History
A Dwelling in the Wilderness
In 1963, the Board of Directors located the property in Douglasville and the current facility was built. Pat Hicks, Bill Long, Roger McKenzie Sr. and Alvis Miller walked the property and decided that they wanted it for the camp. They wrote a makeshift contract on a brown paper sack that they found in order to hold the property until they could get a lawyer to write a formal contract. Local congregations each volunteered to build one of the ten cabins and the bathhouses and the creek was dammed to build the lake. The camp was named "Inagehi," which means "dwelling in the wilderness."
A Start...
A Dwelling in the Wilderness
The Lowest Point
Inagehi's Enduring Legacy
