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Digital Library of Georgia

Fulton County

Fulton County, the heart of the Atlanta metropolitan area, is located in the Georgia Piedmont near the foothills of the Blue Ridge Mountains. Fulton County at a Glance The Chattahoochee River forms its diagonal border, from the northeast to the southwest. The history of Fulton County is to a great extent the history of Georgia and its county seat, Atlanta (most of which lies in Fulton County, with the balance in DeKalb County). About 93 percent of the city of Atlanta's population resides in Fulton.

The earliest inhabitants were the Cherokee Indians, who lived in the area that later became north Fulton County, and the Creek Indians, who ceded their land to Georgia in 1821. By 1822 white settlers from counties to the east of Fulton and from neighboring states began moving into the area. Most were of English, Scottish, and Irish heritage, with a few Moravians and Jews. Fulton County was created from the western half of DeKalb County on December 20, 1853, by an act of the state legislature.

Fulton County is commonly thought to have been named after Robert Fulton, who demonstrated the importance
Courtesy of Edwin Jackson, Carl Vinson Institute of Government, University of Georgia
Fulton County Courthouse
of steam power for water transportation by sailing the steamboat Clermont from New York City to Albany, New York, in 1807. Recent research indicates, however, that the county was named for Hamilton Fulton, a railroad official who acted as surveyor for the Western and Atlantic Railroad and also as chief engineer of the state. After surveying the area, Fulton convinced state officials that a railroad, rather than a canal, should be constructed to connect Milledgeville, then the state capital, to Chattanooga, Tennessee. This event was a precursor of Fulton County's prominence as a major transportation center.

During
Photograph by George N. Barnard. Courtesy of Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division
Atlanta Depot
the Civil War (1861-65), Atlanta was a major arsenal, and Atlanta's railroads were used to move supplies and munitions to the Confederate armies. During the Atlanta Campaign, Union general William T. Sherman sacked the city in 1864 because of its strategic importance. Atlanta recovered quickly and became the permanent state capital in 1868.

On January 1, 1932, Fulton County nearly tripled in size, to 528 square miles, when Campbell and Milton counties were added to Fulton. The consolidation was, in part, to help reduce the expense of running three county governments.

The twentieth century has seen Atlanta, and by extension Fulton County, become the leading distribution center for goods and services in the southeastern United States.
Courtesy of Georgia Tech Communications
Olympic Village
It is also a major financial and telecommunications hub. Several prominent corporations, such as BellSouth (later AT&T), Coca-Cola, Georgia-Pacific, United Parcel Service, the Home Depot, and Delta Air Lines, are based in the county. In 1980 Atlanta businessman Ted Turner, owner of Turner Broadcasting System, decided to establish CNN, the first around-the-clock news service in the world, in his home city. Atlanta gained further international attention when it hosted the 1996 Olympic Games, and many of the events were held in the surrounding counties.

According to the 2000 U.S. census, Fulton had the largest population of any county in Georgia, with 816,006 inhabitants (48.1 percent white, 44.6 percent black, and 5.9 percent Hispanic), approximately 10 percent of the state's population. North Fulton County, or the "golden corridor," was once an agricultural area. It is known today for its economic vitality and upscale living in the incorporated cities of Alpharetta, Mountain Park, Roswell, and Sandy Springs. In July 2006 two new cities, Johns Creek and Milton, were incorporated in north Fulton County. Incorporated cities in south Fulton County include College Park, East Point, Fairburn, Hapeville, Palmetto, and Union City. In 2007 south Fulton residents voted to create a new city, Chattahoochee Hill Country.

Major employers in the county include Cox Enterprises, Delta Air Lines, Georgia Institute of Technology, and Georgia State University.

Notable individuals from Fulton County include the civil rights leader and Nobel Prize winner Martin Luther King Jr.; Margaret Mitchell, author of Gone With the Wind; golfer Bobby Jones; and CNN founder Ted Turner.

Fulton County is home to several institutions of higher education, including Georgia Institute of Technology, Georgia State University,
Photograph by Melinda G. Smith, New Georgia Encyclopedia
Former World of Coca-Cola Museum
and Atlanta University Center.

Places of interest include the state capitol, the Governor's Mansion, the High Museum of Art, the Atlanta History Center, the Jimmy Carter Library and Museum, the World of Coca-Cola Museum, Zoo Atlanta, Wren's Nest (home of "Uncle Remus"), and Bulloch Hall, home of Mittie Bulloch, mother of U.S. president Theodore Roosevelt.

Suggested Reading

Kenneth Coleman, gen. ed., A History of Georgia, 2d ed. (Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1991).

Walter G. Cooper, Official History of Fulton County (1934; reprint, Spartanburg, S.C.: Reprint Co., 1978).


Cathy Carpenter, Georgia Institute of Technology


Updated 8/13/2009

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New Hope School
Sardis Methodist Church
Fort Peach Tree Replica


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