Plantation Architecture Gallery
The architecture of the plantation—the main residence, slave quarters, and numerous outbuilding—was a key part of the antebellum Alabama landscape. The plantation house itself might be a modest cottage or a pillared mansion, but it stood at the center of farm enterprise usually geared toward a single goal: the profitable production of cotton. While plantation architecture is popularly associated with the Black Belt region of the state, other important enclaves of plantation architecture existed in the Tennessee Valley, the lower Chattahoochee Valley, and the fertile upland valleys around Talladega and Jacksonville.
- Umbria, Sawyerville, Hale County
- Waldwic, Gallion, Hale County
- Rocky Hill, Lawrence County
- Sweetwater Plantation, Lauderdale County
- Hill of Howth, Greene County
- Thomas Caver Plantation House, Calhoun County
- Oak Manor, Sumter County
- Youpon Plantation, Wilcox County
- Mount Ida, Talladega County
- The Forks of Cypress, Lauderdale County
- Double Stairway, Barton Hall