture series and other public programs feature renowned authors and historians discussing topics that bring history to life for audiences across the state. The Society also hosts Georgia Days, an annual two-week history education program, that commemorates the Georgia's founding in February 1733. And each year GHS recognizes selected individuals and organizations with a series of awards for noteworthy books, articles, programs, and service.
Vince Dooley addresses the 2007 Georgia Day Luncheon


This website is made possible in part by a grant from the U.S. Institute of Museum and Library Services. Any views, findings, conclusions or recommendations expressed in this site do not necessarily represent those of the Institute of Museum and Library Services. 










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