Seventy
years after General James Oglethorpe settled the colony of Georgia and 27
years after that colony became one of the 13 original states, Wayne County
came into being. It was created by an Act of the Legislature in 1803 after
the Wilkinson Treaty was signed with the Creek Indians on January 16, 1802,
which ceded part of the Tallassee Country and part of the lands within the
forks of the Oconee and Ocmulgee Rivers to the United States. Although created
in 1803, no valid lottery was done for the county until the Land Lottery
Act of 1805. The 1805 Act divided the half million acres (2,000 km²) of
Wayne County, formed the Tallassee Strip, and set the stage for the land
lottery that would result in more formal settlement of the area. It is the
second date, December 7, 1805, that the county chose to observe as the creation
date. Being close to the coast and bordered by the Altamaha River, Wayne
County's history includes occupation by Spanish missionaries at the time
of the settlement of Saint Augustine as well as short lived French occupation.
The flags of France, Spain, England, and the Confederate States of America
all flew over Wayne with little success.
The
county was named for Mad Anthony Wayne whose military career had made him
a well known hero. When he surprised the British garrison at Stony Point
on July 15, 1779, he acquired the nickname “Mad” Anthony. From one siege
to another, he was a vital member of General George Washington’s staff serving
well under General Nathanael Greene and coming to Georgia in 1781 in his
service during the American Revolution.
Wayne Co. is available for Adoption.
Biographies
Churches
Land Records
Obituaries
Miscellaneous
Cemeteries
Court Records
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Wayne is surrounded by: Brantley, Pierce, Bacon, Appling, Tattnall, Long, McIntosh and Glynn