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NGE >> Cities and Counties >> Counties >> Clay County |
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Clay County Clay County, in southwest Georgia, was once on the western frontier of the United States. Named for Senator Henry Clay of
Kentucky, A legend endures concerning General John Dill, one of the prominent leaders during the Creek Indian wars.
Until the development of the railroad in the 1850s, Fort Gaines was a hub of commerce and river traffic for merchants in Georgia and Alabama. It was known as the "Queen City of the Chattahoochee."
The Fort Gaines area is home to an unusually rich variety of plant life. Plant species such as Carolina rhododendron, found mainly in the north Georgia mountains, mix with Florida's maidenhair fern. Around the bluff area are many endangered plant species, including Trillium reliquum, the rarest of the sessile-flowered species of trillium known in the world. In 1979 the Fort Gaines Natural Phenomena Authority was formed, in part to establish and promote these natural assets. Frontier Village in Fort Gaines is an unusual collection of log structures moved from locations throughout the county.
According to the 2010 U.S. census, Clay County's population is 3,183, a decrease from the 2000 population of 3,357. Suggested Reading James Edgar Coleman, The Bluff at Fort Gaines, Georgia ([Fort Gaines, Ga.]: privately printed, 1998). James Edgar Coleman, God's Unfinished Land: Events Affecting Pioneer South Georgia ([Fort Gaines, Ga.]: privately printed, 2000). The History of Clay County ([Fort Gaines, Ga.: Clay County Library Board?], 1976). Jean O. Turn, Clay County Library Updated 11/15/2011 |
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