Adsactly Education - Georgia: The History

in education •  6 years ago  (edited)

Adsactly Education: Georgia: The History


Georgia


The Peach State


Capital: Atlanta


Largest City: Atlanta


59,424 sq. mi. 153,909 sq. Km


24th Largest State


Admitted to US: 1788 (4th)


Population: 11,000,000 (8th)


Highest Point: 4,784 ft (1,458 m)


Lowest Point: Sea Level


State Bird: Brown Thrasher


State Flower: Cherokee Rose


Motto: Wisdom, Justice, Moderation


Bordered By: Tennessee, North Carolina, South Carolina, Florida, Alabama, Atlantic Ocean.


Georgia

Georgia is named for King George II of England dating from when the Colony was first founded. James Oglethorpe founded the colony based on an agrarian society that forbade slavery.

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Native Influence

Native Americans can be positively dated in the Georgia to around 13,000 years ago, but that is probably only a part of the story. Due to the last ice age the coastline was near 200 miles (320 km) east of where it is today. There are tantalizing clues that people lived in Coastal Georgia much prior to that.

At least four Native societies occupied the area. The best known of these is the Mississippian Culture which developed intense agricultural practices leading to larger cities and incredible artwork. The Mississippian Culture was breaking up at roughly the same time as the first European contact which left several clans or tribes occupying Georgia at the time of European Contact.

The King of England authorized the “Indian Reserve” in 1763 which dedicate a large unsettled area to the Natives of the area. The Revolution ended that proclamation and finally, the Indian Removal Act of 1830 forced all tribes to move west of the Mississippi. During 1838 and 1839 more than 4,000 Cherokee died on a forced march to Oklahoma. That forced evacuation became known as “The Trail of Tears”.

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Spanish Influence

Hernando De Soto led the first European expedition to what is now the state of Georgia in 1539. Most of our direct knowledge of the Mississippian Culture comes from this effort. By the time Europeans returned to the area the culture was gone. It is estimated that as many as 6 million died as a result of diseases introduced by De Soto.

Though the Spanish had nominal control over most of what is now Georgia they were much more concerned with their holdings in Florida and did not leave anything of permanence in the state.

English Influence

The conflict between the English and Spanish over control of what would become Georgia started in earnest in 1670 when the Colony of South Carolina was chartered. English settlers and traders moved south in increasing numbers. Both sides raided the other militarily for a long time until 1730 when James Oglethorpe secured a charter from King George to establish a colony. The colony known as Georgia was originally formed to provide English citizens an alternative to debtors prison. Slavery was prohibited in the original Colony.

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The anti slavery prohibition was overturned in 1749 and slaves were soon the largest population in Georgia. The Oglethorpe plan essentially failed and in 1752 the Colony was reclaimed by George and made a ‘Crown Colony’ the same as all the others.

American Influence and Control

American patriots acted quickly when the ‘torch of liberty’ was lit at the start of the Revolutionary War in spring of 1775 and by early 1776 controlled all of Georgia. By 1778 the British had recaptured Savannah and a fairly large stretch of the coastline. That area would prove to be one of the last loyalist areas in what was to become the United States. The British promised freedom to escaped slaves and as many as half of Georgia’s 15,000 slaves escaped to British Territory.

Georgia ratified the US Constitution in early 1788 and joined the United States of America at that time. While the original western border went to the Mississippi river the Mississippi Territory was was created in 1802 and by 1819 the Alabama-Georgia line was finalized giving the state the shape we know today.

During the time between the Revolution and the Civil War Georgia became a huge plantation state with a large number of wealthy planters growing cotton in the west and rice along the coast. Slave populations soared in this period.

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Due to the Spanish and English influences Georgia’s state boundaries were not completely settled until 1819 when the state of Alabama was created and became the western border. Land allocations from the forced removal of all Natives from the state resulted in the availability of a large chunk of farmland being disbursed.

Eli Whitney, a resident of Savannah patented the Cotton Gin in the very late 18th century and paved the way for cotton to become the dominant force in Georgia and all the southern states. Slaves flooded into Georgia to work the cotton and it became one of the leading producers. By 1860 Black Slaves constituted 44% of the states population.

The Civil War

Georgia seceded from the Union in January of 1861. Most of the state was in solidarity with the move, although 5,000 Georgians served in units of the Union Army. Most of these were from the mountains of the north part of the state. Georgia sent 100,000 men to the armies of the Confederacy. 15,000 of them would be killed in action.

Multiple battles were fought in Georgia during the Civil War. The Southern victory at Chickamauga in 1863 was followed by a series of defeats including the infamous “March to the Sea” led by William T. Sherman. That was the first major use of the ‘Scorched Earth’ policy of warfare. The campaign was designed to wreck the South’s primary food production area and to remove the will of the people to prolong the war.

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Georgia suffered more than just military defeat during the war. Food shortages were common and the myth of the plantation was ruined. Possibly the most infamous prison ever, the Andersonville Prison was located in Georgia. 45,000 Union prisoners were kept there and over one third of them died in the 15 months it was in operation due to disease and malnutrition.

Reconstruction

Reconstruction, a largely failed policy, was troubling in Georgia. Immediately following the War the military took command of the state. General Sherman, through military order, seized abandoned plantations of the Sea Islands area and parceled out the land to former slaves. Later that same year President Andrew Johnson, through executive order, returned the land to the former owners.

