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==History== Jones County, along with [[Morgan County, Georgia|Morgan County]], [[Putnam County, Georgia|Putnam County]], and [[Jasper County, Georgia|Old Randolph]], were established by an act of the Georgia General Assembly on December 10, 1807, from land that had originally been part [[Baldwin County, Georgia|Baldwin County]] in 1803 and, earlier, part of the Creek Nation. Jones County was originally bounded by a line running north 56Β° east to Commissioners Creek, then north 15Β° west to Cedar Creek, then up the creek to corner Randolph County and Putnam County, then along a line to [[Ocmulgee River]], then down the river to where the old county line between Wilkinson County and Baldwin County was.<ref>{{cite act |title= Acts of the State of Georgia Passed in 1807|number= 1|date= December 10, 1807 |article= An Act To lay out and identify, six new counties out of the counties of Baldwin and Wilkinson.}}</ref> It excluded parts of what is now Bibb County east of the Ocmulgee River, including the location of [[Fort Benjamin Hawkins]], as they were part of a reserve guaranteed to the Creek Nation. Those areas were later added to Jones County after the [[Treaty of Indian Springs (1821)|Treaty of Indian Springs]].<ref>{{cite act |title= Acts of the General Assembly of the State of Georgia: Passed at Milledgville, At an Extra Session, In April and May, 1821|number= 1|date= May 15, 1821 |article= An Act To dispose of and distribute the lands lately acquired by the United States for the use of Georgia, of the Creek Nation of Indians, by a treaty made and concluded at the Indian Spring, on the eighth day of January, eighteen hundred and twenty-one; and to add the Reserve at Fort Hawkins to the county of Jones.}}</ref> During the initial months of the county's existence, a town known as Albany served as the county seat.<ref name="ACHP">[https://www.achp.gov/preserve-america/community/jones-county-georgia "Jones County, Georgia."] Advisory Council on Historic Preservation website. Retrieved March 30, 2022.</ref> The town was renamed [[Clinton, Georgia|Clinton]]<ref name="Krakow">Kenneth K. Krakow. [http://www.kenkrakow.com/gpn/c.pdf "Clinton"] entry in ''Georgia Place-Names: Their History and Origins''. 3rd ed. Winship Press, 1999. p. 46. {{ISBN|0-915430-00-2}}</ref> and was established as the county seat by the Georgia General Assembly on December 22, 1808.<ref>{{cite act |title= Acts of the General Assembly of the State of Georgia: Passed at Milledgville, At An Annual Session, In November and December, 1808|date= December 22, 1808|article= To establish the site of public buildings in the county of JONES, and to appropriate the money arising from the sale of lots.|url= https://dlg.usg.edu/record/dlg_zlgl_1312143#text|quote="...the site of public buildings in and for the county of Jones shall be in the town called and known by the name of Clinton in said county..."}}</ref> Clinton was incorporated as in 1816.<ref>{{cite act |title= Acts of the General Assembly of the State of Georgia: Passed at Milledgville, At An Annual Session, In November and December, 1816 |number= 45 |date= December 4, 1816 |article= To Incorporate the town of Clinton, in the county of Jones, and for the appointment of Commissioners for the better regulation and government of said town.}}</ref> During the 1800s Clinton grew as a center of commerce and the cotton trade.<ref name="ACHP" /> Clinton remained one of the most populous cities in Georgia in the mid-1800s.<ref name=Krakow/><ref>William Bragg. [https://www.georgiaencyclopedia.org/articles/counties-cities-neighborhoods/jones-county/ "Jones County."] ''New Georgia Encyclopedia.'' October 31, 2018.</ref> Among the earliest settlers of the county were Thomas White (1781β1830) and Elizabeth Haynes Clark (1788β1856), of [[Orange County, Virginia]], who established a plantation a few miles north of [[Round Oak, Georgia|Round Oak]], before 1810. In December 1810 Jones County gained a portion of Putnam County between Cedar Creek and their original border.<ref>{{cite act |title= Acts of the General Assembly of the State of Georgia: Passed at Milledgville in November and December 1810 |number= 29 |date= December 15, 1810 |article= To add a part of Putnam county to Jones county.}}</ref> In December 1822 Bibb County was established and Jones County lost some of its land to that county. During the early 19th century, Jones County had a rapid population increase. The peak came around 1835, when the county ranked third or fourth among all of the state's counties in agricultural wealth. After 1835, soil erosion and lack of funds to develop property drove many farmers to newly opened land elsewhere in Georgia.<ref>{{Cite web |last=David D. Long |display-authors=etal |date=1914 |title=Soil Survey of Jones County, Georgia |url=https://www.nrcs.usda.gov/Internet/FSE_MANUSCRIPTS/georgia/jonesGA1914/jonesGA1914.pdf |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150926104529/http://www.nrcs.usda.gov/Internet/FSE_MANUSCRIPTS/georgia/jonesGA1914/jonesGA1914.pdf |archive-date=September 26, 2015 |access-date=July 11, 2018 |website=Nrcs.usda.gov}}</ref> Before the American Civil War, a few factories sprang up in the county, including a cotton gin factory at Griswoldville in the southern portion of the county and a woolen factory at Wallace. Griswoldville was founded by [[Samuel Griswold]] in the 1850s. During the Civil War, the cotton gin factory was reformatted so it could produce pistols and other weapons for the Confederate Army. Griswoldville was located on the railway linking Macon to Savannah, and became a prime target in 1864 as the Union Army moved through Georgia. On November 20, 1864, the town and the factories in it were burned as part of [[Sherman's March to the Sea]]. Days later the [[Battle of Griswoldville]] took place in the area. The town of Griswoldville was not rebuilt. Many other areas in Jones County were damaged by the Union Army during that time period. The [[Jarrell Plantation|Jarrell Plantation State Historic Site]] in Jones County showcases one of the few and well-preserved antebellum plantations in Georgia. In the 1890s a railroad line owned by the [[Central of Georgia Railway]] named the Macon & Northern Railroad was built through the county and bypassed Clinton by a mile after citizens wanted the line to not pass through the town. By the early 1900s the population had shifted northeastward and the city of [[Gray, Georgia|Gray]] was established. On June 27, 1905, the citizens of Jones County voted on the issues of moving the county seat from Clinton to Gray. The results were 1,289 votes in favor of moving the county seat to Gray and 51 votes for keeping the county seat at Clinton. On August 9, 1905, Gray became the new county seat of Jones County.<ref>{{cite act |title= Acts and Resolutions of the General Assembly of the State of Georgia 1905 |number= 64 |date= August 9, 1905 |article= Jones County, County Site Changed from Clinton to Gray. }}</ref> Father and son Alonzo and James D. Green were innocent African-Americans [[Lynching|lynched]] near [[Round Oak, Georgia|Round Oak]] and [[Wayside, Georgia|Wayside]], Jones County in retaliation for the murder of popular white farmer Silas Hardin Turner on July 4, 1915. A third man, William Bostick, was also lynched on this day. None of those killed received a trial.{{sfn|Rogers|2019|p=}}
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