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New: Join the Sidney Lanier Cottage Guild!
The
Sidney Lanier Cottage House Museum, located at 935 High Street
in Macon, GA, is the birthplace of noted poet, musician & soldier,
Sidney Lanier
(1842-1881, see full bio).
Perhaps best known for his poems "The
Marshes
of Glynn" and "Song
of the Chattahoochee," Lanier
was also a renowned
musician, as he was first chair flute in the Peabody Symphony Orchestra
in
Baltimore for seven seasons. Furthermore, Lanier received a federal
commission to compose a Cantata for the Centenniel celebration
of the United
States in 1876 in Philadelphia.
Click
here for an online guided tour of the Sidney Lanier Cottage.
Born
in the "Cottage" on
February 3, 1842, Sidney Lanier moved to Griffin,
GA shortly after his birth, but returned to Macon with his family
where he
completed his elementary education. At the age of 14, Lanier
entered Oglethorpe College near Milledgeville, GA, and graduated
in 1860 with high
honors. Lanier entered the Confederate Army in 1861 with the
Macon Volunteers and was captured in 1864 while serving on a
blockade runner. He
spent five months in a federal prison, where he developed consumption
(tuberculosis), an illness with which he struggled for the rest
of his life.
Lanier married Mary Day on December 19, 1867 in Christ Episcopal
Church in
Macon. They couple had four sons. Lanier spent his latter years
in
Baltimore, MD, where, in addition to performing with the Peabody,
he
lectured in the English Literature Department at Johns Hopkins
University.
Lanier died near Lynn, North Carolina in 1881 at the age of 39.
Mary Day
Lanier, who outlived her husband by 50 years (d. 1931), spent
her widowhood
editing, publishing, and promoting her husband's copious letters,
poems, and
manuscripts.
The
Sidney Lanier Cottage House Museum is listed on the National
Register of Historic Places. In 1976, the "Cottage" was
designated a Landmark of
American Music, and in 2004, designated a Landmark of American
Poetry by the
Academy
of American Poets. Among the objects
on view
at the Cottage are one of Sidney Lanier's flutes (a silver, alto
flute made
by the Badger Flute Company), Mary Day's wedding dress of 1867,
and several
portraits and first editions.
If
you would like to make a contribution to the continued operation
of this historic and important museum, please refer to our wish
list, or click here to make a monetary
donation to the Historic
Macon Foundation. All donations are tax-deductible and are deeply
appreciated.
OPEN
FOR GUIDED TOURS: Monday - Saturday, 10 am - 4 pm, last tour
at 3:30 pm
CLOSED on Sundays and Major Holidays. Hours may vary during Christmas
and
Cherry Blossom Festival (in March).
ADMISSION: Free for Members of Historic Macon Foundation. Please
click here for membership information.
Walk-in Admission:$5 adults; $4 for seniors, military with ID,
AAA members, and organized groups of 10 or more with a reservation;
$3 for
youth, ages 6-18. $2 per student for organized K-12 school visits
with a
reservation. We also offer special programs
for schools, (Click
here for a downloadable
Microsoft Word document containing tour
information for K-12 teachers. Includes a form to apply for the
free Elam Alexander Trust Program for Fourth Grade classes)
The
Cottage is also a stop on the Intown Historic Macon Tour available
through
the Macon-Bibb County Convention & Visitors Bureau. For information
on this
cumulative ticket (includes Hay House, Cannonball House, & St.
Joseph's
Church), see www.maconga.org.
RENTALS: The Cottage is available for rentals
for weddings, rehearsal dinners, receptions and parties. Click
here to see pictures of banquet settings. For further information,
please see our printable
rental contract in Adobe PDF format.
PHONE: 478/743-3851 for reservations (only necessary for groups
of 10 or
more) and information.
SIDE PORCH MUSEUM SHOP available, includes books and specialty
items of
local interest
WHEELCHAIR ACCESSIBLE in the back
RESTROOMS AVAILABLE
PLEASE NO PHOTOGRAPHY, VIDEOGRAPHY, FOOD OR DRINK
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