The Parker house is of the Plantation Plain style and one-and-a-half stories tall. It is three bays wide and one room deep, with an extra travelers room adjacent to the front porch. There are two chimneys, one on each end wall. Aaron Parker Jr. was born November 12, 1788 in North Carolina to Aaron and Charity Shuffield Parker, Sr. The family moved to Clarke County, Georgia the following year, and Parker was raised there. In 1806 he married Margaret Browning, also originally from North Carolina. The couple would eventually have 14 children over 55 years of marriage. Parker purchased land and moved his family from Clarke County in the spring of 1822. Parker purchased additional plots of land in the area and built the house here around 1830. At the time the land was part of Henry County. Parker was active in the community, serving as county justice of the peace and postmaster general, but his primary occupation was farming. By 1850 he owned almost of land, as well as 15 slaves.. Parker died on January 5, 1881. His wife had died 10 years earlier. Both are buried in a cemetery in Rockdale County. His children inherited his property including of remaining land. The house and land were sold several times during the 20th century. At times the house was rented to tenants. In 1991 the property was being developed into the Southerness Golf Club, and the house was to be demolished. Community efforts prevented that, and instead the golf course incorporated the house, using the first floor as an office. A paved turn-around connected to the parking lot was built surrounding the house and the rest of the golf club's buildings were built nearby. The rear facade of the house is directly adjacent to pavement but the other sides of the house are buffered by a small yard with a low rock wall. While it was included in the golf club, several changes were made including: new wood siding, reconstruction of the rear porch, brick veneer on the chimneys, and new doors and windows. The golf course eventually closed and the Georgia Department of Natural Resources bought the property for $790,000 in 2004. Since then the state has demolished the former golf club buildings and made other changes to create a more rural landscape. The Rockdale County Historical Society partnered with the state to perform a structural assessment and restore the house, which was in a "deplorable" condition. Although it is not open to visitors generally, the park sometimes holds living history demonstrations at the house.