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History of Georgia (U.S. state)

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The History of Georgia ranges from its Pre-Columbian settlement by Native American peoples to its modern status as a rapidly growing part of the United States. In the intervening time, Georgia was a British colony, a state of the U.S., and a member of the Confederate States of America. Georgia has had five "permanent" state capitals: Savannah, Augusta, Louisville, Milledgeville, and Atlanta. The legislature has also met in other places temporarily.

Prehistory

Before the Cherokee and the Creek, Native American cultures are divided into time periods: Paleoindian, Archaic, Woodland and Mississippian.

The Mississippian culture was the most advanced prehistoric civilization. It lasted from around 1500 BC to 900 BC. The causes of the fall of the Mississippian culture are unknown.

European exploration

At the time of European colonization of the Americas, Cherokee and Creek Indians lived in what is now Georgia. Though it is unknown exactly who was the first European to sight Georgia, it is possible that Juan Ponce de Leon sailed along the coast during his exploration of Florida. In 1526, Lucas Vásquez de Ayllón attempted to establish a colony there, possibly near St. Catherines Island.

Another colony attempt, called Charlesfort, made by the French under Jean Ribault, was realized when French Huguenots settled an area in the Port Royal Sound area of present-day South Carolina. Within a year the colony failed. Most of the colonists followed René Goulaine de Laudonnière south and founded a new outpost in present-day Florida called Fort Caroline.

Over the next few decades, a number of Spanish explorers visited the inland region. The local moundbuilder culture, described by Hernando de Soto in 1540, had completely disappeared by 1560.

British Colony

File:Wpdms georgia colony 1732.png
Georgia Colony, as specified in the 1732 grant

The conflict between Spain and Britain over control of Georgia began in earnest in about 1670, when the British colony of South Carolina was founded just north of the missionary provinces of Guale and Mocama, part of Spanish Florida. Guale and Mocama, today part of Georgia, lay between Carolina's capital, Charles Town, and Spanish Florida's capital, St. Augustine. They were subjected to repeated military invasions by both sides. The mission system was permanently destroyed by 1704, after which the coast of future Georgia was occupied by English-allied Yamasee Indians until they were decimated in the Yamasee War of 1715-1716. The surviving Yamasee fled to Florida, leaving the coast of Georgia thoroughly depopulated, opening the possibility of a new British colony.

Massive British settlement began in the early 1730s with James Oglethorpe, an Englishman in the British parliament, who promoted the idea that the area be used to settle the worthy poor of England, providing an alternative to the overcrowded debtors' prisons. Oglethorpe and other British philanthropists secured a royal charter as the Trustees of the colony of Georgia on June 9, 1732. [1]. Ultimately, the colony was not founded by or for debtors, although the misconception of Georgia having been founded as a debtor or penal colony persists. With the motto, "Not for ourselves, but for others," the Trustees selected colonists for Georgia. On February 12, 1733, the first settlers landed in HMS Anne at what was to become the city of Savannah.

Georgia, wrote Governor Wright in 1766,[Saye p 135} had

"No manufactures of the least consequence: a trifling quantity of coarse homespun cloth, woollen and cotton mixed; amongst the poorer sort of people, for their own use, a few cotton and yarn stockings; shoes for our negroes; and some occasional blacksmith's work. But all our supplies of silk, linens, woollens, shoes, stockings, nails, locks, hinges, and tools of every sort . . . are all imported from and through Great Britain."

American Revolution

Britain threatened Georgia's 18,000 white colonists with some 10,000 hostile Indians nearby. Governor Wright was popular. But Georgians read the same political tracts as Bostonians, and developed their own concept of their rights and republican ideals that were violated by British actions imposing a stamp tax, which Georgians denounced in 1765. More fearsome was the British punishment of Boston after the Boston Tea Party. Many feared they would be next--as indeed they were.

In August 1774, at a general meeting in Savannah the people proclaimed. "Protection and allegiance are reciprocal, and under the British Constitution correlative terms; . . . the Constitution admits of no taxation without representation." Georgia had few grievances of its own but ideologically supported the patriot cause and expelled the British.

Angered by the news of the battle of Concord, on the eleventh of May 1775, the patriots stormed the royal magazine at Savannah and carried off the ammunition stored there. The customary celebration of the King's birthday on June 4th was turned into a wild demonstration against the King; a liberty pole was erected. Within a month the patriots completely defied royal authority and set up their own government. In June and July, assemblies at Savannah chose a Council of Safety and a Provincial Congress, to take control of the government and cooperate with the other colonies. They started raising troops and prepared for war. "In short my lord," wrote Wright to Lord Dartmouth on September 16, 1775, "the whole Executive Power is Assumed by them, and the King's Governor remains little Else than Nominally so."

In February, 1776, Wright fled to a British warship and the patriots controlled all of Georgia. The new Congress adopted "Rules and Regulations" April 15, 1776, which can be considered the Constitution of 1776. (There never was a Georgia declaration of independence.) Georgia was no longer a colony--it was a state with a weak chief executive, the "President and Commander-in-Chief," who was elected by the Congress for a term of only six months. Archibald Bulloch, President of the two previous Congresses, was elected first President, and he bent his efforts to mobilizing and training the militia. The Constitution of 1777 was a highly democratic document putting power in the hands of the elected House of Assembly, which chose the governor; there was no senate and the franchise was open to nearly all white men.

The new state's exposed seaboard position made it a tempting target for the British Navy. Savannah was captured by British and Loyalist forces in 1778, along with some of its hinterland. The patriots moved to Augusta. At the Siege of Savannah in 1779, American and French troops (the latter including a company of free blacks from Haiti) fought unsuccessfully to retake the city. During the final years of the American Revolution, Georgia had a functioning Loyalist colonial government along the coast, and remained the last Loyalist bastion along with New York City. An early historian reported: [Charles C. Jones (1883) quoted in Saye p 195]

"For forty-two long months had she been a prey to rapine, oppression, fratricidal strife, and poverty. Fear, unrest, the brand, the sword, the tomahawk, had been her portion. In the abstraction [removal] of negro slaves, by the burning of dwellings, in the obliteration of plantations, by the destruction of agricultural implements, and by theft of domestic animals and personal effects, it is estimated that at least one half of the available property of the inhabitants had, during this period, been completely swept away. Real estate had depreciated in value. Agriculture was at a stand-still, and there was no money with which to repair these losses and inaugurate a new era of prosperity. The lamentation of widows and orphans, too, were heard in the land. These not only bemoaned their dead, but cried aloud for food. Amid the general depression there was, nevertheless, a deal of gladness in the hearts of the people, a radiant joy, an inspiring hope. Independence had been won."

Georgia ratified the U.S. Constitution on January 2, 1788.

The original eight counties of Georgia were Burke, Camden, Chatham, Effingham, Glynn, Liberty, Richmond and Wilkes. Before these counties were created in 1777, Georgia had been divided into local government units called parishes.

Antebellum period

In 1829, gold was discovered in the north Georgia mountains, prompting a gold rush. A Federal mint was established in Dahlonega, Georgia and continued to operate until 1861. An influx of white settlers pressured the U.S. government to take the land away from the Cherokee Indians, who owned the land, operated their own government, and did not recognize the authority of the state of Georgia . This dispute culminated in the Indian Removal Act of 1830, under which all eastern tribes were sent west to Indian reservations in present-day Oklahoma.

Cotton became a major crop in Georgia in the 1810s. Slaves worked the fields in large cotton plantations, and the economy of the state became dependent on the institution of slavery.

Civil War

On January 18, 1861 Georgia seceded from the Union, keeping the name "State of Georgia" and joined the newly-formed Confederacy in February. During the war, Georgia sent thousands of soldiers to battle, mostly to the armies in Virginia. The state switched from cotton to food production, but severe transportation difficulties restricted supplies. Thinking the state safe from invasion, the Confederates built small munitions factories. Their largest prisoner of war camp, at Andersonville, proved a death camp because of severe lack of supplies, food, water, and medicine.

