Georgia Becomes 4th State 

US #2339 was issued for Georgia’s 200th anniversary of statehood.

On January 2, 1788, Georgia was the fourth state to ratify the US Constitution, making it our fourth state.

The first human inhabitants of Georgia were the Mound Builders, a prehistoric Native American tribe. Over time, the Creek tribe settled in the South and the Cherokee in the North.

The first European to explore was probably Hernando de Soto of Spain. He crossed the region on a trip from Florida to the Mississippi River in 1540. Spain, France, and England all claimed the southeastern portion of North America as part of their territory, but it was a group of Englishmen who planned the first colony there in 1730. They named it Georgia, in honor of King George II.

US #726 commemorates the 200th anniversary of the Georgia settlement.

In 1732, King George granted a 21-year charter for the colony. The charter was granted to “Trustees for Establishing the Colony of Georgia in America.” Despite Spanish protests, on November 17, 1732, James Oglethorpe set sail from England with a group of 120 colonists. They arrived at Yamacraw Bluff on February 12, 1733. Today, the city of Savannah is located on that site. During the trustees’ 21-year control of the colony, 4,000 colonists arrived in Georgia.

The English used Georgia as a means of conducting illegal trade with Spain’s colonies in the West Indies. The two countries also disputed the proper boundary between Georgia and Florida. These conflicts led to the outbreak of war in 1739. Oglethorpe attempted to conquer Florida but failed. In 1742, Oglethorpe’s troops crushed a Spanish force landing at St. Simon’s Island, Georgia, in the Battle of Bloody Marsh. This victory ended the fighting in America, although the war continued in Europe.

King George made Georgia a royal province in 1754. Despite its prosperity, Georgia became involved in the movement for independence that was flourishing in other colonies. In 1775, when the Revolutionary War broke out in Massachusetts, support for independence solidified, and Georgia’s patriots seized power. Georgian forces first fought British troops in March 1776, when a British warship attempted to seize 11 rice boats in Savannah. Only two of the ships were captured. On July 24, 1778, Georgia ratified the Articles of Confederation.

In December 1778, the British captured Savannah. American forces, supported by the French Navy, attempted to liberate the city but failed. By the end of 1779, the British controlled the entire state except for Wilkes County. The British were finally driven from Georgia in 1782. The War for Independence ended in 1783.

US #1636 – This version of the Georgia state flag was in use from 1956 to 2001.

On January 2, 1788, Georgia became the fourth state in the Union to ratify the United States Constitution. The state entered a period of rapid development in the 1790s as settlers and land companies began to spread into the region. In 1795, land companies used bribes to make large land purchases from the state. The land was purchased for about 1.5¢ an acre.   The developers planned to re-sell the land at a huge profit. This scheme became known as the Yazoo Fraud. Angry Georgians elected a new legislature that repealed the earlier sales, but many of the land developers insisted their purchases were legal. In 1802, Georgia sold all of its land west of the Chattahoochee River to the US government. In 1814, the federal government finally paid $4,200,000 to settle the Yazoo claims.

The federal government also worked to remove all of the Native Americans from Georgia. In 1827, the Cherokee Indians sold the last of their lands to the US Federal troops forced the last remaining Cherokee Indians to move to reservation land in Oklahoma in 1838. Settlers quickly cleared the Indian land for farming, especially for growing cotton. By 1840, an extensive railroad system had developed through the state to transport people and agricultural products.

US #3570 pictures part of a plantation, Spanish moss, bald cypress trees, and the state fruit – peaches.

Georgia’s economy was based on cotton production, which depended heavily on slavery. On January 19, 1861, Georgia became the fifth state to secede from the Union. Early in the war, Union forces took control of the port of Savannah. Confederate troops won the first large battle in Georgia at Chickamauga in September 1863.

