Welcome to Macon! Here you will find information on the great City of Macon. Use this information to help you determine what location will be the best fit for your next convention, meeting, or trade show.

City of Macon

Macon Conventions, Trade Shows, Conferences and Meetings
Finding Conventions in Macon can be quite time consuming. At Conventions.net, we provide you with an easy to use, efficient means of searching for event planning resources for trade shows, conferences, meetings, and conventions all in a manner of seconds. You have the opportunity to choose from a vast selection of convention centers and meeting facilities in Macon. We developed Conventions.net to make the search for event planning resources easier than ever.

Locating Convention Centers and Trade Shows in Macon
At one time the most efficient way to locate Convention and Trade Show planning resources in Macon was to call company after company simply based on their yellow page ad. Now, when you use Conventions.net you can find meeting planning resources in Macon that meet your specific needs. Not only is this a convenient way to quickly locate convention and conference planning resources, but it is also an excellent resource to find industry suppliers such as hotels, resorts, event speakers, convention centers, and convention visitor bureaus.

We are affiliated with both large nationwide trade show planning companies as well as smaller local convention industry suppliers, which offer trade show and convention planning resources in Macon. So, if you are looking to plan a meeting, convention, or trade show in Macon you have nothing to lose, and only time and money to gain by letting Conventions.net help you fill your event planning needs.

MACON , eighty miles southeast of Atlanta on I-75, where I-16 branches off to the coast, makes an attractive stop en route to Savannah, especially when its 200,000 cherry trees erupt with frothy blossoms (celebrated by a festival in the third week of March). As the highest navigable point on the Ocmulgee River , Macon was laid out in 1823 and became a major cotton port. Downtown is no longer the commercial center it once was, particularly following the arrival of the huge Macon Mall near the intersection of the two freeways, but there are signs, everywhere, of an imminent urban renaissance.

Chief among these is the excellent Georgia Sports Hall of Fame at 301 Cherry St (MonSat 9am5pm, Sun 15pm; $6; tel 478/752-1585), a handsome, state-of-the-art facility where you'll find an interactive Paralympics exhibit alongside a celebration of the long-standing football rivalry between the University of Georgia and Georgia Tech. Close by, at 355 Martin Luther King Blvd, is the restored Douglass Theatre (open for tours MonSat 9am6pm; donations; tel 478/742-2000), Macon's premier movie theatre and vaudeville hall for African Americans during the Thirties and Forties, hosting such blues greats as Ma Rainey, Ida Cox and Bessie Smith.

Macon was home to Little Richard, Otis Redding and the Allman Brothers . Duane Allman and Berry Oakley, killed here in motorcycle smashes in 1971 and 1972 respectively, are buried in Rose Hill Cemetery on Riverside Drive, the inspiration for various of the band's songs. That heritage is celebrated in the exuberant Georgia Music Hall of Fame , next door to the visitor center at Martin Luther King Jr Boulevard and Walnut Street (MonSat 9am5pm, Sun 15pm; $8; tel 478/750-8555). A huge roster of Georgian musicians are recalled by themed interactive displays that include a Gospel chapel, a rock'n'roll soda shop and a country caf. As well as admiring Redding's trademark black sweater and the B-52s' wigs, you can watch footage of Ray Charles singing Georgia on My Mind to the state legislature, inspect a photo of James Brown confiding to the pope, and listen to seventy years' worth of jukebox recordings.

One of the best of its kind anywhere, the celebratory Tubman African-American Museum , 340 Walnut St (MonSat 9am5pm, Sun 25pm; $3), has a wonderful, eclectic collection, from African drums and textiles which schoolchildren are encouraged to handle and play with through intricate quilts, to angry, dazzling avant-garde work. There's a reading area, filled with studies books, autobiographies and photograph collections, in a quiet room. Note that the museum expects to move to larger premises sometime in 2003. A few minutes north of town at 4182 Forsyth Rd, the Museum of Arts and Sciences (MonThurs & Sat 9am5pm, Fri 9am9pm, Sun 15pm; $7) is a creative ensemble of interactive exhibits geared toward kids and an indoor "natural habitat" complete with a treehouse from where you can observe animals such as antelope, leopards and deer