The first major battle in Georgia was a Confederate victory at the Battle of Chickamauga in 1863--it was the last major Confederate victory in the west. In 1864, William T. Sherman's armies invaded Georgia as part of the Atlanta Campaign. Confederate general Joseph E. Johnston fought a series of delaying battles, the largest being the Battle of Kennesaw Mountain, as he tried to delay as long as possible by retreating toward Atlanta. Johnston's replacement, Gen. John Bell Hood attempted several unsuccessful counterattacks at the Battle of Peachtree Creek and the Battle of Atlanta, but Sherman captured the city on September 2, 1864. After burning Atlanta to the ground, Sherman embarked on his March to the Sea on November 15, en route to Milledgeville, the state capital, which he reached on November 23, and the port city of Savannah, which he entered on December 22. A swath of land about 60 miles across was destroyed in this campaign, less than 10% of the state. Once Sherman's army passed through, the confederates regained control. The March is a major part of the state's folk history, and is the setting for Margaret Mitchell's 1936 novel Gone with the Wind and the subsequent 1939 film. One of the last land battles of the Civil War, the Battle of Columbus, was fought on the Georgia-Alabama border.

Reconstruction and Postwar Development

After the Civil War, Union troops under General John Pope occupied Georgia to enforce the Reconstruction Era. At the time, Georgia had more than 400,000 Freedmen. Georgia's first elected governor after the end of the war, Charles Jenkins, refused to authorize state funds for a racially integrated state constitutional convention in 1868, his government was dissolved by General Pope and he was forced into exile. This coup galvanized white resistance to the Reconstruction, fueling the growth of the Ku Klux Klan. On July 15, 1870, Georgia became the last former Confederate state to be readmitted Congress under the terms of Reconstruction.

When Georgia was readmitted, the former state capital of Milledgeville was replaced by the inland rail hub of Atlanta, with the construction of a new capitol building, completed by 1889. Post-Reconstruction Georgia was dominated by the 'Bourbon Triumvirate' of Joseph E. Brown, Gen. John B. Gordon and Gen. Alfred H. Colquitt. Between 1872 and 1890, either Brown or Gordon held one of Georgia's Senate seats, Colquitt held the other, and, in the major part of that period, either Colquitt or Gordon occupied the governor's office. All three assumed leadership roles in the formation of the first Ku Klux Klan. With their appeals to white supremacy, the Democrats effectively monopolized state politics. The one potential source of opposition lay in the 'mountain Republicanism' prevalent throughout southern Appalachia, where slavery was largely nonexistent. However, their success in Georgia was impeded by the popularity of Gordon, a northwest Georgia mountaineer and veteran of the Army of Northern Virginia whose fame grew after the war, leading the last charge at Appomattox, and later becoming the first former Confederate to preside over the Senate.

During the Gilded Age, Georgia recovered from the devestation of the Civil War, experiencing unprecedented economic growth. Atlanta Constitution editor Henry Grady emerged as the leading spokesman of the 'New South' idea, promoting sectional reconciliation and the region's place in a rapidly industrializing nation. The International Cotton Exposition of 1881 and the Cotton States and International Exposition of 1895 were staged to promote Georgia and the South as a textile center, luring mills from New England in an attempt to build a new economic base in the post-war South by diversifying from the region’s agrarian base. Attracted by close proximity to the raw materials and cheap wages, the venture had considerable success, transforming Columbus and Atlanta, as well as Graniteville, on the Georgia-South Carolina border, into textile manufacturing centers. The manufacture of cottonseed oil and paper also became important industries, accompanied by logging (the state became a leading producer of turpentine) and kaolin-mining, used in the manufacture of bricks and ceramics. These industries exploited the resources of once-neglected regions: the swampy Piney Woods along the southern border, and the fall line between the Piedmont and Atlantic Coastal Plain. In 1885, when Atlanta and Fulton County enacted Prohibition legislation, a local pharmacist invented the drink that, after being sold two years later to Asa Candler, would become the state's most famous export, Coca-Cola.

In 1907, Peachtree Street, the main street of Atlanta, was busy with streetcars and automobiles.

The Cotton States and International Exposition was most famous as the site of Booker T. Washington's Atlanta Compromise, in which he urged African-Americans to focus their efforts, not on demands for social equality, but improving their own conditions by becoming proficient in agriculture, mechanics, and domestic service, while urging whites to take responsibility for improving social and economic relations between the races. Washington was denounced by other black leaders as acquiesing to oppression, most notably W.E.B DuBois, who in 1897 joined the faculty of Atlanta University.

