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NGE >> Cities and Counties >> Cities and Towns >> Lincolnton |
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Lincolnton Lincolnton,
When Lincoln County was created from Wilkes County in 1796, the legislative act provided that county commissioners
In the fall of 1917 downtown Lincolnton, which consisted primarily of wooden structures, was largely destroyed by fire. Rebuilding began in 1918. The current county courthouse in Lincolnton dates from 1915 and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Also on the register is the Lamar-Blanchard House (1823), built by Peter Lamar, the "king of Lincoln," and now home to the Lincoln County Chamber of Commerce, Welcome Center, and Development Authority. Another
In October 1965, during the height of the civil rights movement, leaders of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference organized a voting rights march in Lincolnton, and some of the marchers were attacked and beaten. Lincolnton has a hometown bank, a weekly newspaper, and a public library and participates in the Better Hometown Program, operated by the Georgia Department of Community Affairs. This community-development program is a public-private partnership intended to stimulate the downtown revitalization of small communities with populations between 1,000 and 5,000. The town is home to the Lewis Family, a southern gospel group. Suggested Reading Robert S. Davis Jr. and James E. Dorsey, Lincoln County Genealogy and History (Swainsboro, Ga.: Magnolia Press, 1987). Clinton J. Perryman, History of Lincoln County, Georgia (1933; reprint, Tignall, Ga.: Boyd Publishing Co., 1985). Russell K. Brown, Grovetown Updated 12/19/2011 |
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