- Modena State Historical Marker
- Located at the Skidaway Institute of Oceanography,
Skidaway Island
-
31.98595, -81.02281
MODENA
This location first appears (1734) in Georgia's
history as a Savannah outpost. An original settler was Thomas
Mouse who is remembered for his description of early hardships
here. An evangelical visitor in 1736 was John Wesley. By 1740
the settlement was abandoned. The Island revived when the Georgia
Trusteeship ended in 1753, and Colonial Government established.
An early grantee was John Milledge, whose plantation at this
site was called "Modena." He was the orphaned son of
one of the "First Hundred," the youthful protégé
of Oglethorpe, Captain of Rangers, and member of First Commons
House of Assembly. His son and successor, John, Jr., was a leader
in the American Revolution. He was appointed State Attorney General
at the age of 23 when still in uniform, and later became U.S.
Representative, Governor, and U.S. Senator. As Governor he helped
found the University of Georgia (Originally Franklin College).
Modena was an active plantation until Mid-Nineteenth Century.
The name is thought to come from Modena, Italian seat of silk
culture; an industry envisioned for early Georgia, but which
did not flourish.
025-92 GEORGIA HISTORIC
MARKER 1981
Go to Chatham County Historical Markers page
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