Schley County is a small, rural county in central Georgia, created in 1857 and named for General William Schley. The county seat is Ellaville. The terrain is flat to gently rolling farmland and forest, and the county character is strongly rural with low population density and small-town centres. Housing types include older modest homes in town, farmhouses, homes on acreage, and building parcels in the countryside. Because of low development pressure, homes tend to be quite affordable compared with suburban counties: existing homes might commonly fall in the US $120,000-$220,000 range depending on condition and lot size; building new homes on land may cost US $200,000-$300,000+ depending on lot size and finish. The trade-off: fewer amenities and longer drive to larger job markets; the upside: land, value and rural living.