When we are driving from Florida back home to Michigan, we
usually have tunnel vision. We get on
I-75 heading north and don’t stop until we get there. But with the weather in Michigan still so
cold/wet/dreary, we weren’t in a big hurry and decided to take a week to get
back.
Visiting Plain, Georgia was not our main reason for spending
several days in south-central Georgia.
We initially chose to camp in Albany to visit Sherwood Baptist Church,
which produces the Christian-themed movies “Flywheel”, “Facing The Giants” (my
personal favorite), “Fireproof” and “Courageous”. When I went to the church (Mike was back at
the RV on conference calls with work), I got to the front doors at the same
time an older woman was entering. She
was there to help prepare their weekly community dinner. Linda was extremely friendly, treating me
like a VIP and gave me a personal tour of the entire church complex,
introducing me to everyone in the kitchen and bookstore.
Later, looking at the map, we realized Plains was about an hour away. After doing a little online research, we knew
Jimmy Carter’s hometown was not where his presidential library is located (it
is in Atlanta) but thought there might be other things to see or do in Plains
that would make the drive worthwhile. We
can’t say we are big Jimmy Carter fans, as we both voted for Gerald Ford in the
1976 presidential election, but we enjoy history, and Carter is part of our
country’s history.
We often say things are “in the middle of nowhere” but,
literally, Plains is in the middle of nowhere, surrounded by farms (peanut and
other products). The downtown area
consists of one block of businesses. Not
even a stoplight. We had lunch at one of
those businesses, The Buffalo Café, named for the school mascot. The walls of the café were lined with team
photos (old) and memorabilia (also old).
We each ordered the $2.99 cheeseburger. (it was delicious). $2.99 for a cheeseburger? You can’t even buy the bun for $2.99 at most
restaurants! No wonder Jimmy and Rosalynn
returned to Plains after their four years in the White House and continue to
live there.
We drove by their house, but a gate and gatehouse keep the
public from entering the driveway. They
built the house in 1961, and except for the years of being governor of Georgia and
President, this is the home the Carter’s have lived in since.
For such a small town, there were several places to visit, each
one jogging our memory of the Carter years.
Plains High School closed in
1979 when the county went to a consolidated school district. The building now houses the Jimmy Carter
Visitor Center, run by the National Park Service. We were told a movie on Carter’s life had
just started so we could walk around the halls and exhibits until it started
again. An orientation film! That must-see staple of our western
adventure. I knew then the drive to
Plains was indeed going to be worthwhile!
Miss Julia Coleman, one of Jimmy and Rosalynn’s teachers,
had a profound influence on the future president. Quotes from her line the hallways of the
visitor center. President Carter used
one in his inaugural address: “We must adjust to changing times and still hold
to unchanging principles.”
The orientation film, as always, was very informative. Carter entered the Naval Academy at 19,
intending to make the Navy his career.
While home on leave, he had a date with his sister’s friend, Rosalynn
Smith and they were married several years later in 1946. In the film, she tells the following story:
“When Jimmy’s Dad died in 1953, we came back to Plains for
the funeral. So many people told Jimmy
how his dad had helped them, how he made a difference in their lives. Jimmy came to the conclusion that he could
have more of an influence right here in Plains than climbing the ranks in the
Navy. We had seen the world in the Navy
and I didn’t want to settle in Plains. I
only pouted about returning here for about a year.”
We also learned that when Carter was running for president,
so many media people were coming to Plains to try to learn more about him, that
the businesses were spending more time answering their questions than helping
their local customers. The empty train
depot was selected to be Campaign Headquarters.
The choice was not hard – it was the only place with a bathroom!
350 Plains residents pooled their money and rented a train
to take them to Washington for Carter’s inauguration. It was dubbed “The Peanut Special”. Women from the Plains Garden Club filled the
White House with their floral creations.
And all were on the grounds after the parade for a BBQ picnic.
Whenever Jimmy is in town, which is often, he still teaches
Sunday School at the Maranatha Baptist Church.
There was a schedule in the visitor center of which Sundays in April and
May that he would be teaching. The
church (likes ours) does not have a paid janitor. The cleaning of the inside and upkeep of the
outside is done by parishioners who volunteer their time. In keeping with his
common man persona, Jimmy and Rosalynn take their turn cleaning
toilets and mowing the lawn every other month.
The couple is a fixture at the Saturday night town square dance and at
the two eateries in Plains.
All of these were reminders to us of Carter’s platform – he
was a peanut farmer with small town values that resonated with the public after
the Nixon Watergate scandal.
There is a replica of his Nobel Peace Prize in the visitor
center. A major highlight of the Carter
Presidency was the Camp David Accords, the peace agreement between Egypt and Israel.
We left the visitor center and drove several miles outside
of town to Carter’s boyhood home and the cemetery where his parents and
siblings are buried. Then back into town to Billy Carter’s gas station, the
train depot and to get a bag of peanuts and a scoop of peanut butter ice cream.
Traveling to, and leaving the rural Georgia area, got us off
the expressway and we enjoyed the rolling countryside and other small towns. Surprising to me, once you cross out of
Florida, the palm trees disappear and the landscape is like home – pine trees
and farm land.
So much to see and do when we take the time!
Downtown Plains. The cafe is the small building in the middle of the block.
Old Plains High School - now the Jimmy Carter Visitor Center
Replica of Carter's Oval Office and the Resolute desk used by many Presidents
A snapshot of his political career
Bronze replica of Carter's Nobel Peace Prize
Who can forget Billy Beer?
The iconic symbol of Carter's presidential run