Georgia: A State History
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Georgia: A State History, opens a window on our rich and sometimes tragic past and reveals to all of us the fascinating complexity of what it means to be a Georgian.
Georgia's past has diverged from the nation's and given the state and its people a distinctive culture and character. Some of the best, and the worst, aspects of American and Southern history can be found in the story of what is arguably the most important state in the South. Yet just as clearly Georgia has not always followed the road traveled by the rest of the nation and the region. Explaining the common and divergent paths that make us who we are is one reason the Georgia Historical Society has collaborated with Buddy Sullivan and Arcadia Publishing to produce Georgia: A State History, the first full-length history of the state produced in nearly a generation. Sullivan's lively account draws upon the vast archival and photographic collections of the Georgia Historical Society to trace the development of Georgia's politics, economy, and society and relates the stories of the people, both great and small, who shaped our destiny.
Buddy Sullivan
Author Buddy Sullivan, a native of the Sapelo tidewater, has researched and written about the history of coastal Georgia for the last 15 years. He has published 12 books about the coast, including comprehensive histories of Sapelo Island, McIntosh County, and Bryan County. He has also investigated the dynamics of tidewater rice cultivation, and is presently the director of the National Estuarine Research Reserve on Sapelo Island.
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Georgia - Buddy Sullivan
1831.
INTRODUCTION
ANYONE TRAVERSING MODERN-DAY GEORGIA will find a land that both resembles and stands in stark contrast to the image of the state in popular culture. From the towering skyscrapers and massive traffic jams of Atlanta to the moss-draped oaks and quiet, ancient squares of Savannah, the state seems to the visitor a paradox in itself, comfortably straddling both the Old and the New South. Somehow, in that uniquely southern way, the past and the present seem to merge into one. Georgians may not live in the past, to paraphrase the historian David Goldfield, but the past clearly lives in Georgians.
That past has diverged from the nation’s and given Georgia and its people a distinctive culture and character. Some of the best, and the worst, aspects of American and southern history can be found in the story of what is arguably the most important state in the South. Yet, just as clearly, Georgia has not always followed the road traveled by the rest of the nation and the region. Explaining the common and divergent paths that make us who we are is one reason the Georgia Historical Society has collaborated with Arcadia Publishing to produce Georgia: A State History.
Georgia’s early years foreshadowed the journey that lay ahead. Alone among the 13 original colonies, Georgia served as an outpost of Spain’s new world empire and became the battleground where Spanish dreams of conquering and colonizing the Atlantic coast came to an ignominious end. Unlike the other colonies, Georgia was not created for riches or religious liberty. Instead, it was founded by a British aristocrat for the seemingly incongruous purposes of establishing both a military buffer and a humanitarian society where slavery was initially outlawed. The state’s conservatism during the crises of the Revolution and the Civil War was remarkably different from the radicalism of South Carolina, its neighbor to the north.
Later, during the Civil Rights struggle of the 1960s, Georgia once again followed its own course, quietly desegregating its public facilities and, for the most part, rejecting the violent opposition to black equality demonstrated in neighboring Alabama and Mississippi. Georgia would go on to embrace the creed of the New South so enthusiastically that what had been the weakest and most undeveloped colony in the eighteenth century would be transformed by the dawn of the twenty-first into the richest, most urbanized, and technologically advanced state in the region.
Map of Georgia, 1890.
Despite these differences, however, the story of Georgia is typically southern. The growth of the Cotton Kingdom, the devastation of the Civil War, the political campaigns of the Solid South, the racial oppression of Jim Crow, and the economic rebirth and revitalization of the post–World War II era are all part of both the Georgian and southern experience. Indeed, from the invention of the cotton gin on a plantation near Savannah to the emergence of the urban goliath of Atlanta, one could tell the story of the South through the lens of this single state.
It is the compelling story of this unique and yet typically southern people that the Georgia Historical Society seeks to tell. Founded in 1839 with the mission to collect, preserve, and share the history of the state for the enlightenment and enjoyment of its citizens, the society early on amassed an amazing collection of Georgia-related materials, including records and documents, maps, portraits, rare books, and artifacts. Simultaneously, it launched an ambitious publications program designed to make history accessible to all Georgians. Since its first book appeared in 1840, GHS has published over 100 volumes of edited primary sources, monographs, photographs, essays, and lectures related to Georgia history.
The antebellum state capitol at Milledgeville.
