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NGE >> Cities and Counties >> Counties >> Fayette County |
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Fayette County Fayette County is one of five counties created in 1821. It is home to the only preplanned community in the Southeast, a 16,000-acre community called Peachtree City, which was chartered in 1959. Part of the Atlanta metropolitan area, it has experienced significant population growth since the 1970s. Early History Following White settlers began to move into the area in 1822. The state of Georgia decreed that all counties had to create a county seat equidistant to all other towns in the county. At that time, Fayette County reached northwest into what is now Atlanta, east past the courthouse in Clayton County, and south into part of Spalding County. Fayetteville, also named for the marquis, met the state's requirement and was chosen as the county seat. In addition to Fayetteville, other incorporated cities are Brooks, Peachtree City, Tyrone, and Woolsey. From
According to the 2010 U.S. census, the population is 106,567, an increase from the 2000 population of 91,263. Economy and Infrastructure Cotton was the predominant agricultural crop in the county during the nineteenth century. Fayetteville emerged as the only area with significant commercial activity, until about 1920. During the twentieth century, soybean farming overtook cotton as the major crop. Nine voting districts were laid out in 1821, and legally those nine are still in place; the increase in population has necessitated dissecting them into thirty-six voting precincts. One of the top-rated educational systems in the state, the school system in Fayette County has five public high schools, five middle schools, and seventeen elementary schools. In Peachtree City there is a "Foreign Trade Zone," where the main industries in the county are located. This trade zone allows overseas companies establishing themselves to secure cost advantages not generally available internationally—in particular the management of duty and tariff costs. People and Places The
The Holliday-Dorsey-Fife House, built in 1855 by John Stiles Holliday, uncle of the famous gambler John Henry "Doc" Holliday, is located near the Old Courthouse Square. The house contains a number of items pertaining to Fayette County history, as well as a display of Civil War items. A log cabin, constructed in the 1930s as a project of the Works Progress Administration and
Currently there are more than 100 churches in the county; five of them were constituted in the nineteenth century and are still viable congregations: Antioch Baptist, Fayetteville First Baptist, Fayetteville First United Methodist, Flat Creek Baptist, and Whitewater Baptist. Phillip Fitzgerald, the great-grandfather of writer Margaret Mitchell, settled in Fayette County in the late 1820s and opened some of the first businesses in Fayetteville. Other prominent nineteenth-century citizens of the county include Matthew Yates, who hybridized the Yates apple, and Talula Gilbert Bottoms, a well-known southern quilter. Former governor Hugh M. Dorsey, folk artist Nellie Mae Rowe, and Charles D. Redwine, a state senator instrumental in establishing compulsory public education in the state, were notable twentieth-century residents. Ferrol Sams, a prominent physician and author, and his wife, Helen, also a physician, began practicing medicine in the county in the early 1950s. Suggested Reading Carolyn C. Cary, ed., The History of Fayette County, 1821-1971 (Fayetteville, Ga.: Fayette County Historical Society, 1977). Carolyn Cary, Fayetteville Updated 11/22/2011 |
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