However, the war quickly turned against Georgia. Union troops, commanded by General William T. Sherman, captured the city of Atlanta in September 1863. In November, they burned the city and began the legendary “march to the sea.” Sherman’s forces marched toward Savannah, devastating everything they came across. As they cut a 60-mile-wide path through the state, destroying factories, mills, railroads, and other public buildings, they destroyed about $100 million in property. Largely unopposed, General Sherman captured Savannah in December 1864.

US #4285 pictures Georgia’s flag as well as a lamppost, iron fence, and flowering shrubs similar to what you’d find in old Savannah.

After the Civil War ended in 1865, Georgia continued to face hard times. Military rule lasted in the state on and off until 1870. Georgia was readmitted to the Union in 1868. But in 1869 it was expelled, due to its failure to ratify the 15th amendment, guaranteeing people of all races the right to vote. The amendment was ratified in 1870, and Georgia was permanently readmitted into the United States on July 15, 1870.

From the 1870s until the Great Depression (1929-1942), Georgia experienced economic growth. This period was marked by increases in manufacturing, trade, and banking, as well as railroad construction. With the start of World War II (1939-1945), Georgia’s economy resumed its industrial expansion. Large numbers of farmers and agricultural workers took factory jobs in the cities. The majority of these workers stayed in the cities after the war ended. By 1950, the United States census revealed that more Georgians worked in manufacturing than agriculture. In 1960, the census determined that the majority of Georgians lived in urban areas. The state continues to thrive economically. And like many states, it has been forced to deal with overcrowded cities, increased pollution, and racial tensions.

US #1962 pictures the state bird and flower – the brown thrasher and Cherokee rose.

Georgia’s urban growth resulted in many political and social changes. Since the 1960s, the state’s legislative and congressional districts have been redivided several times. These modifications were made to give a more accurate representation of the population. In 1961, black children attended all-white schools for the first time. By August 1969, all of the state’s schools were ordered to be completely integrated.

Black leaders have also made progress in Georgia. In 1965, black civil-rights leader Julian Bond was elected to the Georgia legislature. Other legislators denied Bond his seat, but in 1966 the US Supreme Court ruled in Bond’s favor. In 1973, Maynard H. Jackson, Jr., was elected mayor of Atlanta, making him the first black mayor of a large Southern city.

Click here to see what else happened on This Day in History.

Did you like this article? Click here to rate:
Share this Article

11 Comments

  1. What was the purpose of Sherman’s destruction of so much non military property and hurting civilians? It would only make it harder to bring the state back into the fold. I was surprised also that the state kept he confederate flag on the state flag so long. War makes no sense.The poor old USA just beat itself up. Canada looked on in horror.

    1. According to thecanadianencyclopedia.ca roughly 40,000 Canadians fought in the American Civil War; most of them for the North. Wikipedia says that between 33,000 and 55,000 men from British North America enlisted in the war, almost all of them fighting for Union forces. Canada Encyclopedia goes on to say that Canadian soldiers fought in nearly every battle of the American Civil War, so there were fewer looking on in horror than you think.

  2. There was no rhyme nor reason for Sherman’s brutality excpt for pure brutality
    and to punish the citizens of Georgia. There was no reason for the brutal treatment of the south as a whole after the war. An amicable reconstruction of the South (as Lincoln wanted as was stated
    in his second inaugural “With malice toward none, with charity for all” because he wanted a
    charitable reconstruction) could have occurred BUT there were too many in the Federal
    Government that saw opportunity for riches in reconstruction. This would have tempered
    the one hundred and fifty years of animosity between the South and the North.

    1. Radical Reconstruction was implemented after all former Confederate states, except for Tennessee, refused to ratify the 14th Amendment; granting equal protection under the law for freed slaves.
      I find it interesting that Southerners continue to paint themselves as victims. The Confederacy committed treason so that they continue to own other human beings.

  3. Thank you for another great story about one of our 50 states, Georgia. I will have to plan a visit in my future travel schedule.

  4. Again I state the it is ironic but predictable that unreconstructed southerners would blame Sherman for the destructive march through Georgia rather than the firebrands who forced secession on the South and led the Confederacy to an ultimately unwinnable civil war.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *