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Spalding County was created
in 1851 by the state legislature from parts of Fayette,
Henry, and Pike counties. Forty miles south of downtown
Atlanta, and comprising 198 square miles, the county was
named for Thomas Spalding, an influential statesman and
planter from coastal Georgia.
The incorporated communities
in Spalding County are Griffin, Orchard Hill, and Sunny
Side. The county seat is Griffin, where the current county
courthouse was built in 1985. Griffin was incorporated in
1843, when it was located in Pike County. Known as Pleasant
Grove until 1841, the town was first settled in the
mid-1820s. In 1840 Lewis Lawrence Griffin, a banker,
planter, philanthropist, and the first president of the
Macon and Western Railroad, bought 800 acres in the area. He
sold off lots in town, with plans to develop the community
into an elaborate city with wide boulevards. Pleasant Grove
citizens renamed the town to honor him.
Among the interesting sites
in the county is the Orr-Williamson-Gaissert Homeplace (also
known as the Old Gaissert Homeplace, the Williamson Place,
or the Mary Brook Farm), northeast of Williamson. The site
won a 2002 Georgia Centennial Farm Award, which honors
families and farms for preserving their historic properties.
Oak Hill Cemetery, part of Griffin's original city plan, is
the burial site of many historical figures associated with
Spalding County.
Although it has remained a
county of small-town communities, Spalding's proximity to
Atlanta has attracted new residents from the city. Several
regional facilities, including Spalding Regional Medical
Center and Griffin Technical College, also draw people to
the area. The University of Georgia College of Agricultural
and Environmental Sciences supports a Griffin campus that
provides agricultural education, conducts research,
maintains an agricultural extension service, and serves the
needs of area residents and farmers with information and
other assistance.
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