Buddy Sullivan’s history of Georgia is the most recent in a long and distinguished line of publications offered by GHS that take our collections out of the archives and place them in the hands of the public. The first full-length history of the state produced in nearly a generation, this book is a partnership between the society, Arcadia Publishing, and one of Georgia’s most prolific historians. A popular lecturer, veteran journalist, and gifted author of numerous books on various facets of Georgia history, Sullivan is well-suited to tell the story of the state’s journey through time. His lively account traces the development of Georgia’s politics, economy, and society, relating the stories of the people, both great and small, who shaped our destiny. In the process, he explains to us the foundations of modern Georgia.
This book will be indispensable reading for all Georgians, both old and new. Natives will gain a clearer sense of who they are and newcomers will have a better understanding of the land they now call home. Buddy Sullivan’s history of the state opens a window on our rich and sometimes tragic past, revealing to all the fascinating complexity of what it means to be a Georgian.
~ W. Todd Groce, Executive Director
Georgia Historical Society
1. TWO FORGOTTEN
CENTURIES
RECENT SCHOLARSHIP HAS DEMONSTRATED fairly conclusively that the land that was to become the state of Georgia was the scene of the first European attempt to establish a permanent colony in the present-day United States. In the fall of 1526, Lucas Vasquez de Ayllon, a Spanish official and sugar planter from the island of Hispaniola, founded the colony of San Miguel de Gualdape on the southeastern coast of the future United States, quite possibly in the vicinity of Sapelo Sound in present-day McIntosh County, Georgia. In the context of western hemisphere exploration and colonization, it must be emphasized that Ayllon’s colony appeared a mere 34 years after Columbus made landfall in the lesser Antilles, 39 years before the Spanish settlement at St. Augustine (regarded as the first permanent European settlement on the United States mainland), 81 years before the arrival of the English at Jamestown, and fully 207 years prior to Oglethorpe’s landing at Savannah in 1733. Over 500 Spanish colonists accompanied Ayllon and, although the effort was not a success due to attrition caused by disease and troubles with the local Native Americans, it nonetheless served as the precursor of later Spanish attempts to explore the region.¹
Further Spanish explorations of the section that was to include Georgia were those of Hernando de Soto and Tristan de Luna. The former led an expedition from the Gulf of Mexico through upper Florida and much of Georgia in 1540. In northwestern Georgia, de Soto encountered—with violent consequences—the Coosa Indian chiefdom along the Etowah River.
In the fall of 1565, Pedro Menendez de Aviles established St. Augustine on the upper east coast of Florida. A year later, Menendez began expanding his interests northward along the coast. He developed a series of missions on the barrier islands from St. Augustine northward to the Savannah River where resident Native American populations were indoctrinated in Spanish religion, culture, and farming techniques. Jesuit and, later, Franciscan priests conducted evangelical activities on the sea islands of Georgia. Governed from St. Augustine, the missions were largely self-sufficient, particularly in that section of the middle and upper coast comprising the Guale chiefdoms. The name Guale (pronounced Wall-ie
) came from the Spanish appellation for the island of Guale, present-day St. Catherines Island. Here, about 1570, the Spanish established the principal Franciscan mission of the coast, called Santa Catalina de Guale.² Other Franciscan missions were located on Sapelo Island (San Jose de Sapala), St. Simons Island (Santo Domingo de Asao and San Simon), and Cumberland Island (San Pedro de Mocama). These missions interacted with Guale Indian populations on the islands and at the larger Guale towns, representing various chiefdoms on the mainland: Tupiqui, Espogache, Tolomato, and Talaxe, among others.
In 1597, a Native American revolt, known as the Juanillo Rebellion, precipitated by increasing resentment over the Spanish dominance of the region, resulted in the massacre of five Franciscan friars. Following a brief abandonment of the missions, peaceful relations with the Guale were reestablished and Spanish missionary activities resumed by 1603. This effort was solidified by a visitacion by the Roman Catholic bishop of Cuba in 1606.
There followed half a century of relatively peaceful activity by Spain along the Guale coast, a period in which Spanish military and evangelistic hegemony reached its peak. However, beginning in 1670 with the establishment of Charles Town and the new English colony of South Carolina, increasing troubles between England and Spain, based largely on commercial considerations in the region, led to the eventual decline of the Spanish missionary presence in Georgia. In 1680, an English force with Native American allies attacked Santa Catalina, the primary mission at St. Catherines Island. The mission was moved to Sapelo, the next island to the south, where it was active for another six years. Following further raids, Spanish officials in St. Augustine ordered the deactivation of missions north of the St. Marys River in 1686.
