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NGE >> Cities and Counties >> Counties >> Butts County |
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Butts County Butts Towns and Communities The county seat, Jackson, was named after U.S. president Andrew Jackson, who had in 1818 spent a few weeks in the area before continuing on to Florida to fight the Seminoles in the First Seminole War. Much of the town, including an earlier courthouse, was burned by Sherman's troops during the Civil War (1861-65).
Other incorporated towns in the county are Flovilla and Jenkinsburg. Flovilla was incorporated in 1885, having changed its name from Indian Springs. One of Butts County's attractions, the Old Flovilla Schoolhouse (used from 1885 to 1932), is located in the town. William Ferguson Smith, newspaper editor, author, and prime mover behind the development of Butts County, came from Flovilla. Jenkinsburg, incorporated in 1889, was named after William Jenkins, whose 1881 grant of land to the Southern Railroad allowed the company to build track through the town. Pepperton started out as an African American village near a well-known field of red peppers and became a mill town. It was incorporated in 1897 but was annexed by Jackson in 1996 and is now referred to as East Jackson. Indian Springs State Park Originally
A resort hotel was built at the springs in 1823 by Chief William McIntosh, whose Creek Indian mother had married one of the early Scots settlers, Captain William McIntosh, in Georgia. The younger William McIntosh was educated in Savannah, where his father lived, and joined Andrew Jackson's forces during the War of 1812 (1812-15), gaining the rank of brigadier general. McIntosh, the Creeks' spokesman during negotiations over land distribution, signed away all Creek lands in Georgia to the U.S. government in 1825, to the distress of the Creek leaders. The agreement took place in a conference room (later called the Treaty Room) in his own hotel. The Treaty of Indian Springs, as it is now called, led to his murder three months later by angry Creeks who felt betrayed by him. Chief
Also located within the park are an Indian museum, housed in a building constructed by the Civilian Conservation Corps, and Idlewilde (also known as the Rastello House), another historic building. Idlewilde was built around 1907 on land originally purchased by Robert Grier Bryans, a great-grandson of Robert Grier. Grier, an amateur astronomer, contributed to and likely founded Grier's Almanac. The park's offices are located in a house built by Grier's sisters and later sold to Willis B. Powell, a good friend of U.S. president Franklin D. Roosevelt, who stayed there occasionally. It has been on the National Register of Historic Buildings since 1999. Economy and Employment The economy of Butts County started moving from agriculture to industry quite early, with tanneries,
In 1908 the construction of the Lloyd Shoals Dam on the Ocmulgee River was begun, leading to a steady supply of hydroelectric power in the county by 1910. This local power source resulted in the further industrialization of the county's economy. Among the large businesses brought to the area were several soft drink bottling plants and the Jackson Ice Corporation (1920). Although the area did not escape the economic hardships brought by the Great Depression in the 1930s, the wartime economy of the 1940s helped it to regain its footing, and today it retains a diversified industrial base. As with many small rural towns, Jackson's downtown has had a hard time competing with the nearby malls and chain stores.
Places and People Points of interest, in addition to Indian Springs, include the J. R. Carmichael House in Jackson and several recreational facilities: High Falls State Park; Lloyd Shoals Dam Reservoir, also called Jackson Lake;
Recurring events sponsored by the Butts County Historical Society as fundraisers for their projects include the Dogwood Festival in April, the Annual Invitational Fine Arts Festival in May, the Freedom Celebration in July, the Native American Festival in September, Civil War Days, the "Home for the Holidays" celebration, and the Scottish Festival. Notable residents of Butts County include Clarence Lemar Burpee, a railway man born in Jackson in 1894, who became a commanding officer in the 703rd Railway Grand Division of the Allies during World War II (1941-45). As assistant chief of transportation in the Military Railways Division of the European Theater of Operations in 1944-45, he achieved the rank of brigadier general and was awarded the Distinguished Service Medal and Legion of Merit. John Head, a veteran journalist and newspaper editor, was raised in Jackson. Head serves as chair of the Penn Foundation and has authored two books, We Were the Land's: The Biography of a Homeplace (1999) and Standing in the Shadows: Understanding and Overcoming Depression in Black Men (2004). His brother Fred was the first African American elected to the Butts County Commission. Suggested Reading Susan R. Boatright and Douglas C. Bachtel, eds., Georgia County Guide (Athens: Center for Agribusiness and Economic Development, University of Georgia, annual). John Head, We Were the Land's: The Biography of a Homeplace (Atlanta: Longstreet, 1999). Lois McMichael, History of Butts County Georgia, 1825-1976 (Atlanta: Cherokee, 1978). Elizabeth B. Cooksey, Savannah Updated 11/11/2011 |
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