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Other Points of Interest

Other Points of Interest in Polk County, Georgia

Winn’s Lake Lodge

Location

3200 Rockmart Road
Rockmart, GA, 30153
(770) 646-9900


Winn’s Lake Lodge


This beautiful lake lodge hosts corporate events, houses 19 bedrooms and sleeps approximately 40 people. Amenities include: 1 Jacuzzi, all business needs, an exercise room, 3 meeting rooms (up to 90 people comfortably), pets upon request, a 100-acre lake, 3 boat and fishing docks, canoes, pontoon, bass and paddle boats, 18-hole putting green, outdoor fireplace, and patio and decks.

http://www.winnslakelodge.com

Moore's Soda Fountain

Location

402 Main Street
Cedartown, GA, 30125
(770) 748-9682


Moore's Soda Fountain


An old-fashioned soda fountain and restaurant, serving home cooked food with a pleasant old-fashioned atmosphere.

Hightower Falls

Location

771 Hightower Falls Road
Cedartown, GA, 30125
(770) 748-8588


Hightower Falls

Enjoy the breathtaking view from atop the 80-foot cascading Hightower Falls or enjoy a private wedding ceremony from the bottom. Walk through the 1850 tone gristmill ruins or picnic beside a mountain stream. Hightower Falls is a private group facility that is available for special events with overnight lodging available.

http://www.hightowerfalls.com

The Cedartown Welcome Center at The Depot

Location

609 S. Main Street
Cedartown, GA, 30125
(770) 748-2090


The Cedartown Welcome Center at The Depot


The Cedartown Depot was created as a replica of Cedartown's long-demolished Seaboard Air Line Railway depot. It was constructed to serve as the home of various offices, as well as the Downtown Cedartown Association and the Chamber of Commerce Satellite Service Center. With the Silver Comet Trail passing next to it, The Depot also houses The Cedartown Welcome Center.

The Big Spring

Location

301 Wissahickon Ave.
Cedartown, GA, 30125


The Big Spring


The second largest limestone spring in the South, this spring produces an average of 4 million gallons of water per day and provides water to 10,000 people in NW Georgia. It also was the site of a ball field and ceremonial dance ground of the Cherokee Indian natives until the early 1800s. According to legend, rights to the main water source, The Big Spring, were won by the Cherokee who challenged the Creek in a peaceful ballgame.

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