Sixteenth-century Spanish map of La Florida,
encompassing what would later become the southeastern United States.
Nothing now remains of any of the Spanish missions and few references to them are to be found in the eighteenth-century English colonial records for Georgia. For this reason, historians paid scant attention to the mission era until recent years when careful scrutiny of official Spanish records in Europe led to a renewed interest in the lost
200 years. In 1981, an archaeological team led by David Hurst Thomas located the site of Mission Santa Catalina de Guale on St. Catherines Island. A systematic investigation of the rich yield of sixteenth- and seventeenth-century artifacts and several building foundations beneath the soil have led to a greater understanding of both the Spanish missionary culture and the resident Guale and Timucuan Indians to which the friars ministered.
THE SPANISH MISSION MYTH
In the early 1930s, in an effort to attract tourists and land developers, the numerous tabby oyster shell ruins along Georgia’s coast were promoted as the remains of Spanish missions from the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. Regional boosterism
and the romantic appeal of thick-robed Franciscan friars preaching to the Guale Indians against the backdrop of tabby convents found their way into such prominent publications as the Atlanta Constitution and National Geographic. Spanish mission scholars, such as Herbert Bolton, Mary Ross, and John Tate Lanning, published authoritative books attributing Georgia’s coastal tabby ruins as evidence of the lost missions. They identified the tabbies at St. Marys as the Mission of Santa Maria, those at Elizafield plantation on the Altamaha River as the ruins of Mission Santo Domingo, and the remains at Sapelo Island as Mission San Jose.
For generations, these tabby ruins had, in local lore, been identified as the remains of nineteenth-century sugar mills and plantation structures. The Georgia Society of the Colonial Dames of America engaged its own team of scholars to dispel the Spanish mission myth.
Local historian Marmaduke Floyd of Savannah, along with James A. Ford of the Smithsonian Institution, conducted a series of historical and archaeological investigations, the result of which proved conclusively that the coastal tabbies were indeed the ruins of antebellum sugarhouses and cotton barns.
Floyd and Ford published their findings in 1937 in a seminal work edited by E. Merton Coulter, Georgia’s Disputed Ruins. The exhaustive documentation accumulated by Floyd is on deposit among the manuscript holdings of the Georgia Historical Society. Floyd’s research centered on the contemporary writings of Sapelo Island planter Thomas Spalding, the leading proponent of the use of tabby as a building material on the Georgia coast during the antebellum period. As early as 1816, then later in the 1830s in the Southern Agriculturist, Spalding described his extensive use of tabby and provided detail on his formula
for making tabby, utilizing equal measures of oyster shell, sand, water, and lime (obtained from the ash residue of burnt shell). Spalding built his Sapelo Island sugar works of tabby, then his family residence and other plantation structures. His methods were adopted by many contemporary tidewater planters.
Tabby structures based on the Spalding method were built from c. 1810 until c. 1860 along the coast from South Carolina to northeastern Florida. The ruins of many of these structures remain on the coastal sea islands as well as the adjacent mainland, particularly in McIntosh and Glynn Counties.
Tabby remains of Elizafield plantation sugar mill,Glynn County.
The archaeological evidence at St. Catherines Island, Parris Island, and other mission sites has translated into a greater understanding of the Franciscan presence on the Guale coast during the two lost centuries. Clearly, life was difficult for those on station at the remote, isolated barrier island missions, as well as for the resident Guale Indians. Infectious diseases took a heavy toll on Native Americans and Europeans alike, and epidemics of smallpox, typhoid, and measles were not uncommon. This was particularly so among the Guale, who had no immunity or resistance to these heretofore unknown diseases. Out of about 1,000 Guale who inhabited St. Catherines Island and its environs when the Spaniards arrived in 1570, only a handful remained at the end of the mission era on the Guale coast 116 years later.
The accumulation by the Spanish and subsequent archaeological discovery of numerous religious artifacts at the Santa Catalina mission testifies to the intense effort by the Franciscans to impose Catholicism on the native people. Evidence on these sites also demonstrates the difficulty of the Spanish to adapt to their landscape environment; wheat residue found at St. Catherines was likely imported from Spain or perhaps St. Augustine, since surviving records indicate little success in the cultivation of this important Spanish dietary staple on the Guale coast. More is being learned about the lives of these far-flung missionaries as interest in the lost 200 years increases among archaeologists and historians.
