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NGE >> Cities and Counties >> Counties >> Chattooga County |
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Chattooga County Chattooga County, The county was originally inhabited by Creek Indians and then Cherokees; the first white men in the area were fur traders, hunters, and traveling missionaries, followed by Revolutionary War (1775-83) soldiers. The whites lived in fairly peaceful coexistence with the Indian population until 1829, when gold was discovered in north Georgia. In one of the saddest chapters in America's history, the newcomers, backed by federal and state authorities, used force to dispossess the Cherokees of their land and then distribute it to white settlers in the 1832 Cherokee land lottery. Chattooga's Cities There are four incorporated cities in the county: Lyerly, Menlo, Summerville (the county seat), and Trion.
Lyerly was incorporated in 1891 and named after Tennessee bank president Charles Abner Lyerly, who had invested in real estate in the county. Lyerly was the first town in northwest Georgia to ship poultry to markets in other states. Menlo was incorporated in 1903, although it had existed since 1883. Its founder, Captain Andrew J. Lawrence, named the town in honor of inventor Thomas Edison, whose workshop was located in Menlo Park, New Jersey. Lawrence formed the Edison Land Company to sell lots in town. In 1951 Menlo was awarded second prize in the Georgia Power Company's Better Hometown contest. Trion, incorporated in 1869, was named after Trion Factory, the first cotton mill in northwest Georgia. Built in 1845-47, the mill was named by its three founders to commemorate their partnership. In 1858 it served the community as a hospital during an outbreak of typhoid fever. Unlike many other cotton mills, the factory was spared by Sherman's troops during the Civil War (1861-65), reputedly because one of its owners, Andrew Perry Allgood, was a Union sympathizer who hosted General Sherman overnight in October 1864. Allgood received protection papers from Sherman in exchange for a promise to close the mill for the duration of the war. Ironically, in 1875 the mill did burn to the ground, raising questions about whether the fire had been set by people angered by Allgood's Union sympathies. The mill was rebuilt and eventually became Mt. Vernon Mills Incorporated, the world's largest indigo denim plant. Economy and Population During the nineteenth century, small farms occupied most of the area. By the end of that century, farmers had discovered that peaches grew well in Chattooga County, and by 1906 there were orchards in every part of the county. Unfortunately, although highly profitable for a number of years, the value of peaches as a cash crop dwindled to almost nothing by the mid-1920s. In the meantime,
According to the 2000 U.S. census, the population of Chattooga County was 25,470 (86.7 percent white, 11.2 percent black, and 2.1 percent Hispanic), an increase of 14.5 percent since 1990.
Highlights Annual events include the Howard Finster Arts Festival in May, the Antique Car Show in June, and the Sum-Nelly Arts and Crafts Fair in October. Recreational opportunities include the Georgia Pinhoti Trail, a ridgeline trail for hikers; mountain biking and equestrian activities; and Camp Juliette Low, a summer camp in the Little River area for girls. Notable
Suggested Reading Robert S. Baker, Chattooga: The Story of a County and Its People (Roswell, Ga.: W. H. Wolfe Associates, 1988). Susan R. Boatright and Douglas C. Bachtel, eds., Georgia County Guide (Athens: Center for Agribusiness and Economic Development, University of Georgia, annual). Elizabeth B. Cooksey, Savannah Updated 6/13/2008 |
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