
State Coordinator
Ed
Peach County GAGenWeb is up for Adoption if you
would like to be the
county coordinator
for the Peach County Website.
Click here
I want to
express much thanks to Barbara Koska Timm and Arlene Woody,
the former county
coordinators,
who provided much of the current content and
development
.
THE CREATION OF PEACH COUNTY
File contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by Marilyn Neisler Windham
who wrote this on the occasion of the 75th Anniversary of Peach County -
July 10, 1999.
Peach County was officially created in July 1924 when the
legislature passed the constitutional amendment that created Georgia's last
formed county. In the 1924 November general election, the people of
Georgia ratified the bill by a vote of 77,052 to 31,211. Beginning
January 1, 1925, Peach County went into business. County officers
were elected on January 7th. The idea of this area at the north end
of Houston County having its own county seat was not just something that
developed in the 20th century. As early as the 1850s folks living
here wanted their own independence. Again in the 1880s there was
talk of a new county. It was hard getting to the Courthouse in Perry
and there were parts of Macon County that found it difficult to cross the Flint
River to do business in their county seat. So the idea of making a
county out of Houston and Macon Counties was hardily discussed. But
the real push to make this new county a reality was begun in 1914 at a meeting
at Mr. A.B. Greene's house at Everett Square. Bryon decided to do
what it took to put this area on the map. The movement officially
started as early as 1916, but it was in 1922 that the political battle reached
its peak. The fight between the north end of Houston County and the
south end was almost unprecedented in terms of a war of words and political
advertisements in papers across the state. There were many issues at
hand: Population, land distribution, need for another county, and the name being
a fruit! The main debate state wide was whether the state needed any
more counties. Peach County would be number 161 at the time. Several
years before 5 counties were created. People around the state began
seeing all these new counties as just more governments and more political power
for certain groups. With local people the debate was much
deeper. The concerns were divisions of political power, race,
population ....and everything in between. Macon County was persuaded
to vote against a Peach County admendment and in return was given 40,000 acres
by Houston County. Women's clubs got in the act and wrote vicious
letters back and forth from Fort Valley and Montezuma. One merchant
in Marshallville was sent a letter to "get out of town" because of his support
of the new county. The question of the name was raised.
How could Georgia possibly start naming counties after agricultrual
crops? Would there soon be a "Watermelon County". And
what about cotton, pecan or corn counties? Where would it all
lead? In 1922 the Admendment to create Peach County was passed by
the legislature but was defeated by the people of Georgia in the General
Election. After the 1922 defeat there is little written about all
the many things that happened, but in the end, the bickering parties got
together and made the peach capital of the world a reality.
Untireless efforts from Senator J.E. Davison, Emmet House, Charles Jackson, H.C.
Neil, C.L. Shepard, A.J. Evans helped to resolve the differences with the Macon
and Houston County electorate, so that the 1924 admendment passed.
Peach
County was formed from:
1) Section of Houston given to Macon
2) Section
from Macon and Houston which resulted in Peach County
3) The Central of
Georgia Railroad line runs diagonally through the
counties.
Georgia
History on the Georgia GenWeb Archives
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Copyright 2007 ~ Joe Borderieux
Updated: 04/15/2008