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NGE >> Cities and Counties >> Counties >> Dade County |
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Dade County Dade County, Trenton, originally called Salem, is the county seat and was incorporated in February 1854. The current
Cherokee Indians, who made up the area's original population, were forcibly removed from their land in 1838, soon after the formation of the county. Chief Wauhatchie, their leader, had given the U.S. government permission to determine the northern boundary of Georgia in 1817. Twenty-one years later, despite his cooperation, he and his people were forcibly removed in the infamous Trail of Tears. The
Contrary to an often repeated myth, Dade County did not secede from either the Union or the state of Georgia in 1860. During the Civil War more than 40,000 soldiers traveled through the area on their way to Chickamauga, building themselves a road to carry their equipment and munitions. Dade sent its own Raccoon Roughs to fight for the South, and the Battle of Chattanooga resulted in some minor skirmishes in the county. In 1964 Covenant College, a Presbyterian institution originally established in California in 1955, relocated to Lookout Mountain. Nearly 900 students enrolled in fall 2005 at the liberal arts school, which offers twenty undergraduate majors as well as a graduate program in education. Today the college is associated with the Presbyterian Church of America. Manufacturing is the largest employment sector, followed by retail trade, health and social services, and construction work. The establishment of the Dade County Industrial Park contributed
Among the many scenic attractions are Cloudland Canyon State Park; Lookout Mountain, the sites of battles fought during the Indian wars of 1788 and the Civil War; Rock City; and the Hooker and Tunacunhee Indian Mounds. In addition, the limestone geology of northwest Georgia has resulted in the formation of 164 caves in Dade County alone, making it a spelunker's paradise. Notable residents have included the old-time country musician Norman Blake. According to the 2010 U.S. census, the county population is 16,633, an increase from the 2000 population of 15,154. Suggested Reading Susan R. Boatright and Douglas C. Bachtel, eds., Georgia County Guide (Athens: Center for Agribusiness and Economic Development, University of Georgia, annual). E. Merton Coulter, "The Myth of Dade County's Seceding from Georgia in 1860," Georgia Historical Quarterly 41 (December 1957): 349-64. Retired Senior Volunteer Program, ed. and comp., History of Dade County, Georgia (Summerville, Ga.: ESPY Publishing Co., 1981). Elizabeth B. Cooksey, Savannah Updated 11/17/2011 |
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