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NGE >> Cities and Counties >> Counties >> Stewart County |
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Stewart County Stewart County, created by the state legislature in 1830, was named for Daniel Stewart, an Indian fighter, Revolutionary War (1775-83) veteran, and the great-grandfather of U.S. president Theodore Roosevelt. Rich Early History Thousands of years ago Native Americans recognized the many strategic advantages of the land known
Located along the fall line, Stewart County's entire western border is composed of the Chattahoochee River and the Alabama state line. Only about twenty miles downriver from Columbus (the northerly point of large-craft navigation), Stewart County traditionally provided a link between the Piedmont region of Georgia and the Gulf of Mexico. The first Europeans in present-day Stewart County were the Spanish, who moved through the area about 1639. However, legal settlement began with the state's fifth land lottery, held in 1827, when Lee County became one of five new west Georgia counties. In 1828 the state sectioned off the western part of Lee to create Randolph County, which in turn was divided on December 23, 1830, to
The treaty that wrested west Georgia from Native Americans ended in conflict. By 1836 the remaining Creek Indians began ambushing homes and communities in desperation. The settlers called on Governor William Schley for protection. Schley sent state militia volunteers from Gwinnett County to establish three local forts—Ingersoll, Jones, and McCreary. On May 15, 1836, the river settlement of Roanoke was burned by a reported 300 Indians. On June 9 the Battle of Shepherd's Plantation marked an end to skirmishes in the county and, essentially, in the state. A Brief Prosperity The county population exploded from 1836 to 1850. Settlers poured in, mainly from other fall line counties, especially Jones, Washington, and Wilkes. Stewart soon became one of Georgia's top-three
By the 1850s, however, signs of decline began to manifest. Rail construction—connecting Savannah to west Georgia's cotton producers—passed north and south of the county but not through it. It would be 1885 before a rail finally entered Stewart, leading to the incorporation of Richland in 1889. Additionally, the European-influenced farming practices of the time led to devastating soil erosion in Stewart County. Underlying soil structures in the area yielded multiple gullies in place of the once-fertile crop fields. As the soil washed away, so too did Stewart County's economic strength. Stewart County lost population in every decade of the twentieth century. A New Hope Just as they had overproduced cotton, farmers—including those in Stewart County—also overproduced peanuts, a crop that the government began promoting during World War I (1917-18). By the mid-twentieth century, professionally managed forests
In light of this dramatic change from row crops to trees, some of Stewart County's citizens realized that a new industry needed to be developed. (Forestry allowed for more free time, as it was not as labor intensive as agriculture.) A group formed in 1965 to restore a derelict stagecoach hotel, and the restoration of the 1836 Bedingfield Inn, on Lumpkin's courthouse square, became the first small-town community preservation project in Georgia. The citizens hoped to attract tourists to the county, marking the beginning of heritage tourism in rural Georgia. The early success of the inn restoration caused the same group to establish a living-history museum based on the collections of John Word West at Jonesboro. Westville is a simulated village of 1850, comprising actual historic buildings of Georgia. As of 2006 Westville served thousands of families and more than 20,000 school children each year. Other historic and natural attractions followed the example of Westville. Providence Canyon was designated a state park in 1971. Providence is actually a series of erosion gullies on 1,003 acres of land,
Florence Marina State Park subsequently opened in 1986. The park provides a gateway to the Chattahoochee River and its many recreational possibilities. The Kirbo Educational Center at the park offers information on both the Native Americans of the area as well as the once-prosperous town of Florence, burned in the Creek wars of 1836. About 800 acres of the Eufaula National Wildlife Refuge are located along the Chattahoochee's eastern shores in Stewart County. The Hannahatchee Wildlife Management Area, in the northern part of the county, gives hunters a 5,600-acre site to enjoy. The Towns The
Richland, as old as Lumpkin, became the larger city with the coming of the railroad. Richland's relation to geography and rail is striking. The city sits atop the watershed between the Chattahoochee and Flint rivers. Rails, once connecting Americus to Montgomery, Alabama, and Columbus to Tallahassee, Florida, cross at Richland. Tourists can enjoy the many late Victorian and early-twentieth-century homes there. Omaha, nestled in the northwest corner of the county near the juncture of the Chattahoochee River and Hannahatchee Creek, seems hidden from the current century. Founded in the 1890s, when the railroad arrived, Omaha is mentioned in James Joyce's 1922 novel, Ulysses, as the fictional scene of mob racial violence. Another community within Stewart County is Louvale. Best known for its "Church Row," Louvale's Primitive Baptist, Methodist, and Baptist churches form a religious courtyard of sorts, with a community center
Dozens of other communities have disappeared, or nearly so. One that still survives is Green Grove, an African American community formed in the wake of the Civil War (1861-65). A Baptist congregation, established in 1886, continues to meet today. From 1937 to 1958 Green Grove Missionary Baptist Church operated a school for the community until the county board of education built a new brick facility for black children in Lumpkin. Prominent Citizens Prominent Stewart County natives and residents have included Clement Evans, a Confederate general, Methodist minister, and historian; political leader and Confederate general Robert Toombs, who owned a plantation on the Chattahoochee River; Sidney Root, a businessman, Confederate military advisor, and aspiring architect; architect John Wellborn Root; and Lillian Gordy Carter, mother of U.S. president Jimmy Carter. Suggested Reading Susan R. Boatright and Douglas C. Bachtel, eds., Georgia County Guide (Athens: Center for Agribusiness and Economic Development, University of Georgia, annual). Helen Elisa Terrill, History of Stewart County, Georgia, ed. Sara Robertson Dixon (Columbus, Ga.: Columbus Office Supply, 1958). Helen Terrill and Sara Dixon, History of Stewart County, Georgia, vol. 1 (Fernandina Beach, Fla.: Wolfe, 1998). William W. Winn, The Magic and Mystery of Westville (Lumpkin, Ga.: Westville Historic Handicrafts, 1999). Matthew M. Moye, Lumpkin Updated 12/12/2011 |
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