In April of this year, The Colonel and I took a little vacation. We visited Savannah, GA, Daufuskie Island, SC (more on Daufuskie Island later) and the little town of Darien, GA.
We had been through Darien back in 2011 when we visited Fort King George but this time we wanted to stay overnight. We booked a room at the lovely Open Gates Bed & Breakfast.
Zach, owner and chef (he had fresh chocolate chip cookies waiting for us) of the B&B, welcomed us to the beautiful house built in 1876. He told us that we were his only guests during our stay there (there are five guest rooms available). Zach gave us a tour of the house (to include the kitchen) and told us that we had full run of the place (just turn out lights and lock the front door before we went to bed). We had booked the Island Room.
The Colonel and I dropped our things off in our room and then went for a walk in town. Darien is on Georgia's coast at the mouth of the Altamaha River and is about 50 miles south of Savannah. It is the second oldest (Savannah is the first) planned city in Georgia and was originally called New Inverness.
Darien was founded in 1736 by Scottish Highlanders who were recruited by General James Oglethorpe (he founded the Georgia Colony in 1733 with 114 colonists in Savannah) to act as settler-soldiers to protect the Georgia Colony from the Spanish in Florida.
General Oglethorpe visited New Inverness (Darien) in 1736 and the marker below marks the spot where he had his shelter beneath the oak tree (just a stump remains) while visiting.
We walked in the little town of Darien and had a nice dinner in a restaurant along the Altamaha River. There was a baby gator in the river outside the restaurant. There were also boats moored along the river.
I took some photographs of some of the pretty houses in Darien as we walked after our dinner.