Troup County, Georgia
Template:Short description Template:Use mdy dates Template:Infobox U.S. county
Troup County (Template:IPAc-en, Template:Respell) is a county in the West Central region of the U.S. state of Georgia. As of the 2020 census, the population was 69,426.<ref name="ReferenceA">US Census Bureau, 2020 Report, Troup County, Georgia</ref><ref name="QF">Template:Cite web</ref> The county seat is LaGrange.<ref name="GR6">Template:Cite web</ref> Troup County comprises the LaGrange micropolitan statistical area along with Chambers County, AL. It is included in the Atlanta-Athens-Clarke County-Sandy Springs combined statistical area.
History
[edit]For thousands of years, this area of what is now defined as west central Georgia was occupied by cultures of indigenous peoples. In the historic period, it was part of a large area controlled by the Muscogee, also known as the Creek people.
The land for Lee, Muscogee, Troup, Coweta, and Carroll counties was ceded by the Creek to the United States in the 1825 Treaty of Indian Springs. The counties' boundaries were created by the Georgia General Assembly on June 9, 1826, but the counties themselves were not named until December 14, 1826.
The county is named for George Troup,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> thirty-fourth governor of Georgia, U.S. representative, and senator.
As with much of the Piedmont, this area was developed in the antebellum era for cotton cultivation after short-staple cotton was made profitable by invention of the cotton gin. By 1860 Troup County was the fourth-wealthiest in Georgia and fifth-largest slaveholding county in the state.<ref name="nga">Template:Cite web</ref>
According to U.S. Census data, the 1860 Troup County population included 6,223 whites, 37 "free colored" and 10,002 slaves. By the 1870 census, the white population had increased about 3% to 6,408, while the "colored" population had increased about 12% to 11,224.<ref name="blake">Tom Blake, "TROUP COUNTY, GEORGIA: LARGEST SLAVEHOLDERS FROM 1860 SLAVE CENSUS SCHEDULES and SURNAME MATCHES FOR AFRICAN AMERICANS ON 1870 CENSUS" Template:Webarchive, transcribed 2002, rootsweb</ref>
During the post-Reconstruction period, violence and the number of lynchings of blacks increased in the late 19th century, as whites exercised terrorism to re-establish and maintain white supremacy. Whites lynched three African Americans in Troup County in this period, most were killed around the turn of the 20th century. Such deaths occurred through the post-World War II period.<ref>Lynching in America/ Supplement: Lynchings by CountyTemplate:Dead link, 3rd Edition, 2015, p. 4</ref> A fourth man from Troup County was lynched in neighboring Harris County.<ref name="warren"/>
In the late 19th century, entrepreneurs in LaGrange built the first cotton mill, and others were rapidly established in this area. Initially they employed only white workers.
20th century to present
[edit]During the first half of the 20th century, thousands of blacks left Georgia and other southern states in what is known as the Great Migration. They were seeking work as mechanization reduced the number of farm jobs, and they were seeking more opportunities than in the Jim Crow South, where they were disenfranchised and socially oppressed.
On September 8, 1940, 16-year-old Austin Callaway, a black youth, was arrested in LaGrange as a suspect in an attack on a white woman. The next night a small, armed group of white men took him from the county jail, driving him out to the nearby countryside, where they lynched him: shooting him several times and leaving him for dead. In 2017 a man who was a child at the time revealed that his white family found and took Callaway to the hospital, where he died the next day. They had kept their role secret out of fear of the KKK.<ref name="family"/> Callaway was noted by the local paper as dying from gunshot wounds; the New York Times at the time described it as a lynching.<ref name="nytimes"/> As was typical in these cases, no one was prosecuted for the murder. In response, that fall African Americans organized the first NAACP chapter in Troup County at Warren Temple Methodist Church in LaGrange. It has worked on a variety of civil rights issues, including voting rights, equal justice, access, and human services.<ref name="warren"/>
In 1947, prosperous farmer Henry "Peg" Gilbert, a married African-American father who owned and farmed 100 acres in the county, was arrested and charged with harboring a fugitive by officials from neighboring Harris County, Georgia, in the case of Gus Davidson. Also African American, the latter man was charged in the shooting death of a white farmer. Four days later Gilbert was dead, shot while held in jail by the Harris County Sheriff, in what he said was self-defense. In 2016 the Civil Rights and Restorative Justice Project of Northeastern University reported on this death in custody. They found that Gilbert had been beaten severely before his death, and shot five times. They asserted he had been detained and killed because of his success as a farmer.<ref name="CRRJ_Georgia_1947">Template:Citation</ref><ref name="CRRJ_report_2016_Gilbert">Template:Cite report</ref>
By 1960, the county was recorded in the US Census as having 31,418 whites and 15,760 "Negroes" (now classified as black or African Americans). Following passage of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, blacks gradually regained the ability to vote and take part in the political process.
