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Although never formally designated as such by the British,
Savannah was the center of colonial government in Georgia for
half a century.
Georgia, the last of the 13 British colonies established on
the Atlantic seaboard, was founded by James Edward Oglethorpe
with 114 original settlers on February 12, 1733, at the
present site of the city of Savannah.
As more people settled in the colony of Georgia, the Spanish
in the Florida area became increasingly uneasy at the growing
British presence. On July 7, 1742, Oglethorpe, then "General
and Commander in Chief of the Forces of South Carolina and
Georgia", defeated the Spanish at the Battle of Bloody Marsh
on St. Simons Island, removing the Spanish threat to Georgia.
In 1743 General Oglethorpe sailed for England never to return
to Georgia.
With the arrival of more colonists, settlements developed
along the coast and up the rivers. In 1758 the province of
Georgia was divided into eight parishes, with four new
parishes added in 1765. When Georgia's independence from
British rule was declared in January of 1776, an Executive
Council was elected, and the revolutionary state government
made Savannah its capital. The Legislature met there in 1777
and in 1778.
Upon the fall of Augusta in 1779, the government was located
temporarily at Head's Fort in Wilkes County from February
1780, to July 1781. Government officials returned to Augusta
in 1782, only to move to Savannah, which the British had
evacuated. The legislators paused en route for several days to
conduct business at Ebenezer, a small German settlement.
During the Revolutionary War, many Georgians still felt
loyalty to England. Therefore, the war was fought not only
between American and British forces, but also between citizens
who became revolutionaries, the Whigs, and those still
swearing allegiance to the king, the Tories. Between 1783 and
1785, the Georgia Assembly rotated between Savannah and
Augusta, and the governor divided his official residence
between the two cities.
During the 1783 session of the Legislature, an act was passed
moving the capital to Augusta because it was nearer to the
center of the state than Savannah.
Georgia suffered both a loss of population and considerable
physical destruction because of the Revolution. In time,
settlers, attracted by the availability of land, moved from
the other states-some being lured by an additional tracts of
western land opened through a series of treaties with Creek
and Cherokee nations.
On February 22, 1785, the General Assembly held its last
meeting in Savannah, and Augusta officially became the
capital. Founded in 1735 by Ogelthorpe's men, Augusta was a
fort and a trading post. Even in the first year, the
Legislature was faced with the prospect of selecting a capital
city farther west than Augusta.
In an effort to find a suitable, accessible, an central
location for a new capital city, a legislative commission
directed that it be built near Augusta within proximity of the
Indian trading post called "Galphin's Old Town" or "Galphinton".
The new capital was named "Louisville" in honor of King Louis
XVI of France in appreciation of French aid during the
Revolutionary War.
The first permanent Capitol to be built was completed in
Louisville in 1796. Although there is no existing drawing of
the building, it is known that it was a two-story brick
structure of the 18th century Georgia architecture. Later,
after the transfer of the capital, the building was used as a
county courthouse and finally was destroyed.
The most dramatic piece of legislation passed during the years
that Louisville was the state capital was the rescinding of
the Yazoo Act and public burning of the act on the Capitol
grounds on February 15, 1799, the present Great Seal of the
state of Georgia was adopted in General Assembly in
Louisville. Because of continued westward expansion, the
Georgia Legislature passes an act in 1804 to move the capitol
nearer to the geographic center of the state. A site was
chosen on the Oconee River for a new capital to be named
"Milledgeville". A brick Gothic style Capital building was
erected at a cost of $80,000. The General Assembly met there
for the first time in 1807, and Millidgeville remained the
capital for 61 years. In 1825 General Lafayette, who had come
from France to aid the United States during the Revolutionary
War, visited Milledgeiville where he was honored with
elaborate ceremonies. The Mansion, the first official
residence for the governor and his family, was built in
Milledgeville in 1838.
The desire for land, and later gold, created a swift expansion
beyond the old frontier, carrying with it increased trade
along rivers and migration of people along new roads into the
wilderness. The primary basis for this new growth and economic
expansion was the production of cotton thorough a slave labor
system.
In 1860 the national debate over the extension of slavery into
new territories reached a crescendo. Following the election of
Abraham Lincoln as president, a special state convention voted
on January 19, 1861, to secede from the Union. Secession is
only considered to be the most important legislation passed in
Milledgeville. Only a few months later Georgia formally joined
the Confederate States of America. Georgia did not suffer
direct devastation from the war until 1864 when General
William Tecumseh Sherman advanced though Northern Georgia,
besieged and captured Atlanta, and then pushed on to Savannah
on his famous March to the Sea. The Legislature adjourned amid
great confusion, later reconvening for a brief period in Macon
in 1865. At the end of the war, with federal authorities in
control of Georgia's government, the Legislature was allowed
to reconvene at the Capital in Milledgeville. During the war
years, Georgia lost nearly 120,000 men and boys in battle as
well as much of the state's material wealth. The rebuilding of
the state afterwards was a slow and painful process. There
were political conflicts between the newly enfranchised black
citizens who, for the first time, were allowed to hold seats
in the Legislature, and the prewar social structure, which
sought to minimize the changes it had to accept in its
traditional way of life. Georgia's economy was also crippled
because of its heavy dependence on cotton production at a time
when world market prices were are historically low levels. By
the mid 1870'ss, the federal government abandoned its efforts
to force reconstruction programs upon Georgia. The Democratic
Party became solidly entrenched as the dominant political
force in the state. The only serious challenge was a brief
surge of activity by the Populist Party under the leadership
of Tom Watson.
More Georgians became interested in efforts to diversify the
state's economic base. Spokesmen such as Henry Grady, editor
of The Atlantic Constitution, began talking about a "New
South". Grady's vision was enticing to many Georgians, but its
realization required years of additional effort. Although the
state suffered along with the rest of the nation during the
Great Depression, Georgia was able to achieve slow economic
progress during the early years of the 20th century. Following
World War II, the pace of industrial growth became more
apparent. Atlanta, begun in the mid-1880's as a transportation
center, gained recognition also as a commercial, financial,
and cultural center for the Southeast. New industries
developed in Georgia, and others moved from outside into he
state. Meanwhile, rural Georgia was revitalized as Georgia's
farmers, who had been driven from cotton production by the
destructive boll weevil, diversified their planting operations
and adopted new agricultural techniques.
Along with these economic changes have come many more
social and political changes. As a result of the Civil Rights
Movement of the 1960's under the leadership of Dr. Martin
Luther King, Jr., black voters, who after the reconstruction
era were excluded from effective participation in state
politics, have assumed an active role in the political life of
the state. Colleges and universities have expanded, and new
cultural centers have opened.
In January, 1977, Georgia sent its first President to the
White House-Jimmy Carter of Plains, a former Georgia governor.
Profiting from the strong leadership of the past two Decades,
Atlanta has become an international city. Georgia governors
travel the globe to encourage trade and investment for the
state. In the final quarter of the 20th century, Georgia, with
its capital city Atlanta, is emerging as a leader in the
social, political and economic progress of the nation.
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