history of troup county, georgia
Transcription
history of troup county, georgia
Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. and sticks; prefer pine trees for nests. These birds bury nuts to soften for opening. Kingbird; Tyrant Flycatcher; Bee Martin.-8 5. Dark olive or gray; adults with concealed orange croon ~ a t c h . Eggs: white speckled with brown red. Song: shrill "thsee." Nests of sticks, roots, grass, string at any height. Watches for insects from a favorite perch. Kingfisher, Belted; Halcyon.-1 3. Upper parts slaty blue; under, white. Eggs: white. Song: loud and penetrating harsh rattle. Nests in tunnel in side of a bank. Perches near water, watching for fish. Kite, Swallow-tail; Hawk. Chestnut colored with swallow-like barred tail. Eggs: white spotted with brown. Song: a shriek not often heard. Nests of sticks and grass in tall trees. Kite, White-tailed; Hawk. Like the above except that the tail is white. Martin, Purple.-8. Male: rich glossy black; wings and tail duller. Female: with more of brown and mottled. Eggs: dull white. Song: a grating warble or twitter. Nests of straw, paper, rags in bird houses or gourds. Enemy of crows and hawks. Meadowlark; Field Lark; Oldfield Lark.--1 0 5. Mottled brownish plumage. Eggs: white speckled with brown. Song: "tseeu-tseer," and a sputtering call. Nests in sedges on ground, partially arched over. Mockingbird.-1 o T/2. Gray above; wings and tail brownish; wings white tipped; whitish under. Eggs: bluish green. Song: great variety of musical notes; a great mimic. Nests in impenetrable thickets or bushes. The unsurpassed singer; some taught t o sing airs. Nighthawk; Nightjar; Bull Bat; Mosquito Hawk; risk.-1 0. Mottled brownish; white band across tail and wings. Eggs: gray and white. Song: nasal "peent." Nests on bare ground, sometimes on gravel roofs in cities. Feeds on the wing, destroying flying insects. Nuthatch, White-breasted; Tree Mouse; Devil Downhead.-6. Upper parts slate color; under, white. Eggs: white spotted with brown. Song: "yank-yank," "ya-ya" in same tone. Nests in cavities lined with leaves and feathers. Climbs trees with head downward. Oriole, Baltimore; Golden Oriole; Firebird; Golden Robin.-7 5. Male : orange and black. Female: dull el lo wish and gray. Eggs: white scrawled with brownish black. Song: clear varied whistle and warble. Nests of fibers and string suspended from limbs. Place colored strings near nesting place and watch result. Male: chestnut and black. Oriole, Orchard; Orchard Starling.-7%. Female: yellowish and gray. Eggs: white, speckled and scrawled with black and brown. Song: rich and loud warble; a clattering call. Nest is a woven basket suspended from forks of limbs. VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Owl, Barn. Characterized by the large eyes, and nocturnal habits. Eggs: white. Song: hoots, accompanied by snapping of the bill. Nests in holes of trees, on rocks, in deserted nests. Owl, Horned. Marked with a pointed crest, resembling horns. Eggs: white. Song: hoots and whws. Nests similar to barn owl. Upper, brown and black marked with Partridge; Quail; Bob White.-7. buff; under, whitish. Eggs: white. Song: "Old Bob White." Nests on ground in sedges and grasses. Pewee, Wood.-6 5. Dark olive or gray; wings longer than tail; bills hooked. Eggs: creamy white speckled with brown. Song: "pee-ah-wee, pee-wee." Nests are moss covered. Perch on dead limbs in order to see better. Phebe; Dusky Flycatcher; Bridge Pewee; Water Pewee.-7. Dusky olive brown above; crested; dingy yellowish white under. Eggs: white. Song: pewit, phoebe. Nests of moss and mud lined with hair, feathers, or wod. Builds near water. Robin; Red-breasted Thrush; Robin Red-breast.-10. Dull olive gray above; breast red; white under tail. Eggs: bluish green. Song: cheerilycheer-up. Nests of mud and grass on boughs. An occasional nester here. Shrike, Northern; Butcher Bird; Nine Killer.-10. Slaty gray above; white spot on wings. Wings and throat black; light gray below. Eggs: grayish with spots darker gray. Song: similar to catbird with various whistles. Nests of twigs and grass in thorny trees. Impales their catches on thorns to better tear in pieces. Sparrow, Chipping; Chippy ; Hairbird; Chipbird.-5 Black on neck, throat and back; dark red crown; some brown. Eggs: whitish thickly spotted with brown. Song: chip-chip-chip, repeated for several seconds. Nests of twigs, rootlets and lichens generally in pines. Male: ashy with black and Sparrow, English; House Sparrow.-6%. chestnut stripes; throat black. Female: same as male but gray under. Eggs: whitish scratched with black. Song: a discordant twittering. Gregarious nests built anywhere, and of grass and leaves. Sparrow, FieEd; Field Bunting; Wood Sparrow; Bush Sparrow.-$ '/2. Chestnut streaked with black; grayish white under. Eggs: whitish marked with reddish brown. Song: swee-see-see-se-e-e; piping ascending whistle. Nests of frail grasses and weeds, lined with finer material. Builds in trees and sometimes on ground. Sfiarrow, Sharp-tailed Nelson.-5 5. Brownish or grayish olive with black streak; pale buff under. Eggs: greenish white speckled with brownish spots. Song: a weak squeaky trill. Nests in hollows of the ground. s. VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Starling.-8. Metallic green and purple. Eggs: pale blue. Song: metallic; flock makes "wheelbarrow chorus." Nests near and in and on buildings. A newcomer to the South. Swallow, Bank; Sand Martin; Sand Swallow.-5 %. Grayish brown or clay color above; white below. Eggs: white. Song: a giggling twitter. Nests in holes in sand banks; lives there after nesting. Swallow, Tree; White-bellied Swallow.-6. Lustrous dark steel green above; soft white below. Eggs: white. Song: twittering. Nests of grass lined with feathers. Lives on border of water, or in orchards. Swift, Chimney; Chimney Swallow; American Swift.-$ %. Sooty black plumage; spines on ends of tail feathers. Eggs: white. Song: a continuous twittering. Nests of sticks glued to side of chimney. Gregarious; feeds on mosquitoes and insects. Tanager, Scarlet; Black-winged Redbird; Firebird.-7%. Male: brilliant scarlet with black wings and tail. Female: olive green above; lighter below. Eggs: pale bluish green. Song: like the robin but higher; call, "chip-charr." Tanager, Smmer; Redbird; Smooth-headed Redbird.-7 %. Male: uniform red. Female: yellowish green olive; orange under. Eggs: bluish green. Song: similar to robin. Nests of twigs and rootlets on limbs in open woods. Thrasher, Brown; Brown Thrush; Mavis; Brown Mockingbird.-1 1'/2. Rusty red brown; white bands on wings; streaked white below. Eggs: bluish white. Song: bright cheerful carol; whistled "wheeu." Nests of twigs and rootlets in hedges and thickets. The official state bird of Georgia. Thrush, Hermit; Swamp Angel; Little Thrush.--7. Olive brown reddening at tail; pale buff under. Round spots on breast. Eggs: greenish blue. Song: only during nesting time; similar to mockingbird. Nests near or on the ground in briers, bark and leaves. Thrush, Wood; Song Thrush; Wood Robin; Bellbird.-8. Reddish brown to olive at tail; breast white spotted. Breast spots are heart shaped. Eggs: greenish blue. Song: clear and flute like; call, "quit," "quirt." Nests of grass, weeds and some mud on horizontal limbs. Towhee; Chewink; Grasel; Joree.-8. Male: black with white breast; chestnut wings and tail. Female: brownish instead of black. Eggs: white with brownish spots. Song: tow-hee-e-e; call, cherink. Nests of bark, leaves and grass, usually on the ground. Vireo, Blue-headed; Solitary Vireo.-& Head bluish slate; yellow green sides; whitish under. Two white bars on the wing. Eggs: creamy white. Song: a carol of pure serene trust. Nests are woven baskets of lichens, fibers and bark. Spider webs are interwoven in the nests. VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Vireo, Yellow-thoufed.-6. Plumage greenish; throat and breast yellow. Two white wing bars. Eggs: creamy or rosy white specked with brown. Song: a sad and persistent strain. Nests of bark, grasses and lichens over water. Warbler, Swainson.-5. Brownish above; whitish under. Eggs: white. Song: descending loud clear whistles. Large nests of strips of bark, roots and pine needles. This bird is a ventriloquist. Drab above; Waxwing, Bohemian; Black-throated Waxwing; Silktail.-9. lighter gray below; crested; black throat. Feather quills dark; two white wing bars; wings tipped with red. Eggs: bluish white specked with black. Song: softly hissed twittering. Nests of twigs and moss, lined with feathers. Generally nests low in pine trees. Mottle brownish, gray, black and white; bristles Wh-ip-poor-will.-10. under bill. Eggs: pale brown, gray and lilac. Song: repeats its name at night. Nests on bare ground. Moth eaters; takes its food on the wing. Black and white; male with red Woodpecker, Downy Southern.-6. neck patch; female none. Eggs: white. Song: a sharp series of "peenk." Nests on bare wood in holes of trees. Black and white with a spot of red on head. Wood@cker, Hairy.-9. Song: a whistled "peenk." Nests in holes of trees in deep Eggs: white. woods. Woodpecker, Pileated.-17. Black and white crested; red side patches on head. Eggs: white. Song: a two-syllabled shriek. Nests in tree holes; can bore a live tree. Woodpecker, Red-cockaded.-8 White and black; male, scarlet side of head; female, none. Eggs: white. Song: a nasal "peenk." Nests in holes of trees. Woodpecker, Red-headed; Tricolor; Red-head.-!)%. Black and white; head and breast red; young, gray-headed. Eggs: white. Song: a repeated "charr." Nests in trees and telephone poles. Woodpecker, Yellow-bellied; Sapsucker.-8 5. Black, white and yellowish above; crown and throat bright red. Eggs: white. Song: a whining "whee;" other calls harsh. Tree holes in deep woods are nesting places. They drill holes in tree bark to eat: the sap. Wren, Carolina; Mocking Wren.-5 $4. Chestnut brown; throat whitish; white streak from eye to neck. Wings and tail darkly barred. Eggs: white specked with reddish brown. Song: a loud indescribable tinkling. Nests of weeds, grass and trash in brush heaps, holes and boxes. Wrm, How?.--I. Cinnamon brown; whitish under; wings and tail barred. Eggs: white, thickly speckled with pinkish brown. Song: loud s. VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. clear and enthusiastic warble. Nests of grass and weeds in crevices and boxes near houses. Wren, Short-billed Marsh.-$ I/4. Brown faintly streaked with white; black and buff tails. Wings and tail barred; white shading to buff under. Eggs: white. Song: not noted. Nests on sides of reeds; a globular woven nest with side entrance. Moves and rebuilds whenever disturbed. VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. CHAPTER XIII. TRANSPORTATION " ARLY ROADS. The location of the early trails and roads are largely matters of supposition and conjecture. They were the trails of hunters and trappers, and roads to some market for exchange of trade and supplies. The location of the old river ferries indicate the objective points, when one was traveling westerly from the already settled parts of Georgia. The Philpot Ferry on the northern line of the present county marks the road through Brown Crossroad, Harrisonville, and Hogansville, towards Greenville, Griffin, and Milledgeville, and eastward. The Mooty Ferry, now the Mooty Bridge, served the road running diagonally across the county through Ware Crossroad, LaGrange, Pleasant Grove, Troup Factory, Chipley, King's Gap, and on in the direction of Columbus. The Hawthorn Ferry, north of the island and afterward a t the south point of the island above Sterling Bridge, now called McGee Bridge, was the road from Antioch, Cameron Mill, LaGrange, and Mountville, eastward. The Vernon Ferry was formerly just above the bridge of the A. B. & C. Railroad, and was moved later, on the abandonment of the town of Vernon, t o Hairston Ferry near the present Glass Bridge. The West Point Ferry was in the heart of the town, and accommodated the roads to LaGrange, Chipley and Columbus, and was the crossing place of roads extending into Alabama. Nearly all the above roads were probably the trails which the Creeks used in reaching their capital, Indian Springs. But the roads running north and south were probably laid out by the white settlers, for the road to Whitesville is along land lot line a greater part of the way. In laying out the old roads, steepness of grade received little consideration, for ridges and divides were sought for the drainage they afforded, and the crests of hills were vantage points in locating distant landmarks. The only other consideration was to seek approaches to streams where fordable bottoms were found, or for easy bridging secure from floods. The treatment of unavoidable marshes and bogs was t o heap the road with stones, where small in extent, and for long stretches to corduroy the road with closely laid poles transverse the road. The trails were widened into roads for the convenience of wheeled traffic to replace pack animals with panniers. The long established width was thirty feet including such ditches as nature and the annual road working supplied. VEHICLES.The commerce of the early days was carried in huge conestoga wagons with canvas or hide covers. They were drawn by slow moving oxen, or by mules and horses in teams of two, four, or six to each wagon. VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org . Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. The travel was in caravans for mutual protection, camping by the roadside at night. The old teamsters were unmindful of sanitation and germs, but ever alert to the howl of wolves, the growl of angry or hungry bears, or the war-whoop of unfriendly Indians. The travel of business men and pleasure seekers for short distances was on horseback, gig, or in the family carriages; for the longer distances, the public stage coaches were used. Mrs. J. H. Traylor described a trip with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Cabiiiss, from Henry County, Virginia, to Georgia in October of 1827. They came in a carriage with outriders, and their possessions followed in covered wagons. They met with great hospitality on the road, not the least of which was offered by an Indian chief, whose log house looked down on the waters of the Chattahoochee River. In the early days there were many handsome carriages, some of which were lined with heavy satin or velvet, and often cost a thousand dollars. They were drawn by thoroughbred horses, and driven by liveried negro coachmen. STAGECOACHES.AS the population increased, stage coach lines were organized, and they were well patronized. The most popular line passing through the county was the Montgomery and Griffin line, a division of a transcontinental system. These coaches passed through Mountville, near which there was a relay station for fresh horses. David Beaman, a New England man, was the owner of this line, and he owned a house for his hostler, and stables for his horses on a creek near the Boddie home. The coming and going of the stage coach always elicited the greatest interest from the communities through which the coach passed, as it was the one contact with the outside world. Railroads and telegraphs were not yet used as mediums of communication. Two Texas girls planned to come t o LaGrange College, then operated by the Montgomery brothers, and mistaking the meaning of the word, "Commencement," for the beginning of the term, came nearly all the long trip by stage coach. Discovering their mistake, they decided that it was too long and too hazardous a journey to return, so they remained the entire four years until their graduation before returning to their homes. Many of the older citizens remember Bob Griffin, who was one of the best and the last of the old stage coach drivers in this vicinity. Mrs. Benjamin H. Hill gives an interesting description of her bridal tour in 1845. Mr. Hill and Miss Emily Moore of Athens were engaged for three years before their marriage. He spent those three years in LaGrange studying law with William Dougherty, and was finally admitted to the bar in the summer of 1845. They were married November 18, 1845, and started on their trip from Athens t o Long Cane, Troup County, Georgia, where his father, John Hill lived as a successful farmer. The bride and the groom VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. went from Athens to Union Point in a horse car, drawn by two horses hitched tandem. A t Union Point they boarded the Georgia Railroad train for the city of Atlanta. Here after several hours of delay they took the stage coach for Long Cane, stopping every ten miles for a relay of horses. It required as long to go from Athens to Long Cane, as it now does to reach New York. Mrs. Hill continues the narrative by saying that it was a freezing cold night, and on account of the delay of the stage coach, they did not drive the coach to the house, which was a short distance from the road, so they walked, piloted by a tall negro holding aloft a torch to light the way. A great glowing fire welcomed them within doors, and warm hearts took the young bride and groom into their tenderest aaection. CHATTAHOOCHEE RIVER. About 183 1 the Chattahoochee River began to attract attention, and Colonel Reuben Thornton, a wealthy and enterprising citizen of West Point, ran barges and flat boats from West Point up the river to a point called Standing Peachtree, which is in DeKalb County, transporting produce, most of which was sold at this point. H e took one load of flour over the shoals at Columbus, but could not get his boat back, consequently had to haul his load of sugar, salt, and coffee, to West Point by wagons. After building new boats, he took his cargo on to Standing Peachtree in the boats, and from thence it was wagoned to East Tennessee markets. The merchants of LaGrange and West Point bought their goods in the markets of Augusta, Savannah, or Charleston, and as there was no other means of transportation, they were carried in wagons. These wagons crossed the intervening rivers on flat boats, and it is a significant fact that no serious accident ever occurred. In 1838, Daniel Duncan and J. M. Harrington ran boats from Heard County to West Point. They brought all the material used in building the toll bridge at West Point, and materials for many other structures. RAILROAD.Incorporated December 27, 1847, ATLANTAAND LAGRANGE with the following incorporators, many of which were Troup County citizens: B. H. Conyers, Andrew J. Berry, John Gr&, Brittain S i s , Sr., Hugh Brewster, John Ray, John H. Johnson, Willis P. Menifee, Littleberry Watts, Joel V.Terrell, J. V. Davis, Thomas W. Bolton, Joseph Poythress,. Henry West, Edward Y. Hill, R. A. T. Ridley, John Douglas, William Reid, and James M. Beall. The charter was amended December 14, 1849, to give the power to extend the road to the Alabama line at or near West Point. The building of this railroad excited great interest in the surrounding county, and the day the first train came in to LaGrange, all the citizens of the town and the countryside flocked in to see it. The first engine was named "E. Y. Hill," and the first engineer was Oliver Park. The railroad was completed VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org ' Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. to West Point in March, 1854; the railroad bridge was built in 185 3 and 1854. George H. Winston supplied the stone for the piers. On December 22, 1857, the name was changed to the present name of Atlanta and West Point Railroad. The old car shed was built in 1857-58, with Daniel H. Cram as architect. The bridge and the depots were destroyed by Colonel LaGrange, commanding the Federal troops that captured Fort Tyler in 1865. They were rebuilt in 1866 by Colonel Grant and son. The original terminal of the Atlanta and West Point Railroad was located where the No. 14 Highway crosses the present railroad in entering West Point from LaGrange. MONTGOMERY AND WESTPOINTRAILROAD.Incorporated in Georgia on December 26, 1837, it was completed to West Point in July, 1851. The first engine from Montgomery to run through to West Point was named the "General Winfield Scott." This railroad is now called the Western Railway of Alabama, and together with the Atlanta and West Point operates as a unit from Atlanta to Montgomery. ATLANTAAND WESTPOINTRAILROAD.This railroad as described above is a component part of the fast railway mail service between New York and New Orleans. The stations on this road in Troup County are as follows: Trimble $5 Hogmsvil1e.-- 5 8 Louise---64 LaGrange--21 Gabbettville--80 West Point---. 87 miles miles miles miles miles miles from from from from from from Atlanta Flag station Atlanta R. B. Briscoe, Agent Atlanta-----.Flag Station Atlanta P. E. Redding, Agent Atlanta..-.--Flag Station Atlanta--..--.. I. H. Weaver, Agent ! MACONAND BIRMINGHAMRAILROAD.Incorporated December 27, 1886, by Benjamin H. Bigham, Robert S. McFarlin, Elisha D. Pitman, and William C. Yancey, under the name and title of Macon, LaGrange and Birmingham Railroad. A new chartee was granted September 9, 1889, under the name of Macon and Birmingham, and this charter amended as to route November 7, 1889, andNovember 12, 1889. It was completed in 1891 from LaGrange to Sofkee, near Macon. This road proved unable to earn a livelihood, and the greater part, of it was abandoned in 1925. However, parts of i t are in operation as parts of other systems. NORTHAND SOUTHRAILROAD.Incorporated October 24, 1870, to run from LaGrange to Rome through Carrollton. The following were the Troup County incorporators: Benjamin H. Bigham, W. 0. Tuggle, H. H. Huntley, C. W. Mabry, R. A. T.Ridley, John R. Broome, B. C. Ferrell, F. A. Frost. In the LaGrange Reporter of July 5, 1872: "The present status of the company is over forty miles of heavy road graded, the iron laid on over six miles, with train running and materials on hand to complete fifteen VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. miles more." This road was graded from LaGrange to a point beyond the Mooty Bridge and into Heard County. Further efforts were made to complete this line, when the rights of the Columbus and Northern Railroad were purchased October 1 5 , 18 8 5, by R. S. McFarlin, and a new corporation of the LaGrange North and South Railroad chartered with the following subscribers: R. S. McFarlin, W. V. Gray, Thomas S. Bradfield, Henry E. Ware, B. C. Ferrell, John J. Swain, James G. Truitt, Henry C. Butler, William C. Yancey, 0.A. Dunson, Edwin R. Bradfield, Alfred Truitt, Thomas J. Howell, Enoch Callaway, Louis J. Render, F. M. Ridley, Elisha D. Pitman, I. F. Cox, John R. Broome, Benjamin H. Bigham, Francis M. Longley, William J. McClure, and A. D. Abraham and associates. The road was not completed. LAGRANGE AND TROUP FACTORY RAILROAD.Incorporated December 22, 1857, by Thomas Leslie, Jesse McLendon, Thomas J. Thornton, Thomas C. Evans, Orville A. Bull, John W. McGehee, and James M. Flowers. Never built. LAGRANGE AND OXFORD(ALA.) RAILROAD.Incorporated March 5, 185 6. Five miles were to be built in two years, and the whole t o be finished in six years. No evidence of any accomplishment. LAGRANGEAND BARNESVILLE RAILROAD.Incorporated December 15, 1871, by Jesse McLendon, F. A. Frost, S. W. Swanson, A. D. Abraham, John N. Cooper, Isaac Wise, George V. Boddie, B. B. Amoss, Thomas S. Bradfield, Thomas C. Miller, B. C. Ferrell, B. H. Bigham, J. H. Fannin, W. 0. Tuggle, William C. Jarboe, C. W. Mabry, J. E. Toole, H. R. Harris, M. Reeves, J. E. G. Ferrell, John A. Simonton, James W. Banning, Obediah Warren, J. P. Atkinson, M. B. Lovett, J. Banning, James M, C. Robinson, Thomas C. Leslie, J. R. Broome, Godfrey Kener, John H. Mitchell, David Freeman, William E. Murphey, A. Statford, and R. J. Powell. No construction. GRIFFIN,LAGRANGE AND WESTERN RAILROAD. Incorporated December 27, 1886, by W. E. H. Searcy and T. D. Rockwell of Spaulding County; J. W. Sullivan of Meriwether County, and James G. Truitt of Troup County. The name was changed September 22, 1887, to Birmingham and Atlantic Airline Railroad. No construction. BRUNSWCK, LAGRANGE AND NORTHWESTERN RAILROAD.Chartered December 21, 1893, with the provision that the charter be forfeited unless five miles of road are built within five years. Forfeited. ATLANTA,BIRMINGHAM AND COASTRAILROAD.The records of incorporation of the original company, The Atlanta, Birmingham and Atlantic Railroad, were not available. On March 24, 1905, a committee of LaGrange citizens, Hatton Lovejoy, E. B. Clark, F. E. Callaway, J. G. Truitt, and VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Roy Dallis, arranged a banquet t o entertain George Dole Wadley, vicepsident, and Alex Bonnyman, chief of construction, of the railroad. The purpose of the meeting was to insure the routing of the road through LaGrange to the Birmingham terminus, and the effort succeeded. The road made a direct route to the Alabama coal fields and iron and steel mills, and gave promise of increased trade with our sister state. After the many physical dificulties were overcome, there were financial troubles. All the stations in Troup County are flag stations with the exception of the LaGrange station. The stations are: Big Springs, Knott, LaGrange, Pyne, and Abottsford. The LaGrange agent is W. M. Fincher. CHATTAHOOCHEE VALLEYRAILROAD.This road is located in Alabama with the exception of the passage through the city of West Point. It is a potent factor in the development of the Chattahoochee valley on the Alabama side of that stream, and is the outlet for the products of the plants of the West Point Manufacturing Company. COUNTYHIGHWAYS. Nothing has been more conducive t o the growth and development of Troup County than the system of good roads, which has been evolved from the muddy, and sometimes impassable, roads of even fifteen years ago. The Troup County Commissioners have been active in sponsoring good roads, and as a result of this activity, the county now has thirty-seven miles of concrete paving, and one thousand and thirty miles of topsoiled roads. The convicts housed at the model stockade on the road t a Chipley, just beyond Long Cane Creek, are used to keep the roads in the most excellent condition. Number 1 Highway which passes through LaGrange from Franklin southeast to Chipley and Columbus, and number 14 Highway from Trimble to West Point are state highways and are maintained by the state department. VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. CHAPTER XIV. PUBLIC UTILITIES ESTERN UNION TELEGRAPH. Telegraphic facilities came to Troup County soon after the establishment and operation of the Atlanta and LaGrange Railroad in the early eighteen fifties. The location of the office was at first in the old depot, the present freigbt office, from which place it was removed to the second floor of the Truitt Building and as late as 1908 had only three wire lines in the LaGrange office. It was afterwards moved to the rear of the National Bank Building, and in 1929 moved to the present office on Bull Street. Among the operators of the LaGrange oftice are noted the names of William Speer, Ed Dansby, Mrs. May Dennis Heard, Miss Ruby Medlock, Mr. Sanford, and the present manager, Mrs. Clyde McLaney Jones, who has held her post since 1908. This station also has a branch office at the Southwest LaGrange community located in the Callaway Mills General Oftices under the management of Miss Lucy McLaney. The West Point ofice was established at about the same time as the LaGrange office and is under the eacient management of Mrs. Walters. The Hogansville office established at a later date is under the management of Mrs. Mary John Briscoe. Other communities of the county are reached through telephone, as the railroad operators do not accept commercial messages. The present wire service (193 3 ) consists of six wire circuits with a total of about twenty available in an emergency, but which merely relay through the LaGrange office and can be switched into active service from that oflice, and about the same number in the West Point office. POSTAL TELEGRAPH CO. This company is a newcomer to our county, and opened the LaGrange office on September 24, 1929, under the management of Olin W. Alexander. This company can furnish typewriter extension to remote points, which automatically receives and transmits messages through the parent office. The only other office of this company in Troup County is located at West Point, where similar facilities are offered, and is under the management of Mrs. Roy Pirkle. COMMERCIAL TELEPHONE CO. The first commercial telephone of the county was operated by the above company, chartered May 5 , 1892, by J. F. Askew, C. V. Truitt and T. C. Lane. The charter specified the line from Newnan to West Point, and was operated as a toll line connecting the intermediate points, but was abandoned after the Southern Bell entered LaGrange. LAGRANGE TELEPHONE EXCHANGE.This pioneer exchange was built in 1894 by W. W. Milam and his son, W. R. Milam, and commenced operation VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. with only twenty-eight subscribers in an office over the old Bank of LaGrange on Main Street. In 1900 the exchange was moved to the residence of W. W. Milam at 203 Greenville Street with two hundred subscribers. In 1906 it was moved to an office over Davis Pharmacy with four hundred twenty-five subscribers. In 1895 a toll line of Southern Bell entered the exchange for the convenience of subscribers in long distance calls. In 1909 the exchange was sold to the Southern Bell by the Milam family. The county and LaGrange in particular are indebted to this family for the efficient service they rendered in this pioneer enterprise. WESTPOINTTELEPHONEAND ELECTRICCO. This exchange was chartered on November 7, 1896, by W. A. and J. T. Robinson. I t furnishes the telephonic communication for the thriving city of West Point and its Alabama neighbor of Lanett. This exchange has Southern Bell connections, but continues to remain a separate corporation. It is under the management of J. Smith Lanier and has been for many years. HOGANSVILLE TELEPHONE CO. This exchange was chartered on May 6, 1902, by J. C. Wilkinson, M. K. Word and A. R. Arnold, and continued to operate until 1909 when it was purchased by the Southern Bell and made a part of that great system. BIG SPRINGSTELEPHONE CO. This exchange was built by Eldredge Jones in 1907 and reaches the communities of Mountville, Salem, Odessadale and Stovall. It is owned and operated by Grady Jones with about twenty