The price per pound of cotton plummeted from $1 at the end of the Civil War to an average of 20 cents in the 1870s, nine cents in the 1880s, and seven cents in the 1890s.[1] By 1898, it had fallen to five cents a pound-while costing seven cents a pound to produce.[2] Given the inability to maintain the plantation system without the foundation of slave labor on which it rested, once prosperous planters were reduced to fledgling small farmers, joined by thousands of freemen who preferred to become tenant farmers or sharecroppers rather than hire themselves out to labor gangs. Through the lien system, small-county merchants assumed a central role in cotton production, monopolizing the supply of equipment, fertilizers, seeds and foodstuffs needed to make sharecropping possible. As cotton prices plummeted below production costs, by the 1890s 80-90% of cotton growers, whether owner or tenant, were in debt to lien merchants.[3]

Indebted Georgia cotton farmers responded by embracing the 'agrarian radicalism' manifested, successively, in the 1870's with the Granger movement, in the 1880's with the Farmers' Alliance and in the 1890's with the the Populists. In 1892, Congressman Tom Watson joined the Populists, quickly becoming the most visible spokesman for the predominately Western Populist Congressional delegation. Southern Populists did not share their Western counterparts focus on Free Silver and bitterly opposed fusion with the Democratic Party. They challenged white supremacy by urging white and black small farmers to unite on the basis of shared economic self-interest, and Watson publically denounced the practice of lynching, at a time when Georgia led the nation in this practice. The merger with the Democratic Party in the 1896 Presidential election dealt a debilitating blow to Southern Populism. The Populists nominated Watson as William Jennings Bryan's vice-president, after Bryan nominated a New England industrialist Arthur Sewall as a concession to the Democrat establishment. This defeat embittered Watson, who, as the Populist Party disintegrated, became a vigorous anti-Semite and anti-Catholic crusader, while denouncing the socialism that had attracted many former Populists. His campaigns for the party's candidate for President in 1904 and 1908, but he succesfully endorsed for governor M. Hoke Smith, a former cabinet member in Cleveland's administration who broke with Cleveland on account of his support for Bryan. Hoke Smith's tenure was noted for the passage of new Jim Crow laws requiring literacy tests and property ownership for voting.

Boll Weevil to World War II

The lynching of Leo Frank.

In the early 1900s, Georgia's manufacturing and agriculture grew. The cotton industry benefited from the depradations of the boll weevil further west, and, in 1911, Georgia produced a record 2.8 million bales of cotton. However, four years later, the boll weevil arrived in Georgia, and by 1921 reached such epidemic proportions that it destroyed 45% of the states' cotton crop.[4] World War I drove cotton prices to a high of $1 a pound in 1919, but quickly fell to 10 cents. Landowners ruined by the boll weevil and declining prices were forced to expel their sharecroppers, significant numbers of whom migrated to the northern industrial states, the beginning of the Great Migration.[5]

In the security frezy triggered by the outbreak of World War I in Europe, Georgia was thrust into the national spotlite by the notorious trial and lynching of Atlanta Jewish pencil factory owner Leo Frank. The ringleaders of the lynch mob which murdered Frank in the Marietta town square in 1917 included a number of prominent political leaders, most notably former Governor Joseph Mackey Brown, while Tom Watson played a leading role in instigating the violence. The trial led to a campaign for the revival of the Ku Klux Klan, which was refounded in a ceremony atop Stone Mountain in November 1915. With Atlanta as its Imperial City, the Klan quickly came to occupy a powerful role in state and municipal politics. Governor Clifford Walker, who served from 1923 to 1927, was closely associated with the Klan. By the end of the decade, the organization suffered from a number of scandals and internal feuds. Klan membership in the state declined from 156,00 in 1925 to 1,400 in 1930.[6]

The Great Depression considerably worsened the states economic situation, with collapsing demand for cotton and other agricultural staples compounded by ecological havoc wrecked by poor land-use strategies. However, in most rural parts of the state, the effects of the Depression were less apparent than in the nation as a whole, because they had been struggling with an on and off deppression throughout the 1920's. Georgia was one of the greatest beneficiaries of the New Deal, which brought major advances in rural electrification, housing and road construction, education, and health care. Franklin Delano Roosevelt had a particularly close relationship with Georgia, establishing a home in the theraputic waters of Warm Springs, which became known as the 'Little White House.' The Agricultural Adjustment Act, enacted during Roosevelt's first 100 days in office, paid farmers to plant less cotton, and, from 1932 and 1936, succeeded in raising the price of cotton from five to fifteen cents a pound. Between 1933 and 1940, the New Deal brought $250 million to Georgia, establishing a series of agencies that offered extensive public works projects, including rural electrification programs, libraries, schools, parks, roads and the nation's first public housing project and slum clearance.[7]