Textile manufacturing was a major part of the economy until the late 20th century, when textile manufacturing moved offshore to areas with cheaper labor. The county has acquired other industry, notably auto parts manufacturers who support the nearby Kia Motors plant. Also in the area are West Point Lake and Callaway Gardens, which attract tourists and visitors as top recreation destinations in the state.<ref name="family">Brad Schrade, "Family reveals 76-year-old secret in Georgia lynching", Atlanta Journal-Constitution, March 16, 2017; accessed March 26, 2018</ref>
As of 2015, the official historian of Troup County is writer Forrest Clark Johnson, III, who has published several books on the county and region's history. He is a retired teacher in the county's school system.
On January 25, 2017, Mayor Jim Thornton and Police Chief Louis M. Dekmar, of the county seat of LaGrange, publicly apologized to more than 200 people gathered for a reconciliation service at Warren Temple United Methodist Church for the police's failure decades before to protect Callaway, saying:
"I sincerely regret and denounce the role our Police Department played in Austin's lynching, both through our action and our inaction," Chief Dekmar told a crowd at a traditionally African-American church. "And for that, I'm profoundly sorry. It should never have happened."<ref name="nytimes">"Nearly 8 Decades Later, an Apology for a Lynching in Georgia", New York Times, 27 January 2017; accessed 27 January 2017</ref>
Residents organized Troup Together, a grassroots group to acknowledge lynchings, commemorate the victims, and work on racial reconciliation. On March 18, 2017, black and white residents of the county gathered to dedicate a historic marker at Warren Temple Church "memorializing Callaway's lynching and three others documented in the area: Willis Hodnett in 1884; Samuel Owensby in 1913 and Henry Gilbert, a Troup County resident who was lynched in neighboring Harris County in 1947."<ref name="family"/> Another ceremony was held at Southview Cemetery in LaGrange, where these names were read.<ref name="warren">"What Happened at Warren Temple?", Troup Together blog and website; accessed March 26, 2018</ref>
On April 7, 2017, Troup County's computer systems were the victim of a ransomware attack; it caused all county computer systems to be inaccessible. This included the sheriff's office and district attorney's office.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> After five days, the county was still working to get 400 computer systems back online.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
Geography
[edit]According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the county has a total area of Template:Convert, of which Template:Convert is land and Template:Convert (7.2%) is water.<ref name="GR1">Template:Cite web</ref> The county is located in the Piedmont region of the state.
The entirety of Troup County is located in the Middle Chattahoochee River-Lake Harding sub-basin of the ACF River Basin (Apalachicola-Chattahoochee-Flint River Basin).<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>
Major highways
[edit]- File:I-85.svg Interstate 85
- File:I-185 (GA).svg Interstate 185
- File:US 27.svg U.S. Route 27
- File:US 29.svg U.S. Route 29
- File:Georgia 1.svg State Route 1
- File:Georgia 14.svg State Route 14
- File:Georgia 14 Connector.svg State Route 14 Connector
- File:Georgia 14 Spur.svg State Route 14 Spur
- File:Georgia 18.svg State Route 18
- File:Georgia 54.svg State Route 54
- File:Georgia 100.svg State Route 100
- File:Georgia 103.svg State Route 103
- File:Georgia 109.svg State Route 109
- File:Georgia 219.svg State Route 219
- File:Georgia 403.svg State Route 403 (unsigned designation for I-85)
- File:Georgia 411.svg State Route 411 (unsigned designation for I-185)
Adjacent counties
[edit]- Coweta County (northeast)
- Meriwether County (east)
- Harris County (south)
- Chambers County, Alabama (southwest/CST Border except for Lanett and Valley as they are part of the Columbus Metropolitan Area)
- Randolph County, Alabama (northwest/CST Border)
- Heard County (north)
Communities
[edit]Cities
[edit]- Hogansville
- LaGrange (county seat)
- West Point
Unincorporated communities
[edit]- Abbottsford
- Harrisonville
- Long Cane
- Mountville
Demographics
[edit]Race | Num. | Perc. |
---|---|---|
White (non-Hispanic) | 38,099 | 54.88% |
Black or African American (non-Hispanic) | 24,157 | 34.8% |
Native American | 127 | 0.18% |
Asian | 1,608 | 2.32% |
Pacific Islander | 36 | 0.05% |
Other/Mixed | 2,443 | 3.52% |
Hispanic or Latino | 2,956 | 4.26% |
As of the 2020 United States census, there were 69,426 people, 24,436 households, and 15,354 families residing in the county.
Government
[edit]The government of Troup County is based on an elected county commission, or council. The chairman is elected county-wide, or at-large, and four commissioners are each elected from single-member districts.<ref name="gov">"Board of Commissioners" Template:Webarchive, Troop County, GA government</ref> District 5 includes much of the territory of LaGrange, the county seat and most densely settled community in the county.
Politics
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See also
[edit]- National Register of Historic Places listings in Troup County, Georgia
- The Burnt Village
- List of counties in Georgia
References
[edit]Template:Geographic Location Template:Troup County, Georgia Template:Atlanta Metro Template:Georgia (U.S. state) Template:Authority control Template:Coord