subscribers since 1915 after the death of Eldredge Jones. AND TELEGRAPH CO. This great comSOUTHERNBELL TELEPHONE pany bought the LaGrange and Hogansville exchanges in 1909 and has operated long distance lines since 189J. I t has about sixteen hundred phones in the county and numerous trunk lines for long distance use. Telephones were formerly neighborhood means of communication, but one can now speak to the ends of the world in combination of wired and radio phones. RAILWAY EXPRESS AGENCY. The original company, which operated in this county for parcel delivery, was the Southern Express Company. It was organized soon after the Civil War, and operated under the same name un ti1 July, 1918, when the Federal government assumed control under the title of American Railway Express. In March, 1930, the railroads purchased the business, and since that time, the company has operated as the Railway Express Agency. The names of John M. Barnard, Philip G. Awtry, and Ed Dansby are associated with the old Southern Express Company. The present agent of the Railway Express Agency is J. W. Short. GEORGIAPOWERCOMPANY. The Columbus Power Company entered LaGrange and West Point in 1911 on 66KVA lines and furnished light and power to LaGrange, West Point, and Hogansville. The city of LaGrange VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. operated a municipal electric plant, which they still own, but the power company offered current cheaper than could be produced by the city. A connection was made with the Georgia Power Company, and a shortage of one company was supplemented by the excess of the other. In 1923 the voltage of the transmission lines was raised to 1 1 OKVA t o the various power stations and there transformed to 11,000 volts, or llKVA, to be carried to the individual power houses of customers, and there reduced to 550 or 220 volts for power, and 110 volts for lighting purposes. In 1930, on July 1, the Georgia Power Company acquired the properties of the Columbus Power Company, and this county has been very efficiently served by this company since that time. The West Point station is under the jurisdiction of the Alabama Power Company, which serves the valley industrial plants. The LaGrange station has for its efficient master, W. H. Tillery, and the Hogansville station, W. A. Mann. The Maintenance Department is under the supervision of L. L. Estes for the Troup County customers, and the wellkept stations and lines bespeak his knowledge and efficiency. Not least among these genial ofhcials is the foreman of the lines, I. I. West, who has the dangerous task of handling llOKVA lines, sometimes with a full current flow, or hot as the boys say. THERAILROADS.The railroads are classified as Public Utilities, but have been treated in the chapter on Transportation. VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. CHAPTER XV. TROUP COUNTY TEXTILE INDUSTRY OBERTSON WOOLEN MILL. Built in 1847; located in land lot 78 of the 4th district. A t some time prior to 1847, there came from scotland to Troup County Robert Robertson, who bought from James O'Neal a site a short distance west of the Smith M i l on the Salem Road, and established thereon the first textile plant of the county, which was known as the Robertson Woolen Mill. From far and near the patrons brought their bags of wool for cleaning and carding. I t was returned to them in long rolls or balls ready for the home spinner or weaver. The success of this mill inspired the next textile venture in a district purely agricultural. TROUP FACTORY. Built in 1845, and adapted to cotton manufacture in 1848; located on land lot 1 5 of the 4th district. This plant was built by Robertson, Leslie and Company, a firm composed of J. L. C . Robertson, Thomas Leslie, and a Mr. Beaman, as a gristmill in 1845, and was converted into a cotton mill in 1848, being the second such plant in Georgia, and i t continued to operate as such for more than a half century. Troup Factory sheetings and homespuns were standards of excellence in a widespread area of Georgia, and their use is within the memory of many present day citizens. Charles H. Griffin was an active factor in the management of this plant in the early nineties. It was originally located on Flat Shoals Creek on the Columbus Road or the Georgia No. 1 Highway, but was moved to Greenville Street in LaGrange in 1902. The business of the plant was so great that on December 22, 1'857, a railroad was incorporated for the purpose of handling the products, which was called the LaGrange and Troup Factory Railroad. Disturbances due to the impending Civil War prevented its building. The name was changed after the removal of the plant to LaGrange to that of Park Cotton Mills, and its products were limited to yarn. This mill is now one of the things past and gone with only a few of its walls standing t o mark the spot. LAGRANGE MILLS. Built in 1888, and located on land lots 108 and 109 of the 6th district. The LaGrange Oil and Manufacturing Company was chartered on August 6, 1883, and its incorporators numbered most of the business and professional men of the little town of LaGrange: L. J. Render, A. N. Davenport, J. M. Barnard, J. G. Truitt, J. P. Thornton, H. C. Butler, W. 0. Tuggle, S. P. Smith, F. M. Longley, M. L. Fleming, J. C. Forbes, T. J. Harwell, H. H. Cary, E. D. Williams, G . A. Speer, I-lenry Banks, W. V. Gray, A. R. Phillips, T. H. Whitaker, Louis Mayer, J. G. Whitfield, E. R. Bradfield, I. F. Cox, J. R. Broome, James Ellis, T. S. Bradfield, A. P. VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Jones, Enoch Callaway, J. T.Perry, J. W. Harrison, F. M. Ridley, W. C. Yancey, and T. C. Crenshaw. This plant was erected for the extraction of cotton seed oil, but also operated a large public ginnery. In 1888, the charter was amended so as to include the manufacture of cotton textiles in addition to the oil plant, and the name was changed to LaGrange Mills. The building of the cotton mill plant was a great event in Troup County; the first giant Corliss engine, the curious machines for cotton manipulation, the first electric dynamo for the lighting of the mill, the monumental smokestack, were a succession of marvels to the curious bystanders of that day. In March of 1890, the charter was again amended so as t o permit the LaGrange Mills to construct electric pole lines in the city and to furnish current for the same. There immediately followed the construction of an arc circuit for lighting the city streets, to which was added an incandescent circuit of direct current for the benefit of mercantile establishments. These lines were extended to furnish lights for the Southern and the LaGrange Female colleges in the same year. The use of meters was unknown and the rate was a flat fifty cents per month for each sixteen candle po.wer light. Lighting for residences was not yet accomplished. The prosperity of LaGrange Mills induced the Consolidated Cotton Duck Corporation to make the stockholders a very tempting offer, which was accepted on November 28, 1905. I n 1913, this corporation in turn sold to Lockwood, Green and Company of Boston, who changed the name to International Cotton Mills, LaGrange Mills Division, the corporate name shared by Canadian, New England and the southern plants owned by them. I n the regrouping of the above-named plants, the name was again changed to the New England Southern Mills, LaGrange Mills Division. The financial collapse of the owners and the pressure from the creditor banks of Boston and New York forced the sale of their southern properties, and again LaGrange Mills became the property of local stockholders, and was renamed LaGrange Calumet Mills, and in the year 1932 became a unit of the Callaway Mills in the consolidation of the various corporations under that name. But in the minds, thoughts and speech of the old employes, it is named "The Old Mill." The names of John M. Barnard, manager; George W. Murphy, superintendent; George Mitchell, electrician, will always be associated with the success in the operation of this mill. Among the superintendents of this plant under the various owners are noted the following names: George W. Murphy, William Reid, John Turnipseed, Eugene Stevens, W. H. Dickinson, John A. Baugh, afterwards manager; Forest B. Gardner, and B. W. Robinson. , VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. DIXIECOTTONMILLS.Built in 189j, located on Greenville Street in LaGrange in land lot 107 of the 6th district. This mill was incorporated on September 26, 1895, and the following names appear on the charter: Samuel Hale, James G. Truitt, Blount C. Ferrell, Francis M. Longley, of LaGrange; W. N. Weeks of New York; J. T. Cressey of New Hampshire; Thomas P. Ivey of Atlanta. Many investors of the local commercial world afterwards joined their forces to the above. At first the plant was not an entire success, because of poor equipment, much of which was out of date in cotton manufacture. It is curious to note that in the original plans for buildings and the layouts for machinery no provision was made for a power plant to operate the mill. Provision for this oversight and for the replacement of much of the antiquated machinery placed a handicap on this plant in the form of excessive debt; nevertheless, under the skillful management of 0.A. Dunson, it continued to operate until forced to sell by the mortgagor on October 17, 1917, when the plant passed into the possession of Wellington-Sears Company, and at this date is a unit in their chain of mills. This plant is the pioneer in this county for the manufacture of lightweight cotton fabrics, eight ounces to the yard beiig the heaviest goods made in this plant. Among the names of the superintendents of this plant are noted the following: DeGroat, Magraw, W. S. Dunson, Jack Donaldson, J.' J. Ward, A. Culberson, George W. Murphy, Jr., Albert Lehmann; and the names of Samuel Hale, L. J. Render and 0. A. Dunson as the managers of the plant. HOGANSVILLE MANUFACTURING COMPANY.Built in Hogansville in 1899, and located in land lot 96 of the 11th district. This plant was chartered on July 11, 1899, by E. H. Thornton, and R. J. Lowry of Atlanta; and Frank Word, Judson F. Mobley, and J. F. Askew of Hogansville. The history of this plant from the above date is the same as that of the LaGrange Mills, as it was sold to the same corporation and afterwards was included in every transaction in which LaGrange Mills was conceined, and in, those changes suffered the same changes of name and was distinguished as the Hogansville Mills Division of each change. It was purchased by the Consolidated Duck Corporation on November 28, 1905; sold in turn by them to Lockwood, Green and Company and called the International Cotton Mills, changed to New England Southern Mills; sold again to LaGrange parties and renamed Hogansville Calumet Mills; consolidated in 1932 as a unit of the Callaway Mills, retaining the name of Hogansville Calumet as a designation. The activities of this plant constituted a commercial barometer of the community of Hogansville until the construction of Stark Mills, which shared the business indicator with the older plant. Among the superintendents and managers are noted the following: George W. Murphy, William Reid, John VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Turnipseed, W. H. Turner, Jr., Oxford, James Mooty, David G. Reid, and John A. Baugh, manager. UNITY COTTONMILLS. Built in 1900, and located in land lot 141 of the 6th district, on Leman Street in LaGrange. This plant was chartered on May 8, 1900, and the following were the incorporators: J. M. Barnard, C . V. Truitt, J. E. Dunson, F. E. Callaway, S. H. Truitt, S. P. Smith, J. H. Edmondson, G. E. Dallis, W. V. Gray, G. B. Heard, E. G. Hood, T. J. Thornton, F. J. Pike, J. L. Bradfield, H. D. Glanton, T. S. Bradfield, C . D. Hudson, A. H. Nunnally, P. H. Hutchinson, N. R. Hutchinson, F. M. Ridey, J. R. Broome, H. R. Slack. There have been some additions to this plant a t intervals, but the greatest expansion was in the form of an entire new plant under the name of Unity Spinning Mills, located in land lot 147 of the 6th district. This was built in 1909 by the parent plant of which it formed an auxiliary. The management of this plant was in the hands of C. V. Truitt up to the time of his retirement, after which it devolved upon Cason J. Callaway. The superintendents of this plant are as follows: George W. Murphy, Sr., William W. Arnold, William H. Turner, Jr., James Newsome, Ed Estes, W. Preston Dunson. The products of Unity Cotton Mills were originally in the form of the cotton ducks, but later became more diversified in character. The plant may be considered as the parent plant of the group of cotton mills now designated as the Callaway Mills. ELM CITYCOTTONMILLS. Built in 1905, located in land lot 142 of the 6th district. The charter bears the date of November 15, 1905, and enlisted a large number of contributors under the leadership of Fuller E. Callaway, Sr., as the directing genius. The following names are recorded in the charter: F. E. Callaway, C. V. Truitt, J. G. Truitt, S. H. Truitt, Roy Dallis, W. A. Holmes, A. T. Dallis, V. E. Dallis, George E. Dallis, Pike Brothers, E. G. Hood, J. H. Edmondson, Henry Banks, Sr., J. W. Johnston, Bradfield Drug Co., F. M. Ridley, H. R. Slack, J. C. Roper, J. M. Barnard, George W. Murphy, P. G. Awtry, J. L. Bradfield, H. D. Glanton, N. E. Marshburn, E. R. Bradfield, Sr., W. V. Gray, L. D. Mitchell, Pope F. Callaway, McCaine and Market, E. B. Clark, F. M. Longley, B. H. Seay, R. L. Adams, J. R. Hall, G. B. Heard, S. P. Smith, W. S. Davis, A. H. Cary, C, Y. Hall, J. R. Broome, W. L. Cleaveland, N. S. McCalley, J. M. Formby, W. J. Hardy, J. F. Market, J. Wid Freeman; Banks and Arnold of Coweta County, H. M. Atkinson, W. D. Brady, George M. Traylor, James Banks, A. E. Thornton, M. Frank, George W. Parrott, George Dole Wadley, S. P. O'Neal, J. H. Lane & Company. Elm City was also a cotton duck plant and has enjoyed a long term of prosperity under the skillful management of the superintendents, Ira B. Grimes and H. F. Shuford. VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. UNITYSPINN~NG MILLS. Built in 1909, and located on land lot 146 in the 6th district. No new corporation was formed, but the plant was built by Unity Cotton Mills and formed a part of its properties. The products of this plant were twines, cords and yarns. N o weaving was done in this plant in the original layout. The superintendents were S. Y. Austin and Boyd N. Ragsdale. This is also a unit of the Callaway Mills. DUNSONM~LLS. Built in 1910, and located in land lot 8 7 of the 6th district. The charter was granted on November 19, 1910, and the following names appear on the charter as the promoters of this plant: T. J. Thornton, W. S. Dunson, A. H. Cary, F. M. Ridley, \V. A. Reeves, J. M. Barnard, S. H. Dunson, W. E. Morgan, P. H. Hutchinson, F. M. Longley, R. 0. Pharr, J. E. Dunson, J. F. Ogletree. The plant was enlarged in 1923, nearly .doubling the original capacity of the mill, and varying the production to include the light as well as the heavyweight cotton goods. The management was in the hands of T. J. Thornton in the beginning, and he was succeeded by the present efficient manager, W. S. Dunson. There has always been exercised a liberal conservatism in the management: liberal in attitude towards the churches and schools and sports, yet conservative in the business aspects. The superintendent was W. S. Dunson until his promotion t o manager, and he was succeeded by A. C. Dunson as the present superintendent. HILLSIDE COTTONMELS. Built in 1915, and located on land lot 143 of the 6th district. The charter was granted on December 5 , 1914, to a large number of incorporators: F. E. Callaway, C. V. Truitt, J. G. Truitt, S. H.Truitt, Roy Dallis, A. T. Dallis, V. E. Dallis, Render Dallis, S. Y. Austin, J. H. Edmondson, H. H. Childs, R. 0. Pharr, W. S. Davis, T. H. Nimmons, E. R. Callaway, H. W. Callaway, W. A. Holmes, C. J. Callaway, Hatton Lovejoy, W. H'. Turner, Jr., R. C. Key, C. Y. Hall, J. R. Hall, James Newsom, I. B. Grimes, Boyd Ragsdale, H. R. Slack, B. H. Seay, L. H. Zachry, Pike Brothers, J. M. Formby, H. T. Wooding, J. D. Hudson, R. L. Render, C. W. Smith, C. N. Shearer, R. K. Colley, G. W. Birdsong, A. H. Thompson, J. J. Milam, McCaine Brothers, H. D. Glanton, C. L. Smith, OGT. L. Cleaveland, W. G. Cleaveland, Henry Banks, Sr., H. D. Phillips, J. A. Perry, 0.D. Grimes, P. G. Awtry, W. E. Johnson, H. H. Tigner, W. J. Hardy, J. W. Bryant, R. W. Bryant, E. C. Lewis, James Banks, J. Carroll Payne, W. D. Brady, C. H. Hutcheson, J. H. Lane and Company, F. Coit Johnson, James W. Lane, E. W. Leseur, Howard L. Marsh, Oliver L. Johnson, Charles T. Newberry, Charles D. Brady, Wr. H. Tobey, C. M. Pirkleman, W. W. Quinlan. This plant, by reason of the installation of a dye house as a part df the equipment, manufactures the greatest variety of products of any mill located in the county; in weight from the heaviest to comparatively lightweight goods with many color variations. This was VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. the parent ~ l a n tof several lines of manufacture, which were afterwards incorporated as separate entities and some of them removed to other locations. These were Valley Waste Mills, Valway Rug Mills, Rockweave Mills, and Oakleaf Mills. The superintendents of this plant were S. Y. Austin, J. 0. Blackmon, and Frank L. Asbury. STARKMILLS. Built in 1922, and located in land lot 11 of the 12th district. This plant was not chartered in Troup County, but was built by Lockwood, Green and Company of Boston, the owners at that time of the Hogansville and LaGrange plants of the New England Southern Mills, and sold with them in 1928. It was afterwards sold to the United States Rubber Company and is still in their possession. This mill was adapted to the use of long staple cotton for the manufacture of tire cord. The mill is under the superintendency of H. H. Ocheltree. The managers were John A. Baugh for Lockwood, Green and Company, and H. Gordon Smith for the U. S. Rubber Company. VALLEYWASTEMILLS. The construction of this plant followed very closely upon the building of Hillside Cotton Mills, of which it formed a part. A separate charter for this plant was granted on November 4, 1927, to Cason J. Callaway, Henry G. Smith, and Grady S. Kennington. As the name implies, it was a plant for the utilization of cotton waste. In the merger of 1932, the plant has lost its corporate identity. VALWAYRUG MILLS. Incorporated on November 4, 1927, by Cason J. Callaway, Ira B. Grimes, and Henry G. Smith. This plant is a distinctive' idea in the diversification of production in the South. The manufacture of rugs in the plant has always been a source of interest to the passing visitor, because the use of Jacquard looms and other machines is so different from those of the ordinary cotton mills. The beauty and variety of the rugs have commended them to a widespread patronage in America. ROCKWEAVE MILLS. This plant was another offshoot of Hillside Cotton Mills, and was originally called Rockweave Laundry Textile Mills, but the charter was amended on December 9, 1927, to conform to the above name. The plant with a wide variety of products specialized in the manufacture of those products associated with the laundry trade: bags, nets, and all forms of canvas containers and receptacles. Most of this plant has been transferred to LaGrange Calumet Mills, and its corporate identity was lost in the merger of 193 2. OAKLEAF &LS. This plant is another of the Hillside group of industries, and was chartered on April 16, 1928, and its location changed to the vicinity of the Unity Spinning Mills. I t specializes in flannels, wiping cloths and cords of various kinds. The superintendent is T. L. Arnette. VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. THECALLAWAY MILLS.Under this title were merged into one great corporation the allied plants that were sponsored and controlled by the late Fuller E. Callaway, as well as those organized and built since his death under the management of Cason J. Callaway as president, and Fuller E. Callaway as treasurer. The plants in this great organization are as follows: SPINDLES Calumet, LaGrange Plant .. Elm City Plant . Wlls~de Plant Oakleaf Plant Unity Plant Unity S p n n n P a Calumet, Hogansville Plant Manchester Plant, Manchester, Ga Milstead Plant, Milstead, Ga . . . n 9,984 11,664 3 1,680 3,168 12,960 t 1 5,5 5 2 12,096 25,080 13,668 Total Number of Spindles.._------.-----.----------.....-.......... 1 3 5,8 12 The maintenance of recreation parks and playgrounds, the Young Men's Christian Associations, assistance to the schools and churches have always been included as a part of the operating budgets of these plants, and the care of health safeguarded by the presence of well-trained nurses has been one of the first thoughts towards the welfare and happiness of employes. The products of these plants include twines, cords, ropes, drills, sheeting, sateens, moleskin, corduroy, filter fabrics, and every sort of canvas and duck, a variety of rugs, and many other specialties. WEST POINTMANUFACTURING COMPANY. While the plants of this corporation are not located in Troup County, yet the executive and administrative offices are located in the city of West Point. The plants of this corporation are noted below: Riverdale at Riverview, Ala., built in 1866, makers of tent and awning ducks. 11,6 84 spindles. Langdale at Langdale, Ala., built in 1867 as the Chattahoochee Manufacturing Company, and purchased in 1880. The plant has 3 3,s 5 6 spindles. This ~ l a n tdonated the sails to refit the frigate Constitution, popularly known as "Old Ironsides," also donated the sail duck for the Byrd Expedition to the South Pole. kanett Mills, makers of wide drills, twills and sateens, and the fabrics used in automobile manufacture. Shawmut Mills, makers of the heavier forms of cotton duck that is used for hose and belting. Fairfax Mills, whose specialty is the making of towels for every kind, of use, and of every size and weight. VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Lanett Bleachery and Dye Works is the pioneer in the dyeing of the fabrics and the addition of color to our section of the South. The West Point Manufacturing Company has a total of 192,000 spindles in the various plants. The corporation has been for many years under the management of the Lanier family, which has contributed so much t o the financial, educational, social, cultural and political life of Troup County, and of West Point in particular. TROUP COUNTY TEXTILES. The county of Troup ranks well in the total of the textile plants, the total spindles of each plant is given below: SPINDLES Calumet, LaGrange 9,984 Calumet, Hogansville ----.--.-..-.--.--------.I-. 12,096 Dixie Cotton Mills 23,936 Elm City Plant 11,664 Dunson Cotton Mills 41,000 allside Plant -----.-....-----.-----31,680 Oakleaf Pant . . 3,168 3 1,160 Stark Mills ----.-.-------------------Unity Plant 12,960 -- 11,S 12 Unity Splnnlng Phnt .- . . Total Spindles VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org 197,600 Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. CHAPTER XVI. INDUSTRIAL AND COMMERCIAL ARLY INDUSTRIES. The furnishings of the earliest cabins yield the clue to the nature of the early commercial barter and industrial activity. These consisted of rifles, knives, broadaxes for hewing, hatchets for shaping, crosscut saws, froes, sledge hammers, anvils, spinning wheels and looms, and such furnishings and fittings as could be made with the above implements. In later days the large plantations operated commissaries that could supply almost any need of the neighborhood, and employed smiths who could fabricate horseshoes, hinges and straps, and hammer out such wrought nails as were necessary in house construction, and carpenters who could hew a sill, rive boards for roofs and palings for yard and garden fences, build houses and barns, and fashion the giant "totem pole of the clan" in the form of the tall screws for the cotton presses. The early industries of Troup County were crude and simple in operation, and were dependent for power on muscle, mules, and water power. The apparatus for steam power was too heavy and too cumbersome to haul so far with only oxen as the tractile agency. The mills of the early days were smithies, carpenter shops, and gristmills, and later sawmills and tanneries. By reason of the same difficulties of transportation, the patronage of a given industry was limited to the range of travel of one day for the round trip. The journeys to the markets of Augusta and Savannah were generally annual caravans, and they required about two weeks of travel for each round trip, and to this must be added the time to see the bright lights, to view the novelties on display since the last visit, and to enjoy the pleasures of the trading instinct, both in disposing of the wares and produce carried for the purpose of sale, and to select the quantity and quality of goods to be hauled on the homeward trip. The entire trip could easily use a month. THE TROUP COMPANY.Chartered October 14, 1905, by A. H. Cary, J. M. Barnard, J. E. Dunson, Frank L. Hudson, W. A. Reeves, T. J. Thornton, J. H. Edrnondson, J. D. Edmundson, Albert S. Dunson, Frank Word, M. PI. Hightower, R. W. Trimble, C. W. Smith, L. S. Turner, A. E. Thornton, W. A. Speer, N. 0. Banks, and T. M. Zellars. The corporation was organized for the purpose of manufacturing fertilizer and the operation of a warehouse for storage of cotton. After several years of operation the fertilizer ~ l a n t was sold to Swift and Company. The warehouse was retained and is still operated by a reorganized company. FARMERS WAREHOUSE COMPANY.Chartered April 29, 189 1, by Andrew J. Daniel, Scott Davis, James L. Sims, William C. Matthews, and John Daniel. This corporation of Hogansville operated for some time, but at the present VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. date the corporation has dissolved and its properties consolidated with other warehouse properties. HOGANSVILLE WAREHOUSE.Chartered December 29, 1906, by J. F. Askew, H. H. Ware, Braze11 Trirnble and Company, R. W. Moore, J. M. Woodruff, and B. F. Rosser. This is an active corporation of Hogansville, and has united the interests of the warehouses of Hogansville. SECURITY WAREHOUSE COMPANY. Chartered June 28, 1906, by F. E. Callaway, C. V. Truitt, W. A. Holmes, J. C. Roper, S. H. Truitt, J. D. Edrnundson, J. F. Market, H. H. Childs, G. W. Birdsong, McCaine and Market, R. 0.Pharr, Henry Banks, V. E. Dallis, C. Y. Hall, S. D. White, N. S. McCalley, W. A. Heard, W. N. Hogg, R. S. Jackson, W. L. Haralson, Pike Brothers, Roy Dallis, H. D. Glanton, and J. B. Whitley. A portion of this warehouse was used for a time as a silk mill, and afterwards as a wholesale grocery company. The warehouse is at present operated by H. H. Childs as manager. OTHERWAREHOUSES.The cotton warehouses of West Point are located in Alabama, which is beyond the scope of this record. Among the personally owned warehouses there is noted Barnard and Awtry, which afterwards became the property of E. G. Hood, and is now the freight depot of the A. B. & C. Railroad in LaGrange; and the name of Frank Word in Hogansville is always associated with the storage of cotton. There are, perhaps, many other names of former days that should be recorded, but the lack of definite information prevents. THEBRADFIELD DRUGCOMPANY. Chartered May 3, 1897, by Thomas S. Bradfield and W. S. Davis for the purpose of conducting the wholesale and retail trade in drugs. The retail stores were a continuation and expansion of a long established patronage. The Court Square Pharmacy was the original retail drug store. HOGANSVILLE MILL AND LUMBERCOMPANY. Chartered April 9, 1902, by T. J. Pendergrass, W. C. Lee, J. T. Armstrong, and J. H. Melson. This company operates the planing mill on the south side of Hogansville. GEORGIAGRANITEAND POWERCOMPANY. Chartered April 7, 1902, by J. F. Mobley, Mrs. M. E. Morgan, and Milton H. Hightower, for the production of gravel and crushed stone. The plant located near Trimble furnished the material used for railroad ballast, and for concrete construction. Many thousand tons were marketed by this company. COMPANY.Chartered November MUTUALCOFFINAND MANUFACTURING 8, 1902, by C. H. Revis, H. C. Clay, J. L. Rice, Squire Thornton, and the Mutual Aid Society, No. 1. It was organized as an adjunct to the Colored Burial Insurance Company, and prospered for many years as such. VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. LAGRANGE ICE AND MANUFACTURING COMPANY. Chartered November 16, 1891, by John D. Edmundson, Joseph E. Dunson, C. V. Truitt, F. M. Longley, and H. C. Butler, for the manufacture of ice. The corporation was enlarged to include the manufacture of ice cream, cold storage of ~erishables, and the sale of fuel, and the name was changed to that of LaGrange Ice and Fuel Company. T'his plant as well as the Citizens Ice and Coal Company was purchased by the American Service Company of Chicago. WESTPOINT IRON WORKS. Chartered May 5, 1891, by W. C. Lanier, L. Lanier, and E. F. Lanier, for the manufacture of castings, gears and machinery parts. The scope was widened to include all forms of woodwork, and the business of contracting. This company was a pioneer of the county in the development of machine shops and foundries. PIKEBROTHERS LUMBERCOMPANY. Chartered January 30, 1904, by J. A. Pike, F. J. Pike, and C. N. Pike, for the manufacture of doors, sash, and blinds, wooden columns, and all forms of woodwork, paving tile and concrete building blocks. This company was a development of a plow factory, formerly operated by W. C. Cox. Upon the retirement of Pike Brothers from contracting and manufacturing, the plant was purchased by the West Point Iron Works above mentioned, and operated under the name of LaGrange Lumber and Supply Company. Newman Construction Company is the present owner. COMPANY. Chartered November 7, NOVELTYAND MANUFACTURING 1891, by S. T. Whitaker, M. Herzberg, R. R. Lanier, and J. M. Harrington, for the manufacture of candy in West Point. MUTUALCOTTONOIL COMPANY. Chartered July 25, 1906, by M. H. Hightower, H. H. Mobley, Frank Word, S. A. Davis, J. F. Jones, J. S. Jones, T. T. Jones, H. B. Darden, S. N. Reid, J. M. Barnard, J. E. Dunson, and E. F. Lanier. This plant, located in Hogansville, was constructed for the extraction of cotton seed oil. It continues to be a powerful industrial factor in the development of Hogansville. TRIMBLE BRICKCOMPANY.Chartered by