Gaineswood Historical Site

Gaineswood Historical Site Gaineswood, a National Historic Landmark, was constructed over an 18 year period (1843-1861).

Owner and architect Nathan Bryan Whitfield was a cotton plantation owner whom transformed the building into a Greek revival mansion.

Patriotic Wreath Class on the grounds of GaineswoodSaturday, June 6th9:00-11:00$50 registration includes materials to ma...
05/23/2026

Patriotic Wreath Class
on the grounds of Gaineswood

Saturday, June 6th
9:00-11:00

$50 registration includes materials to make a ‘John Mark’ style bow and live boxwood door arrangement

To register, comment below and
PayPal: [email protected]
Or
Venmo:
Must send payment to hold a spot

Deadline is Wednesday, June 3rd
*weather may effect scheduling

Demopolis come celebrate Gaineswood's 2024-2025 restoration.
05/09/2026

Demopolis come celebrate Gaineswood's 2024-2025 restoration.

Gaineswood Part III 1821- 1843Before settlement, this region was part of the homeland of the Choctaw people, led in part...
03/26/2026

Gaineswood Part III 1821- 1843

Before settlement, this region was part of the homeland of the Choctaw people, led in part by Chief Pushmataha, one of the most respected Native leaders of the early 19th century. Known for his diplomacy and leadership, Pushmataha worked closely with American officials during a time of major transition in the Southeast.

One of those officials was George Strother Gaines, a U.S. Indian agent who developed a strong relationship with Pushmataha. Their alliance played a role in shaping the early history of this region, including the opening of Choctaw lands to American settlement following treaties in the early 1800s.

In 1821, Gaines built a modest double dogtrot cabin here in Demopolis, marking the beginning of what would eventually become the site of Gaineswood.

Years later in 1843, the property came into the hands of Nathan Bryan Whitfield, who began transforming that simple structure into something far more ambitious.

Rather than building all at once, Whitfield expanded the home over time ( 18 years) designing and reshaping it into a masterpiece of Greek Revival architecture. By 1843, the vision was becoming a reality.

What began as a frontier cabin, on land shaped by both Native history and early American expansion, was becoming one of the South’s most remarkable homes.

As we reflect on 250 years of American history, Gaineswood reminds us that every place carries layers of stories, some long before the walls were ever built.

From Choctaw homeland… to frontier cabin… to lasting legacy.

🏍 We were just visited by this handsome group of bikers! It's a beautiful day to take a ride.
03/21/2026

🏍 We were just visited by this handsome group of bikers! It's a beautiful day to take a ride.

02/25/2026

Part II -- 1819-1821: A Frontier Becomes a Town

By the time Alabama became the 22nd state in 1819, America was expanding rapidly into what had recently been Native land.

That same year, French exiles arrived along the Tombigbee River, forming the Vine and Olive Colony and naming their settlement Demopolis ("City of the People").

It was ambitious. Idealistic. Hopeful. But this was still frontier Alabama.

In 1821, just a short time later, George Strother Gaines built a double dogtrot house in the region -- a practical structure suited for the heat, airflow, and frontier living. It reflected the reality of the time. This was not yet a land of grand columns and rotundas. It was a land of transition.

The promise of 1776 had now physically reached the Tombigbee.

The wilderness was becoming settlement. Settlement was becoming community. And within a generation, Demopolis would see the rise of architectural statements meant to signal permanence.

02/23/2026

Gaineswood and 250 years of America

Part I -- 1776: Before there was a Demopolis

In 1776, when the United States Declaration of Independence was signed, this land was not Alabama.

It was not Marengo County. It was not Demopolis. It was the wilderness.

The land that would one day become Demopolis sat along the Tombigbee River, a fertile river valley of hardwood forests, cane brakes, rich black prairie soil, and winding waterways that sustained life for centuries before a new republic was imagined.