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The first election held after the Civil War featured 102,000 white men and 90,000 freedmen. A new constitution was written in 1868. Within a year it was completely ignored and white domination of blacks particularly by paramilitary units of the Ku Klux Klan. By 1869 all 32 of the black legislators elected to the legislature were forcibly removed from office.

White domination was complete by 1906 when a new constitution was written that almost completely disenfranchised blacks. Georgia would recover from this horrible period, but it was not without major cost.

Dumb Laws

You cannot live on a boat for more than 30 days during the calendar year, even if just passing through the state.

All sex toys are banned.

All images in this post are properly licensed and used.

This is part of a series on the various states. We will finish up Georgia in the next installment, I hope you will return. I do hope you have enjoyed this synpsis of Georgia. The words and ideas are mine but I used Wikipedia Georgia as the source for the information.

Authored by: @bigtom13

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Good information on the history of the emergence and settlement of Georgia, @bigtom13. I've known something of it's status, mostly from the cinema. It has caught my attention, especially, the great contradictions that mark that state. Founded on the discrimination and death of the natives (the Cherokees), but in a colony where slavery would be forbidden. But then, it will become a state where slavery reigns and the most terrible persecution of the black population until reaching the horrendous Ku Klux Klan. Fatalities of history and life! Thank you for your post, @bigtom13. Until the next delivery about Georgia. Greetings.

One of the reasons I broke this account where I did is due to the financial giant that Georgia would become based on some fundamental changes. It's almost a 'tale of two states'.

Thanks for your always well thought comment.

What beautiful images! They are so beautiful, they seem unreal. It's not that you haven't put beautiful landscapes before, but these photos are really insurmountable. Apparently, natural beauties abound in this state. I'm telling you, the whole story you just told, I didn't know, and I must confess I only knew about Georgia from the famous novel Gone with the Wind. The history of the war and the rights and freedoms of slaves is very interesting. It is also interesting to know that there could have been inhabitants in Georgia, even earlier than is believed. This kind of discovery always worries me especially because in the end it turns out that the natives are not natives and that we are all of the same race. When you say that sex toys are forbidden, I imagine it is their sale! I don't think anyone needs to know whether or not it is used in intimacy. LOL. Nice post and as I said, unbeatable images. Thank you for sharing, @bigtom13.

I've really only bummed around Georgia looking at the sights one time. I've been there many times, but it was always flying into Atlanta at a bargain rate. One of my college roommates (who was married to my wife's sorority sister) went to work for Turner Broadcasting in the very early days. We went to lots of ballgames and partied hardy in Atlanta but I'd never seen the real beauty until much later. It truly is a beautiful place.

As a follower of @followforupvotes this post has been randomly selected and upvoted! Enjoy your upvote and have a great day!

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Beautiful photo, good job

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Excellent and extensive information that allows us to approach Georgia. It is very interesting to know how this state was formed and developed. Some laws are really silly, aren't they? I hope the next part will complement this publication. Thank you, @bigtom13 for sharing and @adsactly for spreading it.

I hope the next part will complement this one also. It's a pretty fascinating place.

Hello! Very cool post! I made sure to upvote it. I would greatly appreciate if you would take a look at what I post. I just started on this website and I am looking to get upvotes. :)

Georgia is one of those states I have yet to spend a meaningful amt of time at. I've driven through it once, maybe twice?

But i found your "Dumb Laws" the most interesting and intriguing!

Do Oregon next!! That's where I live, haha :D

Ahahaha I am doing the list alphabetically. I started with Arizona (where I live know) with the possibility of Washington (where I grew up). The first one was so popular and rewarding personally that we decided that I should do them all.

Left to my own devices Oregon would have surely been third. I've spent a lot of time there, and just love the Columbia River Gorge. I'll get there! Hope you will stay.

And thank you for the kind words.

@bigtom13, Definitely History holds many components and sometimes historical facts can shake us because some stuff really surprise us and whenever we hear the numbers like thousands of years then thoughts run towards Imagination state to feel how the world or particular place would be in those times. But History is integral part to look back and to learn some aspects. Stay blessed.

One of the very few things that is common to all tribal histories is 'the people that were here before'. I honestly believe that the Americas were populated by 50,000 years ago. Science is starting to catch up to me :)

More we dig into Truth, more surprising aspects we know. In my opinion we are yet very far away from the Technological minds means, Ancient people were more Advanced when it comes to Technology. Enjoy.

I always love reading about travel & history!
I have friends who travels Georgia twice a year but reading it’s history is not just seeing but also learning. Nice to know about Georgia’s history. It’s like I already travel there while reading!

Reading is learning indeed.
Thanks @adsactly! ❤️

I've seen Georgia on The Walking Dead. Too many zombies /s

Thank you, @bigtom13, for sharing this synopsis with punctual information developed in a broad but simple way. It's very interesting, I suppose, for people who, like me, come from other latitudes and have an interest in knowing more about the world and history. After reading your text I think that Georgia's history has what the history of the world, in the background, is done by men with their eagerness to dominate, their sense of ownership and power (even over other human beings) and, why not say it, also with their silly laws.
I know, we are also capable of wonders, it is true. History is an effective mirror for learning and preserving what is worthwhile.
I look forward to the continuation.