R. W. Trimble, P. H. Darden, and Edwin Trippe, on May 12, 1902, for the manufacture of brick. This company has been an important factor in the building trades not only of this county, but in the entire, southern territory. All the textile plants erected since 1902 in this section of Georgia have used Trimble brick. LAGRANGE TANNERY. This plant was established about 1832, and was located on the corner near the intersection of Whitesville and Hamilton streets on the branch, which still bears the name of Tanyard branch. The original owners were Samuel Reid and Seaborn J. Thompson. It continued to operate unril destroyed by the raiders under Colonel LaGrange in 1865. VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. WESTPOINT TANNERY. This plant was located on the tract of land now known as Heyman's Pines, and was organized at an early date. During the Civil War it was operated for the Confederate government by Herman Heyman and Daniel Merz. The Federal raiders of 1865 seized the entire stock of leather. This plant was in operation some time after the close of the war. KENERFURNITURE SHOP. This shop was located on Hines Street in the early LaGrange days. Many of the handsome pieces of furniture that are now classed as antiques were fashioned in this old shop. Godfrey Kener, the proprietor, built the old rock mill near Tanyard branch on Hines Street, and that old building, used as a gristmill, may have been the shop. This building was razed when LaGrange Mills were built in 1888. CARLTONAND THACHER. This firm, located in Mountville, operated a furniture factory in that place. Their excellent work in the manufacture of beds, dressers, dining tables, and all kinds of handmade furniture, was the source of pride and gratification to many of the housewives of old Troup County. K ~ GIN D FACTORY. This plant was located three or four miles east of LaGrange, and was owned and operated by George Kidd, who had invented some improvements on the existing cotton gins. The products of this old factory were widely used throughout Georgia and parts of Alabama. GRISTMILLS.The old gristmills of the county, some of which dated from the opening of the county, have always been a source of pleasure and convenience, as well as manufacturing enterprises. The list is not complete, yet numbers all that are known to the author: Norwood Mill in the northeastern part of the county; Culberson Mill in the northern part; Cameron Mill on Yellow Jacket Creek near the river; the Double Mills on the two sides of the Chattahoochee just above Glass Bridge; Dennis Mill on Long Cane down near the 4th, Sth, and 6th districts corner; O'Neal's Mill, which gave the name to the militia district, on Polecat Creek near the Salem Road; Smith Mill on Turkey Creek on the Salem Road; Dallis Mill near the Meriwether County line north of Chipley; Young Mill on Beech Creek on the Haralsonville Road, and Pool's Mill in the 14th district on Whitewater Creek. A. P. JONES BUGGYAND WAGONMANUFACTURING COMPANY. This company, formerly located on the site of the present Dunson Hospital, was for a long time a prosperous business. I t was established in 1878 and continued to operate until 1904, when the advent of the automobile commenced its conquest of the horse-drawn conveyances. One remarkable thing in regard t o this business is that three brothers established four plants for the manufacture of wagons and buggies: A. P. Jones of LaGrange; R. H. Jones of Cartersville and Rome, and W. E. Jones of Atlanta. There are VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. still to be found in Troup, Meriwether, Heard and Harris counties, specimens of the excellent handiwork of "Jones, the Buggy Man." BANKOF LAGRANGE.This bank was chartered by the General Assembly of Georgia in 1852, authorizing the corporation to commence business when $50,000.00 in specie had been paid in. There are no records that the condition was ever complied with. No names were included in charter. LAGRANGE SAVINGSBANK. Chartered in 1866 by F. A. Frost, B. H. Hill, R. A. T. Ridley, Jesse McLendon, and Thomas J. Thornton. N o records of the savings bank available, but several of the incorporators were engaged in a private and unincorporated business. LAGRANGE BANKINGAND TRUST COMPANY. Chartered in 1871 by H. S. Wimbish, John F. Morelad, John A. Speer, John R. Broome, S. W'. Swanson, T. J. Thornton, W. F. Spalding, John H. Glanton, A. D. Abraham, and James F. Ogletree. The capital stock was fixed at $50,000.00 with the privilege of increasing to $100,000.00. This corporation for a long time was the principal commercial bank of the county, and the closing of which almost paralyzed the commercial interests of LaGrange. Among those wha presided over this bank are noted the names of Major A. D. Abraham, George A. Speer, Thomas J. Thornton, Joseph E. Dunson, Sr., and Joseph E. Dunson, Jr. It is now in procees of liquidation. ~ R C H A N T SAND PLANTERS BANK OF WESTPOINT. Chartered September 29, 1883, by J. J. Hagedorn, A. M. Eady, Daniel Merz, W. B. Higginbothem, J. R. Scott, W. E. White, J. M. Reed, J. W. Smith, B. L. Harris, Lawrence Smith, and William Collins. This bank enjoyed a long period of prosperity, but like many others of our country, succumbed under the pressure of the twentieth century depression and shrinkage of values. F ~ S NATIONAL T BANK OF LAGRANGE.Chartered December 20, 1883, by L. J. Render, B. C. Ferrell, F. M. Longley, J. G. Truitt, W. C. Yancey, W. 0. Tuggle, J. M. Barnard, and H. H. Cary. This bank continued to operate until 1890, when it was converted into a state bank. The exactions of a national bank, which did not permit more than 10% of the capital stock to be loaned to one customer, did not permit the bank to finance the LaGrange Mills for their suficient operation, as the capital stock was only $50,000.00. Some of the currency of this bank is still in circulation, but largely kept as keepsakes. BANK OF LAGRANGE.Chartered in 1890, by L. J. Render, J. G. Truitt, F. M. Longley, J. M. Barnard, B. C. Ferrell, and H. H. Cary. The business of the First National Bank above mentioned was carried on by this bank without interruption, the change being made between the close of business on Saturday and the opening on Monday morning. This bank, too, felt the iron hand of depression and was closed and liquidated. VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. BANKOF WEST POINT. The personnel of this corporation is not available, but it was a factor in the commercial life of the community, and like so many other institutions was forced into liquidation. FIRSTNATIONALBANKOF WESTPOINT. This bank like the First National of LaGrange found itself unable to continue its operations, and was put into liquidation. HOGANSVILLE BANKINGCOMPANY. The leading spirit in the organization of this bank was J. F. Askew, but i t like many others fell victim to the dark days of the depression and was forced to close. MERCHANTS AND FARMERS BANK. Hogansville. The organizers of this bank were J. P. Mobley and N. H. Hight, and enjoyed an era of prosperity but was unable to cope with frozen assets and likewise closed. LAGRANGE NATIONAL BANK. Chartered by United States May 29, 1905, by F. E. Callaway, C. V. Truitt, J. G. Truitt, W. A. Holmes, S. H. Truitt, F. M. Longley, and P. H. Hutchinson. One of the few institutions that remained closed only during the bank holiday, or moratorium, declared by President Roosevelt. The handsome structure on Main Street in the city of LaGrange is the home of this institution. The presidents of this bank in their order are Fuller E. Callaway, Ely R. Callaway, and Henry D. Glanton. CITI~ENS BANK AND TRUST COMPANY. This company represents the banking interests of the city of West Point, since the closing of the other banks. CITIZENS BANKOF HOGANSVILLE.This is not a bank strictly speaking, but conducts the present business of the city of Hogansville as a sort of clearing house for an Atlanta bank. VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. CHAPTER XVII. EDUCATIONAL AGRANGE FEMALE COLLEGE. This institution has the unique distinction of having its origin in the first institution in America chartered for the instruction of women. The originator of such a revolutionary idea was Thomas Stanley, who conducted a small school in the village of LaGrange. He held the then unpopular opinion that girls should be given the same educational advantages that their brothers had long enjoyed. How revolutionary this idea was, may be learned from the fact that only a few years prior to this time, the General Assembly of Georgia had refused to permit the establishment of "Female Academies." However, Stanley and his friends persisted in their efforts, and ~ossiblybrought some political influence to bear on the legislative body, for on December 26, 1831, a charter was granted to LaGrange Female Academy, designating the following board of trustees: Wilson Williams, Julius C. Alford, Rufus Broome, James Herring, John L. Gage, William A. Redd, and Joseph Poythress. As there were in existence no institutions for women empowered t o confer degrees on women, the term academy was used w designate an institution, in which the higher branches of learning were taught, but without authority to confer degrees. They were the finishing schools of the day. This academy was established on the lot set apart by the Inferior Court of Troup County for an academy, when the town of LaGrange was laid out by them. It is shown on the plat of original LaGrange as the southwest corner of No. 11 Commons, and is the present site of No. 406 Broad Street, known in later years as the Turner home. The academy was presided over by Thomas Stanley as first principal for two years. At the death of Stanley in 1833, John Park was chosen to succeed him, and served eight years, assisted for a time by Mrs. Ellen Stanley in the conduct of the school. In 1843, the academy and the present site of College Hill were purchased by the Montgomery brothers, ,Hugh B. T., Joseph, and T. F., and the dormitory was located on the hill, and the academy building used as classrooms. In 1847, an application for a fuller charter was made, and was granted on December 17, 1847, and the name changed to LaGrange Female Institute. The institution retained this name until a charter amendment on December 26, 1851, when it received the present designation of LaGrange Female College. In 185 1, the "new building" was erected on the college hill for the accommodation of classes and administration of college affairs; the cornerstone was laid on July 4, 1851, with masonic ceremonies. It was an imposing VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. structure built on the model of the Temple of Diana at the site of the present building. In 1857, on the 29th of January, the Montgomery brothers sold the properties to the Georgia Conference of the Methodist Church, South, and by an act of legislature of December 19, 1859, the trustees were authorized to sell the property of the Stanley buildings and site. Fortunately this sale was not immediately consummated, for on March 28, 1860, the entire plant on the college hill was consumed by fire during the night following a concert held in the auditorium. Classes were resumed in the Stanley Building, and plans for rebuilding were at once made. The dormitory, the northern end of the present Oreon Smith Building, was completed by December 20, 1860. The college building was to be completed by May 15, 1861, but the confusion from the incipient war re vented the immediate completion. The masonry work was completed, but the floors and roof unfinished. Benjamin H. Cameron was the contractor, and his corps of workmen were negro slaves trained for the work. In 1879, the college building was completed and the classes have been held in this building since that time. This reconstruction was due to the untiring efforts of J. R. Mason, president at the time. In 1885 began the remarkable administration of the beloved Rufus W. Smith. This covered a period of thirty years and witnessed great improvement in the curriculum and equipment, and a wonderful broadening of purpose and quickening of the spirit of the institution. A regular department of education was established. An annex of twenty-eight rooms, a dining hall and a modern kitchen were added to the dormitory. Electric lights were installed in 1888. Running water and bathrooms were added to the equipment. The Harriet Hawkes Building was erected in 1911 through the generosity of A. W. Hawkes in a gift of $10,000.00 for that purpose. It was during this regime that William S. Witham established a loan fund of $10,000.00 for the aid of worthy students. Alwyn M. Smith and his wife (Miss Laura Crain), both graduates of the Leipzig Conservatory of Music, were instrumental in placing the department of music upon a high plane of excellence. During the administration of Miss Daisy Davies, who was elected president in 1915, an endowment fund of $251,000.00 was pledged largely from local citizens; notable among the many contributors, the following generous sums: James G. Truitt and wife, $50,000.00; the Dunson estate, $37,000.00; Miss Mary Nix, $12,000.00. In 1920, William E. Thompson was elected to the presidency, and during his administration, Samuel C. Dobbs donated $25,000.00 and built a beautiful home on the campus. VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. In 1931 the college celebrated the centennial of the original establishment with a pageant, depicting its progress from a small school to the present splendid equipment. In the early days of the school, it is interesting to note some of the quaint incidents and settings. These first students, "Amarantha Cameron, Philogenia Ware, Elethia McLendon, Sophronia Campbell" and others arrived in carriages and in barouches with far more bandboxes and umbrellas than books. They were accompanied by their black "mammies," but this new business of girls getting an education did not encourage so many "curling tresses" and so much "tubbing and buttoning," so the mammies were sent home. A serious period ensued in which one-half of each day was devoted to the study of mathematics, it being generally conceded in that day that a woman could not learn such an abstract subject. But much time was given to the writing of essays with such serious subjects as "Mother, Home and Heaven," "What is Life but Fleeting," "All a Mist," and "In the Dark Our Fortunes Meet Us," and others of like import. The college authorities declared that a knowledge of French was indispensable, "as the diplomas are printed in French." In addition to all this getting of knowledge, these young. misses were admonished to "mind your manners, and walk sedately." The board of trustees of LaGrange Female Institute, who succeeded the board of LaGrange Female Academy, were as follows: Sampson Duggar, Hampton W. Hill, Daniel McMillan, Orville A. Bull, and Thomas B. Greenwood. The catalogue of 1848 announces that, "Board for pupils of the Institute can be obtained in the following homes: Major George Heard, Benjamin Harvey Hill, Esq., Dr. N. N. Smith, James Bradfield, Esq. Price of board per month, $9.00, exclusive of washing and lights." Lights were tallow candles. Twenty girls were accommodated in the institute at the same price. The dormitory was used in the last days of the war as a hospital for wounded soldiers. Thus it will be seen that the LaGrange Female Academy, chartered on December 26, 1831, and a suitable building erected for its accommodation was used continuously for the academy classes and those of LaGrange Female Institute, which was chartered on December 17, 1847, and also for the classes of LaGrange Female College, as it was later called, until 1851. The little academy has the distinction of being the first institution ever chartered for the instruction of young ladies in any state. The presiding o&cers of the institution under the original title of principal, and later as presidents, are given below. For three years the classes 1 VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. were combined with those under President Ichabod F. Cox at the Southern College, and his name is added to the list. Thomas Stanley John Park Joseph Montgomery W. C. 'Connor William C. Harris Gadwell J. Pearce Armstrong Ichabod F. Cox Morgan Callaway E. P. Burch James T. Johnson J. R. Mason John W. Heidt Rufus W. Smith Alwyn M. Smith Miss Daisy Davies William E. Thompson SOUTHERN FEMALECOLLEGE. In 1842 Rev. John E. Dawson organized a school for young women. Dr. Dawson was soon succeeded by Milton E. Bacon, through whose efforts the school was chartered under the name of LaGrange Female Seminary in 1845. By an act of the General Assembly of Georgia dated January 3 1, 1850, it changed the corporate name to LaGrange Collegiate Seminary for Young Ladies; two years later on January 14, 1852, the name was changed to Southern and Western Female College. On February 17, 1854, the name received its last change of Southern Female College as a title. The first class of four was graduated in 1845. The institution won an enviable reputation for thorough and conscientious work, and its increasing patronage demanded more extensive accommodations. In 1850, the old school building was remodeled for a boarding house or dormitory, and a beautiful chapel was erected. The location a t this time was in the eastern part of LaGrange, between the present Hill and Greenville streets. President Bacon was succeeded by John A. Foster. In 1857, I. F. Cox was made president, in which position he labored over thirty years. During this period he firmly established the success of the college. Near the close of the Civil War, the buildings, which were then used as a hospital for Confederate soldiers, were accidentally destroyed by fire. The government at Richmond, Virginia, upon the presentation of the claim by Benjamin H. Hill, appropriated $ 5 1,000.00 to restore the property, but as the Confederacy soon dissolved, no return for the loss could be made. With indomitable energy President Cox set to work to rebuild and refurnish the institution. In 1871, the new site on Church Street was selected and work begun on the buildings. The chapel erected in 1877 was a monument to the generosity of President Cox and the people of LaGrange. During the commencement of June, 1887, President Cox was stricken by apoplexy and died from the stroke. But the heritage he left was a col- VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. lege free from debt and equipped with handsome buildings and the most modern appliances. For a time Mrs. I. F. Cox served as president, and was succeeded by her son, Charles C. Cox. After the death of President I. F. Cox, which occurred during the commencement in June, 1887, the college was managed for a time by his wife, who was succeeded in turn by her son, Charles C. Cox. Mr. Cox was greatly beloved by the citizens of LaGrange as well as the students, and the college flourished under his administration which continued until the summer of 189 5 . Dr. G. A. Nunnally became president, and his administration lasted for seven years, during which time a new dormitory, the Sarah Ferrell Lyceum, and a chapel were added to the institution. In 1902 M. W. Hatton was chosen as president, and he served until 1908 when two of the buildings were burned. Due to the vigorous efforts of the local alumnae, the Sarah Ferrell Lyceum was renovated and arranged for classrooms as well as a dormitory, and Dr. R. HI. Blalock was engaged to manage the institution, and so successful was his administration that not only were the annual expenses met, but a surplus was provided. Rev. W.D. Upshaw was engaged to solicit funds for the rebuilding of the dormitory. In 1910, the new building was completed, and William F. Brown was elected as president, and served as such for two years. In 1912, James E. Ricketson succeeded as resident, and continued to serve until 1916, when M. W. Hatton returned for one year. In 1917, the trustees of the college decided that inasmuch as L. J. Render had for many years been a generous patron of the college and had advanced large sums of money for buildings and for maintenance of the college, that repayment of these advances would be an impossibility on the part of the trustees, and that the wisest course was to discontinue the school and turn over the property to their creditor. This was done, and the buildings were converted into apartments, and some time later became the property of Pike and Hunter under the name of Render Apartments. The Southern was always noted for its classical background and the splendid musical conservatory. The Cox administration inaugurated this excellent department, and Dr. John H. Norman of Oxford, England, and Miss Eula Render, who had studied many years in New York and abroad, added greater lustre by their knowledge and brilliant performance. The presidents of Southern Female College at LaGrange include in their roster many well and widely known educators. The roster follows: VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org 1842-46 1846-5 5 1855-57 1815-57* 1857-87 1887 1887-95 COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. John E. Dawson Milton E.. Bacon John A. Foster Henry E. Brooks Ichabod F. Cox Mrs. I. F. Cox Charles C. Cox 1891-03 1903-08 1908-10 1910-1 2 1912-16 1916-17 Dr. G. A. Nunnally M. W. Hatton Dr. R. H. Blalock William F. Brown James E. Ricketson M. W. Hatton BROWNWOOD.In 1840, the Brownwood Institute for young ladies was established by Dr. Robert C. Brown. I t was located about two miles from LaGrange in land lot 1 1 3 on the West Point highway, and occupied the site of Dr. W. W. Rutland's present residence. Dr. Brown was born, reared and educated in England. He had previously taught at the Scottsboro School, and Mrs. B. C. Ferrell had been one of his pupils. It was through Judge B. C. Ferrell that he was induced to locate in LaGrange. He was a man of great wealth, and spared no expense in designing and building the school. The buildings were entirely English in design, drawn by English architects, and built by English workmen. The campus was immense, about one hundred acres in extent, and the school buildings were placed in the center. There were magnificent oaks, velvety lawns of blue grass, and many of the flowers common to the Old South. Winding walks and broad driveways, sanded with the whitest sand, wound through the campus. Pupils were enrolled from all over the South, and it was a great honor to receive a diploma from Brownwood. For among the noted educators of this old school are recalled the names of Bennett, Sherman, Foster, and Cox. Dr. and Mrs. Brown had four children: Harry became a noted physician; Marie, an artist, never married; Lucia married Ovid Rodgers; Lydia a physician. Dr. Brown is buried in Hillview Cemetery in LaGrange. After the death of Dr. Brown, Brownwood was sold to Dr. Otis Smith, a Baptist minister from Massachusetts. Dr. Smith married Martha Womack, an aunt of Mrs. Thomas A. Boddie. Thomas Boddie was a student at Brownwood and recounted to Miss Belle Boddie some of the pranks of the school boys. On one occasion, Dr. and Mrs. Brown went to the house of Peter Tatum to perform the wedding ceremony of Betty Tatum and Dr. Little. Dr. Smith and his wife were the first guests to leave for home after the ceremony. It was a very dark night, and on reaching the Brownwood neighborhood, the horses became disquieted and refused to go on. Ben, the negro coachman, got out to investigate and found a rail fence built across the road. Ben cleared the road and next morning there was no sign of a fence there. Dr. Smith made *During the years of 1811-17, John A. Foeter and Henry E. Brooks acted as co-presidents. VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. no reprimand, and in fact, enjoyed the prank as much as the boys who played it. In 18j2, Brownwood was chartered by the General Assembly as a university for boys with Dr. Otis Smith as president, and for many years enjoyed the reputation of one of the best schools in the South. COUNTYPUBLICSCHOOLS. The public schools of Troup County were organized in January, 1871, in accordance with an act of the General Assembly enacted on October 13, 1870. The following members constituted the County School Board, and the militia district represented is noted: LaGrange District City of LaGrange Harrisonville District East Vernon Rough Edge Mountville ONealys Mill Hogansville District West Point District City of West Point West Vernon Antioch LLong Cane McLendon's P I ' Mill. Town of Hogansville James H. Fannin, President John E. Toole, Secretary J. P. Mooty E. J. Greene Anderson Leslie J. T. Johnson H. Traylor W. C. Lovejoy -W. L. Alford J, W. Oslin John W. Glass John G. Goss, resigned Aug. 1 B C. Cook l Gibson . i. . S. H. Dunson N o election The examination and selection of teachers and the issuance of the licenses to teach were made in August, September and October, 1871, and the following names were authorized to teach in the common schools: In East Vernon, F. B. Mosely and Mrs. Mary R. Lane; in Harrisonville, J. P. Mooty, John Wrillingharn and Isaac Jackson; in Rough Edge, Robert H. Dallis; in O'Neal's Mill, Frank Ward; in West Vernon, Charles S. Johnson; in West Point district, J. D. Attaway and J. R. Mann; in Antioch, W. G. Floyd and Miss Ella M. Boyd; in Long Cane, Miss Florence Burton; in McLendon's, L. S. Bates; in city of West Point, A. P. Mooty and A. F. Trimble; and the following names with place undesignated: J. M. Hogg, Lemuel Bruce, W. S. Alford, Mrs. Ella Marchman, Mrs. Fannie Autrey, J. B. Camp, Robert E. Park, I. F. Cox, J. W. Hogg, W. E. Palmer, J. W. Tarleton. The first school census taken in the county in the fall of 1871 merely gives the totals of white and colored between the ages of six and twenty-one. VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. DISTRICT WHITE LaGrange I5 City of LaGrange-_---.....--I---270 85 656 East Vernon 18 1 673 Harrisonville 697 Rough Edge 238 97 698 Mountville 2 10 699 O'Neal's 157 700 Hogansville Town of Hogansville 103 116 701 West Point City of West Point 151 735 West Vernon -.-----.