When.com Web Search

  1. Ad

    related to: history of georgia

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Georgia History - New Georgia Encyclopedia

    www.georgiaencyclopedia.org/articles/history-archaeology/georgia-history-overview

    Online. Georgia's history is integrally linked to that of the rest of the South and the rest of the nation. But as the largest state east of the Mississippi, the youngest and southernmost of the thirteen colonies, and by 1860 the most populous southern state, Georgia is in certain respects historically distinctive.

  3. Creek Indians - New Georgia Encyclopedia

    www.georgiaencyclopedia.org/articles/history-archaeology/creek-indians

    The history of early Georgia is largely the history of the Creek Indians. For most of Georgia’s colonial period, Creeks outnumbered both European colonists and enslaved Africans and occupied more land than these newcomers. Not until the 1760s did the Creeks become a minority population in Georgia. They ceded the balance of their lands to the ...

  4. Georgia's Historic Capitals - New Georgia Encyclopedia

    www.georgiaencyclopedia.org/articles/counties-cities-neighborhoods/georgias...

    Savannah: Georgia’s First State Capital. At the time of statehood in 1776, Georgia’s revolutionary government operated from Savannah, though no document or election formally designated Savannah as the capital city. As the largest city of the new state, and by virtue of the tradition of the past three decades, Savannah remained the seat of ...

  5. Stone Mountain - New Georgia Encyclopedia

    www.georgiaencyclopedia.org/articles/geography-environment/stone-mountain

    The 1821 Treaty of Indian Springs, which ceded land east of the Flint River, expelled native peoples while opening the land for settlement by European Americans. By the late 1820s, whites had settled the base of the granite mass, and the town was officially named Stone Mountain in 1847. The building of railroads in the 1830s and 1840s allowed ...

  6. Georgia Guidestones - New Georgia Encyclopedia

    www.georgiaencyclopedia.org/articles/history-archaeology/georgia-guidestones

    Georgia Guidestones. From 1980 until its destruction in 2022, one of the most intriguing and controversial granite monuments ever erected stood in Elbert County, near the South Carolina border. The Georgia Guidestones dominated the highest elevation in the county, which is located in the northeastern Piedmont section of the state.

  7. Boundaries of Georgia - New Georgia Encyclopedia

    www.georgiaencyclopedia.org/articles/history-archaeology/boundaries-of-georgia

    Boundaries of Georgia. The boundary lines that define the state of Georgia are significant for a variety of reasons, such as ownership of physical territory, jurisdiction for the state’s laws, and the state’s rights within the federal system. The determination of Georgia’s boundaries over time has been fraught with conflict, controversy ...

  8. Agriculture in Georgia - New Georgia Encyclopedia

    www.georgiaencyclopedia.org/articles/business-economy/agriculture-in-georgia...

    Slightly more than 9.9 million acres are classified as farmland, with an average farm size of 235 acres. Nearly half of all Georgia farms made less than $2,500 in 2017, while 15 percent made more than $100,000. Although the number of farms in Georgia continues to decrease—from about 47,000 in 2007 to 42,000 in 2017—farms are growing in size.

  9. History Overviews - New Georgia Encyclopedia

    www.georgiaencyclopedia.org/topics/history-overviews

    The Battle of Chickamauga, the largest battle fought in Georgia during the Civil War, took place in Walker County on September 18-20, 1863. Confederate troops under Braxton Bragg prevented Union troops under William S. Rosecrans from entering Georgia, but each side sustained heavy casualties; around 16,000 Union and 18,000 Confederate.

  10. Trustee Georgia, 1732-1752 - New Georgia Encyclopedia

    www.georgiaencyclopedia.org/articles/history-archaeology/trustee-georgia

    The first twenty years of Georgia history are referred to as Trustee Georgia because during that time a Board of Trustees governed the colony. England’s King George signed a charter establishing the colony and creating its governing board on April 21, 1732. Origins James Edward Oglethorpe, famous for conducting a parliamentary investigation into the conditions […]

  11. Georgia Historical Society - New Georgia Encyclopedia

    www.georgiaencyclopedia.org/articles/history-archaeology/georgia-historical...

    The Georgia History Festival, which began as Georgia Days in the mid-1960s, is an educational program that commemorates the Georgia colony’s founding on February 12, 1733. Geared toward K-12 students, this living history event in Savannah features craft workshops, the two-day Colonial Faire and Muster event at Wormsloe State Historic Site ...