History
Laws & Ordinances of Roberta, Georgia for 1904
Original Settlers of the County
Greatest Tragedy in Crawford County History
Crawford County, the
57th county formed in Georgia,
was one of 4 counties created on December 9th, 1822
from Creek Indian lands and part of Houston County
by an act of the General Assembly
(Georgia Laws 1822, p. 21). The county was named for William H. Crawford,
who was U.S. Secretary of the Treasury
(as well as Georgia's first candidate for U.S. President in
1824),
when the county was created.
The county has traditionally been a leader in the state's peach production. There are 19 archaeological sites in the county that have been filed with the State Archeological Office. Of particular significance is the Creek Indian habitation area along the Flint River. In 1824, portions of the Crawford County were used to create Upson County. In 1826, the portion of the Old Creek Agency Reserve on the east side of the Flint River was added to Crawford County (Ga. Laws 1826, p. 60).
Development
of the County
From the
Crawford County Sesquicentennial book,
Roberta, Georgia, November 16-19, 1972
The most
probable reason for the creation of Crawford County
was that Houston County was too big. People needed to live
near enough to a seat of government that they could travel
to in less than a days time. Therefore, counties were
made smaller. The county seat, of course, was placed
as near the center of the county as possible to
make travel easier. Thus, according to the following
act, Crawford County was created. And it be
further enacted, That all that tract of country
hereinafter pointed out, beginning at the corner of twelfth
and thirteenth districts of Monroe, thence due South to
Ichuconna Creek, thence down said creek to the district line
dividing the fourth and fifth districts of Houston, thence from
corner
of said fourth district, a direct line touching the Southeast
corner of
the seventh district of Houston to the Flint River, thence up
said river to the mouth of Big Potatoe Creek, thence a
direct line to the corner of the first and sixteenth
districts of Houston on the county line, thence east on
said line to the beginning, making one other county, to be called Crawford.
Last Updated Wednesday, April 10, 2013
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