-----------100 15 1 800 Antioch 804 Long Cane 181 71 80 1 McLendon's 149 1086 Pool's Mill 65 5 Total 23 1 5 The original Board of Education C o u ~ nSCHOOLSREORGANIZATION. which was chosen in 1871 was found to be too large for efficient work, so the board was reorganized on January 19, 1872. The new board consisted of five members with a term of office of four years. The first three of the board given below were chosen for two years, and the other two for four years, so that the terms of the whole board would not expire a t the same time. W. P. Edmondson W. E. Glanton N. L. Atkinson M. L. Rachels, Chairman John E. Toole A. E. Reid W. S. Trimble A. C. Williams E. T. Winn J. N. Carlton J. C. C. Freeman Orville A. Bull John D. Johnson William M. Boyd James F. Park W. E. Dozier John T. Boykin William A. Poer William V. Gray, Chairman J. F. Mobley VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org W. R. Bradfield John D. Johnson J. F. Thompson R. L. Gilham Henry W. Miller W. B. Whatley James F. Askew H. C. Kimbrough Jesse F. Jones E. B. Clark, Chairman William T. Tuggle W. C. Davidson C. K. Bass R. E. O'Neal George V. Boddie H. E. Newton H. H. Lane, Chairman John W. Colley J. H. Cleaveland Fannin Potta ' Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org 1914-18 191419181918-22 19 18-22 COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. W. S. Brack J. Q. Burton, Chairman J. D. Walker R. H. Sivels W. C. Davidson 1922-30 1922-30 19281930-1932-- L. L. Smith J. T. Hairston J. C. Teaver H. J. Hogg J. T. Patillo COUNTY SUPERINTENDENTS. The county school superintendents, called formerly commissioners, were elected by the Board of Education in the first plan of operation, but were afterwards made elective by the voters, but excluding those in cities which had an independent system of schools. The oecials of the early days of public schools were hampered in many ways in the accomplishment of their purposes: the apathetic attitude of the people, the lack of suitably trained teachers, and the woeful lack of funds .coupled with the temporary diversion by the state authorities'.of the school funds, which caused the pay of teachers to be deferred or discounted. The roster of superintendents follows: 1871-85 1885-01 190 1-08 1908-12 John E. Toole, Sr. Orville A. Bull Hatton Lovejoy W. C. Davidson 1912-20 1920-28 1928- John B. Strong Thomas G. Polhill J. H. Melson PRESENTCOUNTYSCHOOLS. In 1920, when Thomas G. Polhill was elected as County School Superintendent, there were twenty-three small white schools in Troup County outside of the municipal corporations of LaGrange, Hogansville and West Point. The attendance on these schools was very irregular, for it was dependent on weather conditions and the needs of the various stages of crop development on the farms. Some of the school building&were poorly lighted and heated and inadequately furnished with suitable desks, blackboards and apparatus. During the administration of T. G. Polhill, the physical conditions were almost revolutionized and reconstructed. Instead of the numerous poorly constructed buildings, there were constructed nine modern consolidated schools, each one of which is provided with a suitable assembly room, a library of well selected books, furnished with modern desks and an adequate teaching force. The question of attendance further hampered by the increased distance of some pupils from the consolidated school, was solved by the use of school buses under the control of careful and skillful drivers to carry pupils to and from the schools. Since the consolidation of the various schools, the pupils have made wonderful advancement in comparison with former days. Another potent factor in the advancement of the rural schools of our county has been the introduction of the Four-H Clubs in the schools by Miss Ida Bell, and the Boys Club by our county farm agents, George Daniel VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. and John Anderson. These ideas were impracticable until the schools were consolidated, because the units were too small to justify the expense. These great improvements that were inaugurated in our county schools have been amplified and carried on under the efticient management of the present superintendent, J. H. Melson, who is a teacher of wide experience and ability, and who is in sympathy with every egort towards improvement. The following are the schools: Pleasant Hill at Abbottsford; Center and Gray Hill in the 5th district; Hillcrest in the 12th; Mountville; Oak Grove; Rosemont ; Salem; Tatum. PERSONNEL OF THE COUNTYSCHOOLS. The personnel of the county schools under the supervision of J. H. Melson follows: Abbottsford n Gray Hill Hillcrest Montvie 0 Grove Rosemont Salem Tatum t H. B. Coleman and two teachers eJ. D. Whiteside and six teachers K. T. Wilson and four teachers H. B. Clay and three teachers H. M. Perry and four teachers F a n Cain and three teachers 0 T. Harmon and seven teachers Miss Ruth Boyles H. R. Sims and three teachers TROUP COUNTY ACADEMY.The Troup County Academy was chartered in 1827, and in 1828 was located on the present site of Hillview Cemetery in LaGrange. The students of the academy used water from a spring on the grounds of the Church Street Park, the former Ridley place. Among the teachers of this academy are noted Judge Orville A. Bull, Judge Blount C. Ferrell, and Lem Robertson. In 1838 the property was transferred to the trustees of the LaGrange High School, who sold the property to the city for a cemetery. FRANKLINACADEMY.This academy was chartered in 1827, and incorporated on December 26, 1831, a t the same time as the incorporation of the town of Franklin, and was located in land lot 283 of 5th district on the present site of the high school. On December 24, 1832, the name of the town and of the academy were changed to the name of West Point Academy. PLEASANT GRWE ACADEMY. This academy was chartered by the General Assembly of Georgia in 1827, but no names were mentioned in the charter. It is probable that the old Pleasant Grove School was the site, but there are no records available to verify this. VERNONACADEMY. Chartered on December 22, 1829, with the following named trustees: Woody Dozier, Willis Whatley, Elliott Reid, Wiley J. Sterling, and Ira Allen. I t was chartered as an accessory to the town of VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org , COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Vernon on the Chattahoochee, which had been an aspirant for the location of the county seat in 1828. The academy, like the town, now exists in memory only. LAGRANGE FEMALEACADEMY.Incorporated on December 2 6, 183 1, this was the school which was developed into LaGrange Female College. This academy has the distinction of being the first incorporated institution for the instruction of women only in the state of Georgia. The history will be treated under the history of LaGrange Female College. WESTPOINTFEMALEACADEMY.This academy was chartered and incorporated on December 25, 1837, with the following trustees: Beaman H. Martin, Benjamin P. Robinson, William Reid, Dickerson, Burnham, John M. Russell, John C. Webb, and Edward B. Terrell. This academy was operated for some time, probably up to the time of the war in 1861, and formed the nucleus of the Female College afterwards built in 1868. LAGRANGE HIGHSCHOOL. This school was chartered on December 28, 1838, with the following board of trustees: N. N. Smith, Benjamin Cameron, William A. Redd, Jesse Bull, John E. Gage, Bennett M. Ware, Wilie Womack, Andrew Battle, and James K. Redd. The property of the Troup County Academy was donated to them by the trustees of that institution, which was sold, and a site bought on the eastern side of the town between Hill and Greenville streets and east of King Street. The site contained about twenty acres, and fronted 750 feet on the present Hill Street. This school was presided over by some well known educators, Otis Smith, Carlisle Bernan, Threlkeld, Hodges, Mmty and Jones. On October 14, 1843, the property was purchased by Joseph T. Montgomery, and it is probable that he induced Carlisle Beman, then president of Oglethorpe University, to take charge of the school. A t a later date it was in possession of the LaGrange Board of Education, who sold the school site to a company to use as a race track, and the school pras moved further west to the intersection of Hill and Greenville. This in turn was sold by the city to Robert E. and Edward Park, and the building removed to Park Avenue and operated as a boarding school for boys. A few years later it was destroyed by fire. HOMEACADEMY.Chartered on December 31, 1838, with the following named trustees: William Christian, William .E. Marcus, Peachy Bledsoe, William M. Fincher, Elkanah Talley, Thomas Tatom, George Wells, and Samuel Cartright. The location of this academy cannot be definitely stated as the names of the trustees constitute the only clue. Probably in the southern part of the county, but possibly in the eastern. WESTPOINTFEMALECOLLEGE. While the college may have been a development of the West Point Female Academy, it was organized as a college mainly through the efforts of Major McClendon, and financed by a VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. stock company in 1868. In November, 1873, it was destroyed by a storm, but was rebuilt in 1874 by the city council under the administration of B. F. Reid as mayor. Colonel A. P. Mooty was one of the presidents, and was in charge in 1874, at which time there were about a hundred students in attendance. THE LAGRANGEPUBLICSCHOOLS. Education in LaGrange for many years was dependent on her colleges, the high school for boys, and several private schools, all of which received a small addition to their income from the state school fund through the county school commissioner. The General Assembly of Georgia had passed several acts enabling the city of LaGrange to establish a system of public schools, and in the early part of 1903, an election was held to authorize an issue of bonds for the construction of school facilities to the amount of $25,000.00, and the citizens approved the measure by an overwhelming majority. The following Board of Education was elected by the city council to put the system into operation: F. M. Longley, who was chosen as chairman, T. A. Atkinson, J. H. Edmondson, H. R. Slack, C. L. Smith, W. L. Cleaveland, and John D. Edmundson, mayor and ex-of6cio member. The high school, now a r w e l l Avenue, was erected a t a cost of $13,000.00; East LaGrange and the Union Street colored school, for $4,5 00.00, and the balance up to $20,000.00 was used for desks and apparatus. Clifford L. Smith was chosen as the first superintendent; James E. Ricketson as High School principal; Miss Lulu Ward as principal of East LaGrange, and Miss Fleming Ward as principal of Unity School, conducted in a building furnished by the Unity Cotton Mills. An additional colored school was established as Hill Street in the old colored academy. The construction of Elm City Mills in 1905 and the Urity Spinning Mills in 1909 soon overcrowded the Unity School, for which temporary provision was made on Oak Street for the first grade, but finally resulted in the construction of the Unity School on Wilkes Street, and the enlargement of Union Street. The High School was built in 1914 at an approximate cost of $36,000.00. The system at that time included the High School on north Greenwood Street, Harwell Avenue Grammar School, Unity Grammar School, East LaGrange Grammar School on Johnson Street, and a kindergarten school on Dixie Street, and the two colored schools, Union Street and Hill Street. In 1920, the city limits were enlarged to a two-mile radius, and the Southwest LaGrange School and the Dunson School added to the city system, and a colored school in the Valley Waste village. In 1922, the Dawson Street School was built to replace the East LaGrange School, which was abandoned and razed; and the East Depot School for VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. colored students was erected in the same year; the High School was enlarged and a gymnasium added in 1921; the Domestic Science building was added to the High School group on Greenwood Street. In 193 1, the Junior High School was erected on fill Street. The present system includes the following schools: . High School on Greenwood Street. Junior High School on Hill Street. Harwell Avenue Grammar School. Dawson Street Grammar School. Southwest LaGrange School on Washington Street. Dunson School on the Atlanta Highway. Unity School on Wilkes Street. Union Street colored school. East Depot Street colored school. The story of the LaGrange Public Schools would be incomplete without paying tribute to the excellent work of James E. Ricketson as principal of the High school until he became president of the Southern Female College, and his able successor, Thomas G. Polhill, afterwards the superintendent of the Troup County schools, and their associates, for the establishment of a standard of scholarship beyond reproach, and to these at a later date was added the work of Robert L. Cowart as principal. The painstaking work in the early years of the schools of Miss Lulu Ward and her sister, Miss Fleming Ward, in preparing the way for fuller upper grades, which were pitifully small in the beginning. The Southwest LaGrange School under the superintendency of Chilton W. Coleman before the merger constituted a powerful factor in the later expansion of the schools by the excellent preparatory work accomplished. Since 1916 the LaGrange schools have been under the care of Superintendent F. F. Rowe, under whom they have made great progress in development of scholarship, and have added an enviable record of athletic activities. Clifford L. Smith 1903-16 F. F. Rowe 1916- WESTPOINTPUBLICSCHOOLS. The West Point Public Schools were operated as part of the county system until 1876, when a local board of education was authorized. In 1879 on August 9, the board was composed of nine members, the terms of three members expiring every year. On August 20, 1906, the pro rata of the school fund of West Point was authorized to be paid direct. VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. The utilization of the West Point Academy as a nucleus for the system and with some additions was found to be adequate for the demands of the schools. A large per cent. of West Point citizens in the business sense are political citizens of Alabama, and the colored population of the Georgia side is small in proportion to the white. The population of the textile plants are all in Alabama. Yet the normal growth of the thriving city on the banks of the Chattahoochee increased the demands of the school on the hill, and in 193 2 a handsome, commodious, and well arranged high school was built, which would bq a credit to a veritable metropolis. q e number of superintendents testifies to the merits of these well known educators by their long service: A. P. Mooty was the first, serving under the chairmanship of John R. Scott; J. W. McKemie; Norman C. Miller; J. E. Purks; Walter P. Thomas, and the present incumbent, W. Terrell Harrison. HOGANSVILLE PUBLICSCHOOLS.The public schools of Hogansville were established in 1893 in conformity to an act passed by the General Assembly of Georgia during that year. The school was located in the northern part of the town in a small wooden building. In 1896 the old small building was replaced by a larger wooden structure, which at the time seemed to be ample for the accommodation of pupils for some time to come. The construction of the Hogansville Manufacturing Company in 1899 caused an influx of students which soon filled the school to overflowing and necessitated the use of temporary quarters for some of the classes. The new brick schoolhouse and auditorium was erected in 1919, and again there seemed to be plenty of room. The construction of the Stark Mills in 1922-23 complicated the situation once more, and resulted in the construction of the new High School in 1932. Among the early teachers of the Hogansville schools are noted the names of Mrs, Sarah Covin and her husband, John H. Covin, and A. F. Trimble. The superintendents include the following: Marvin Williams, Duval Jackson, J. B. Sammons, E. B. Strozier, J. T. McGehee, McLarty, and the present incumbent, 0. C. Lam. VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. CHAPTER XVIII. LITERATURE AND ARTS AGRANGE DAILY NEWS. In any record of the literature of a community, the editors of the newspapers hold a prominent place, inasmuch as a great part of the progress of a community is mirrored in, and influenced by the attitude of the papers of the community. Troup County has been fortunate in having so many able editors. The present LaGrange News has had several names during its long and honorable career. It was launched as the LaGrange Herald in 1843, and later was called The Chattahoochee. In the early sixties it bore the name of The LaGrange Reporter, which name was retained up to the time of the merger of the LaGrange Reporter, the LaGrange Graphic and the S h t t l e in the year 1928. Since that time it has borne the name of LaGrange Daily News. In Avery's History of Journalism in Georgia, he tells us that the LaGrange Herald, then a weekly, was founded by Dr. Bronson. William J. Scott was an early editor. Judge Alexander M. Speer, for many years prominent in the political history of South Carolina and Georgia, was one of the senior editors. Thomas J. Bacon, one of the most brilliant members of the ante bellum bar of LaGrange, was the editor until 1861 at the beginning of the war. He was mayor of LaGrange a t the time and was one of the first to volunteer and was a Captain in the 27th Georgia Volunteer Infantry. He was killed at Seven Pines on May 3 1, 1862, and was the first LaGrange man killed on the battlefield. C. H. C. Willingham was the editor during the war and the reconstruction days. He was an able and fearless writer and his intense loyalty to the South, and his denunciations of Federal injustice came near causing his arrest several times. Another editor was John T. Waterman, who was a man of brilliant intellect and courtly manners. He conducted the Reporter for eight years, making a great success of his management. Rev. S. Pope Callaway, son of James Callaway, one of the Troup pioneers, is remembered most happily as editor of the Reporter for many years by the old citizens now living in the county. He was noted for his cultured English, his grasp of thought, and his force of expression. After his death in 1896, his wife, Mrs. Ellen Patillo Callaway assumed the management and called to her assistance W. W. Randall, an experienced editor and newspaper man. Some time later she gave the management to her son, James Pope Callaway, during whose administration the daily was instituted. In 1902, George E. Billinghurst became manager and editor, and with him was associated W. W. Randall. In 1904, J. 0.Bell purchased the plant VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. and became manager and editor. The property again changed hands and J. A. Perry became manager and editor for some time. The next editor was John H. Jones, who became the state senator from our 37th district in 1921-22. H e was also the author of "Americanism," a book of observations and records of the World War. Many of the succeeding managers and editors were never very closely identified with local interests, and did not leave much impression upon the memory of the readers. Some of these were Williams, Mahaffey, Henry Emory, Howard, Paul Porter. The present manager and editor is Roy C. Swank, who is able and efIicient. THE LAGRANGEGRAPHIC. This paper commenced publication on January 7, 1888, under the management of C. R. Hawkes and W. W. Randall. After some time Hawkes was replaced by Roe C. Ward, and this continued until Randall was employed as editor of the Reporter, when Orville Gustavus Cox became editor of the Graphic. Associated with him was G. A. B. Tomlinson, and from this gifted pair came many sparkling gems of prose and poetry. After his death in 1903, he was succeeded by the following editors and managers: James B. Ridley, Marvin M. Dickinson, Samuel G. Woodall, Roy McGinty, James B. Daniel, W. A. Richardson. After these the paper was merged with the Reporter under the name of LaGrange Daily News. THEWEST POINTNEWS.This newspaper is the medium of news of West Point and the Chattahoochee valley industrial plants, and was established by Joseph Hames. H e was succeeded by W. Trox Bankston, whose facile pen enriched the pages for many years. Bankston was a member of the legislature for our county in 1917- 18. Upon his change of residence t o the city of Covington, the editorship and management fell upon the shoulders of John Coffee and his son, who are the present operators of the paper. THEHOGANSVILLE HEADLIGHT. This newspaper was'established in 1897 by J. R. Kendall and George E. Billinghurst. After Billinghurst removed to LaGrange, Rev. George W. Morgan became the editor. He was followed by R. H. Jackson, who was editor up to the time that it ceased publication. THESHUTTLE. This paper was established as a paper ministering to the news of the southern textile plants in 1919 under the management of Mrs. Ethel Thomas, who added to the interest of the pages with a weekly letter under the pen-name of "Aunt Becky." She was succeeded by Mrs. C. J. Lewis for a short time, and she was followed by Miss Eleanor Orr, who was manager until it was merged with the Reporter in 1928 under the name of the LaGrange Daily News. VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. OURPAPERS.The end and aim of these papers of Troup County has ever been to bring the news to its readers in an entertaining manner, to uphold the lofty principles of our government, to promote civic and urban gowth, and to disseminate culture and enlightenment among the readers. The modern editors have striven and succeeded in carrying forward the high moral policies established years ago by the pioneer editors. LITERATURE.A tea for authors given by the trustees of the LaGrange Memorial Library in September of 1933, as a feature of the observance of the Georgia Bicentennial program, brought out the fact that Troup County has produced a number of writers of note. The display included the work of the following Troup County authors: Mrs. Oreon Mann Smith, a novel, The Novice. She was the wife of Rufus W. Smith, president of LaGrange Female College, and was a teacher of distinction in Georgia schools for more than fifty years. Mrs. Addie Bull Tomlinson, a poem, Missionary. She was the wife of J. M. Tomlinson, a portrait painter, and the mother of Mrs. Mary Tuggle and gifted son, G. A. B. Tomlinson. Gustavus Adolphus Bull Tomlinson, a volume of poems, The Old Brigade and other poems. He was the son of the above. This talented family added greatly to the culture of Troup County. Orville Gustavus Cox, a volume of poems, Elms and Roses. He was editor of the LaGrange Graphc, and was mayor of LaGrange in 1903-04. Frank H a r d , a volume of poems, In a Garden. He was judge of the City Court of Troup County, 1905-16; judge of the Court of Appeals. His friend, William Cole Jones says of his poems, "He will stand revealed as one whose crowning gift is a fine responsiveness to the beauty of nature and the worth of man." He lives in Decatur at present, but Troup County still calls him her son by virtue of his long residence there. Mrs. Jewel Faver Glass and her talented daughter, Katherine Faver Glass, have had many poems published in the newspapers, and they each have several poems on trees in "Poems of Trees," a Sidney Lanier Memorial. Carrie Fall Benson, plays and poems. She has written five plays, two of which, "FiddLin Fellow" and "Timbers," were sold to the Carolina Players, and produced in many cities of the country. The other three, "Decoroza Days," "Porcelain Heartbreak," and r'Mickleberry Manor," have been produced at LaGrange College and before many organizations of women. She has written many charming poems, which have been published in poetry magazines and in anthologies. Charles Stakeley, a volume of poems. He was a minister of note, and was pastor for many years a t Augusta, Georgia, and at Washington, D. C. He died at Montgomery, Alabama, in 1932. VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Mrs. Lottie Anne Spikes, a volume, Memories. She was the wife of L. E. Spikes. She was a contributor to the columns of the Banner Herald. John Franklin Edwards, a volume, The Red Book. He,was a member of the 35th Georgia Volunteer Infantry, C. S. A., the father of Mrs. R. L. Hammett. The book is an autobiography of Confederate service. John H. Jones, a volume, Americanism. He was an editor of the LaGrange Reporter, and our Georgia state senator in 1921-22. Ulrich Bonnell Phillips, a history, Life and Labor in the Old South. He is the most celebrated writer of LaGrange origin, soq of J. R. Phillips and nephew of Robert M. Young. His history of the ante bellum South is fearless in style, clear cut, and enlightening, yet giving to facts an interesting and picturesque touch. He was awarded a prize offered by Little, Brown and Company for the best unpublished history manuscript, the publication of which won for him the Kahn Fellowship Foundation, which is awarded for unusual attainment and gives a year of leisure :for travel and rest from work. He is now professor of American History at the University of Michigan. Mrs. Arabella Dawson Hill, a volume, Mrs. Hill's Cook Book. She was the wife of Judge E. Y. Hill, and daughter of John E. Dawson, founder of Southern Female College at LaGrange. Her book was for a long time the supreme authority on all forms of cookery, and many of her recipes are still in use. Clifford Lewis Smith, a booklet, Birds and Trees of Trout County. H e is the author of this volume. Belle Boddie, contributions, Early Recollections of Troup County. She has recorded the recollections of her mother, Mrs. Aley Womack Smith Boddie, the wife of Thomas A. Boddie, with great charm and dignity. They were published in the LaGrange Grajhc. In addition to these contributions, she has had many other articles accepted by papers and magazines. Edward Thomas Moon, a history, Class of 1893 of University of Georgia. A history of the achievements of the class of 1893, written in a clear and entertaining manner by one of its members. Mrs. Annie Bass Hill, poems. She is the wife of B. H. Hill of West Point. She has written many poems of merit and distinction, which have been published in the Atlanta Constitution, the New York Times, and in several magazines. She is a member of the Atlanta Writers Club. Anderson M. Scruggs, poems. His boyhood was spent in West Point. His most widely known poem, "Glory to Them," is a glorification of the toilers of the earth. This poem has been published in thirty magazines, anthologies, and newspapers, and appeared in an English anthology of the best poems of 1930. He is professor of histology and embryology at the VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Southern Dental College, and is a member of the Poetry Society of America, and of the Atlanta Writers Club. Nellie Sue Bailey, poems. She is a student at LaGrange College, and has had several poems published in the local papers, and one included in the volume of Trees-the Sidney Lanier Memorial. Benjamin Harvey Hill, addresses and orations. He was one of the distinguished orators of America, prominent in state and national affairs. Many of his addresses have a wide circulation. His official positions are noted in the roster of Oficials and Old Citizens. PAINTING. Our county has been fortunate in having many exponents of art in color and in form in the communities, and emanating from the colleges. Some of these have bestowed their artistic creations on friends -and loved ones, and enriched the walls of many homes. Some of these artists and teachers follow: Mamie Stakeley, an early instructor; Lucy Carpenter, whose specialty was wax flowers; J. M. Tomlinson, portrait painter; Mamie Holifield, an artistic artist; Mrs. Ada Wooten Shaw, Mrs. Pearl Long Smith, Roberta Black, Viola Burks, and many others. All of the above have received awards of merit for pictures exhibited a t state and local fairs and exhibitions. Vance Cotter also won recognition with his etchings and pen and ink work. William Lamar Dodd, son of Rev. F. J. Dodd, has exhibited some beautiful water colors in Philadelphia at the Feragil, and in the International Exhibit at New York. He received a scholarship in the Art League of New York for excellence of his work. Musrc. From the early days to the present, the citizens of LaGrange and of the entire county have enjoyed unusual opportunities in culture and entertainment and instruction on account of the presence of masters of art, music, and literature in the colleges, and from the celebrities who came to our communities under the auspices of our educational institutions. Among these passing celebrities are noted: Walter Emerson, premier cornetist of the world; Thomas Nelson Page, author and ambassador to. England; ' Governor Bob Taylor, the inimitable entertainer; Rumenji, the master violinist; Blumenstein, the matchless cello player of the Boston Quintet Club; these and many more through the colleges; William J. Bryan, the orator and statesman; and John Burroughs, the naturalist; the last two through the public schools. Among the musicians that have contributed to the technique and appreciation of music, and became identified with our county as citizens are noted many names: Alwyn Means Smith, a talented singer and master of music, and his wife, Mrs. Laura Crane Smith, a finished singer and musician; Herman Schirmacher, musician and orchestral expert; John Norman, pianist and organist; Louis Alberti, singer and choral expert; Mrs. Pauline VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Witherspoon Hutchinson, the golden-voiced soprano; Mrs. Jennie Evaas Bradfield, the matchless contralto; Eula Render, Mrs. Ethel Dallis Hill, and Ms. Gene Covin Farmer and her talented daughters, all violinists of the highest order; Mrs. Mary Will Cleaveland Thompson, Mrs. Annie Lizzie Strong Park, Sallie Cox, and Viola Burks, artistic pianists and organists; a host of others, of which those above were only types. VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. CHAPTER XIX. PUBLIC BUILDINGS HE COURTHOUSE. In 1827 the first session of Troup County Superior Court was at a private home west of the town of LaGrange, since the county seat had not been selected by the Inferior Court, and in fact the selection was made in the spring of 1828. The old brick courthouse was erected in 1830, and the accompanying jail was located on the site of the present city hall. The original jail was replaced by a brick structure in 1845, which was built by Benjamin H. Cameron. In 1892 the jail site was changed to the present one under the administration of M. L. Fleming as chairman of the Troup County Commissioners, and the present structure was built in that year. The other commissioners were J. M. Callaway, J. P. Baker, J. E. Smith, and W. J. Hammett, and the builder was William L. Landrum. The old courthouse was supplemented at a later date by two small offices separated by a vault. These were for the accommodation of the County Clerk and the Ordinary, and were located on the eastern edge of the courthouse plat, which was inclosed by an octagonal iron fence. This fence was afterwards used to inclose the Confederate Cemetery. The old brick courthouse and the offices were dismantled in 1904, and while the work of demolition was ia progress, 0. G. Cox, talented poet and editor of the LaGrange Graphic, penned the following lines: "The march of time had ordered that the old courthouse should go. It was shoddy and old-fashioned and out of time, I know, But I'm thinking of the vanished scenes in the long ago. Alford is grandly thundering, Dougherty is pleading, and Edward Hill is there! Bull i s weighing justice with scales balanced fair. Haralson in argument is pealing strong and clear, Ben Hill sees on furrowed cheek the tribute of a tear. Gordon's ~outhfulvisage, bright eyes aflame! Ferrell, clear and brilliant, and a host whom I could name." In 1904, the present courthouse was built under the administration of Charles H. Griffin as chairman, and ably assisted in the work by the other members of the Board of Commissioners, J. M. Callaway, W. J. Hardy, J. F. Market, and Frank Word, and Frank Harwell as clerk of the board. It was built by C. C. Totherow and Company as the contractors. THELAGRANGEPOSTOFFICE. The time of waiting in the lobby of the old post offices was formerly spent in political discussion, and the transmission of social news, otherwise known as gossip. The gathering time was the arrival of the mail train, and the waiting time during the distribution in VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. the various boxes until "General Delivery" was open. The records of the early days are not kept in the local oflice and the memory of old citizens, some of which have blank intervals, furnish the source of all available information. The earliest location of the office in the memory of the author was a wooden building about where the Howard Garage is situated on Church Street, and Captain W. S. Evans was the postmaster. This was during the first Cleveland administration in 1884. I t was next moved to the west side of Ridley Avenue near the Misses Young store, and Moses R. Kirby was the postmaster. The next move was to the east side of Main Street, and the postmaster was William Laird, who was not previously a citizen of LaGrange. In 1905 the ofice was moved to the corner now occupied by the A. 82 P. store, as the National Bank had leased the old quarters on Main Street, and on this site Mrs. N. F. Awtry presided as postmistress. In 1911 the present Federal building was erected as a post office, and continues to be the oflice until the present date. This is a modern building with all the conveniences necessary for the reception and forwarding of mail. The addition of the convenience of the parcel post was established about 1917, some time later than the erection of this building. The present courteous and obliging postmaster is Walter L. Turner, who succeeded Mrs. Awtry. THE WESTPOINTPOST OFFICE. The thriving city of West Point and the adjoining part of the city that lies in Alabama also have a Federal building as a post office, the erection of which was completed in 1932. It is on the west side of the river on the south side of 8th Street, almost on the Alabama state line. CITYHALLOF LAGRANGE.The city hall of LaGrange was erected in 1926, during the administration of Grover C. Hunter as mayor, with the approval of the following members of the city council: F. J. Pike, R. L. Render, Roy Dallis, E. D. Phillips, J. E. Borders, and A. C. Dunson. The building was designed by Lockwood and Poundstone, and constructed by the LaGrange Lumber and Supply