Guidestones redux



Connie Cannon, known here as MathAddict, has returned from her trip to the Georgia Guidestones and has provided a fascinating report of her experience. For those of you who missed the earlier post in which we  wrote about the Guidestones, these five slabs of granite rocks  – carved with script in several languages – are considered the most mysterious monument in the U.S. No one knows who created it or why.

While researching the Guidestones, we contacted Connie who used to live in Georgia just to ask if she knew about the monument. To our surprise, not only had she heard of them, but she was headed to see them in a few days, a stop en route to a wedding in northern Georgia.

She was hoping for something mysterious to happen, and she wasn’t disappointed. Here’s her story.

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The trip couldn’t have been more refreshing, especially for me.  A cold front ushered in the first autumn frost of the season a few hours after we arrived at our motel in Dillard, with low temperatures in the mid-thirties and highs in the mid-sixties.  Gorgeous clear skies every day, stars close enough to reach up and touch every night.

The Georgia Guidestones.  Oh geez.  I don’t even know if I can find words to adequately describe that experience, so will just jump in and try to put it all in sequence.

There were seven of us in two vehicles: hubby, me, our middle son Kenny, our youngest son, his wife, and our two little grandsons who are ages three and six.

Our usual route up U.S.1 takes us directly through downtown Elberton, and the Guidestones are located about nine miles north of there, on a piece of acreage near GA State Road 77. Driving along the two-lane road, we finally spotted the monument off to our right.

We drove up a slightly paved old country road, and there they were.

Topographically, the Georgia Guidestrones are erected on the highest point in that county.  They stand on a concrete base situated on a green grassy knoll that is perfectly level at its center.  The grass is obviously manicured, neatly mowed.  On three sides around the knoll, there is a hedge of shrubbery also obviously kept beautifully manicured to a height of about four feet.  The fourth side, where we parked our vehicles, is simply a small gravel area with space for about four vehicles, and the gravel has railroad ties preventing tires from touching the grass.  Outside the shrubbery hedge, and even behind the small parking area, there are open fields of tall grass, and no trees.

There was no one else there.  As I stepped out of our SUV, the first thing I noticed was that there was no sound.  No normal birdsongs, no insects chirping  or flying, (very unusual in such an environment), not even road noise.  The second thing I noticed was that, looking across the field towards 77 and across it, there were two white geodesic domes on  another knoll. I tried to visually measure the distance between the stones and the two domes, and it was approximately nine acres. (Later, when we left and got onto 77 again, I looked for a road to the domes but there was none. Weird.)

Our little boys were running wild after being in their van for three hundred miles, but there was nothing there to hurt them or that they could hurt, so we allowed them to play.  I stood by our vehicle for several minutes, just observing what my eyes could take in and waiting to see if I  sensed or felt anything unusual besides the utter stillness of the place.

To the right of the Stones perhaps twelve feet from the edge of the monument, there is a plaque, probably twelve feet by twelve feet square, flat on the ground. According to the inscription, underneath this marker is buried a time capsule.  No date is written on the plaque for digging out and opening up the capsule. Nor is there any kind of clue what might be inside it. It seems the only person who knows is (was) ‘R.C. Christian,’ the mysterious man who ordered the monument built and promptly disappeared, and the local businessman/granite company owner, who is deceased.   On the other side of the monolith is a tilted  pedestal holding a large plaque upon which is engraved the history of the Guidestones.

As an aside, the bible-belt evangelical graffiti, mentioned in the earlier post, has been removed.  We were told by a black gas station attendant that every time graffiti appears on the Stones, it is somehow erased.  The city has even put cameras at each corner around the knoll, but the cameras have never been able to capture who erases the graffiti. Yet they catch the people who put it there and are able to locate them.  The mysterious “erasers?” They simply have no idea, and the townsfolk seem to be afraid to go there now in spite of the fact that no one has ever been harmed or threatened at the site.

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In tomorrow’s post, Connie takes us up-close to the Guidestones, which seem to literally come alive with energy. Then, before she leaves, she encounters a man who has a startling affect on her, and who even seems to affect the photos that her son is taking. You’ll see a dramatic difference in the appearance of the Guidestones in the photo accompanying the post.

