This image was not cropped, adjusted, or worked in PS at all.
It was only re-sized for the preservation of space on the site.
A stunningly beautiful scene needs no help.
This old church was built in 1832, and has undergone continuous renovations over the years. The brick was made by hand (slave labor, of course, at the time) and the wood members are heart walnut. It is the only one of the structures in this small town to survive a tornado in 1900.
The church was abused and disrespected during Union occupation during the Civil War. Probably because some of the occupying forces came from those of General William Sherman, who instructed his armies to pour salt in the rich fields of Georgia, preventing their use for 20 years. The altar and pews of this church were dismantled and used for the coffins of Union soldiers, even with the huge trees in the virgin forests of the Wolf River, which runs just below the town.