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NGE >> Cities and Counties >> Cities and Towns >> Hartwell |
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Hartwell Hartwell is the seat of Hart County, which was named for Revolutionary War (1775-83) heroine Nancy Hart. The town narrowly escaped
The town was spared much of the direct devastation accompanying the Civil War (1861-65). And with the state's "redemption" from Reconstruction, the community returned to a political complacency that lasted until the emergence in the 1890s of a significant Populist challenge to local Democrat control. Yet the town maintained steady growth throughout, its population rising from 235 in 1860 to 1,672 by 1900. With its fortunes wedded so closely to the local cotton economy, Hartwell suffered from the invasion of the boll weevil in the 1920s
Still, the economic stimulus provided by the completion of the huge reservoir not only failed to meet expectations but also appeared to benefit the county at large more than its county seat. Visitors to the lake swelled the county's population enormously on summer weekends, but they were slow to connect to Hartwell itself. In fact, although the county's population grew by some 30 percent between 1970 and 2000, the town actually lost more than 16 percent of its residents over the same period. Hartwell
Even as the community faces common concerns about uneven growth, inadequate services, and the public school system, Hartwell enjoys a tremendous resource in the fierce pride and unwavering faith of its people in the destiny of a community that, for the last half century at least, has been known as Georgia's "Best Town by a Dam Site." Suggested Reading John William Baker, History of Hart County, 1933, 3d ed. (Fernandina Beach, Fla.: Wolfe, 2000). George M. Rooks Jr., "A History of Hartwell, Georgia, 1854-1990," in The Hart of Georgia: A History of Hart County Georgia, ed. Shirley Kaufhold (Hartwell, Ga.: Savannah River Genealogical Society, 1992). James C. Cobb, University of Georgia Published 1/19/2004 |
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