| So long, casino
October 28, 2003
- The venerable Radium Springs Casino's
obituary has been written for awhile, but the structure is
officially coming down.
ALAN MAULDIN
STAFF WRITER
ALBANY — Demolition equipment moved in for the kill in recent
days and began its task this week of tearing apart Radium Springs
Casino.
A
pile of aromatic heart pine support boards and brightly colored
insulation was all that was left of much of the building Tuesday, when
workers spent half the work day in the effort.
But the 76-year-old building's fate had already been decided in 2000,
when the owner sold the building to Dougherty County. Federal agencies
provided money to purchase the property and remove or destroy buildings
on the site.
"It's a sad-looking sight," said Michael Johnson, who lives in the
Radium Springs neighborhood and was involved in efforts to have one of
Southwest Georgia's most famous landmarks spared. "You see what happens
to our history. I just think the whole community ought to be grieving,
because it won't be replaced."
Johnson, 62, said that political figures from the local level to
Congress failed in helping save the building. He said the Radium Springs
Preservation and Development Group perhaps could have done more.
"You can only fight things so long," he said. "We devoted a lot of
time to it."
The last glimmer of hope, a request by the Dougherty County
Commission for an extension on the Dec. 31 date to close out demolition,
was denied by the Federal Emergency Management Agency.
Last year, the Georgia Department of Natural Resources bought 85
acres of timberland, the springs and Radium Springs Creek from Skywater
Properties, but there is no money budgeted for planned projects, Russ
Ober, regulations supervisor for the agency's Fisheries Management
office, said Tuesday.
Ober hopes the community will pitch in for clean up of the property
he said has had little upkeep in several years.
"What we feel like we can do is use it for striped bass management
and hopefully hold some kids fishing tournaments there this year," he
said during a Tuesday visit to the springs. "There's going to be a
little bit of mourning, then I hope folks will come in and volunteer to
help."
There is no money in the state budget for the springs in the 2003
budget and it will not be in next year's budget, Ober said.
"Right now it's all up in the air," he said. "With the budget crunch
we don't have the funds to do anything."
The spring is the southern terminus of a trail that will begin at the
Parks at Chehaw and is part of the Albany Downtown Riverfront Master
Plan.
Ober hopes that the spring can be a natural learning environment for
students from all over Southwest Georgia to study an aquifer system, and
Chehaw is interested in working with the state on the project.
Alan Mauldin can be
reached at (229) 888-9348.


Photographed during the destruction
by
Buster Wasden, Class of '55
Photographed after the destruction
by
Adair Mellichamp, Class of '54

The Pavilion
Photographed previous to the
destruction
by
Al Higginbotham, Class of '54
Pictures taken January 27, 2003
Photographed by
Jimmy Holland, Class of '58
January 26, 2003
Submitted by
Brinson Phillips, Class of '54
Back to Top
|