Company. The cornerstone was laid by W.D. Richardson, Grandmaster of Georgia Freemasons. The building is located on the northeast intersection of Haralson and Ridley Avenue on the site of the old county jail. It provides commodious city offices for the clerk and the city engineer, a comfortable room for a council chamber, and in the basement the city police office and the city prison. The city clerk is J. H. Moss, and the city engineer, G. H. Sargent. WEST POINTAUDITORIUM.This modern structure is a credit to the city of West Point, and houses the welfare activities of the community, and the headquarters of this district of scouts under the leadership of Grady Brad- VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. shaw. The city offices are located on the corner of First Avenue and Ninth Street. Further details and dates were not obtainable. HOGANSVILLE CITYHALL. The city hall of Hogansville was erected in 1924, during the administration of Mayor Daniel. It is located on the south side of Main Street a short distance from the railroad station, which is the center of the corporate limits of the city. Upon the cornerstone appears the following information: "Hbgansville City Hall, 1924; G. G. Daniel, Mayor; C. C. Nall; R. E. Daniel; B. F. Rosser; W. P. Wilkes; B. R. Williams, Sr.; R. H. Utting, clerk." The building is a credit to the enterprise of this energetic city. THEDUNSONHOSPITAL. This hospital was originally the LaGrange Sanatorium, which was chartered November 24, 1902, by H. R. Slack, F. M. Ridey, H. W. Terrell, T.S. Bradfield, F. E. Callaway, J. E. Dunson, C. V. Truitt, W. A. Reeves, and A. T. Dallis. The Sanatorium was sponsored by Dr. H. R. Slack, who was a large contributor in the subscription to the enterprise, and it was operated by him until 1916, when it was purchased by the city of LaGrange in response to a bequest by Joseph E. Dunson, who died in that year. The bequest was stipulated as a fund of $10,000.00 for the erection of a municipal hospital, and in addition a maintenance fund of $500.00 annually for five years for the operation of the hospital. The city purchased the Sanatorium for $20,000.00 by adding $10,000.00 from the city treasury. The Sanatorium was valued at a larger sum, but Dr. and Mrs. Slack donated the excess value to the hospital. The Dunson Hospital began operations with forty beds, and included a colored ward in accordance with the conditions of the bequest. At a later date the hospital was enlarged to accommodate sixty beds and an X-ray laboratory. A training school for nurses was conducted for a time. Among those citizens who have served as trustees, or directors, of the hospital are found the names of H. H. Childs, Jarrell Dunson, T.J. Thornton, F. S. Tatum, J. J. Milam, and C. N. Pike. The present board consists of C. N. Pike, R. 0. Pharr, T. G. Polhill, Richard Hutchinson, and Mayor R. S. O'Neal, ex-officio member. The superintendents of the hospital are named in the order of their service in the hospital: Freda Walters, Ethelyn Patterson, Grace Hudson, and Catherine Shriver McDuilie, the present incumbent. LAGRANGE MEMORIAL LIBRARY. The LaGrange Woman's Club bought from G. B. Heard, administrator of the Heard property, the house and lot on Church Street in 1911 for a club house. Even at this early date, a public library was being discussed by the club, but the income from the rental of the house was used for liquidating the indebtedness, and all the remaining VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. available funds were used during the World War and the following years for the care of war orphans and Red Cross projects. Finally, on March 1, 1921, during the administration of Mrs. Howard Park as president of the club, and with Mrs. Clifford Smith as chairman of the library committee, a small library of three hundred volumes was installed in the assembly room of the club house. So generous were the gifts to this little collection that in a month's time it numbered two thousand volumes. The chief gift was the reference library from the Southern College, donated by the Render family. The Woman's Club bore all the expense of maintenance of the library for three years, after which the city began to appropriate a small sum towards its support. A reading room was added to the library at a cost of $800.00, which was open to the public for one or two days each week. The library soon outgrew its quarters, and the club members began to agitate the question of erecting a larger and more convenient building for the library. As a result of this agitation in 1924, Joseph H. Edmondson made a most generous and attractive proposition to the club women, viz.: that he would contribute $5,000.00 toward a library building, if the club and the citizens of the town would raise $10,000.00. In response to this proposal, in 192 5 Hubert Quillian, secretary of the South-West LaGrange Y. M. C. A., was asked by the Woman's Club to take the chairmanship of the library movement. The club as an organization had promised to contribute $1,000.00 in cash and its valuable lot on Church Street and the sum to be obtained from the sale of the old house on the site as a nucleus to build a library and Woman's Club room. The club also promised t o contribute its books, then valued at $3,000.00. In addition, fifteen members of the club had met previously and had subscribed $1,$00.00 as their personal gifts to the construction. The matter was presented to the Rotary Club by Hubert Quillian in such an attractive and interesting manner that the club took over the project and with their characteristic enthusiasm and energy, they achieved the astounding success of securing $25,000.00 in subscriptions in one day. It was suggested and adopted by all the interested parties that the library should be dedicated as a memorial to the soldiers who suffered and died in the World War. The Troup County Library Association was formed with Hubert M. Quillian as president, a constitution was adopted and a charter secured; and plans drawn by Ernest D. Ivey of Atlanta were accepted, and a contract for building a public library and a Woman's Club room was let to the LaGrange Lumber and Supply Company. This handsome library was completed in November, 1926, and dedicated on Armistice Day to the veterans of the VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. World War as a memorial to those who suffered and died in that great conflict. The library was opened to the public on December 6, 1926. It now has nearly seven thousand volumes, a very good reference collection, and all the leading magazines. In 1932 the total circulation was 33,716 volumes. I t is supported by the City of LaGrange and the Woman's Club, the city contributes $1,200.00 yearly to the support and the club pays the deficit and adds to the library. Miss Jeannette Wilhoite has acted as the librarian since its beginning in 1921. Her efficiency and charm have contributed in a large measure to the usefulness and popularity of the library. The present board of trustees are as follows: J. H. Edmondson, President; Mrs. Clifford Smith, Vice-President; Render Dallis, Secretary; Robert Hutchinson, Treasurer; Mrs. J. E. Dunson, Jr.; Miss Mary Nix; Cason J. Callaway; H. W. Caldwell, and W. H. Turner, Jr. HAWKES CHILDREN'SLIBRARY.In 1873 four young men of West Point, Scott Todd, Morris Herzberg, Theodor Mayer, and H. Blumenfield, formed a reading club. They met in the rear of the Herzberg jewelry store, where they kept their books, and read and discussed them. A few years later the Young Men's Library Association was formed. A room was obtained, the books installed, and a librarian secured. Other members who joined at this time were Shep Shepherd, LaFayette Lanier, Daniel Merz, and H. Heyman. This library finally became the nucleus of the present Hawkes Children's Library, which was established through the activity of the West Point Woman's Club. A. K. Hawkes, a philanthropic citizen of Atlanta, becoming interested through the influence of Mrs. C. E. Patillo, left a bequest of $7,500.00 for a children's library at West Point. The result of the bequest is the attractive library building on the west bank of the Chattahoochee. Mrs. S. 0.Cundy, sister of Mr. Hawkes, supplemented this gift with a contribution of more than $5,000.00, the income from which is used for the purchase of books for the library. On September 29, 1922, the library was opened with appropriate ceremonies. The library is supported by the city and the West Point Woman's Club. Mrs. Mary Poer Oslin has been the efficient and courteous librarian from the time of its establishment, and her profound interest has been a great factor in the success and upbuilding of the library. On January 1, 1932, there were 4,575 volumes in the library. VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. CHAPTER XX. CHURCHES HERE ARE many churches and chapels in the county, and there are some which have moved from their original location to a more convenient site, and a few of the old buildings have come into the possession of the colored people by gift or by purchase. The following list of the churches gives all that are known to the author: NAME PASTOR LOCATION Callaway Chapel Mountville Road M. G. Wilson County Line ---.--------------------Fourth District Hogansville---------------------------------J. G. Graham Hogansville, First Hogansville, Second Hogansville J. G. Graham LaGrange, First LaGrange W. E. Howard LaGrange, Dunson LaGrange P. T. Layton .. LaGrange, East (Dixie) LaGrange C. S. Freeman LaGrange, South (Unity) LaGrange J. B. Rice LaGrange, Southwest LaGrange C. M. Goforth Long Cane Long Cane H. G. Bradshaw J. W. Maltbie Mountville --..-....-....-.----------Mountville . Providence Harr~sonville R. E. L. Harris H. G. Bradshaw Union Jones Crossroad Wehadkee W e s t Vernon H.G. Bradshaw Point m e H. lvey West Point .-....-..I..-.------.--.-West East Vernon (Tatum) East Vernon Robert Crowder . -Fuller Emmaus Hogansville, east i l l Flat Shoals - . - - - - - - - - - . S m i t h LaGrange LaGrange . . Lebanon Fourth Distr~ct W. F. Mims . - BAPTIST,PRIMITIVE LaGrange, Cherry Street LaGrange .-. -------- -Satterwhite CATHOLIC -------- West Point ....-.-..-...-....------.... West Point CHRISTIAN Oak Street Oak Grove West Point LaGrange . . Fourth D~strlct Point Church of Christ LaGrange VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org C. W. Hanson W W W W ~ W W W - - ~ W W S. P. Spiegd Jerse Dollar Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org NAME COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. LOCATION PASTOR J. D. C. Wilson J. D. C. Wilson St. Marks -----.---I-----------LaGrange Good Shepherd LaGrange, S. W HOLINESS Jackson Street Beth-El -.-......-I--------------- LaGrange - David Marx West Point ...--Hammett Road--.-.-.-----------------H. C. Holland Asbury . Wlllam Greenway Bethel, West Point Circuit Gabbettville, E Stovall Road W. E. Brown Big Springs L. B. Linn LaGrangeDixie L. B. Linn . - L a Dunson .. Harmony, West Point Circuit Abbottsford, W Wlllam Greenway Hogansville .. Hogansville H. C. Holland -LaGrange ----..-..--.---.-I--------- L.M. Twiggs LaGrange, First LaGrange, South LaGrange.. W. E. Brown William Greenway Long Cane, West Point Circuit.--Long Cane..-----.--...-----.--------Midway 14th District J. C. Adams, J. K. Brown ..---- Mountville W. E. Brown Mount Pleasant Pleasant Grove,West Point Circuit..-Pleasant Grove William Greenway Saint James .-.---...-.---.....---------------HogC. Holland LaGrange--C. A. Reese Saint John Salem ------------.----.---------------Salem J. R, Allen Trinity LaGrange G. T. Pittman .LaGrange C. A. Reese Unity West Point Point G. L. King . .- 1 1 1 1 1 1 - Ebenezer ..-.---.----Hogansvile LaGrange ---.I---....-....----------------LaGrangeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeA. E. Dallas Loyd Chapel -Glass Bridge Road A. R. Howland West Point West Point LaGrange Larane LAGRANGEFIRSTMETHODIST. The site for the town of LaGrange was purchased on March 5 , 1 8 2 8, and was surveyed and subdivided by the Inferior Court of Troup County a short time thereafter. As soon as the subdivisions were made, on one of the lots set aside for church purposes, the first church of LaGrange was erected, a log church on the site of the present Methodist VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. church. It was completed in 1828. On the same site in 1858, a brick church was built, which was replaced by the present structure in 1898. This church was under the jurisdiction of the South Carolina Conference from 1828 to 183 2; of the Georgia Conference from 183 3 to 1867; 'of the North Georgia Conference from 1868 to the present time. The first session of the Georgia Conference was held at LaGrange in 1833, and in 18S S, the Conference again assembled at LaGrange, at which session the question of purchasing LaGrange College was presented for consideration. From 1828 to 1839, the church had no pastor and shared with the other churches in this section a preacher on the Troup Circuit. In 1840, it was made a half-station, sharing the pastor with West Point. At that time the following were the only stations in the Georgia Conference: Athens, Augusta, Columbus, Macon, Milledgeville, Savannah, and Washington. Anderson, W. D 1 891-92 Bigham, Robert W 1867-70;93 Boring, Isaac 1930-31 Boring, Jesse 1829-30;35; 57 Butch, E. P 1859-60 Chappell, J. D 1929-30 Connor, W. G.-.-.....---.-1854-56 G d e , W. F.-..----...-.---1863-64 Crumley, W. M 1870-72 Dillard, Walter B 1915-17 Duncan, John P 1850-52 Eakes, R. Frank .---.-.....-.-1901-04 Ellis, John B 1927-30 Evans, James E.-.--..--.-... 1857-58 Evms, W. H 1853-54 Foate, W. R .---.--_----..-.1852-53 Gardner, G. E 1884-86 Graham, Alex 1858-59 Harris, Samuel A .--..-I--... 1912-15 Hopkins, Isaac S 1906-08 Hughes, F. G 1893-95 Hunter, J. D 1833-34 Hunter, John 1828-29 Irvine, W. T 1909-11 Jarrell, A. J 1886-88 Jenkins, John S 1924-27 Key, Caleb W 1841-42;60-62 LaPrade, W. H.--..----.-.-1877-79 Ledbetter, S. B 1907-09 .-.--,.----- .,.-..-..---..--..- Lewis, Josiah 1882-84 Lewis, Walker 1907-09 Matthews, W. D..-----..-.. 1833-34 Mitchell, Arch. H 1830-31 Norman, Jeremiah 1831-32 Parks, H. H 1874-75 Payne, James B.-.....-.-.--_1837-39 Pope, Cademan 18 80-82 Quillian, A. F. 1899-01 Quillian, Frank 1922-24 Quillian, W. F 1890-91;95-97 Samford, Thomas ----.--.-... 183 5-37;40;46 Scott, W.J. 1872-74 Shankle, A. G 1918-21 Smith, G. G 1875-77 Smith, Rembert G 1921-22 Speer, E. 'W 1864-67 Starr, 3. W ..-...----.-..-..------.1832-33 Thomas, A. C 1897-99 Twiggs, L. M 1930Tulley, John W ......--..-.....1846-48 Wadsworth, W. W 1879-80 Walton, Fletcher .-....--.-..-1904-06 Wasson, S. E.-.--.....-...-...--1917-18 White, Miller F..-.-....--.-..1848-50 Wiggins, James A ..--.--...... 1 842-45 Williams, W. S I831-32 Wright, A. ..-.-------.-..-. 1862-63 VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org .------.- ...--.-.--. Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. LAGRANGE FIRSTBAPTIST. This church was organized on April 12, 1828, with Jonathan Nichols as chairman, and James David as supply minister, and a membership of eleven. Necey Fowler was the first person to join the new church. Mrs. S. C. Todd, in a reminiscent article published in the LaGrange Graphic in 1895, stated that the organization took place in the same building where the first court was held, at Nicholas Johnson's house, and that Mr. and Mrs. Johnson, and Mr. and Mrs. Culberson, were among the eleven members. For a number of years the church worshipped in a building on the northwest corner of Bull and Broome streets. This property was deeded by the Inferior Court to the Presbyterian and Baptist churches on August 15, 1831, as one of the lots to be given by the county for religious purposes. There is also a record, which shows that the Baptist church owned a lot on Smith Street, which they sold to Robert A. T. RiQey on March 4, 1839, but there is no record of a church building on that lot. On October 12, 1855, the congregation reached a decision to build a church of their own to seat from four to six hundred people, the building to be designed "upon the basis of the highest combination of simplicity and cheapness compatible with taste." The present lot, known then as Howard's Tavern, was selected. At the south end of the building was erected one of the tallest spires in the state, about one hundred seventy-five feet, according to the statements of some old citizens. In the interest of economy, this steeple was erected after the building was completed. It was destroyed in later years by a wind storm. In 1862, Benjamin H. Cameron was instructed to hang a bell in the steeple and "when it was properly hung, he would be paid." The bell was uninjured in the fall of the steeple, and for many years was in use on a platform in the rear of the church. The basement of the church was impressed by the Confederate government for a hospital during the War Between the States. A sum of $368.00 was collected for the use of the basement, which sum was used to build a baptistry. Previous to this time, the baptisms were performed in the nearby creeks and the Chattahoochee River. Some time later, a marble pool, the gift of the late I. F. Cox, was installed. In 1884, an organ was installed, and Miss Sallie Cox was the first organist. Some time later a handsome three-manuel Skinner organ was erected after the remodeling of the church in 1922. In the remodeling of the church in 1922, parts of the old structure were undisturbed, the east wall being retained and parts of the roof, but the purity of its colonial architecture was not in any way disturbed. VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Binns, Walter P 1926-3 I Callaway, S. Pope 1861-67 David, James 1828 Dawson, John E 1842-47 Ford, J. W 1886-87 Granberry, George ........1841 Harden, M. B 1871-83 Harris, R. H 1883-8s Hornaday, H. C 1867-71 Howard, Willis E 1932McKay, R. R 1888-91 Mallary, Charles D......................... 1848-52 .-... Moncrief, A. J 1899-02 Moon, Jesse 1840 Nunnally, G. A 1896-99 Posey, Humphrey 183 8 Reeves, James 1829-3 1 Smith, Otis 183 1-37 Stokes, William H 183 2 Teague, E. B 18 5 5-64 Tumlin, G. S 1891-9 1 Tunnell, Spencer R .-...-.------..--1919-26 Vaughan, A. B 1902-18 Wood, John 18 3 3-3 5 LAGRANGEPRESBYTERIAN CHURCH. On March 21, 1829, the Presbyterians of the village of LaGrange gathered together and organized a church. Three Presbyterian ministers were present: Garrett Hollenbeck, Edward Lanier and Jesse Stratton. The charter members of this church are as follows: Bailey, Nancy Baker, Mary Cameron, James Cameron, David Cameron, Mary Wadford, Alexander Watson, John M. Hall, Robert Hall, Cynthia Hall, Fidelia Hall, Carolyn Long, James E. Wilkinson, Flora Wilkinson, Margaret Robert Hall, Green Culberson, John M. Watson, and James H. Cameron were elected Ruling Elders, and James Long was appointed clerk. Many of the early settlers from other older states were Presbyterians, and they hastened to join by letter. A characteristic of the early churches was their strictness of discipline. One of the members was suspended in open session in 1832 for drunkenness, profanity and gambling. A committee was appointed to see the erring member and to admonish him to confess, repent, and reform. If he complied, he was forgiven; if not, he was called before the session, tried, and frequently suspended. The first report made by William A. Redd was as follows: 18 3 2 Total now in communion ........................................................ . . Added by exarninatlon .............................................................. Added by certificate ................................................................. . . Dtsmlssal by certificate ............................................................ Suspended .. Adults baptized Missionary Funds raised Education Funds raised VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Some of the earliest additions to the church were: Benjamin and Eliza Cameron, James Cameron, Sr., and his wife Sara Cameron, James Loyd and his wife. James Loyd and P. H. Greene organized and taught the first Sunday school in Troup County. This church shared the building with the Baptist church on Bull Street until January 3, 1846, when the new building on the corner of Church and Haralson streets was dedicated. In 1863 this building was used by the Confederate government as a hospital, and again the congregation shared with the new Baptist church alternating the services. When the church was released, the sum of $245.00 was paid as rental by the Confederate government. In 1919, the beautiful structure on Broad Street was erected during the pastorate of T. D. Bateman upon a site donated by Miss Laura Loyd. The membership has grown to the present total of three hundred and thirtysix, and contributed members to the formation of Long Cane (Loyd's) and Ebenezer churches. Carter, H.C..--..-..---------------------183 1-32 Long, Scott, Thomas F Patton, William K Likens, John G Cunningham, W. M McMurray, Francis Bruce, J. T Anderson, J. P Herndon, J. G Bateman, T. D Dallas, A. E .. 1832-34 -1834-3 8 1838-40 1841-70 1871 -83 1884-91 1892-99 1900-19 1919-22 1922-- James S................................. 1829-30 Redd, William A. 1830-39 Smith, Nathaniel N. ........................ 18 39-68 Toole, John E. 1869-8 5 Boyd, Andrew J 188 1-99 Calhoun, J. D ................................. 1899-01 Schaub, J. L. ................................... 1901-11 Gilbert, L. E.................................. 1912-14 Ash, H. C....................................... 1914-23 King, B. J......................................... 192 3 -3 2 Sargent, George H........................... 1932- LOYD PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH. This church was organized in 1837 at Long Cane and was called Long Cane Presbyterian Church, and the majority of its members were former communicants of the LaGrange church. This original church building was the joint property of the Baptist and Presbyterian churches of Long Cane, and was situated near the old camp ground, where camp meetings preceded by prayer and fasting were held in the 30's and the early 40's. For many years this church was given one service a month by the LaGrange Presbyterian ministers. Sometimes the services were held in homes remote from the church. In 1887, the Presbyterians withdrew from Long Cane, and built a new church three miles north of Long Cane, and named the new building Loyd VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Church, in honor of James Loyd, the oldest surviving member of the Long Cane Church. In 1911 a manse was built. In 1915 , during the ministry of W. E. Dozier, the membership was greatly increased, and the services more frequent, and the old building was torn down and replaced by a comfortable new structure. John Glenn Likens Wm. M. Cunningham, D.D. Robert Logan W. W. Brimm Frank McMurray J. T. Bruce J. P. Anderson J. G. Herndon W. Beale I. H. Miller W. E. Dozier R. Gardien A. R. Howland Robert Hall David Davidson James Loyd John T. Newton W. C. Davidson Lyman C. Davis F. B. Dozier W. S. Brock Charles R. Darden W. R. Loyd J. C. Teaver R. M. Davidson Hope Hudson Murdock Cameron Ebenezer Newton James Dickey Asa C. Hudson H. E. Newton R. R. Lane J. Q. Burton David W. Beaty Charles T. Hudson F. R. Davis J. G. Davidson Traylor Loyd W. W. Maley MOUNTPLEASANT METHODIST CHURCH.One of the earliest settlers in Troup County was Thomas Evans, who built a cabin home near the present site of Camp Viola. He was of Welsh descent on both sides of the family, and was distinguished by his uprightness and godliness. I t was in his cabin, where he and his family were joined in earnest prayer by his neighbors, that the Mount Pleasant Church was organized. James Hunter, an energetic and consecrated circuit rider, organized this church in 1828, and served as their pastor that year. The services were held in the cabin of Thomas Evans for nearly a year. However, the congregation grew too large for the cabin, and in the autumn of 1828 the neighbors built a larger log house for worship, near where the old Hebron Church stood. Rev. W. C. Evans, son of the above named Thomas Evans, served this church in 1846. People continued to move into the neighborhood and again it was found necessary to build a larger church to accommodate the communicants. This second building was located in front of the home of Wilson Partridge. The years passed and again the church was too small, so another much larger church was built on the hill in Mountville, where the cemetery is now located. One of the most flourishing Sunday schools in the county was organized and conducted in this church through the efforts of John Carleton. VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. In 1908 the church was moved from the hill to the present site. From this little country church, four of its members have entered the ministry: W. C. Evans, J. E. Russell, William Hightower, and Charles P. Marchman. WESTPOINTMETHODIST CHURCH. The first church building in West Point was the Methodist Church, which was a log structure, built on the site of the home of Dr. J. P. Miller in 1 8 3 1. The building was used by all the denominations, and the Methodist congregation was organized by Rev. Thomas Williamson as the first organization in the town. In 1834, a frame house was built on the eastern part of block 34, which lies between Tenth and Eleventh streets, just west of the present highway. In 1812, a building committee, composed of George H. Winston, James M. Hill, and James W. McLendon, let a contract for a brick church on the west half of block 72 on the south side of Seventh Street. The lot was donated by the West Point Land Company. The building was completed in 18 13, and was dedicated on December 4, 18 5 3, by Dr. Alexander Means of Emory Cbllege. In 1906, during the pastorate of S. P. Wiggins, the present commodious church and Sunday school buildings were erected under the supervision of a building committee, composed of L. S. Turner, chairman, Benjamin H; Hill, J. S. Baker, H. W. Miller, and J. E. Purks. Among the early members of this church are noted the families of the following: Lodwick Alford, Arthur E. Baker, Charles Eaton Bass, William Biscoe, Henry Chappell, David Davenport, John Durham, W. B. S. Gilmer, J. M. Harrington, Henry Harris, James M. Hill, Mrs. Emma Lanier Oglesby, William Reid, Evans Richards, James Scott, Thomas Tatum, Henry Todd, Dr. Ward, John C. Webb, George H. Winston, and Thomas Winston. Boring, Isaac Mitchell, Archibald H. Williams, W. S. Morgan, Jeremiah Whitley, Starr, J. W. Hunter, J. D. Matthews, W. D. Boring, Jesse Samford, Thomas F. Payne, James B. Samford, Thomas F. Tatum, Thomas Kay, Caleb W. Wiggins, James A. Samford, Thomas F. Tulley, John W. White, Miller F. Frost, Johnson Duncan, John P. Talley, John Foote, W. R. Myrick, Fletcher Wiggins, L. G. R. McGehee, John W. Dixon, R. M. Simmons, W. A. Cook, W. F. Ryburn, P. M. Thigpen, A. M. VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Birch, E. P. Thigpen, A. M. Cox, D. D. Ryburn, P. M. Lewis, W. F. Seals, T. A. Rivers, W. P. Thigpen, A. M. Farris, B. F. Ellis, H. J. Williams, A. W. Sasnett, B. H. Parker, J. R. Foote, W. R. Robinson, W. F. Allen, Beverly P. Quillian, H. M. Betterton, T. C. Shaw, Simeon Wiggins, S. P. Tumlin, J. M. Cleckler, R. C. Logan, J. G. Cooper, W. H. Patillo, C. Evans Erwin, J. P. Crawley, W. G. Edmondson, R. A. Veatch, J. W. Jones, H. H. Yarbrough, J. F. King, G. L. WESTPOINTBAPTISTCHURCH. This church was organized on September 7, 1849, by the following: James Whitten, C. D. Mallory, James Fuller, and William D. Harrington. Twenty-four letters were presented for the membership on the day that the church was constituted as the West Point Baptist Church of Christ, and at an early date became a part of the Western Association. The first building was erected in 1850, and dedicated in August, 1851. It was built on the site of the present church, the lot which was donated by the West Point Land Company. The first record as to a Sunday school was in 1883, but the school may have been in existence prior to that time. On December 3, 1883, the Woman's Missionary Society was organized. The old building was replaced in 1896, and in the new building was celebrated the Semi-centennial of the organization on September 7, 1899. The present building is a result of the diamond jubilee held in 1924 during the pastorate of Dr. Ernest Quick, and the credit for the beautiful structure is given to the building committee: W. H. Huff, chairman, H. H. Greene, and J. C. Lanier, who supervised the completion in 1925. The second church building was used for classes for a time after the West Point Female College was burned in 1886. PASTORS Bishop, J. W. Bledsoe, William C. Bond, A. R. Briscoe, W. R. Callaway, S. Pope Callaway, Thomas M. Carpenter, J. H. Deal, W. R. Askew, L. D. Burdette, J. W. Callaway, G. W. Callaway, J. T. M. Callaway, Lewis A. Callaway, W. A. Curley, B. H. Harrington, William VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org D.-- Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org Eden, J. F. Figh, Rufus Forrester, Graham Golden, E. 2. F. Harrington, William Ivey, James H. Jester, J. R. McMurray, J. A. Pack, B. M. Quick, Ernest Roby, 2.D. Shirley, H. H. Smith, Otis Smith, W. T. Trainham, Wert Tucker, H. H. Williams, Wray, W. A. COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 1850-54 1849 Harris, L. M. Heard, R. S. Huguley, Columbus Huguley, W. H. Jennings, R. W. Nolan, J. H. Sharman, C. W. Whitaker, S. T. Woodyard, H. T. N o records from 1814 to 1871. WESTPOINTCHRISTIAN CHURCH;Disciples of Christ. I t was about the year 1853 that Dr. Hook, a minister of the Christian Church of Augusta, Georgia, visited West Point, and his ministry during this visit marked the beginning of the work of this church in West Point. Among the pioneer families identified with the establishment of the church in West Point are included the names of the Laniers, the Winstons and the Griggs. Monthly services were held more or less regularly from 1 8 53 to 1905 by Drs. A. G. Thomas, F. L. Adams, T. M. Harris, J. N. Grubb, A. C. Henry, and Belt White; also during this period special services were held on different occasions by Drs. 2. T. Sweeney, Philip Lamar, and A. R. Moore. In 1905, S. P. Spiegel, State Evangelist of Alabama, held a protracted meeting, and the organization was strengthened by several additions. The first trustees of the organization were: LaFayette Lanier, Sr., S. T. Hammond, E. F. Lanier, and Phil Lanier. At the time of the reorganization in 1905, the church began to accumulate funds for the purpose of erecting a building, which was built in 1906 and 1907, and dedicated in 1907. Dr. A. R. Miller of Savannah was called to become the first full time minister, and served for three years. He was followed by Rev. 0.P. Spiegel, who served for one year, 1910. In 1911, Rev. L. M. Omer became the pastor, and remained until the summer of 1917. In December, 1917, S. P. Spiegel, the present incumbent, began his ministry with the church. VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. The church has a magnificent plant and a p o d parsonage, and while it has never been strong numerically, it has been and now is a power and an influence for good in the community. The present trustees, in the year 1933, are: S. T. Hammond; George H. Lanier; William C. Batson, and S. H. Johnson. ST. MARKSEPISCOPAL CHURCH.There was no organized Episcopal congregation in LaGrange until 1892. There were, however, a number of church members. Some of these were: Mrs. Bennett Ferrell, and her sister Miss Emma Bright, Mrs. Frank Ward and her three daughters, and the families of Fred Ball, Henry Mason, and Wiley Sims. Church services were held in Sterling's fill, now the Truitt Building, in the Presbyterian church and in the Masonic Hall by visiting clergymen. On May 26, 1892, Bishop Nelson reached a sermon in the First Methodist Church, which was the beginning of a campaign to build an Episcopal church. A subscription was started and soon a sum sufficient to warrant the purchase of a lot was raised. Rev. William M. Walton, Archdeacon of Atlanta, purchased the present site of the church on the corner of Church and Battle streets. January 9, 1893, a contract was let to Pike Brothers to build a church and a rectory. Henry C. Butler made and donated the pews, which are still used in the church. Mrs. L. T. Slack, a consecrated church member, and her family were largely instrumental in the erection of this church. R. C. Ward gave the foundation stone and brick. The first convocation was held in the church on December 17, 1893, by Aschdeacon Walton, who served this little church named St. Marks, for five years. He was succeeded by Rev. R. F. DeBelle, Rev. Thomas Burry, and Rev. G. R. Micou, who gave two or three services each month. The first resident rector was Rev. A. H. Brooke, who began his work in 1903, and was succeeded by Rev. Henry Phillips in 1906. The ministry of Rev. Henry Phillips was quite successful. Due to his efforts the congregation of St. Marks was materially increased, and a mission in southwest LaGrange built with a church, a school and a library. He served until 1915, and was succeeded by the following rectors: Robert Phillips, Arthur M. Marshall, William B. Hays, H. A. Willy, G. V. Harris, J. W. Fulford, G. J. Batty, and J. D. C. Wilson, the present rector. Under these ministrations, the church has greatly increased its membership and usefulness. The present rector also serves the Good Shepherd Mission in southwest LaGrange. ASBURYMETHODISTCHURCH.This church is located in land lot No. 119 of 12th district, or a t Harrisonville. The organizers of this congrega- VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. tion were: John and Nancy Stinson, Henry and Sara West, Philip and Elizabeth Howell, John Ragan, James Amos, W. C. Leith, Ready and George Watts. In 1827 and the early part of 1828, the congregation gathered at the various homes for services, and after the building of a schoolhouse near Providence Cemetery (land lot 171) for a time the building was used as a meeting place. After a short time a place was provided at Tan Yard Hill, but water not being convenient, the building on the Asbury site above mentioned was erected in 1833, in conformity to the charter granted to "Asbury Chapel" in 1832. For some time this was the only church in the northern part of the county. The impetus given to this community by the session of the annual conference at LaGrange in 1833 was probably an outcome of this great gathering, as the church was built the same year. The church has witnessed the eloquence of many Methodist notables who ministered to the old time circuits. As a result of the great religious revival of 1838, the development in the whole section was rapid in religious fervor and church growth. The following are the pastors who served this church, the year indicated where known: Aiken, E. K Askew, J. S Bard, W. M. D. Bell, J. 0. Bigham, Robert W. Bill, W. T Birch, E. P. Bowden, John M. Brannon, F. M. T. Bryan, J. C Cotter, W. J. Cox, D. D. Davies, Henry R. Dillard, Walter B. Elliott, T. M. Ellis, Henry J. Embry, T. J. Evans, William H. Florence, William A. Foote, William R Green, Hartis, Harwell, Richard J. Heard, Peter A. Henderson, Irby .... - 863 1880 - Hodnett, Logan, 3. G..................... ..................... .189! Lowe, J. T. Martin, C. S. 1870 Mason, J. R Maxwell, W. A. Morgan, John 18 I8 Reid, K. Roberts, J. W. Roper, Lucian Rush, Leonard Scott, 'William J. Sears, A. J. Simmons, William A ............................. 1840 Singleton, J. J. Smith, J. B. Spearman, G. T. Speer, E. Sprayberry, J. A. Timmons, T'. H..................................... 1869 Tumlin, G. W. Walraven, M. M. Whitaker, W d ,Elisha ... 1875 Yarbrough, George W. ........................ 18I7 .. 1879 1871 1873 - VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. FLATSHOALSCHURCH.This church was organized on February 5 , 1829, and the constitution was adopted on February 11, 1829. The following is a copy of some of the minutes: "A Book for the Church of Christ at Flat Shoal Creek, the 5th of February, 1829." Constitution of the Baptist Church of Christ, Troup County, 4th District, known by the name of Smith's Meeting House, this 11th day of February. Benjamin Smith Tinsley Heath Israel Gamble George, a man of color Winniford Smith Nancy Posey Polly Smith Levina Smith Polly Heath Nancy Gamble Berena Smith Jane Gamble Georgia, Troup County: Whose names are hereunto subscribed to certify that being clothed with church authority met on the day at first above written, and formed ourselves into a presbytery and constituted the brethren into a Gospel Church, in testimony of which we hereunto subscribe our names the day and date above written. W. COOPER, Minister, ANDERSON SMITH, Clerk. February 11, 1829. JOHN Feb. 11, 1829, Peggy Smith joined the church. Feb. 21, 1829, James and Elviry Hollis united by letter. James made Clerk. Feb. 20, 1830, name changed to Flat Shoals Church. May 15, 1830, Margaret Smith granted a letter of dismission. Cooper, John W 1 829-37 Caldwell, Cread 1837-42 Belcher, Abner .. . 1843 Brown, -.............................. 1843-46 1847-56 Hudspeth, Coursert, ..... I856 Higginbothem, Henry 1856-r9 Caldwell, Cread 1860-62 Williams, Jesse 1862 Higginbothem, H . N .......................1 862-73 .. Wdl~ams,Jesse ................................ 1873 Caldwell, Benjamin ....-.................. 1874-77 - Williams, J. H Basemore, T. J Jackson, J. C............................... Hunter, W. A Thrash, E. C Prather, Reese Fuller, F. L Riner, W. W O'Neal, J. D Riner, W. W. Mims, W. F VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org 1877-83 1884-85 1886-89 1889 1890-93 1894-08 -1909-1 1 1911-16 1919-20 1920-32 1932- ..--.-..-.--....-.--------- Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Smith, Benjamin Gamble, Israel Satterwhite, Obediah Forshee, Wyley Caldwell, M. Floyd, Thomas B 1829 Hollis, James Wilkerson, Harrison G.+.-.--.Lee, Henry B .. O'Neal, Hdliard Lawless, John Floyd, Thomas B Hunter, Abel B Hardy, Coalman Satterwhite, S. H 1829-30 1829-30 1832 1833-45 1845 Satterwhite, Elijah Hunter, Abel B Hunter, W. A O'Neal, E. J O'Neal, E. F 1850 1876 1878 1893-31 193 3 1848 18 30 1831-35 183 6-38 18 3 8-48 1849-5 5 -185 6-57 18 5 8-75 Satterwhite, E. W.-.-------...-.--1876 Satterwhite, S. H 1876-84 Fuller, C. 1 1884-86 Satterwhite, S. H 1887-90 Hardy, J. C 1 1890-93 Satterwhite, S. H 1894-07 Hardy, J. W -1908-22 O'Neal, Mrs. M. V 1922-- .-.------.-------------- 1875-76 MOUNTZIONCHURCH.On land lot No. 23 1 of seventh district. The presbytery who organized this church on October 13, 1829, was composed of James Reaves, Anderson Smith and John W. Cooper, and the organizing members are as follows: William A. Stanley Nimrod Yarbrough Edward Satterwhite Alexander Allison John Johnson Obediah Satterwhite William A. Radney Mary Jarvis Nancy McCoy Lucinda Stanley Yarbrough Susan Satterwhite Mary Allison Elizabeth Johnson Polly Satterwhite Frances Radney The minutes prior to June 2, 1838, cannot be found, but on that date Thomas B. Floyd was called to act as deacon, having been previously ordained to that office. On June 3 0, 1838, the pastor was liberated for the first Sunday in August to attend the general meeting at Hillibahatchy. Ignatius Russell and William Collins were members at this date, and the pastor was named Belcher. September I., 1838, Polly Parrish united with the church. February 2, 1839, William Chambers united by letter. March 2, 1839, Malinda Yarbrough by letter. April 6, 1839, Mary Chambers by letter. May 4, 1839, Abner Belcher, a minister, and his wife, Martha, by letter. VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. May 5 , 1839, Rebecca Brazeal, James Collins, Miss Judith Collins. June 1, 1839, brother Island, slave to Edmondson, letter of dismission. January 4, 1840, Peter Parrish, by letter. February 1, 1840, James Hardy and Emily his wife by letter. PASTORS DEACONS Belcher, Abner 18 39-4 1 Floyd, Thomas B Hamrick, Harrison 1845 -49 Collins, William Radney, W. A Hudspeth, 1850 Hamrick, Harrison 18 50 Britton, Emanuel 181 1-53 Rowe, Kephe 18 5 3 -56 Stringer, J. ---------.-...--.-.------.--.---18 16-57 Floyd, Thomas B Cousert, 1858-61 Hardy, James . . Jesse W~ll~ams, 186 1 Radney, W. A - - 1838-48 18 3 8-40 1812 18 3 8-40 1840-1 2 18 52- WESTPOINTPRESBYTERIAN CHURCH.On December 3 0, 1837, the West Point Presbyterian Church was organized with thirteen persons in attendance; the meeting was held in a building of logs. The new church was built on a lot near the Georgia and Alabama line, facing the city of West Point. It was built by a negro carpenter belonging to George Croft and George Reese. I n the building there was provided a gallery for the slave members. The church was dedicated on July 30, 18 52. In 1886 and again in 1919, the building was flooded by the Chattahoochee River and badly damaged. In spite of these calamities, this devoted congregation has built a handsome, commodious church in the Gothic style or architecture on West Tenth Street and Fifth Avenue. This building was designed by Charles H. Hopson. EBENEZER PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH. The original location of this church was on the site of the present I-Eogansville cemetery, and was donated by Joseph N. Boyd on June 12, 1835 . The church was fully organized in 1837 with fifty charter members, and at that time was given the above name. The first elders were Joseph N. Boyd, John E. Gillespie, and Green Culberson. The early church was aftiliated with the LaGrange church and was served by the pastors of that church. At a comparatively modern time the church was removed to the present site in the city of Hogansville. ANTIOCHBAPTIST CHURCH. This church was an important factor in the religious life in the days when Antioch was a flourishing village. The following document found among the county deeds is an interesting record of this former church: VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. State of Georgia, Troup County: Know all to whom it may concern that I, Archey Whatley, of the state and county first written, do for and in consideration of the love and esteem which I have for the Baptist Church who worship at Antioch and who are of the same faith and order with myself and wife who believe in the foreknowledge of God, in eternal unconditional personal election, original sin, particular redemption, efficaceous grace, in regeneration and sanctification, free justification by the imputed righteousness of Jesus Christ, and the final perseverance of the saints to eternal glory, that baptism by emersion and the Lord's Supper are ordinances and washing the saints feet, and other good works are Christian duties, and for the purpose of having a Baptist meeting house close at hand for the convenience of myself and family, attending divine worship, know ye that I do hereby constitute and appoint Labon Pitts and John Stillwell who are deacons of Antioch and their successors (Deacons of Antioch Church) trustees in behalf of and of said Antioch Church, know ye that I do hereby give unto the said Labon and John and their successors in office for the use and benefit of Antioch Church who are and may continue to be of the above named faith and order the lots or parcels of lands and roads or ways connected therewith (viz.) one parcel of the following description commencing at a chestnut post on the west line of a parcel of land I sold to Jackson Ray, thence due north twenty rods to a white oak corner, thence southwardly twenty rods to a stake corner, thence west twenty rods to the place of beginning containing two and a half acres more or less for the purpose of building a Baptist meeting house on, and one parcel of land round the spring which is now used by the congregations who meet at Antioch Church meeting and by R. F. Session's family of the following description a circle forty feet diameter the spring to be the center of said circle containing one-tenth of an acre more or less and also a road or way thirty feet wide leading from meeting house lot to the spring to leave the meeting house lot entirely east of the first corner thence directly to the spring, and a road or way thirty feet wide from the meeting house N. easterly to the public road. The above described lands and roads or ways are parts and on lot of land number thirty in the fifteenth district of Carroll when drawn, to have and to hold the above described lands and roads or ways together with every thing thereunto belonging or in any wise appertaining unto the said Labon and John and their successors for the use of Antioch Church forever in fee simple. And I, the said Archey, do hereby warrant and will forever defend the rights and titles of the said lands and roads or ways against the claim of myself my heirs and assigns and against the claim or claims of all and every other person or persons whomsoever. VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. In witness whereof, I hereunto set my hand and a$x my seal in the presence of this 12th day of August, A. D., 183s. WAIDHILL, ROBERTH. STKONG, WILLISJ. WHATLEY, JAS. M. RICHARDS, J . P. ARCHEYWHATLEY(L. S.) Recorded 25th May, 1837. R. F. MCGEHEE,Clerk. BEULAH PRIMITIVE BAPTISTCHURCH.This church, according to the first minutes, was constituted on August 3, 1837, at the house of Archey Whatley and the following constitution with the regular old Baptist articles of faith attached were adopted: The following, whose names appear below, have mutually given ourselves to each other, and having withdrawn from difFerent churches, for various unscriptural institutions of the day and feeling it our duty to endeavor to promote the cause, and kingdom of Christ on the earth, and having met at the house of brother Archey Whatley, in the western part of Troup County, and agreed to call elders John Blackston, and Moses Gunn, regular ordained ministers, as a presbytery, to constitute us into a church after the regular order of the Baptist. These elders, after examination, and prayer, proceeded to declare us a church of Jesus Christ, on the regular principles, and articles of faith. JOHN BLACKSTON, MOSESGUNN,Presbytery. Barnett, John Barnett, Sarah Taylor, Elizabeth Brazell, Jabez F. Brazell, Seneth Whatley, Elizabeth Brazell, James Post, Marey Whatley, Fanny Post, John Post, Martha Post, Martin Post, Sarah Ann Smith, William Smith, Mary Whatley, Archey Smith, Nancy After the constitution of the church, it was declared in gospel order, and a conference was organized. The church was named Beulah, and elder John Blackston was called and chosen unanimously as pastor. John Blackston as moderator and Jabez F. Brazell as clerk. Archey Whatley, who had donated the site for Antioch Church, withdrew from that church on the constitution of Beulah. During the years from 1837 to 1 8 50, forty-two members united with the church, and from 185 1 to 1861, inclusive, forty-seven were added, among whom are noted the names of Vachel D. Whatley and wife, Julia Garrett, VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Ornan Whatley and wife, Edward Cooley, James Bonner, Goodwin D. Floyd and wife. PASTORS 1837-39 Blackston, John Jackson, Edmond 1841-42 . . Loyd, Benjamm 1842 Black, Peterson 1844-48 Swint, F. 1848-50 Britton, Emanuel 18 11-14 Whatley, Vachel D. -----.-..----1854-66 Edwards, Simeon 1866-68 Taylor, Dr. C. B. Whatley, A. B. Burson, H. S. McCoy, H. R. Avery, W. R. Taylor, Dr. C. B. Prather, Rees Parish, W. J. 1868-71 1871-74 1876-79 1879-86 1886-88 1888 1890-08 1908-1 I The church was dissolved by mutual consent on August 17, 1925. The above information was furnished by Elder S. H. Whatley of Thomaston, Georgia, and to the information was appended the following note: "The children of these old faithful Christians and their neighbors furnished the material for the perpetuity of this old church for eighty-five years. Then the citizens began to move to other sections for various reasons, principally for better school facilities. This made a sad decline in the church attendance and finally it was almost impossible to take care of a pastor. Archey J. Whatley, who still survives at this date, the son of Ornan Whatley and grandson of old Archey, is the only one of the members living in the community of the old church site. Elder Vachel D. Whatley was ordained in Beulah Church in 18 5 3 and served the church until his death in 1866. Elder A. B. Whatley was ordained in 1870 and served until 1874. The writer asks the forbearance of the readers for claiming the honor of being the son of Elder Vachel D. and brother of Elder A. B. Whatley. "I submit this report in respect to the church of my dear father and mother, the church where they worshipped before I was born. I began my career as a Christian in my early manhood, and though I was never a member of Beulah Church, I loved and still cherish the memories of my childhood at that dear place. I have been preaching for the Primitive Baptist close on to half a century. I shall soon lay down my armor and join the church triumphant." ELDERS. H. WHATLEY. Thomaston, Georgia, December 20, 1933. WEHADKEE BAPTISTCHURCH. This church is located in land lot 17 of the 16th district. It was constituted on October 1 5 , 1849, and the membership was withdrawn from the Long Cane, and from New Hope, Alabama, churches. The following are the charter members: VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Crowder, 0.W. Crowder, Rachel Haralson, Jesse B. (Deacon) Henderson, Jefferson A. Johns, Susan J. Kirby, Lucinda Kirby, Pleasant B. McCoy, Amos H. McCoy, Martha E. Morris, Flora B. Morris, Joseph P. Morris, Sophronia Parker, Elvinton H. Parker, Martha A. Phillips, Henry Post, Elizabeth Tingle, Ellen Tingle, Solomon Waldrop, John J. Williams, Caroline Williams, Madison 1849-6 1 Hammond, T. M. 1904-10 McCoy, Daniel H. Culpepper, J. T. 1910-12 Roberts, William H. ----------...-----. 1861-64 Henderson, Elisha W. 1864-66 Martin, C. B. 1912-1 1 Hearn, S. C. 3 6 6 Collier, W. B. 1915 Callaway, A. R, 1866-68 Cofield, W. P. ---....-.-.----.--.--.---------1915-16 Dean, John W. 1916 Cumbee, Reuben A. J. 1868-77 Colquitt, G. W. 1877-78 Blalock, R. H. 1916-18 Martin, C. B. 1918 Goss, J. G. -----.------.-,--- 1878-84 Houston, H. W. 1 1884-90 Henry, W. H. 1918-20 Hunter, J, P. 1890-93 Vaughan, A. B. -1920-26 Cox, T. J. --...........-..I. ---1893-99 Owens, R. E. 1926-33 Whatley, W. R. 1899-01 Bradshaw, Grady 193 3 Hunter, J. P. 1901-04 CLERKS Chivcrs, Joel M. .....-.------. 1849-53 Edmunds, Samuel A. 185 3-56 Boyd, Richard C. 18S6-68 Clark, H. R. .-.....-----------.-1868 Johnson, Charles S. Haralson, W. H. Smedley, David B. 1868-71 1871-99 1899 The first Sunday school was established in this church in 1868. TEMPLE BETH-EL. Under the designation of Beth-El Temple was organized the Jewish synagogue for the West Point and Lanett members of the Jewish church, which is allied to the Congregation of Atlanta, and Dr. David Marx, rabbi of the Atlanta Congregation, ministers to the religious needs of the Congregation. Temple Beth-El is located in Lanett on ground donated by Mrs. Betty Merz Heyman for that purpose and adjoins the home place of Mrs. Heyman and also of Lee Heyman. The temple was built in 1908 by means of public subscription, and was dedicated in the spring of 1909 by Dr. David Marx, who served as Rabbi for the Congregation before the erection of the temple, and has continued to serve through the succeeding years. The officers of the Congregation are as follows: President, Lee Heyman; Vice-President, Joseph Herzfeld; Treasurer, Zachariah Hagedorn; Secretary, Louis P. Heyman, who is also the Superintendent of the religious school. The VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. teachers of the religious school are Lee Heyman, Louis P. Heyman, and Miss Rose Heyman. The Jewish citizens of LaGrange and of Opelika are members of the West Point Congregation, who worship at Temple Beth-El. JEWISHCEMETERY AT WESTPOINT. The Jewish Cemetery at West Point was dedicated in August of 1.885 just preceding the burial in it of Herman Heyman, a pioneer citizen of West Point. The dedication was consummated by Rabbi S. Hecht of Montgomery, Alabama. The land adjacent to Pinewood Cemetery was purchased from the city as a Jewish burial place, and prior to that time Jewish citizens on their death were taken either to Atlanta or to Montgomery for interment. Many well known citizens of West Point and of adjacent towns rest there peacefully in their final sleep: Mr. and Mrs. Herman Heyman; Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Freisleben; Morris Herzberg; Zach and Philip Hagedorn; Louis, Theodore and Fred Mayer, and their sister Mrs. Thekla Mayer; Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Hagedorn and their sons; and Mrs. Hagedorn's sister, Mrs. Reichard; Isaac Frohain of Alexander City, Alabama. MIDWAY METHODISTCHURCH. This church was built in 1867 in land lot 121 of the 14th district. I t was the consolidation of two congregations, one of which was at Liberty Hill, and the other called Rehoboth a t Antioch. The property consisting of four acres was donated by John T. Boykin, Sr., with the stipulation that it should revert to the heirs in case of abandonment as a church. The property was deeded by the heirs to the North Georgia Conference in 1910. The church was built by contributions of lumber, labor, and money from the members and their friends. Some of the lumber was secured from the Wilder estate, and is still in a state of good preservation. Among the pastors who served this church are noted the names of J. W. Lee, James Eakes, and many others. It was formerly a part of the West Point circuit, but now is a part of the Glenn circuit. HARMONY METHODIST CHURCH. This church, located about two miles west of Abbottsford in land lot 7 of the 16th district, is one of the earliest churches west of the river, and was probably established in 1838. The present church building, which replaced the preceding small frame building, was built in 1898. The site of this church is the location formerly used as the Harmony camp ground. The church has been during the later years a part of the West Point circuit. It was the gathering point of the community of Troup and Alabama Methodists, especially in the summer months, during which the camp meetings were held. The cemetery adjacent to the church holds the ashes of many of the Troup pioneers. VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. ANTIOCHBAPTIST CHURCH. The incorporation of this church took place on January 21, 1852, and the following were names of the trustees designated as such in the charter: Henry Walker, Benjamin Green, Hardy Morgan, Thomas Green, and Augustus J. Scrutchins. However, in this charter reference is made to Cedar Creek Baptist Church, which may have been the name of the church before this incorporation. The many changes in this section of our county has caused this church to be absorbed by other congregations. BETHELCHURCH. Organized in 1831, and together with its cemetery located in land lot 121 of the 5th district. This is one of the old community churches on the east side of Long Cane Creek, and is a part of the present West Point circuit, sharing with Harmony, Long Cane, and Pleasm t Grove the services of one pastor for the four churches. VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. CHAPTER XXI. ORGANIZATIONS LEGION,BAXTER L. SCHAUB POST. The LaGrange Post was organized on November 21, 1919, and was named in honor of Baxter L. Schaub, the first Troup County man to lose his life in the service. He was the son of Mrs. J. L. Schaub, and saw service on the Mexican border as a member of the Fifth Infantry, National Guard of Georgia. He continued in service when this regiment was mustered into service as the 122nd Infantry after the declaration of war with Germany. He was a mess Sergeant, and lost his life when the mess hall at Camp Wheeler was destroyed by fire, November 24, 1917. Ia the thirteen years of the existence of the Post, it has rendered service to the community in many ways. The care of disabled service men is the first objective of the Legion, and this Post has contributed its services to many deserving cases. The promotion of Americanism by lectures in the schools and the observance of great anniversaries constitutes another activity of the Post. The Legion loyally assisted the other organizations of the city of LaGrange in the erection of the public library as a memorial to the Troup County men who lost their lives in service during the war. In 1929, under the leadership of Albert Brooks, a drum and bugle corps was organized, and proved very popular. This corps received the honor of being the prize corps in the meet of 1933. In 1930, under the leadership of John R. Finn, the membership of this Post was increased by the addition of more than 300 members, and entertained the state organization in 1931. The commanders of this Post are as follows: MERICAN Howard, W. L. Callaway, Enoch Bradfield, Loyd Martin, Raymond W. Philpot, Eugene A. Dunaway, Eugene 1919-20 1920-21 1921-22 1922-23 -192 5 -26 1926-27 O'Neal, R. S. Thomason, J. Toombs Brooks, Albert Finn, John R. Holleran, Owen C. Winn, Frank 1927-28 1928-29 1929-30 1930-3 1 193 1-32 1932-33 No elections were held in 1923, nor in 1924. AMERICANLEGIONAUXILIARY.In February, 1931, John R. Finn as Commander of the Legion named a membership committee for the establishment of an Auxiliary, and they were Mrs. Cason J. Callaway, Mrs. T. H. Nimrnons, and Mrs. Albert Brooks, and an application was made on February 1, 1931, for a charter for the LaGrange Auxiliary of the Baxter L. Schaub Post of the American Legion. On February 2 1, 193 1, a meeting was called, at which the state president, Mrs. E. S. Travis, addressed the gathering on the subject of "Rehabili- VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. tation, Child Welfare and Americanism." ogcers were elected : Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. T. Harvey Nimmons President R. S. O'Neal---First Vice-president J. B. Davis---..Second Vice-president Albert Brooks..---_-.Secretary-Treasurer At this meeting the following Mrs. Walter Binns Chaplain Historian Mrs. J. D. C. Wilson Mrs. George Cahall_------Sergeant-at-Arms A t the time of organization, this Auxiliary had the largest charter membership of any organization of auxiliaries in the state of Georgia. The Auxiliary assisted the Legion most graciously in entertaining the state !egionnaires in LaGrange in July, 193 l. A t the recent meeting of the Legion in Valdosta in 1933, this Auxiliary received the award for the greatest increase in membership in the state. UNIONSONIC LODGE. Union Lodge, No. 28, Free and Accepted Masons was one of the early organizations of the county. The charter was applied for on October 22, 1842, and was organized on December 4, 1842, with the following oGcers: Kinchen L. Haralson, Worshipful Master; Blount C. Ferrell, Senior Warden; Hampton W. Hill, Junior Warden; Lewis Hines, Treasurer; Daniel McMillan, Secretary; Jesse King, Senior Deacon; William C. Buffington, Junion Deacon; George A. Dudley, Tiler. The charter members of the Lodge were: Buffington, William C. Dudley, George A. Fears, Oliver P. Ferrell, Blount C. Ferrell, Mickleberry Gage, John E. Haralson, Kinchen L. Hardin, William S. Hill, Hampton W. Hines, Lewis Key, Caleb W. King, Jesse McMillan, Daniel Peel, John J. Stokes, William B. Ferrell, William B. M., F C Latimer, James, EA The roster of Worshipful Masters, or presiding officers, and their years of service are given below. Haralson, Kinchen L. 1842 1843-41 Ferrell, Blount C. Bogart, Peter 1846 1847-49 Ridley, Robert A. T. ..-.-..--.-.------.. Morgan, D. W. 18 50 1851 Todd, J. C. B. ................................ Sims, W. H. ---.......---...-.-.-.....--.---1852 Hodges, Henry 1853-54 1855-56 Long, James A. Bigham, Benjamin H. 1857 Jones, Waters B 1858-60 1861 Tuller, W. M. 1862-63 Teague, E. B. 1864 Ridley, Robert A. T. Jones, Waters B. 1865 1866-67 Scott, J. H. 1868-71 Curtright, B. F. ..--.-.-...--.---------------Jones, Waters B. 1872 Yancey, William C. 1873-74 Toole, J. Edward, Jr. 1879 Bigham, Benjamin H. 1877-78 Toole, J. Edward, Jr. ........----..-----. 1879 VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org Huntley, 'William H. Banka, Henry Longley, Francis M. Chapple, J. A. Banks, Henry Smith, Clifford L. Banks, Henry Weaver, William H. Cleaveland, William L. Gorham, Zachry T. Smith, Clifford L. Lovejoy, Hatton Reeves, Henry Ricketson, James E. Campbell, Walter R. Clark, Eugene B. Harwell, Frank COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 1880-84 -1885-87 188 8 1889-90 189 1-92 1893-95 1896-98 1899 1900-02 1903 1904-05 1906-07 1908 1909-10 191 1-1 2 1913 19 14 191 5-19 Smith, Cligord L. ..-..--...-.-.--.-.------Connally, Pyron R. 1920 Sargent, George H. 192 1 Connally, Pyron R. 1922 1923 Johnson, J. Forest Smith, Clifford L. 1924 Park, Howard P. -.......-.......-1925 ---A Almand, Henry G. 1926 1927 Sutherlin, J. J. .---........-..-..