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NGE >> Cities and Counties >> Counties >> Bartow County |
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Bartow County
Before white settlement,
Attracted by abundant natural resources and the promise of gold, white settlers acquired land through the
The Western and Atlantic Railroad (W&A), which paralleled present-day Interstate 75 from Atlanta to Chattanooga, Tennessee, played a significant role in the early development of the county. During the Civil War, the W&A was the Confederacy's main corridor through northwest Georgia and was of some strategic value during Union general William T. Sherman's campaign for Atlanta. One of the shortest and bloodiest battles of the war was waged at the deep cut of the railroad at Allatoona Pass. The W&A also figured prominently in the Great Locomotive Chase (also known as the Andrews Raid), which ran through Bartow County. The Civil War brought numerous skirmishes to the county, particularly in the areas of Kingston and Cassville, where the Kingston Confederate Cemetery and the Cassville Confederate Cemetery were established. In 1865 the last remnant of the Confederate army east of the Mississippi was paroled at Kingston. A huge iron belt that runs north to south, almost through the entire eastern length of the county,
Other major industries include Shaw Industries and Anheuser-Busch. Bartow County also serves as the corporate headquarters for Phoenix Air. Until the mid-1970s cotton remained the main crop in this largely agricultural county. Bartow County is home to Red Top Mountain State Park and Lake Allatoona, which occupy a large portion of the southeast corner of the county. The first African American state park, George Washington Carver, was located in Bartow; it became part of Red Top park in 1975. Historical attractions include nineteen National Register listings, among them Adairsville Historic District, Etowah Valley District, and the North Erwin Street and North Wall Street Historic Districts in Cartersville.
Notable people from Bartow County include the evangelist Sam Jones, humorist Bill Arp, novelists Corra Harris and Francis Goulding, Baptist missionary Lottie Moon, iron pioneers Jacob Stroup and Moses Stroup, iron industrialist Mark Cooper, major league baseball player Rudy York, Hall of
According to the 2000 U.S. census, the population of Bartow County was 76,019 (87.8 percent white, 8.7 percent black, and 3.3 percent Hispanic). As the metropolitan Atlanta area expands, Bartow County's continued growth is assured. Suggested Reading Lucy J. Cunyus, History of Bartow County, Formerly Cass (1933; reprint, Greenville, S.C.: Southern Historical Press, 1994). Joseph Mahan, A History of Old Cassville, 1833-1864 (Cartersville, Ga.: Etowah Valley Historical Society, 1994). One Hundred Fifty Years of Cartersville, 1850-2000 (Cartersville, Ga.: Cartersville Magazine, 2000). Chantal Parker, Cartersville Updated 7/1/2009 |
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