A Map of George (Eufaula) Lake Attractions
A map showing attractions near Walter F. George (Eufaula) Lake, including Westville, state parks, Fort Gaines and Eufaula National Wildlife Refuge.
Bedingfield Inn Museum
The Bedingfield Inn Museum, an authentic stagecoach inn built around 1836, has survived from the period when Lumpkin was a frontier town.
Eufaula National Wildlife Refuge
Eufaula National Wildlife Refuge occupies the upper portion of the Corps of Engineers project Walter F. George Reservoir (Lake Eufaula). Concentrations of ducks, geese, wood storks, sandhill cranes, raptors, wading birds, shorebirds and songbirds. Several rookeries present along with bald eagle and osprey nests.
Florence Marina State Park
Situated at the northern end of 45,000-acre Lake Walter F. George, also known as Lake Eufaula, this park offers the perfect setting for those who love water sports.
Frontier Village
Georgia tours, walking tours, history tours. Visit the Frontier Village in Fort Gaines to see century old buildings on a site that served as a frontier fort in 1814 and an Indian fort in 1836.
George Bagby State Park and Lodge
This southwest Georgia park on Lake Walter F. George (also known as Lake Eufaula) features a 60-room lodge, conference center, restaurant, cottages, and an award-winning, 18-hole Meadow Links golf course.
Kirbo Interpretive Center
Located at Florence Marina State Park, the Kirbo Interpretive Center teaches visitors about Native Americans, Nature and local history and displays snakes, turtles, fish and artifacts from the prehistoric Paleo-Indian period through the early 20th century.
Kolomoki Mounds Historic Park
In the Chattahoochee Watershed that is so rich in Native American history, this unusual park is an important archaeological site as well as a state recreational area. The Swift Creek and Weeden Island Indians built 7 mounds within the park during the 12th and 13th centuries. The mounds include Georgia’s oldest great temple mound, two burial mounds and four ceremonial mounds. The Kolomoki museum interprets these mounds and the Indian culture.
Providence Canyon State Park
A visitor center explains how the massive gullies were caused by erosion due to poor farming practices in the 1800s.
Rood Creek Indian Mounds
The Rood Creek Indian Mounds are from an Indian village more than 600 years old which probably was abandoned before the Spanish came to the area.