--------Wooten, George F. -1927 Turner, Walter L. 1928 Sutherlin, C. Wilner 1929 Davis, R. Cooper 1930 Turner, Henry 193 1 1932 Calhoun, Frank F., Jr. Dye, A. Luther 1933 LAGRANGE WOMAN'SCLUB. In 1908, Mrs. Sallie Boykin Cary organized the LaGrange Woman's Club and was elected the first president. Like the other clubs of the Georgia Federation, which it joined in 1909, this club was organized for civic, philanthropic and cultural purposes. It was divided into a number of departments which followed as near as possible the Federation departmental system, and during the twenty-five years of its existence most of these sections have continued to function. The child welfare, community service, fine arts, American home, garden, and junior sections have been especially successful. Splendid contributions have been made to the patients at Alto and Milledgeville, Red Cross, Christmas seals, Camp Viola for undernourished children, Tallulah Falls School, and many other worthy causes. A number of scholarships have been given for student aid. The club has maintained a scholarship at Tallulah Falls for two years. The civics, community service, and garden sections have inaugurated, planted and supervised a city park and a playground, and has planted hundreds of trees, shrubs and roses on the highway. The child welfare section has conducted a clinic for diphtheria and other preventable diseases in pre-school children for many years. The fine arts section has exerted a cultural influence in the community by giving concerts and bringing celebrated artists to the city, also sponsoring fine collections of paintings, etc. The club met in the homes of the members for many years. In 1911, the Heard House on Church Street was bought for a club house for $3,300.00, on which a part payment was made from the small sum that the club had been able to save, and the balance was borrowed from the LaGrange VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. National Bank through the courtesy of Fuller E. Callaway, the following women indorsing the note and forming a body of trustees for the club: Mesdames Enoch Callaway, C. M. Awtrey, C. V. Truitt, W. A. Holmes, F. E. Callaway, Sarah Reid, T. A. Atkinson and Clifford Smith. This note was paid in the course of time, and in 1920 the trustees deeded the building to the club. I t was not used by the club, however, till 1921, the rents being used to help pay the debt. It was at this time that the club put into existence the principal project for which it had been working for many years: a public library. This library was maintained almost entirely by the club until 1926, when the old club house was torn down and replaced by a beautiful new library and club house. The library has continued to be the principal activity of the club. During the years since 1926 up to the present, 1933, the club has contributed $3,441.36 as its share of the expense of maintaining the building and running the library, in addition to the contribution of the club towards the erection of the building. The club has won the district gavel many times for its excellent work, the Tallulah Falls gavel, and the General Federation prize of fifty dollars for its Book Week observance. This prize was used to purchase two etchings for the library. Mrs. Clifford Smith served the club for fourteen years as president, and Mrs. Henry Reeves for three years. The following women have served as presidents of the club: Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. 'Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Sallie B o y k i Cary Clifford Smith Sarah White Dunson Henry Woodyard H. H. Childs Howard P. Park Jarrell Dunson L. D. Mitchell F. C. Ferrell Henry Reeves The following members constitute the officers, who have been elected for the current year of 193 3 : Miss Margaret Edmondson President First Vice-president Mrs. J. T. Nichols ..-.-. Mrs. Neil Glass.-..---Second Vice-President Mrs. Render Terrell---.--..-----------Secretary Mrs. T. L. Arnett Treasurer WEST POINTWOMAN'SCLUB.When the realization of what organized women could do was first sweeping the country in 1898, a group of West Point women with a vision of accomplishment banded themselves together as the West Point Woman's Club. From the beginning the objects of the club were "social, literary and humanitarian." Interesting women of all denominations met in friendly intercourse to exchange ideas under the cheering influence of the "cup of VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. tea." Picnics and outings as well as the annual club reception in September were all parts of the social aspects of the club. The literary and cultural features were in the form of well-executed programs including the study of travel, music and art, suggestions on home making, and always the high lights in current events. A deep interest was developed in civic affairs for the betterment of the community in public buildings, schools, welfare of the poor, care of the cemetery, and the like. For a number of years the membership approximated thirty members, and under the wise direction of Mrs. J. Lindsay Johnson, at that time president of the Georgia Federation of Woman's Clubs, the club joined the federation in 1899, and acceded to the suggestion that the club be unlimited in numbers. Standing as a monument of achievement of the club, is the City Auditorium, wherein are provided quarters for the club, Chamber of Commerce, Welfare Association, and the Boy Scouts. Credit also is given the club for the establishment of the Hawkes Children's Library, which is elsewhere described in these pages. The activity of the club made possible the bonds for the school building, the pride of the city. The care of the cemetery has always been a part of the club plans, and under the leadership of Mrs. E. F. Lanier funds for the fence and gate were provided. The club has always maintained a chairman of cemetery maintenance, among whom the following are noted: Mrs. Benjamin T. Smith, Mrs. E. F. Lanier, Mrs. Clarence Hudmon, Mrs. John H. Horsley, Mrs. Lewis Askew and Mrs. Grady Webb. Under the direction of the civic chairman and in the interest of beautification of the city, shrubs have been planted at the new school buildings, both at the white and the colored schools. Under the direction of the forestry chairman, Mrs. Harold Parker, a beginning has been made for the beautification of the highway from West Point to LaGrange, and replacements and extension will be continued. Plans for a garden section of the club are being worked out with Mrs. George H. Lanier as chairman, and plans for a Junior Woman's Club are being considered in the hope that a junior club may result. Much attention has been given in the past few years to social entertainments, both for the social intercourse and for the securing of funds for various projects by means of enjoyable entertainments. For the past two years the club has been interestingly entertained by the dramas given under the direction of Mrs. Jack Hodnett, Jr., who is chairman of drama. The audiences and the participants have been very enthusiastic over the renditions. VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org ' Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. The welfare work of the club has been under the direction of the chairman of social service, Mrs. Edmund F. Cook, who is also president of the West Point Welfare Association. Each year an active chairman handles the sale of Christmas seals in support of the Georgia Tubercular Association, and the present chairman is Mrs. William Keith; and the club annually conducts the campaign for Red Cross members under the direction of C. E. Wright, representative of the Red Cross in West Point. In 1912 the club was chartered, and many of the present active members were included in the roll of charter members. The list of the charter members follows: Adams, Mrs. David L. Adams, Miss Emma Avary, Mrs. J. Arch Bankston, Mrs. W. Trox Clarke, Miss Carrie Cohen, Mrs. Morris Crowder, Mrs. R. L. Cumbce, Mrs. Edward L. Dixon, Mrs. Mary Fullerton, Mrs. Claude L. Hagedorn, Mrs. Max Hagedorn, Mrs. Philip Hagedorn, Mrs. Zach Harris, Mrs. Anna Herford, Miss Marjory Herford, Mrs. Wiiliam B. Herzberg, Mrs. Helen Herzberg, Mrs. Hetty Lou Heyman, Mrs. B. Heyman, Miss Bertha Heyman, Mrs. Lee eurnphrey, Mrs. Robert T. Higginbotham, Mrs. W. B. Logan, Mrs. J. G. Lovelace, Mrs. John L. McAfee, Mrs. M. J. McCulloh, Mrs. Mark McKemie, Mrs. J. Courtney McNamara, Mrs. P. Joseph Mitchell, Mrs. Edgar Omer, Mrs. L. M. O'Neal, Mrs. Rance Oslin, Mrs. Mary Poer, Mrs. John M. Shaefer, Mrs. Mollie Scott, Mrs. Fannie Stanfield, Mrs. W. H. Tatum, Mrs. P. A. In February, 1933, the club celebrated its thirty-fif th anniversary. The club has continuously served its members, its city, and its citizens and those of the communities which it brings together. On the organization of the West Point Woman's Club, the officers were limited to a term of two years' consecutive o$ce holding. The presidents of the club commencing with the year of organization in 1898 are as follows: Lang, Mrs. Ed 1898-1900 Adams, Mrs. David L. 1900-02 Herford, Mrs. W. B. 1902-04 Humphrey, Mrs. R. T. ..-.----........ 1904-06 Bankston, Mrs. W. Trox .--.--...1906-08 ..... Humphrey, Mrs. R. T. 1908-10 Heyman, Miss Bertha 1910-12 McNamara, Mrs. P. J. 19 12-14 Avery, Mrs. J. A. ....-....-..-......1914-1 a - I Wright, Mrs. C. E. ----------.--------19 15 -1 6 1916-17 Avery, Mrs. J. A. Bankston, Mrs. W. Trox 1917-19 VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 1919-2 1 McCulloh, Mrs. Mark 1921-23 Poer, Mrs. J. M. DeLamar, Mrs. Mary 1923-24 Hudmon, Mrs. W. C. -.-..-..-.. 1924-25 McCulloh, Mrs. Hugh, Sr. -......... 1925-26 Wallace, Mrs. James M. .-..---....1926-27 Cook, Mrs. Edmund F. ----.---.-1927-29 Hodnett, Mrs. H. J. 1929-31 Byrd, Mrs. Mark M. 1931-33 McCulloh, Mrs. Hugh, Jr. ----- 193 3- LAGRANGE BAPTISTWOMAN'SMISSIONARY UNION. During the pastorate of M. B. Hardin in 1882, the Woman's Missionary Union of the First Baptist Church of LaGrange was organized with twenty-eight members, and the following ogcers: Mrs. John Pitts President Mrs. U. B. Frost .......--....-------------------------------.----.-----.------Secretary Mrs. J. C. Forbes----...-----.-----------------------------------------Treasurer The following consecrated women have acted as presidents during the fifty or more years that the society has diligently labored to carry on the work of Christ: Mesdames F. M. Longley, C. C. Cox, A. T. Cason, W. V. Gray, P. G. Awtrey, W. A. Reeves, R. S. O'Neal, and Misses Ella McLendon and Alice Amoss. Miss Amoss served for fourteen years. During the administration of Mrs. P. G. Awtrey, a handsome new organ was bought and presented to the church by the union. During the administration of Mrs. W. A. Reeves there was the greatest increase in the size and number of circles, and in the general excellence of the work. The Bible department under Mrs. Duke Davis won the Western Association award for a number of years.. The union is active in the support of Camp Viola, and their work in behalf of home and foreign missions is deserving of highest praise. A t this date, 1933, the union has two hundred and eighty members, and is divided into nine circles. The officers for 1933 are as follows: Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. R. S. L. C. Schaudies Enoch Callaway, Sr Frank Stevens E. C. Market President Vice-president Second Vice-President Secretary Treasurer PRESBYTERIAN LADIES'Am SOCIETY. The Ladies' Aid Society of the LaGrange Presbyterian Church was organized in 1835, and has been noted from that time to the present day for its many benevolent activities. Among its first projects were the purchase of the first church organ, and the assumption of all the expenses of the church except the salary of the pastor. During the Civil War this society was disbanded in order to form the "Soldiers' Aid Society," which was composed of all the women of the town. VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. These women ministered to the sick and wounded soldiers, and after this work was over, they reorganized their own societies and took up their separate interests once more. By their diligence and devotion these noble women were enabled to cancel $3,000.00 of the indebtedness of the present beautiful church. Mrs. Thomas A. Boddie was a member of this body for sixty-seven years, and Mrs. J. L. Schaub for fifty-one years. The LaGrange Chapter of UNITED DAUGHTERS OF THE CONFEDERACY. the United Daughters of the Confederacy was organized July 3, 1897, under the leadership of Mrs. A. V. Heard, better known as Miss Queen Heard. The chapter entertained the state convention in 1902, at which time the Confederate monument on Court Square was unveiled. This monument bears this inscription: "Erected by the LaGrange Chapter, United Daughters of the Confederacy t o the memory of our Confederate soldiers-those who fought and died, and those who fought and lived. I n our hearts they perish not." The aims and objectives of the LaGrange Chapter can best be stated in the words of the creed of the general organization: "We are daughters of the Confederacy to preserve in loving remembrance the memory of those who gave their lives to the Confederacy and to protect their last resting places from neglect and obliteration; to care for the needy ones who still abide with us; t o guard the truths of history; to educate worthy young people who are descendants of Confederate veterans; and by mutual study and research to keep alive for many years a distinctly Southern womanhood." The LaGrange Chapter through the years of its existence has been the active Memorial Association, of which Mrs. Caroline E. Gay was president for so many years. Among the names of those who presided over the chapter the following are noted: Mrs. A. V. Heard, Mrs. Caroline E. Gay, Mrs. Sarah Reid, Mrs. Eugenia Nix, Mrs. F. T. Reid, Mrs. R. 0.Pharr, Mrs. Henry Reeves, Mrs. J. L. Braaeld, Mrs. J. J. Milam, Mrs. Enoch Callaway, Sr., Mrs. Roy Dallis, Mrs. L. D. Allen, Mrs. T. G. Polhill, and Miss Mattie McGee. Bigham, Mrs. M. J. Boyd, Mrs. Mary A. Burks, Miss A. F. Callaway, Mrs. Fannie Banks Fitts, Mrs. B. B. Gay, Mrs. Caroline E. Gorham, Miss I. L. Gorham, Mrs. 2. 7'. Heard, Mrs. A. V. Herring, Mrs. S. J. Hooten, Miss Lutie May Hooten, Mrs. N. J. Hutchinson, Mrs. N. R. Longley, Mrs. F. M. VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org McCaine, Miss Mary McFarlane, Mrs. Ida Mooty, Miss Tommie B. Newsom, Mrs. W. H. Nix, Mrs. Eugenia Gay Park, Mrs. L. M. Pitts, Mrs. Littleton Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org Ragland, Mrs. Sallie H. Rakestraw, Mrs. M. E. Reid, Mrs. J. B. Reid, Miss M. E. Ridley, Mrs. C. B. Ridley, Miss Ellie COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Ridley, Miss Julia Speer, Mrs. G. A. Strong, Miss Elizabeth Strong, Miss Frances Swanson, Mrs. Graves Thornton, Miss Elizabeth Thornton, Mrs. J. P. Tomlinson, Mrs. J. M. Toole, Miss E. J. Ward, Mrs. M. A. Ware, Mrs. J. J. Whitfield, Mrs. E. G. Witherspoon, Mrs. Philo DAUGHTERS OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION.In 1894 a small but flour- ishing chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution was organized as the eighth in the state, the Atlanta chapter being the first in 1891. This chapter was called, "The Susannah Elliott Chapter," but it was afterward disbanded. The LaGrange Chapter, as at present constituted, was organized on February 5, 1920, with twenty-three charter members. The LaGrange Chapter was named not only for the beloved "City of Elms and Roses," but also in honor of LaGrange, the ancestral home of the Marquis de LaFayette, French hero, who aided America so materially in her struggle for independence. The officers of this charter member band were: Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. Miss Mrs. Mrs. Alice M. Rushton King (B. J. K.) .Regent Birt Thomas Park (H. P. P.) - - - - I - - - - - . - - . - - - Vice-Regent Mary Park Polhill (T. G. P.) Recording Secretary Mary Lane Hutchinson (Frank Ha)--Carresponding Secretary Annie Newton - . - - . - - - - - - - - - - - - Aegistrar Jennie Evans Bradfield (J. L. Be)--- 7-----.-----Treasurer Mattie Turner Faver (J. D. F.) _--.Historian Awtrey, Mrs. Ada M. (P. G.) Awtrey, Mrs. Nemie F. (C. M.) Bateman, Mrs. Erroldine H. (T. D.) Bradfield, Mrs. Jennie E. (J. L.) Callaway, Mrs. Ida C. (F. E.) Callaway, Mrs. Lula W. (E. R.) Dallis, Mrs. Ruth E. (Roy D.) Davis, Mrs. Sarah B. (W. S.) Faver, Mrs. Mattie T. (J. D.) Gerlach, Mrs. Sarah L. (R. F.) Hooker, Mrs. Louise S. (Scroope) Hutchinson, Mrs. Mary L. (Frank) King, Mrs. Alice M. R. (B. J.) Lane, Mrs. Mamie B. (R. R.) Newton, Miss Annie Newton, Miss Janie Parham, Mrs. Daisy R. (V. S.) Park, Mrs. A. Elizabeth S. (R. H.) Park, Mrs. Birt T. (H. P.) Phillips, Mrs. Julia (Robert) Polhill, Mrs. Mary P. (T. G.) Strong, Mrs. Mary I. R. (1. B.) Terrell, Mrs. Lena M. (Henry) 1920 Mrs. B. J. King 1920-22 'Mrs. C. M. Awtrey 1922-23 Miss Annie Newton 1924-21 Mrs. E. T. Moon 1925-27 Mrs. J. L. Bradfield 1927-29 1929-31 1931-32 1932-33 1934- Mrs. Miss Mrs. Mrs. Mrs. T. G. Polhill Mattie McGee H. R. Slack T. G. Polhill J. D. Favcr VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. The LaGrange Chapter has awarded prizes each year in the High School for excellence in American history and citizenship. Scholarships have been given to LaGrange College and the Penn Studios. A chapter of Children of the Revolution was organized by Mrs. Polhill, the second such chapter in the state. The bi-centennial of the birth of George Washington was celebrated during the regency of Mrs. H. R. Slack by planting a tree in the city park with a suitable marker. LAGRANGE LIBRARY CLUB. One of the first Woman's clubs in the state was organized in LaGrange in 1897 by Mrs. Enoch, Callaway, who acted as the president for several years, and represented the club at the first state federation meeting in Rome, Georgia, in that year. The object of this club was to found a library. The meeting was held in the old council room, which occupied a part of the space where the present Masonic hall is now located. A small but select library was installed in this building, and Mrs. I. H. Lane and Mrs. Daniel Curtright acted as librarians. Dr. Callaway was of great assistance to the club in financing the library and furnishing the. room. A small fee was charged for library membership, but this was found to be hard to collect, and finally the library was given to the public schools, and made the nucleus of the present school libraries. The club disbanded after disposing of the library. VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. CHAPTER XXII. ARCHITECTURAL FEATURES RIMITIVE. The original type of houses built by the pioneers was adopted from the Indian design. The floor plan was simple, being that of two rectangles separated by a space, and the entire structure covered by a continuous gabled roof of boards. The intervening space was sometimes floored over and sometimes merely raised with carefully packed earth, and was used by the Indians as a meeting place for a council, by the pioneers as a porch or a daylight sitting room when the weather permitted. The name given to this part of the cabin by the pioneers tells the story of other occupants for at least part of the time, as it was called the "dog trot." Wide and high fireplaces of stone capped by a chimney built of sticks and mud constituted the heating and cooking facilities of the indoors. Chimney corner seats within the cavernous fireplace were the choice seats in winter, during which season the homefires never died, but heaps of ashes kept live coals through a whole season. Huge logs constituted the fuel. The barns, stables, cribs and houses of the quarters or servant houses continued to be made of logs long after the "big house" became a mansion. The di$culties of transportation of window glass over rough trails made the use of transparent windows prohibitively expensive; hence most of the window openings were closed with rude wooden shutters, which were seldom opened in winter or closed in summer. In the luxurious years that followed the cabin era of the QUARTERS. pioneers came the age of gigantic plantations, and an essential part of these were the quarters, or slave and servant homes, which were built at some distance from the big house, and were long lines or groups of small log cabins usually one-room, or two-room a t most. In the evening when one approached within hearing distance of the cabins, there might be heard the strum of a banjo, or the shuffle of a dance on the bare ground, or the oral petitions raised to Almighty God by some saintly old negro, or the grunts of some rheumatic with a "misery" in the side or back. THE BIG HOUSE.The house of the master was always called the "big house," which term had no reference t o the size as it might be of modest dimensions. There were two distinct types of residences of the early days. One of them was strictly classical in facade with huge Doric or Ionic columns like some temple to house the altar to some heathen god instead of the lares and Penates that it held. These houses were two-story with the columns for the full two-story height, and formed the setting for a spacious verandah, which sometimes was extended on the two sides as well as the front. One invariable feature of these temple-light facades was the presence of a bal- VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org ' Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. cony with a grilled balustrade, placed immediately over the front entrance, which in turn was decorated with transom and side lights. The second form was not so regal in appearance, composed of one-story height slightly elevated from the ground level, and provided with broad low verandahs on three sides. This form resembled the Spanish style with the exception of the central patio and fountain. Numerous small columns decorated the surrounding verandahs. Our county was fortunate in having the services of skilled architects and builders, such as, Cullen Rogers, Charles Bailey, and the Camerons and Greenes, for to them we are indebted for many of the beautiful houses of the ante bellum days, that were built in the forties and fifties of the nineteenth century. CHURCHES. The early churches were simple log rectangles seated with puncheon benches and having very primitive furnishings. They were insufficiently heated and not infrequently without any provision for lighting except the lanterns brought from their homes by those assembled. The replacement of these crude buildings took place at an early date, certainly before 1840. The brick churches followed the lines of basilica structure, a rectangular building with a classic facade, and a pulpit recess at the opposite end. Provision for a choir was made at a much later date in one corner near the pulpit and the altar; because in the early days the use of musical instruments in a church was taboo. MODERNCHANGES.The ceilings of the dwellings were formerly high, and were decorated with plaster mouldings and also rosettes for the chandeliers. The high ceiling added both to the comfort in summer and to the discomfort in winter. The present day ceilings are low. The huge fireplaces of the long ago have shrunk to narrow grates, or else have disappeared except as an ornament, where furnaces supply heat. The cellar was once the storage place of wines and liquors, and sometimes of fruits and vegetables. EARLYHOMES.There are many homes in our county, which are interesting from their age and their associations. Many of these are omitted from those enumerated below for the lack of definite information obtainable by the author. Very few of the original houses of the pioneer period are now in existence. Of those built at a date following that period, the strength and the dignity of composition after these many years give testimony to the fact that our forbears built wisely and well. BELLEVUE. The most interesting and historic house in LaGrange and perhaps in Troup County is "Bellevue," the former home of Senator Benjamin H. Hill. It is located at the north end of McLendon Avenue, which VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. was formerly the juniper-lined driveway to the mansion. The estate originally included twelve hundred acres. The beautiful colonial house crowned the hill, and afforded from the "Court," as the flat roof was called, a panorama of exceeding beauty. Far in the rear of the house were the slave quarters, orchards and vegetable gardens. The house was surrounded by magnolias and beds of old fashioned shrubs and flowers, bordered with boxwood. The walks paved with granite slabs led through the grove of splendid oaks and hickories of the original forest to the massive iron gates at the entrance. These gates, which cost $12,000.00, were replicas of the gates at the White House in Washington. The entire grounds were enclosed by a stone wall, built by slaves. This house, which is regarded by architects as one of the purest types of southern colonial architecture, has immense hallways and handsome rooms with high ceilings and beautiful plaster cornices, and additional gilt cornices over the French windows. There is a wide portico on three sides of the house adorned with magdicent Ionic columns of two-story height. On the roof above the second story is the "Court" surrounded by a balustrade in keeping with the stately columns. "Bellevue," which required two years in building, was designed by an architect by the name of Taylor, and was erected on the site of General Hugh A. Haralson's home, which had been burned. The site was purchased by B. H. Hill on November 3, 18 5 3. Mr. Hill built the, home for his beloved wife, and she said that she spent the happiest years of her life here. During their residence a t "Bellevue," it was noted for its lavish hospitality and the large number of celebrated people entertained. Here Jefferson Davis, Stephen Mallory, Clement Clay and a host of other celebrities were guests. Associated with this house are memories of brilliant dinners, scintillating with wit and repartee; of balls, gay and sparkling with beautiful belles and handsome beaux; and there is the reverse side of this picture also: the many sorrows and anxieties of the war and the poignant emotions of Hill's arrest in his own bedroom by the Federal soldiers. Mr. and Mrs. Hill sold this house and moved to Athens, and eventually made their home in Atlanta. The estate was bought by Judge Jesse McLendon, and is now owned and occupied by his son, Millard F. McLendon. FERRELL'SGARDEN. Chief among the interesting places of old LaGrange was the home of Blount C. Ferrell, now replaced by the handsome villa of Mrs. Fuller E. Callaway, and the beautiful gardens, which are known throughout the United States. One of the four gardens of "Hills and Dales," formerly known as "Ferrell's Garden," was begun a hundred years ago by Mr. and Mrs. Mickleberry Ferrell, who bought the whole of Land Lot nurn- VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. ber 1 11 of the Sixth District on December 11, 183 1, and moved to LaGrange in 1832. In 1841, Mickleberry Ferrell gave to his daughter, Sarah Coleman Ferrell, eighty acres in the southeast corner of the lot. Sarah Ferrell married her cousin, Blount C. Ferrell, and together they built a quaint and interesting house and immediately began planning their own garden. How pure in design and artistic in structure were these plans of Sarah Coleman Ferrell in 1841, is manifest today as garden experts from the world over come to admire them! One terrace after another, bordered with box and planted with magnolias, and rare trees, shrubs and flowers from far distant countries were added with the passage of years. Among the trees are to be found the shittim wood from the Holy Land, a giant Australian cunninghamia, whose foliage is renewed every twelve years, a gingko tree from Japan with foliage like maiden hair fern, a linden from Germany, weeping cherry trees from Japan, tea bushes from China, European larches, cryptomarias, aged cedars and magnolias, hawthorn, tea olives, banana shrubs, and a host of others. The ancient cedar from Lebanon was blown down in 1932, but Mrs. Callaway preserved the wood and had a number of interesting pieces of furniture made from the tree. Mrs. Ferrell originated many quaint conceits in boxwood, among which are noted her own motto "GOD IS LOVE" and that of Judge Ferrell "Fiat Justitia." Mrs. Callaway has added the Callaway coat-of-arms motto "Ora pro mi." Mrs. Ferrell called the lower garden on the west side, "The Church." She shaped from tree-box the figure of an organ, pulpit and chairs, and formed a lyre of box and blooming flowers. Mrs. Callaway has continued this idea by planting old maids and sweet williams for the congregation, jack-in-the-pulpit acts as preacher, while the birds sing, and the marigolds take the collection. Judge and Mrs. Ferrell spent seventy years of happiness together in the quaint house and the beautiful gardens, and the joy they gave others through their hospitality and generosity can never be estimated. Mrs. Ferrell died in 1903 at the age of 86, and Judge Ferrell at 92 years of age in 1908. Four years later, Fuller E. Callaway purchased the estate and.erected a beautiful Italian villa on the site of the old Ferrell house. Mrs. Callaway has striven to carry out Mrs. Ferrell's ideas and to keep the old world charm of this peaceful and lovely place. Besides this, she has added thousands of shrubs and gayly blooming flowers, a rock garden, a charming wild flower garden, a beautiful lake with graceful bridges and summer houses. Like Sarah Coleman Ferrell, Mrs. Callaway loves and tends this garden, and prays, "That her employment in Heaven will be to tend and water from the ambrosial fount, flowers that never would in other climates grow." VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. NURSES'HOME ON HARALSON STREET. The nurses' home of the Dunson Hospital is one of the oldest residences in LaGrange. It was built in 1829 by Joseph D. McFarlin, the father of R. S. McFarlin, and was sold to James M. Hill in May, 1835 , and in turn to Thomas C. Brown in July, 1836, and acquired by James M. Turner about 1839. I t was from this house that William W. and Sterling G. Turner went to Brownwood school, and Achsah and Annie Turner to LaGrange College under the Montgomery brothers. It was afterward the home of the Cunningham family, and from them bought by Dr. H. R. Slack, and eventually sold to the city of LaGrange as a home for Dunson