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NGE >> Cities and Counties >> Counties >> Lumpkin County |
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Lumpkin County Lumpkin County was established by the state legislature in 1832 and named after Georgia governor Wilson Lumpkin, who also served as a U.S. congressman With
Lumpkin County is steeped in history. The U.S. Army Ranger Mountain Training Center is located at Camp Frank D. Merrill.
Lumpkin County covers an area of 284 square miles. According to the 2000 U.S. census, the population was 21,016 (94 percent white, 1.5 percent black, and 3.5 percent Hispanic), a 44 percent
Dahlonega has an active parks and recreation program with excellent facilities, as well as a new jail. Lumpkin County High School was initially opened in fall 2003, as was a new elementary school. The county's economic base rests on the service industry, tourism, wine-making industry, and poultry farming. Its proximity to Atlanta (about sixty miles) allows residents to enjoy international cultural and recreational opportunities while living in a semirural, less hectic environment. Suggested Reading Andrew W. Cain, History of Lumpkin County for the First Hundred Years, 1832-1932 (1932; reprint, Spartanburg, S.C.: Reprint Co., 1978). "I Remember Dahlonega": Memories of Growing Up in Lumpkin County, as told to Anne Dismukes Amerson, vol. 1 (Alpharetta, Ga.: Legacy Communications, 1990), and vol. 2 (Dahlonega, Ga.: Chestatee Publications, 1992). Lumpkin County Heritage Book Committee, Heritage of Lumpkin County, Georgia, 1832-1996 (Waynesville, N.C.: Don Mills, 1996). Marilyn Lary, North Georgia College and State University Updated 2/1/2008 |
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