This region was home to Native nations, including the Choctaw and earlier Mississippian mound-building cultures whose presence shaped the Southeast long before European settlement. The Tombigbee itself was part of ancient trade routes connecting communities across what is now Alabama and Mississippi.

There were no columns, no town squares, and no Greek Revival homes. There were hunting paths, river crossings, seasonal settlements, and deeply rooted traditions.

As thirteen colonies declared independence from Britain along the Atlantic coast, this region remained far removed from the political center of the revolution, yet ripple effects of that declaration would eventually reach even here.

Within decades, treaties would reshape Native land ownership. Settlement would follow. Alabama would become a state in 1819.

But in 1776, this was sovereign Native land and Gaineswood was still decades away.

02/20/2026

1776 to Present: Where the American Story meets Demopolis

As our nation marks its 250th anniversary, we are taking a look at where we have been from 1776 to the rise of Demopolis, to the columns of Gaineswood.

Before there was a town
Before there was a house.

Over the next few weeks we will be conducting a series. We will explore how the American story reached the banks of the Tombigbee and how Gaineswood was ultimately intertwined.

Stay tuned!

The Polk & Lyon Legacy in Demopolis On February 14, 1864, during the Meridian Campaign, Union forces under Sherman devas...
02/19/2026

The Polk & Lyon Legacy in Demopolis

On February 14, 1864, during the Meridian Campaign, Union forces under Sherman devastated Meridian, Mississippi with railroads twisted, depots destroyed, the city left in ruins.

In the days that followed, Confederate General Leonidas Polk withdrew toward Demopolis.

Reassigned by Jefferson Davis to command the Department of Alabama and East Mississippi, Polk found Demopolis both strategically important and personally familiar. He worshiped at Trinity Episcopal Church and moved within the social circles of the city’s prominent families. Nearby stood Gaineswood, its towering columns quietly witnessing the shifting tides of war along the Tombigbee.

Polk would be killed only months later, on June 14, 1864, during the Atlanta Campaign a bishop turned general struck down on Pine Mountain. But the Polk connection to Demopolis did not end there.

His son, Dr. William Polk, also served the Confederacy during the Civil War, carrying his father’s cause into battle before later returning to civilian life. After the war, he married Ida Ashe Lyon, daughter of Francis Strother Lyon, on November 24, 1866 — intertwining the Polk and Lyon families within Demopolis society.

From that union came four children. Of those four children only three would see adulthood. Leonidas Mecklenburg Polk , a grandson of General Polk's, life would be tragically cut short in 1877 at Bluff Hall due to scarlet fever. Within just over a decade, Demopolis witnessed the fall of a grandfather on the battlefield, a son who had also marched to war, and the loss of a young grandson within the quiet walls of one of its grandest homes.

Gaineswood and Bluff Hall are more than architectural masterpieces. They are keepers of layered history — of campaigns and command, of marriage and mourning, of legacy carried forward and heartbreak endured.

The Meridian Campaign may have burned a city but in Demopolis, history lingered in families, in faith, and in the shadows of white columns that still stand today.

Happy Holidays from Gaineswood! ⛄
12/20/2025

Happy Holidays from Gaineswood! ⛄

✨ We were blessed this COTR to have so many visitors! We can't wait to see you again next year!
12/19/2025

✨ We were blessed this COTR to have so many visitors! We can't wait to see you again next year!

🎄This is your last chance to pick up your handcrafted ornaments before we are closed for the holidays!  Pick one up toda...
12/19/2025

🎄This is your last chance to pick up your handcrafted ornaments before we are closed for the holidays!
Pick one up today in our gift shop! 🎁

Address

805 S CEDAR Avenue
Demopolis, AL
36732

Opening Hours

Monday 10am - 4pm
Tuesday 10am - 4pm
Wednesday 10am - 4pm
Thursday 10am - 4pm
Friday 10am - 4pm
Saturday 10am - 4pm

Telephone

+13342894846

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