Hospital nurses. After one hundred and four years occupancy, the house is still in splendid condition. Colonial builders built for time. WILKINSON HOUSE, 30 1 VERNONSTREET. This site was originally purchased by Whitfield H. Sledge, and sold by him to Pleasant P. Coleman, who built the present house. The purchase was made in 1835 by Coleman. The Wilkinsons, the present owners, formerly owned a dignified home of colonial design, which was located on the site of the McClellan store. James and David Culberson owned the only sawCULBERSON HOUSES. mills in Troup County in its early days, and constructed many of the early homes. James Culberson built the house now occupied by Mrs. T. A. Atkinson at 207 Broad Street, sometime prior to the war for his son, J. P. Culberson. It is said that the house was originally built in the country, and taken down and rebuilt on the present site. He also built the house now occupied by J. J. Milam at 203 Broad Street, for Judge J. B. Edwards. The house and grounds embraced about three-fourths of the entire block. It was surrounded by an iron fence, and the massive gates were on the eastern side, facing Lewis Street. The old Banks house, which formerly occupied the space on Broad, Lewis and Vernon streets, now used as a park, was built by Judge William C. Thomas, great grandfather of Mrs. Henry Reeves, and afterwards was acquired and enlarged by James Culberson, who gave it to his daughter, Mrs. Martha Culberson Thornton, grandmother of Mrs. L. D. Mitchell. James Culberson, who lived at the junction of the Harrisonville t northeast of LaGrange, also built another house for his and ~ a m m k t roads daughter, Mrs. Sarah Culberson Snead, on the site of the Newton home at 117 Church Street. WARE HOUSE, 3 11 VERNONSTREET. This site was originally bought by Daniel S. Robertson, sheriff of Troup County, on April 14, 1832, and he is said to have lived there several years. The deed to him names the property as the west half of No. 2 Commons, and adds five rods front on Vernon Street from No. 3 Commons, which accounts for the offset in Harwell Avenue. The site was purchased in 1834 by Bennett M. Ware, the gandfather of VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Mrs. Eugene Nix, whose mother, Mrs. Caroline Ware Gay, was born there in 1835. Mrs. Gay will always be remembered for her loyal support of the Confederacy and the civic interests of LaGrange during the war, reconstruction and long afterward. This place was acquired later by Col. James H. Fannin, whose family occupied it for many years. Mrs. Fannin was Julia Ferrell, and inheriting a love of flowers from her ancestors, planted many trees, shrubs and flowers on the place. Mrs. H. E. Cary, sister of Mrs. R. T. Segrest, bought the place in 1909. BODDIEHOUSE. This house, located seven miles east of LaGrange on the Mountville road, was built in 1836 by Nathan Van Boddie, and was designed by the architect, Cullen Rogers, and is typically southern colonial in style. Its outstanding distinctions are the beautiful Ionic columns, the fan-light transom over the front door, and the immense dining room, which is forty feet in length and twenty in width. Before the advent of railroads in Troup County, David Beman, who owned and operated the Montgomery and GrifKn stage coach line, had a relay station on the Boddie farm, and Miss Belle Boddie relates that her grandmother consented to serve the passengers meals, and accommodate them for the night if necessary. There were two long tables in the capacious dining room, and four cherry tables which were added when there was an overflow of guests. The fare was abundant and delicious, and Mrs. Boddie realized $8,000.00 from her venture. The Boddie house was the scene of many brilliant gatherings, both political and social. The handsome dining room was also used as a ball room. Much of the beautiful furniture is still in this house, now occupied by Misses Belle and Van Boddie. The home of James M. Flowers is located on the Big FLOWERSHOUSE. Springs road in Land Lot No. 157 of Sixth District. The first house was a log cabin, which was used until the present house was built in 18$1, and was then used as a kitchen for many years. The Flowers home was noted for its beautiful flower yards, which were designed by Berkman, the Augusta landscape gardener. The boxwood and many of the old fashioned shrubs still survive after the passage of many years. Some of the most beautiful furniture to be found in the South is still in this house, now occupied by Joseph Newsom, a nephew of Mrs. Flowers. E. Y. HILL HOME.The home of Edward Young Hill, for whom Hill Street was named, was a handsome home replaced in recent years by the Junior High School on Hill Street. The home was purchased by Dr. H. S. Wimbish, who resided there until February of 188 5 , when the place was sold to Maj. A. D. Abraham. I t was in turn sold to Robert D. Render in 1898, VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. and sometime after his death, the property was purchased by the city of LaGrange for a Junior High School site. THEOAKS,1103 VERNONSTREET. The town home of Philip H. Greene took its name from the grove of splendid oaks in which i t was situated. It was built in 1845 by Philip Hunter Greene, who was his own architect and builder. The house was constructed of timber from the native forest, the trees being felled and the lumber prepared by slaves. The construction is of traditional ante bellum style: all timbers mortised together and secured by wooden pegs; the facade is composed of six massive Doric columns; and the floor plan is that of four large rooms separated by a wide hall. At the rear of the hall is one of the most beautiful curved stairways to be found in LaGrange, among whose interesting features are noted the mahogany stair rail and the quaint niches in the walls for statuary. The walls and ceilings of the lower floor with their frescoes were made of plaster of Paris, and the mantels of black marble imported from Carrara. A t the rear of the house was the glassed conservatory, in which were stored rare plants and shrubs, among which there was a lemon tree that provided fruit for many years. This property was inherited by the daughter, Mrs. Sarah Caroline Greene Todd. It is now the property of Mrs. Francis J. Dodd and still stands in the dignity and beauty of its early days among the venerable trees from which it took its name. BROUGHTON HOME. The home of Edward Broughton of ante bellum days was a large two-story house with green blinds, broad halls and spacious verandahs. I t was a homelike place with many windows open t o the sunshine and to the fragrance of the garden filled with old fashioned flowers. Seven daughters went from this home to LaGrange College under the Montgomery brothers, one of which daughters, Mary, married Troup Montgomery. This house occupied the site of the house in the triangle between Greenville and Hill streets in LaGrange, now occupied by Mrs. F. J. Pike. Miss Tallie Hill relates that the old Broughton house or a t least one on the same site was used in stage coach days as a hotel, probably after Howard's Tavern was sold as a site for the present Baptist Church, which was in 1839. TALLIE ~ L HOUSE, L 109 HILLSTREET. This is one of the very old homes of LaGrange as it was built before Hill Street was opened, and its position is that of facing on Greenville Street, which explains the angular position in reference to Hill Street. Wiley P. Burks, guardian for Mrs. Hill, bought this home for her in 1853. Mrs. Hill was the mother of five daughters, Frances, Victoria, Mary, Tallie and Mat, and two sons, Abram C. and Albert G. There are a number of beautiful oaks on the grounds surround- VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. ing this interesting house that are over one hundred years old. Misses Tallie and Mat Hill have lived in this house continuously for eighty years. They taught a private school there for many years, and many men and women of this community received not only their early education here, but they also acquired the moral precepts from these remarkable women, which have guided them through life. To their keen mentality and wonderful memories, the author is indebted for many interesting facts about the early history of LaGrange. GEORGE HEARD HOME,206 BROADSTREET. The home of George Heard is a stately house in a setting of trees and shrubs, which was inherited by his daughter, Martha Heard, who married Judge James M. Beall, and the house was known for many years as the Beall house. There were two sons in the Heard family, the one, Rev. Peter A. Heard, who married Mary Cade Alford, made a great name for himself in Georgia Methodism; the other, Dr. Henry Thomas Heard was equally distinguished as a physician, This house is now the residence of Mrs. George E. Dallis. The home of Robert Dougherty formerly occupied DOUG HER^ HOME. the whole block on Church Street, part of which is now the site of the Render Apartments. Some of the giant oaks that adorned these beautiful grounds are still standing. The house was a large colonial structure. As Robert Dougherty was regarded as a giant in the legal profession, his home was the frequent meeting place of pioneer celebrities. This site, after the destruction of the Southern Female College on Hill Street in 1861, was the location of the college, the apartments being a portion of the college buildings. REIDHOUSE.The house on the Mountville road, located in Land SAMUEL Lot No. 90 of Sixth District, is one of the first frame houses in Troup County. It was built by Samuel Reid, the county surveyor, and replaced the log house of the early pioneer days. The stately columns were added at a much later date. Judge Reid was the grandfather of Mrs. J. B. Strong. The house today is known as the Glanton house, and stands far back on the north side of the road. RILEYI'V~ARCHMAN HOME. When the early pioneers began to settle in Troup County, Riley Marchman built a home on Land Lot No. 9 9 of the Sixth District, which is on the south side of the Mountville road. He cleared the ground for his plantation, which was surrounded by Indian cabins and homes. George Marchman, a youth of sixteen in training in Company C of First Georgia Reserves, was killed at the battle of Fort Tyler in West Point, and is buried in the family cemetery on this place. VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. WALTERCOLQUITT HOME. On the outskirts of the southeastern part of LaGrange, Walter Colquitt bought a tract of land and built a house. While he was never a resident of Troup County, yet he spent all his summers in this country home, which in later days became the property of A. J. Heard. JOEL D. NEWSOM HOME. This home is located on the north side of the Big Springs road in Land Lot No. 136 of the Sixth District, and was the home of Joel D. Newsom. This house of colonial type of architecture is a replica of the Boddie house on the Mountville road, and was designed by Cullen Rogers, an able architect of the ante bellum period. LTNDSAY HOME, 401 VERNONSTREET.This house occupies the site formerly known as No. 3 Commons of LaGrange, and was the home of B. F. H. Lindsay, whose daughter, Mrs. Bessie Lindsay Walker, resides on Hill Street. After the death of B. F. H. Lindsay, his widow married Dr. William E. Murphey and lived in the same house. John L. Robertson was the next owner, and in the late nineties it was purchased by Mrs. Frank Ward and her daughters, one of whom, Miss Lulu Ward, still has her home and flower garden there. Mrs. Ward was a quiet gentlewoman, who looked on the journey of life as a road to Jericho, and deemed the law of human helpfulness one of the greatest laws of the code. One of the very interesting old homes in Troup JOHNHILLHOME. County is that of John Hill at Long Cane, located in Land Lot No. 189 of the Fifth District. I t is similar to most of the houses of former days, colonial in style with broad farm lands surrounding it. From this home came three men of marked ability: Dr. John Hill, William Pinckney Hill, and Senator Benjamin Harvey Hill. ALFORD HOME. The first home built in the western part of LaGrange in Land Lot No. 110, was the home of Julius C. Alford, which formerly was located on the site of LaGrange College. Julius C. Alford, our Congressman who was dubbed the "War Horse of Troup," was prominent in the early military and political circles, and proposed the name for the city of LaGrange. Julius Alford was a great uncle of Judge W. T. Tuggle, our popular city court judge. This site was purchased by the Montgomery brothers in 1843 for the erection of dormitories for students of the LaGrange Female Institute, which used the Female Academy on Broad Street for class rooms. FORESTHOME. The home of Charles Cabiniss Bailey, located in Land Lot No. 2 5 2 of the Sixth District, was purchased by him October 28, 1827. Charles Bailey came from County, Virginia, to Forsyth, Georgia, and leaving his family in Forsyth, he brought carpenters with him to Troup, as well as blacksmiths and masons. With this corps of laborers he constructed five two-story houses in the county. In 1850, he built the handsome resi- & VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. dence known as "Forest Home" on the above mentioned site on the north side of the Hamilton road, near Rosemont School at present. H e presented this home t o his daughter, Mrs. John Humphrey Traylor, whose descendents still retain possession of the estate. The first ladder steps of the house built in 1827 are still in use to connect the second story of the house with the attic. The old wisteria still climbs across the verandah, and the old garden still boasts of the ancient boxwood, crepe myrtle and tall cedars. What stories of elaborate hospitality, brilliant entertainments of celebrated men, romance, joy and sorrow, this house and garden could tell! Jefferson Davis and a host of others were entertained within its hospitable portals. From this home have gone forth numerous men and women distinguished in the social and political life of Georgia. BOYKINHOME.This beautiful old colonial home is located in Land Lot No. 139 of the Fourteenth District, which was originally a part of old Carroll County. The present house was built in 1849 by John T. Boykin, and was occupied by his son, John T. Boykin, and his children continuously until 1924, and was ever known for the generous hospitality of its inmates. POYTHRESS HOME.The site of the home of Joseph Poythress was bought by him in 1830 from James and William Daniel, and occupied the site of the present post oflice in LaGrange. The property was inherited by Frank Poythress, who married Caroline Ware, and she in turn became the owner of the property after the death of her husband, and sometime afterward she married John T. Gay, and lived in the house until her death in 1922. The house was moved to front on Broome Street when the post office was built, and was finally razed in 1925 . GRIGGSHOME.The battle-scarred Griggs home is on the Alabama line in West Point and located in Alabama, but it is so closely identified with the history of Troup County, that it has been included in our list of homes. It remains practically unchanged since the battle of Fort Tyler, when it was scarred with bullets in the fierce struggle for possession of the fort. WHITFIELDHOUSE.This is one of the old houses of Troup County, and was the home of Horatio Whitfield, an old pioneer of the county, and is located on the south side of the road a t Whitfield Crossing near Louise. The property was afterward in the possession of the Banks family. In 1931, it was purchased by S. H. Dunson, and he and Mrs. Dunson have used excellent judgment in the remodeling of the house, adhering strictly, though in a charming manner, to the traditions of architecture of the ante bellum period during which the old house was built. I t is now known as "Gricewood." TARVER HOUSE, CHURCHSTREET. This house was built by the mother of Judge Walter Colquitt. After the death of Henry Colquitt, her husband, VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. she married Andrew W. Tarver, and was in her second widowhood when the house was built. She occupied the house with her son, John Colquitt and his children, he being a widower at that time. The property is in possession of the Lehmann family and has been for many years. HENDERSON HOME,303 HILLSTREET. This stately house was built by William Henderson, the great uncle of Mrs. R. 0.Pharr, some time before the war, and was purchased by Benjamin H. Bigham in 1861 upon his return from the War Between the States. It is conspicuous for the beautiful staircase and the handsome brass cornices over the windows. Mrs. Adelaide Bigham Park, her daughter, Mrs. Mary Park Polhill, and her granddaughter, Mrs. Adelaide Park Webster, were all married in the same room of the house. MCFARLAND HOME, H ~ ESTREET. S This house was built by a German contractor named Wagner for Joseph D. McFarland about the year 1833. It was occupied by the Bacon and the Fannin families; James Stanley and his wife lived here in 1843, and it was afterwards occupied by Benjamin B. Amos, the father of Mrs. Ida McFarlane. It was bought by L. J. Render in 1880 and is still in possession of his daughter, Mrs. W. E. Morgan. The Render family though pioneers of Meriwether County have added much to the wealth, culture and prestige of LaGrange and Troup County for more than fifty years. RUTLEDGE HOME. This house is located on the east side of the road from Hardin Crossroad to West Point. It was built by a contractor named Urpe in 18f2 for Joseph Rutledge, father of Mrs. M. L. Fleming. Two years were required to construct the house; no nails were used in the framing, all joints being mortised and tenoned and fastened by wooden pegs. It remained the property of Joseph Rutledge until his death in 1892, and became the property of Mrs. M. L. Fleming in 1895, and was sold by her to William Hogg in 1908. FROSTHOME, 323 GREENVILLE STREET.This house was the former home of the Frost family, who were financial and military characters in the early days of LaGrange. At some later time i t was purchased by W. V. Gray, and occupied by his family for many years, and is still in possession of the family. 'WILKES HOME, 218 MAINSTREET. This house was the former home of Benjamin Wilkes, the grandfather of Ben Wilkes of Springdale Drive. The house was situated in the center of a large lot fronting on Main, Bull and Broome streets. It was afterwards moved southward from the original position, when the Truitt home was built near Broome Street. The Wilkes family were among the wealthiest and most influential of the early days. SWANSONHOMES.On the north side of the old Vernon road just beyond the second crossing of the A. B. & C. Railroad is the old home of Graves Swanson. On the south side of Vernon road within the city limits on the VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. site of the home of Ely R. Callaway was the home of Sherwood Swanson. Both of these homes were noted for their lavish hospitality. The home of Sherwood Swanson housed the first session of the Superior Court held in the county. Sherwood Swanson married Sarah Cameron, one of the three g a d uates of LaGrange College under the Montgomerys in the first class of 1846. CAMERONHOME.This home is located on the north side of Vernon road just within the city limits, and was the home of Benjamin Cameron, a pioneer builder and contractor. He built the old court house in 1831. His son built the dormitory and college building of LaGrange College in early 1861. the war preventing the completion of the college building. Sms HOME. The home of Wiley Sims was the site of the old LaGrange Country Club; the old house being remodeled as a club house. Wiley Sims was the first ordinary of Troup County, the office being created in 18 5 2. He was prominent in the social and political life of early days. FLORENCE HOME.Near the A. J. Heard place southeast of LaGrange, the summer home of Judge Walter Colquitt, was located the Florence home. The menage of this home was noted for the exquisite furniture, handsome carriage and horses, and other appointments in keeping with the early pioneer country home. POERHOME. This house dates far back in the county records, and the age is attested by the bend in the street in West Point, whose other streets are straight lines except those along the river front. The city was laid off in rectangular squares at the beginning of its existence. WHATLEY HOME.This home is located on a narrow road leading north just beyond the Estes Cemetery west of Abbottsford. A view of this quaint house bespeaks its age. The angular dormers and steeply pitched roof are ample evidence of the originality and good taste of the designer. HARWELL HOME,305 BROADSTREET. ?Ibis is perhaps one of the oldest homes in LaGrange and was the home of Vines Harwell and his wife, Mary Lane, who were married on November 18, 18 23, and afterwards moved to this home, where were born Henry and John Harwell on December 24, 1827, in this house. 'The house was afterwards occupied by J. Brown Morgan, whose wife was captain of the "Nancy Harts" in the Civil War period. T t was afterward owned by John N. Cooper. It has been in possession of the Pinckard family for more than thirty years. The beautiful columns were added to the house in the later years of its existence. MODERNHOMES.Among the handsome modern homes of LaGrange, West Point and Hogansville, may be mentioned the following: Truitt and Dunson homes built in southern colonial style; Nix home of English type with its beautiful gardens; the handsome Callaway Italian villa set in the VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. famed Ferrell Gardens, now called "Hills and Dales"; Lanier home in West Point with the house and gardens artistically set on the famous Fort Tyler hill with a magnificent panoramic view of the surrounding country; Word home in Hogansville picturesquely located in a stately grove of oaks. There are doubtless many other homes in the county, which should be enumerated, but the lack of definite information has prevented their inclusion in this edition of our county history. VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. CHAPTER XXIII. CUSTOMS AND PRACTICES IP LANTATION DAYS. On the old plantations the spring months were one unending toil of planting, sowing, weeding, tilling up to the "laying by" time about the first of July, when the golden seas of wheat, barley, rye and oats, and sometimes millet were waiting for harvest time. The strong armed cradler mows a swath in the ripened grain, and he is closely followed by one who gathers the cuts and binds them into convenient bundles or sheaves. When the reaping and binding are complete, the bundles are shocked in upright piles with one spread over the top to protect the shocks from possible rains before the threshing time. The itinerant thresher is notified that the community is ready for "thrashing day"; and when notice is received that the caravan is on the way, then commenced the hurry, bustle and hard toil of the burning summer days, which left completely exhausted every one from the cooks feeding the extra itinerant crew and the laborers moving the grain to the thresher and the chaff and straw out oflthe workers' way, to the master awaiting the scorer's count of the harvest total. The modern reaper has taken away the glamor of old "thrashing days" with the hearty appetites and deep sleep consequent upon laborious toil. The summer months were largely idle time with the exception of the pulling of fodder and cutting of hay. Visits to distant friends and kinsmen, various gatherings in churches and camp meetings, served to pass away the long summer days. The call of the road commissioners always marred the idyllic summer days, when the able bodied citizens gathered together for highway work in making possible the old roads and in cutting new ones. The notable days of autumn were cotton picking, cane grinding, cider making, corn shucking, each of which were celebrated in accordance with the alcoholic inclinations of the participants. One other day should be mentioned, and that is settling day or October 1, when the accounts of the harvest year are closed. Prior to this date all transactions were of the barter type: the threshing paid in toll 06 grain; the miller in toll of grain; all else on credit payable on the settling day. Plantation days are gone with its toils and labors, with its pleasures and recreations, but they have a warm place in our hearts. THECOUNTRY DOCTOR. In the early days most of the roads were only faintly marked trails, and in consequence travel was largely on horseback. This was the method employed by the country doctors in reaching their patients, and all physicians were country doctors. The doctor was the surgeon, the dentist, the pharmacist, the nurse, and the botanist, and anything else that was needed by the patient. He carried VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. in his saddlebags instruments for operations, materials for compounding remedies, miscellaneous sedatives and purgatives, bandages and liniments, in fact a circulating pharmacy. On the way t o some distant visitation his watchful eye was ever on the alert for catnip, boneset, lobelia, bayberry, gentian and all those plants from which he prepared his tinctures. It is a matter of pleasure and also of duty to pay tribute t o the tireless energy, enduring patience and studious skill of these faithful pioneer ministers of health to our forefathers. CORNSHUCKING. The monotony of farm life was sometimes broken by introducing a concerted social feature, or by making play of work. One of these in those other days was a "Corn Shucking," which our northwestern countrymen would call a "Husking Bee," but in our Georgia always bore the above appellation. By light of lanterns and to the accompaniment of banjos and fiddles (not violins) husky neighbors vied with one another in races of time or quantity of corn husked, and a feature of the contest was to find who would shuck the first ear of red corn, which entitled the lucky one to the first and a double portion of the eggnog, and sometimes he received also a spanking from the envious defeated contestants. The dancing of jigs and singing of old songs interspersed the program of work and amusement. Now, alas, the days of corn shuckings are nu more, and it is in memory alone that we may see some husky buck "cut t i e pigeon wing," or hear some old darky "zoon." LOG ROLLING. The original forests of the county were so dense that in order to plant crops, it was necessary to fell the trees and to destroy all timber not needed for building cabins, barns and shelters. The disposition of the enormous mass of trunks, branches and brush entailed the communistic assistance of neighbors in rolling the logs into a heap for burning. After the arduous toil by day with cant hooks and levers, came the evening by the light of the bonfire, and entertainment of song and dance with refreshments both liquid and savory. HOUSE WARMING.When the patches for fields and gardens were cleared, and the cabin of logs completed with its board roof and stick chimney; when puncheon benches, shelves and racks and bunks, were added, and the pioneer ready to occupy his new home, invitations were broadcast by word of mouth to the "House Warming." The house might be the future home of some newlyweds, or merely the abiding place of some newcomer t o the community, but the ceremony was much the same in either case. The host gave warm welcome with a roaring fire in the spacious fireplace, a royal banquet VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org Courtesy of The GAGenWeb.Org http://www.gagenweb.org COPYRIGHT ELECTRONIC EDITION 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. of venison or bear steak with suitable accompaniments, which usually included hard liquor for men and wine for the ladies. The presents brought by the guests would seem curious when compared with a modern shower: for the host, a powder horn scraped until thin and translucent, a leather shot pouch, a tinder box, a coon-skin cap, knitted woolen socks and the like; for the madame, a skillet, a spider, buckskin moccasins, mittens knitted from colored yarns, and the like. COOKING METHODS.The pioneer oven usually placed some distance back of the cabin, was a cumbersome affair built of stone or brick, with a huge firebox underneath provided with a stick chimney for the draft. The firing of the oven was not a daily occurrence, for it required some time to heat the oven chamber to a cooking temperature. The bread supply for a week was usually baked at one heating, and a ham, or a whole pig, or a turkey, or all three could be baked at one time in the cavernous depths of the oven on ceremonial occasions, but roasting and barbecuing were more frequently resorted to for such use as the family alone required. The spider was a three legged cooking implement for cooking bread at the open fireplace. It was provided with a cast iron cover on which hot coals and ashes were heaped in order to brown on top the biscuit or corn pone without having to turn over. The skillet, or frying pan, was used for the cooking of rashers of bacon, sliced ham and steaks, much as at the present time. The hot ashes of the giant fireplace were also utilized for the roasting of sweet potatoes, and sometimes for the cooking of the ashcake of corn bread. To keep the home fires burning was a solemn duty, since matches though invented in 1856 were not in common use in the South until some time after the Civil War. The method of preserving fire was to bank ashes over the live coals at night before going to bed. The hunter, camper and long distaace teamster customarily carried a tinder box, flint and steel, or sometimes in a metal box a spongy mass taken from decayed trees, which they called "punk," which would when enclosed carry a smouldering spark for many hours. HORSEBACK RIDING. Tn the early days when most of the roads were little more than faintly marked trails, the favorite method of transportation was that of a saddle horse. The general use of saddle horses made necessary some changes of costumes, which were later relegated to the realm of things past and forgotten. One of these changes among the men was the habitual wearing of high top boots. Among women in the days when modesty of person was considered a virtue was the use of the side saddle, and a riding habit with long flowing skirts was always in evidence. These perquisites VISIT US @ http://www.gagenweb.org