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Courthouse before 1855

Courthouse Ruins 1855

Courthouse circa 1970

The Washington County Courthouse has been built and destroyed and rebuilt several times. The courthouse pictured on the left was built circa 1835-1836. It was burned during the fire of 1855 which destroyed a major part of the downtown area of Sandersville (center photograph). By 1859 it had been rebuilt very close to the same building design. It was then burned by General William T. Sherman in 1864 during the Civil War. It was rebuilt again circa 1869 by Greene Brantley and J. W. Renfroe. In 1899 it was remodeled. This courthouse still stands as shown in the photo on the right. [Source: Vanishing Georgia Collection, Georgia Division of Archives and History, Office of Secretary of State.]


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I hope you find my efforts helpful in your research of your Washington County roots.  I am unable to do additional research on your family as I do not live in Georgia and do not have direct access to county records.  I post everything I have for everyone to use.

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Welcome to Washington County, Georgia, a truly southern community where the past meets the present. Travel back in time visiting our rich history, antebellum homes and historic sites. Kick your shoes off and enjoy the hospitality of our citizens. We know you'll want to visit our charming community again and again!


A Little County History

Washington County in east-middle Georgia was established on February 25, 1784. Georgia's tenth county, named for U.S. president George Washington, was settled by Revolutionary War (1775-83) veterans who were awarded grants to Creek and Cherokee lands. Beginning in 1786, seven counties plus portions of nine more were eventually cut from the original Washington County. The county currently encompasses 680 square miles, and its population, according to the 2000 U.S. census, is 21,176 (45.7 percent white; 53.2 percent black).

Warthen was the first settlement in the county, founded as the site of the superior courts and the jail. Made of hand-hewn logs, the jail has been restored and is considered the oldest log jail in Georgia. The entire village of Warthen, including the jail, is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

In 1796 the Georgia legislature named Sandersville (originally Saunders Crossroads), which was situated at the crossing of two Indian trails, the county seat. Many early post-office communities within the county grew and faded with time, while railroads determined the survival of several villages. Townships in the county today include Davisboro, Deepstep, Harrison, Oconee, Riddleville, Sandersville, Tennille, and Warthen. As a frontier county, self-contained farms and plantations were also common.

Religion played an important role in the early community. The first church in the area was constituted in 1790. Baptists and then Methodists later organized, and both denominations had founded churches by 1856. Around 1900, Catholic and Episcopal congregations were formed. Today 120 churches of various denominations meet around the county, and many are descendents of these earlier ones.

On November 25, 1864, Union general William T. Sherman and his troops came through Washington County on their "March to the Sea." Sherman selected the Brown House as his headquarters. Two days later, when his army left Sandersville, Sherman ordered the courthouse and jail to be burned. In Tennille, railroad tracks were pulled up, heated, and twisted into "bowties." The county courthouse was lost to fires in 1855 and again in 1864. A new courthouse was completed in 1868 and enlarged in the Victorian style in 1899. Before the turn of the twentieth century, brick store buildings replaced the wooden ones that had been burned.

Medicine also played a key role in the county's history. William Rawlings, a renowned surgeon, opened a hospital around 1895. Nurses were taught at Rawlings' Nurses Training School from 1903 to 1932. Operating on the Sandersville square for sixty-five years, the Rawlings Sanitarium moved to a new facility in 1961; originally called Washington Memorial Hospital, it is now the Washington County Regional Medical Center.

Stable cotton prices from about 1890 to the mid-1920s brought prosperity and fine homes to the area, many of which are still standing. Farmers have since diversified, growing other agricultural products, and a prosperous lumber industry has also developed.

Fortunately for Washington County, as the marketplace for some agricultural products declined, the kaolin industry grew. Kaolin, a white, alumina silicate clay, is used in paper, medicines, paints, and many other products, all of which are shipped around the world. As Washington County grew into kaolin's largest refiner, it became known as the "Kaolin Capital of the World." Five processing companies and numerous mines currently attract college-educated personnel, scientists, and geologists from many countries. An annual Kaolin Festival celebrates the importance of the resource. At the end of the twentieth century, kaolin was an $800 million business and Georgia's largest volume export. Mining companies have reclaimed and restored more than 80 percent of the land that has been stripped since 1969.

Organized in 1976, the Washington County Historical Society operates two museums, one in the old county jail, which is now the Genealogical Research Museum, and the Brown House Museum, which serves as the society's headquarters. Four districts are listed on the National Register of Historic Places, as are the Old City Cemetery and several other structures. An exhibit dedicated to architect Charles Edward Choate is housed in the chamber of commerce.

Two Georgia governors came from Washington County: Jared Irwin, a Revolutionary War soldier and frontier Indian fighter, and Thomas Hardwick, a U.S. senator and congressman. Elijah Poole Mohammed, leader of the Nation of Islam, was born near Deepstep; the Gordys of Motown music fame and concert singer McHenry Boatright were also from Washington County.

Source: The New Georgia Encyclopedia


Counties Bordering Washington County

Baldwin, Glascock, Hancock
Jefferson, Johnson, Wilkinson


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