For 35 years following the abandonment of the missions, the coast of Guale lay at the center of increasing dispute between the English in South Carolina and the Spaniards in Florida. The stretch of coast between Beaufort and Amelia Island, known as the debatable land,
came to represent the linchpin of a growing commercial struggle between England, Spain, and France. To protect their interests, Carolina merchants centered at Charles Town sponsored John Barnwell and his rangers to establish a permanent outpost, Fort King George, near the mouth of the Altamaha River in 1721. The English built a cypress blockhouse and stationed troops there for several years to deter the Spaniards from potential encroachments toward Carolina. The unhealthy Altamaha delta region took a far greater toll on them than did their Spanish adversaries, however, and the English abandoned Fort King George in 1727.
2. THE COLONY UNDER THE TRUSTEES
THE CONCEPT FOR THE ESTABLISHMENT of a new English colony between South Carolina and Spanish Florida may reasonably be said to have begun as early as 1717 when Scotsman Sir Robert Montgomery proposed (to no result) his ambitious margravate of Azilia
on the coast that would become Georgia. By 1729, the British Board of Trade was advocating an extension of South Carolina further southward, below the Savannah River, for protective purposes against Spanish Florida. South Carolina had become an important commercial enterprise with productive rice plantations along the coast from Georgetown to Beaufort, and a burgeoning slave and sugar trade with British colonies in the Caribbean.
At the same time, James Edward Oglethorpe, member of Parliament since 1722, was heading a committee to investigate deplorable conditions in English debtor prisons. Among the recommendations of Oglethorpe’s committee was the release of thousands of debtors
to form the basis of a new colony. This action would serve the additional purpose of providing a military buffer for South Carolina in response to the increasingly antagonistic Spanish authorities in St. Augustine. Thus, in 1730, a concerted Georgia movement
had begun with Oglethorpe, John Viscount Percival, James Vernon, and others forming the corporation that came to be known as the Georgia Trustees. By 1732, the Trustees’ proposal had received the blessing of King George II, the latter approving the settlement of lands between the Savannah and Altamaha Rivers. The Trustees honored the king’s support by giving their venture his name—Georgia.¹
There has been much written by earlier generations of Georgia historians regarding the philanthropic ideals upon which the new colony was founded. In actuality, few debtors were among the first settlers of Georgia. The Trustees, philanthropy notwithstanding, had two primary motives for the colony, one being to claim the disputed land along the coast between South Carolina and Spanish Florida, and the other being purely economic: the mercantilistic prospects (and profits) offered by the establishment of agricultural ventures and their attendant trade outlets with English possessions in the Caribbean basin. There was a great deal of emphasis placed upon silk production in the new colony, although this effort had met with little success in Virginia and the Carolinas earlier. They also viewed the semi-tropical climate of coastal Georgia as ideal for the cultivation of a variety of spices and the production of wine.
Oglethorpe himself accompanied the first group of 114 settlers to America, these being recruited through the Trustees’ vigorous promotional campaign. (Another 500 colonists followed a year later.) The ship Ann, transporting the first colonists, sailed from London in November 1732 and arrived at Charles Town two months later. Proceeding to Beaufort, Oglethorpe quickly selected high ground at Yamacraw Bluff on the Savannah River, 16 miles inland from the Atlantic Ocean, as the site of a settlement. It is likely that Colonel William Bull, royal governor of South Carolina and an experienced surveyor, had considerable input in the selection of the site of Savannah. Chief Tomochichi of the local Yamacraw Indians, through interpretation provided by trader John Musgrove and his Native American wife of mixed descent, Mary Musgrove, gave Oglethorpe his approval for the settlement. Oglethorpe and the colonists, accompanied by Bull, landed at Savannah on February 12, 1733, and plans were immediately put in motion for the building of a town on the high bluff.1717²
Oglethorpe and Bull laid out the new town of Savannah to be centered around a series of squares, likely modeled after eighteenth-century London grid patterns. The squares were to be surrounded by 40 lots, each 60 by 90 feet. These groupings were comprised of two wards, north and south of the square, each with ten-lot sections called tythings. To the east and west of the squares were Trust lots for public use.