New Georgia Encyclopedia
homeindexquick factsdestinationsgalleryfeaturesabout NGEcontact
header

NGE >> Cities and Counties >> Cities and Towns >> Douglas

tanline
left menu toptop corner
the artsbusiness & industrycities & countieseducationfolklifegovernment and politicshistoryland & resourcesliteraturemediareligionscience & medicinesports & recreationtransportation search
search line
most_popular
logo
Digital Library of Georgia

Douglas

Douglas, the seat of Coffee County, is located in south Georgia 92 miles west of Brunswick and
Douglas
120 miles northwest of Jacksonville, Florida. The city is located at the intersection of U.S. 441 and 221 and Georgia 32. Its population, according to the 2000 census, is 10,639. Industries include poultry processing, manufactured housing, jet engine parts, and small engines. One of the major employers is a wholesale distribution center. The adjoining campuses of South Georgia College and East Central Technical College serve students in Coffee and surrounding counties.

The town site, the area of the confluence of Twenty Mile Creek and Seventeen Mile Creek, was occupied for thousands of years by Native Americans. Methodist revivals and baptisms were held at Twenty Mile Creek as early as the 1830s.

The town of Douglas was established in 1858 and was named for Senator Stephen A. Douglas, a powerful advocate of popular sovereignty at that time.
Douglas Streetscape, 1910
From 1854, when Coffee County was created, until the 1880s, only a white frame courthouse, a hotel, a store or two, and a few houses occupied the site in the middle of the piney woods. Petitions to move the courthouse to Pearson, a more prosperous Coffee County town and nearer to the rail line, were circulated in 1887. In 1888 Benajah Peterson, the principal property owner, joined with others to save Douglas. They built a new courthouse, new churches, new commercial buildings and residences, a new school, a sawmill, a turpentine still, and a cotton gin during the 1890s. Three railroads were built to Douglas.

Douglas was chartered as a town in 1895 and as a city in 1897. The Georgia and Florida Railroad located its offices and shops in Douglas in 1909. During the 1920s and 1930s Douglas became one of the major tobacco markets in the state. This era of the city's history is depicted in the Heritage Station Museum, located in the old Georgia and Florida Railroad depot.

The Eleventh District Agricultural College was established in Douglas in 1907. It became the first state junior college, South Georgia College, in 1927.

An airport was constructed on the campus of the junior college in 1928. It served as a landing field for the Dixie and Northern Air Line and as an aviation school for Dixie Aviation. During World War II (1941-45) the field was used as a primary pilot-training base for the army air corps. Today the airport has a 6,000-foot runway.

After the war Douglas was one of the first small cities in the nation to develop and implement an urban renewal program to abolish slum housing and its effects throughout the city.
Historical Douglas Postcard
By the 1960s poultry processing and manufactured housing were the major industries in the city. Retail sales and services and wholesale distribution centers provided jobs for Douglas area residents at the beginning of the twenty-first century.

The city has two areas listed on the National Register of Historic Places: the downtown historic district and the Gaskin Avenue historic district were created in 1989.
Ashley-Slater House
Douglas has been recognized for its excellent recreation program. It has ten public parks and offers year-round activities for all age and interest groups. General Coffee State Park lies only a few minutes to the east, and there are four golf courses in or near the city.

Suggested Reading

C. T. Trowell, Douglas before Memory: 1854-1905 (Douglas, Ga.: Douglas Historic Commission, 1995); serialized in the Douglas Enterprise, January–December 1996.

Warren P. Ward, Ward's History of Coffee County  (1930; reprint, Spartanburg, S.C.: Reprint Co., 1978).


C. T. Trowell, South Georgia College


Updated 9/30/2003

printer

Printable Version

article links

Coffee County at a Glance

external links
spacer spacer spacer spacer
   

A project of the Georgia Humanities Council, in partnership with the University of Georgia Press, the University System of Georgia/GALILEO, and the Office of the Governor.