|
|
|
![]() |
|
NGE >> Cities and Counties >> Counties >> Dodge County |
|
|
Dodge County In The original inhabitants of the area were Creek Indians, who ceded their lands in the treaties of Fort Wilkinson (1802) and Washington (1805). White settlers began arriving in the 1840s. In 1869 the president of the Macon and Brunswick Railroad named a station stop in the area for William Pitt Eastman, a northeastern industrialist with extensive Georgia land holdings. Upon visiting the
During the 1870s the Georgia Land and Lumber Company, which bought more than 300,000 acres of land rich in longleaf pine for less than ten cents an acre in 1868, began to harvest timber in the county, displacing local farmers who in many cases were evicted by the company. A series of court cases, imprisonments, and assassinations arranged by the company in collusion with the federal government followed, and although in 1923 many of the original landowners finally regained their land, it was by then nearly barren. With the help of chemical fertilizers, landowners shifted from forestry to cotton farming, but six years later, with the onset of the Great Depression, many lost the little they had acquired. The county's failing economy was further set back by boll weevil
Williamson Stuckey, a pecan farmer in Eastman, began selling his wife's pecan candies in the mid-1930s, building a large and well-known national business by the 1960s. Stuckey's business represented the beginning of the county's economic shift away from farming. Places
Eastman has two institutes of higher education: Georgia Aviation Technical College and Eastman Regional Academic Center, a satellite campus of Mercer University. According to the 2000 U.S. census, the population was 19,171 (69 percent white, 29.4 percent black, and 1.3 percent Hispanic). Suggested Reading Susan R. Boatright and Douglas C. Bachtel, eds., Georgia County Guide (Athens: Center for Agribusiness and Economic Development, University of Georgia, annual). Addie Davis Cobb, History of Dodge County (1932; reprint, Spartanburg, S.C.: Reprint Co., 1979). History of Dodge County, Georgia, 1932-1992 (Alpharetta, Ga.: W. H. Wolfe Associates, 1993). Mark V. Wetherington, The New South Comes to Wiregrass Georgia, 1860-1910 (Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press, 1994). Mary Ellen Wilson, "The Heyday of Georgia's Longleaf Pine Lumber Industry: Two Dodge County Companies in the Late Nineteenth Century," Georgia Historical Quarterly 79 (fall 1995): 685-99. Elizabeth B. Cooksey, Savannah Updated 6/19/2008 |
|
|||||||||
|
Home | What's New | Index | Quick Facts | About NGE | Help | Contact A project of the Georgia Humanities Council, in partnership with the University of Georgia Press, the University System of Georgia/GALILEO, and the Office of the Governor.
|