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11 Responses to Guidestones redux

  1. Natalie says:

    Wow, what a post! I am intrigued…oh yes I am. 🙂

  2. mathaddict3322 says:

    Nicholas, what a small world! We lived “in the shadow of Stone Mountain”, near Snellville, past Oxford College out on highway 81!!!! You’ll have no problem getting to the Guidestones from there. Go to Lavonia, on to Roylston, and then the next town is Elberton! I-20 or 78 will be your best route heading northeast out of Stone Mountain. ENJOY!! Take a camera!

  3. Nancy says:

    This is so exciting. I was intrigued the moment I found those things on another site. I can’t wait to hear more.

  4. I didn’t learn about these guidestones until after my trip to Georgia in 2006 and I am looking forward to more of this story.

  5. mathaddict3322 says:

    Nicholas, I just checked for you. from mid-town Atlanta (Fulton County) and I doubt that’s where your parents live, it is 90 miles to Elberton. Then add nine more miles north on 77 to the Guidestones, and of course factor in whether you are north or south of Fulton County. So you can plan on approximately 100 miles or so, one way or the other depending on your Atlanta location! And btw, the drive there is spectacular through all those very old gorgeous little towns, and Amish farms!

    • My parents live in Stone Mountain. I should’ve been more specific than “Atlanta”! Can’t wait to hear more about your experience, there. I’m very intrigued when you claim to feel really “different” after having gone there. Tomorrow’s post can’t come soon enough!

  6. mathaddict3322 says:

    Nicholas, I don’t know what part of Atlanta you may be departing to go northeast to reach Elberton. My suggestion would be to get a good roadmap and determine where you are in Atlanta as a means of creating a plan to reach Elberton. You can get there via Athens; depending upon your starting point and which country road you wish to follow. I just don’t know if you’ll need to take I-285 or I-85 or I-20. I’m not sure of the mileage from Atlanta….as you know, Big A is enormous so it depends upon where you are located. We lived in the country where Rockdale and Newton counties came together, so from that area, the mountains weren’t much of a stretch. If you’re south of Atlanta, it will of course be farther. I think you can find directions from Atlanta if you google The Georgia Guidestones. You can also pull up a city-to-city mileage site on google and put in Atlanta to Elberton and get the mileage, then add the nine miles out highway 77 to the Stones. But believe me, wherever you parents live, the destination will be worth your time and the trip. You won’t regret it!

  7. I’m going home to Atlanta for a week between Christmas and New Year’s. How far from Atlanta is this thing? I may want to check it out for myself! I’m intrigued.

    Oh, and I hate having to wait one more day to read the rest of the story! You guys!!! 🙂

  8. mathaddict3322 says:

    Thanks, Guys, for the post! I just want to make a couple of significant comments. I’ve spent the better part of my adult life, in excess of four decades, researching psychic phenomena in my efforts to prove or disprove my perceptions as a medium. This research has incorporated the uses of cameras, tape recorders, and other electrical and mechanical devices. It has been an absolute, unwavering requirement of mine to be as accurate as possible in these endeavors, with no trickery. I make it a habit to always study and be cognizant of any and all surroundings and environmental circumstances and factors that might affect photographs or tapings, etc….such things as lights and shadows, radios or TVs at a distance, other sounds that are barely discernible that a recorder might pick up. Because of this diligence towards being authentic, I asked my son to please make sure the camera he used at the Guidestones had no automatic adjusting mechanisms, that he not change lens, that he simply point and shoot. That is what he did.

    My reason for this extreme caution is simple. We want to learn. And how would we learn, if we cheat? If we use special means to create something that isn’t really there? So, bottom line, there was no photographic
    explanation, and no environmental explanation, for what occurred at the Guidestones, which you will see tomorrow. The other comment I want to make is that a year ago, when we began to plan to go to the wedding and make the stop at the Stones, I began to HOPE something intriguing might happen. So did the incidents happen because I wanted them to happen, or would they have happened regardless of my hopes and expectations? I’ll never know. But the incidents have caused some kind of positive shift within me that I cannot yet define. I’m “different”. And I’m trying to wrap my mind around the shift and compartmentalize it within my scope of understanding. It’s baffling, yet definitely wonderful.

  9. Melissa says:

    Interesting! I’m hoping to make a trip to this site next time I am in Georgia visiting an old high school friend (and college roomie).

  10. gypsy says:

    oh, what a tease this post is, you two!!! 😉
    very intriguing this whole story – now, for part two! and of course, next road trip i take, there has to be a change of route or detour to visit this magical mystical site myself!

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