|
|
|
![]() |
|
NGE >> Cities and Counties >> Counties >> Webster County |
|
|
Webster County On December 16, 1853, Webster County, in the southwestern part of the state, was carved out of Lee and Stewart counties to become Georgia's 103rd county. The Creek Indians ceded the land to the United States in the treaty of 1826. Creek influence is still apparent in the names of three of the area's slow-moving creeks, the Kinchafoonee, Choctahatchee, and Lanahassee. The county was originally called Kinchafoonee (a Creek word meaning white bones) In the early years of Webster County, with its fertile soils and numerous creeks, cotton was king. But with the devastating arrival of the boll weevil in Georgia in 1915, cotton lost its importance as farmers diversified into peanuts, corn, and wheat. In the early twentieth century several sawmills were built as the forest industry grew. A modern high-production sawmill has replaced the old mills. The county, which is mainly rural, covers an area of 210 square miles.
Education in Webster County has progressed from numerous one-room segregated schools to today's modern multiracial elementary and middle schools. There is no public high school in the county. In the late 1920s William Decker Johnson, the bishop of five midwestern states in the African Methodist Episcopal Church (AME Church), founded the Johnson Home Industrial School as a private African American college, which later became a grammar and high school. The school flourished for many years until Johnson's death in 1936. Bishop Johnson, father of composer Hall Johnson, was from the Archery community, near Plains in nearby Sumter County. U.S. president Jimmy Carter has described Johnson as a pioneering black leader who transformed Carter's life. The county is the birthplace of Walter F. George, for many years a U.S. senator from Georgia. A reservoir on the Chattahoochee River is named in his honor. Both the county courthouse and the jail are on the National Register of Historic Places. Suggested Reading Jimmy Carter, An Hour before Daylight: Memories of a Rural Boyhood (New York: Simon and Schuster, 2000). Weston Women's Club, comp., History of Webster County (Weston, Ga.: Weston Women's Club, 1980). Jack Holbrook, Webster County Commissioner Updated 1/5/2012 |
|
|||||
|
Home | What's New | Index | Quick Facts | About NGE | Help | Contact 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.
|