Roosevelt's programs faced considerable opposition from Georgia's powerful governor Eugene Talmadge. A former Agriculture Commissioner whose claims to be a 'real dirt farmer' won him the loyalty of his small-town and rural constituencies, in his four terms as Governor (1933-37) he sought to subvert many New Deal programs. Appealing to white supremacy, he denounced New Deal programs that paid black workers wages equal to whites, and attacked what he descriebd as the communist tendencies of the New Deal. In the 1936 election, he unsuccesfully attempted to run for the Senate, loosing to pro-New Deal incumbent Richard B. Russell, while the candidate he endorsed for Governor was also defeated. Under the pro-New Deal administration of for State House speaker E.D. Rivers Georgia came, by 1940, to lead the nation in the number of Rural Electrification Cooperatives and rural public housing projects.[8] Talmadge was relected Governor in 1940, but suffered from a scandal caused by his firing of a dean of the University of Georgia system, on the grounds that he advocated racial equality, leading the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools to withdraw accreditation from the states white colleges. In 1942, Tamladge was defeated in his bid for reelection, suffering because of the scandal and the popularity of Roosevelt. In 1946, he was reelected by opposing a federal court ruling invalidating the white primary, but died before taking office. The administration was often able to circumvent Talmadge's opposition by working with pro-New Deal politicians, most notably Atlanta Mayor William B. Hartsfield.

Wartime factory production during World War II helped boost Georgia's economy out of recession. Marietta's Bell Aircraft plant, the principle assembly site for the B-29 Superfortress bomber, employed some 28,000 people at its peak, Robins Air Field near Macon employed some 13,000 civilians, Fort Benning became the world's largest infantry training school, newly-opened Fort Gordon became a major deployment center for troops leaving for the European front, while shipyards in Savannah and |Brunswick built many of the ships used to transport troops and supplies. Following the cesation of hostilities, the states urban centers continued to thrive. From 1946 to 1955, some 500 new factories were constructed in the state. At the same time, the mechanization of agriculture dramatically reduced the need for farm laborers, percipitating an urban migration of former sharecroppers and tenant farmers. By 1950, more Georgians were employed in manufacturing than farming. During the war, Atlanta's Candler Field was the nations busiest airport in terms of flight operation, and Mayor Hartsfield lobbied succesfully to make the city a hub of commercial air travel, based on its strategic location in relation to the nation's major population centers.

Civil Rights and Beyond

Georgia was a battleground in the American Civil Rights Movement. Georgia governor Marvin Griffin denounced Brown v. Board of Education, pledging to keep Georgia's schools segregated, "come hell or high water". Atlanta-born Baptist minister Martin Luther King, Jr. first emerged in the national spotlite through his leadership of the Montgomery Bus Boycott in 1955. The success of the boycott led to the formation of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference in Atlanta in 1957, providing the political leadership for the Civil Rights movement. In 1958, a a Reform Jewish temple in Atlanta was bombed by a group called the 'Confederate Underground,' citing Jewish support for the Civil Rights movement. The SCLC committed much of its resources to a desegregation campaign in Albany in 1961, but, with the local police chief restraining violent attacks on demonstrators that had inflamed national opinion elsewhere, this campaign failed to achieve any dramatic victories. However, the Albany campaign taught King and the SCLC important lessons they woyld put into use in the more succesful Birmingham campaign of 1963-64, forcing Kennedy to submit a Civil Rights bill to Congress, which led to the passage of the Civil Rights Act.

