Columbus named a top Memorial Day weekend destination by Southern Living

The National Infantry Museum and Soldier Center opened in 2009 with one guiding mission: to honor the legacy and valor of the U.S. Army Infantryman. The museum is located at Fort Moore (previously Fort Benning) in Columbus, Georgia. (photo courtesy NIM Facebook)

The secret’s out, Columbus. Southern Living Magazine included Columbus, Georgia, in this year’s top 20 places to visit for Memorial Day.

The magazine listed three great places to visit while in Columbus: Chattahoochee Riverwalk’s 15 miles of walking and biking paths, the National Infantry Museum to try out combat simulators and a film at the Giant Screen Theater, and Mabella for a plate of spaghetti.

The National Infantry Museum includes an exhibit on POWs. One of the featured stories is that of Col. Ben Purcell of Clarkesville, Georgia. (photo by Lori Gary)

Columbus narrowly missed the top 10, coming in 11th place behind Panama City, Florida; Savannah, Georgia; and Corpus Christi, Texas. Ocean City, Maryland, eked into the top Southern city to visit.

Columbus beat out places like New Orleans, Louisiana: Hilton Head Island, South Carolina; and Naples, Florida.

If you’re looking for someplace fun to spend the holiday, many destinations on the list are within a few hour’s drive from Middle Georgia.

Here are Southern Living Magazine’s Top 20 Memorial Day weekend destinations in the South:

  1. Ocean City, Maryland
  2. Arlington, Virginia
  3. Saint Augustine, Florida
  4. Pigeon Forge, Tennessee
  5. Galveston, Texas
  6. Asheville, North Carolina
  7. Savannah, Georgia
  8. Jacksonville, Florida
  9. Corpus Christi, Texas
  10. Panama City, Florida
  11. Columbus, Georgia
  12. Hilton Head Island, South Carolina
  13. Wilmington, North Carolina
  14. Naples, Florida
  15. Biloxi, Mississippi
  16. New Braunfels, Texas
  17. Annapolis, Maryland
  18. Charleston, South Carolina
  19. New Orleans, Louisiana
  20. Charlottesville, Virginia

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This article comes to Now Habersham courtesy of the Columbus Ledger-Enquirer