Self-Guided Tour at Bowdon Station

Take a self-guided tour of Bowdon’s history following wayside signs in Bowdon Station. View or download the rack card below or pick one up at City Hall or the Bowdon Area Historical Society. Find out more about Bowdon’s textile past by visiting our community page: http://westgatextiletrail.com/bowdon/.

These wayside signs share Bowdon’s apparel industry history, from the 1930s to the contemporary era, and are located in the heart of the historical industrial district that was once home to five apparel companies. Look for the wayside signs along City Hall Avenue and Commerce Street and wall signs when shopping at businesses on City Hall Avenue n Bowdon (see map below).

Map of the Bowdon Spur Trail. Photo courtesy of UWG Center for Public History. Map created by UWG Print Services.

Opening the Bowdon Spur Exhibit

In March of 2018, the Textile Trail opened a new trail spur in Bowdon, Georgia. This new walking trail is clustered in the historic downtown corridor along City Hall Avenue and features three large wayside panels, ten wall-mounted plaques, and a rack card.

The opening event included commemorative remarks and ribbon untying, as well as a guided walking tour of the panel exhibit. The event had around fifty people in attendance, among them: City officials Mayor Jim Chaffin and City Manager Gary Bullock; representatives from the Sewell family, including Robin Sewell Worley; members of the Bowdon Area Historical Society, including Tom Upchurch, Mignon Wessinger, and Judy Rowell; UWG History and Art faculty; and former apparel industry employees of Bowdon.

Bowdon Spur Trail Marker. “Expanding the Sewell Family Legacy.” Photo courtesy of UWG Center for Public History.

Following the opening ceremony and remarks, UWG Department of History public history graduate student Chanell Lowery led a guided walking tour of the historic district. Chanell’s tour highlighted the lasting impact of the apparel industry in Bowdon, including the Sewell and Plunkett families and their influence on Bowdon. Contextualizing Bowdon’s Bremen-Bowdon Investment Company (BBI or BBIC) and LaMar Manufacturing Company into the larger narrative of the U.S. textile industry were points of emphasis during her tour. Additionally, Chanell’s tour, which serves as her Master’s thesis project, highlighted unionized and nonunionized plants and both women and African Americans in the textile industry workforce.

Chanell Lowery, pausing for a picture during her docent tour of the Bowden Spur Trail. Photo courtesy of UWG Center for Public History.

This project was generously funded by the Warren P. and Ava F. Sewell Foundation, Georgia Humanities, the UWG Center for Public History, the Carrollton Area Convention and Visitors Bureau, the Bowdon Area Historical Society, and the City of Bowdon.