Atlanta Mayor Ivan Allen, Jr. tesified before Congress in support of the Civil Rights Act, and Governor Carl Sanders worked with the administration to ensure the states compliance. In the state's largest city, Atlanta, desegregation proceeded without significant violence. Atlanta Constitution editor and syndicated columnist Ralph McGill earned admiration, enmity and several death threats by writing in support of the civil rights movement. However, the majority of white Georgians continued to oppose integration, as evinced by the election, in 1966, of Lester Maddox, who gained fame for violently threatening black civil rights demonstrators attempting to enter his resteraunt. As Governor, stubbornly agitated for states rights, and prevented the body of Martin Luther King, Jr. from lying in state in the state capital after his assassination. In 1969, the U.S. Department of Justice filed a lawsuit against the state to finally integrate the public schools. In 1970, newly-elected Governor Jimmy Carter, who had campaigned as a segregationst, declared in his inaugural address that the era of racial segregation had ended. Integration percipitated white flight, and in 1974, Atlanta, now a majority-black city, elected its first black mayor, Maynard Jackson. His administrations most significant achievement was the completion, in 1980, of William B. Hartsfield International Airport, the largest in the world, designed to accommodate up to 55 million passangers a year. In 1990, the International Olympic Committee selected Atlanta as the site of the 1996 Summer Olympics.

The association of the Democratic Party with the Civil Rights, and the Left in general, gradually eroded the monopoly it had once enjoyed in state politics as the 'white man's party.' In 1964, Georgia was one of the few states to support Barry Goldwater, and the segregationist message of George Wallace won the state in 1968. Since then, Georgia, along with much of the formerly Democrat Solid South has become a Republican stronghold in Presidential elections, despite the states support for native-son Jimmy Carter in 1980. In 1992, Paul Coverdell became the first Republican Senator from Georgia since the end of Reconstruction, and, two years later, Republican Congressman Newt Gingrich, representing the conservative northern suburbs of Atlanta, was the acknowledged leader of the Republican Revolution and was elected Speaker of the House. The states leading Democrat, Governor Zell Miller (1990-99), gradually shifted to the right, and, after being appointed to the Senate following the death of Coverdell, emerged as a prominent ally of George W. Bush on the war in Iraq, Social Security privatization, tax cuts, and opposition to gay marriage. In 2002, Georgia elected its first Republican governor since Reconstruction Sonny Perdue , who had campaigned against a redesign of the state flag which removed the Confederate battle emblem.

References

Surveys

  • New Georgia Encyclopedia (2005). Scholarly resource covering all topics.
  • Andy Ambrose. Atlanta: An Illustrated History Hill Street Press, 2003. ISBN 1-58818-086-7, 200+ photographs
  • Bartley, Numan V. The Creation of Modern Georgia (1990). Scholarly history 1865-1990.
  • Coleman, Kenneth. ed. A History of Georgia (1991). Survey by scholars.
  • Coulter, E. Merton. A Short History of Georgia (1933)
  • Franklin Miller Garrett. Atlanta and Environs: A Chronicle of Its People and Events (1969), 2 vol.
  • Steve Goodson. Highbrows, Hillbillies, and Hellfire: Public Entertainment in Atlanta, 1880-1930 University of Georgia Press, 2002. ISBN 0-8203-2319-5.)
  • Donald L. Grant. The Way It Was in the South: The Black Experience in Georgia 1993
  • London, Bonta Bullard. (1999) Georgia: The History of an American State Montgomery, Alabama: Clairmont Press ISBN 1-56733-994-8. A middle school textbook.

Scholarly studies to 1900

  • Bass, James Horace. "The Attack upon the Confederate Administration in Georgia in the Spring of 1864." Georgia Historical Quarterly 18 (1934): 228-247.
  • Bass, James Horace. "The Georgia Gubernatorial Elections of 1861 and 1863." Georgia Historical Quarterly 17 (1935): 167-188
  • Bryan, T. Conn. Confederate Georgia University of Georgia Press, 1953.
  • Coleman, Kenneth. Confederate Athens, 1861-1865 University of Georgia Press, 1967.
  • Charles L. Flynn Jr., White Land, Black Labor: Caste and Class in Late Nineteenth-Century Georgia (LSU Press 1983)
  • William W. Freehling and Craig M. Simpson; Secession Debated: Georgia's Showdown in 1860 Oxford University Press, 1992
  • Hahn Steven. The Roots of Southern Populism: Yeoman Farmers and the Transformation of the Georgia Upcountry, 1850-1890. Oxford University Press, 1983.
  • Hamilton, Peter Joseph. The Reconstruction Period (1906), full length history of era; Dunning School approach; 570 pp; ch 12 on Georgia
  • Miles, Jim To the Sea: A History and Tour Guide of the War in the West: Sherman's March Across Georgia, 1864 Cumberland House Publishing (2002)
  • Clarence L. Mohr. On the Threshold of Freedom: Masters and Slaves in Civil War Georgia (1986)
  • Parks, Joseph H. Joseph E. Brown of Georgia. LSU Press, 1977.
  • Parks, Joseph H. "State Rights in a Crisis: Governor Joseph E. Brown versus President Jefferson Davis." Journal of Southern History 32 (1966): 3-24. online at JSTOR
  • Darden Asbury Pyron; ed. Recasting: Gone with the Wind in American Culture University Press of Florida. (1983)
  • Joseph P. Reidy; From Slavery to Agrarian Capitalism in the Cotton Plantation South: Central Georgia, 1800-1880 University of North Carolina Press, (1992)
  • Saye, Albert B. New Viewpoints in Georgia History 1943.
  • Schott, Thomas E. Alexander H. Stephens of Georgia: A Biography. LSU Press, 1988.
  • Thompson, William Y. Robert Toombs of Georgia. LSU Press, 1966.
  • Wallenstein; Peter. From Slave South to New South: Public Policy in Nineteenth-Century Georgia University of North Carolina Press, 1987
  • Werner, Randolph D. "The New South Creed and the Limits of Radicalism: Augusta, Georgia, before the 1890s" Journal of Southern History v 57 #3 2001. pp 573+.
  • Woodward, C. Vann. Tom Watson: Agrarian Rebel (1938)
  • Woolley; Edwin C. The Reconstruction of Georgia (1901 )Dunning School

Since 1900

  • Karen Ferguson; Black Politics in New Deal Atlanta University of North Carolina Press, 2002
  • Gary M. Fink; Prelude to the Presidency: The Political Character and Legislative Leadership Style of Governor Jimmy Carter Greenwood Press, 1980
  • Gilbert C. Fite; Richard B. Russell, Jr., Senator from Georgia University of North Carolina Press, 1991
  • Douglas Flamming; Creating the Modern South: Millhands and Managers in Dalton, Georgia, 1884-1984 University of North Carolina Press, 1992
  • William Warren Rogers. Transition to the Twentieth Century: Thomas County, Georgia, 1900-1920 2002. vol 4 of comprehensive history of one county.
  • Peirce, Neal R. The Deep South States of America: People, Politics, and Power in the Seven Deep South States (1974). Reporting on politics and economics 1960-72
  • Thomas Allan Scott. Cobb County, Georgia, and the Origin of the Suburban South: A Twentieth Century History (2003).
  • Mel Steely. The Gentleman from Georgia: The Biography of Newt Gingrich Mercer University Press, 2000. ISBN 0-86554-671-1.
  • Stephen G. N. Tuck. Beyond Atlanta: The Struggle for Racial Equality in Georgia, 1940-1980 . University of Georgia Press, 2001. ISBN 0-8203-2265-2.)
  • C. Vann Woodward, Tom Watson: Agrarian Rebel (1938)

Primary sources

  • Scott, Thomas Allan ed. Cornerstones of Georgia History: Documents That Formed the State (1995). Collection of primary sources.

Primary sources

  1. ^ C. Vann Woodward, Tom Watson: Agrarian Rebel (Oxford University Press: Oxford and New York, 1938), Pg. 132
  2. ^ Gerald Gaither, Blacks and the Populist Movement: Ballots and Bigotry in the New South (University of Alabama Press: Tuscaloosa, AL, 2005) Pg. 2
  3. ^ Sarah Soule, ‘Populism and Black Lynching in Georgia, 1890-1900’ Pg. 435 Social Forces: Vol. 71, No. 2
  4. ^ 'Cotton Production and the Boll Weevil in Georgia' Pg. 11, http://pubs.caes.uga.edu/caespubs/pubs/PDF/RB428.pdf
  5. ^ Aristide Zoldberg, A Nation By Design (Oxford Univeristy Press, 2005), Pg. 255
  6. ^ http://www.georgiaencyclopedia.org/nge/Article.jsp?id=h-2730
  7. ^ http://www.georgiaencyclopedia.org/nge/Article.jsp?id=h-2733
  8. ^ http://www.georgiaencyclopedia.org/nge/Article.jsp?id=h-2733