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GEORGIA STATE MAIN INFO

GEORGIA Main Info

Hernando de Soto, the Spanish explorer, first traveled parts of Georgia in 1540. British claims later conflicted with those of Spain. After obtaining a royal charter, Gen. James Oglethorpe established the first permanent settlement in Georgia in 1733 as a refuge for English debtors. In 1742, Oglethorpe defeated Spanish invaders in the Battle of Bloody Marsh.

A Confederate stronghold, Georgia was the scene of extensive military action during the Civil War. Union general William T. Sherman burned Atlanta and destroyed a 60-mile-wide path to the coast, where he captured Savannah in 1864.

The largest state east of the Mississippi, Georgia is typical of the changing South with an ever-increasing industrial development. Atlanta, largest city in the state, is the communications and transportation center for the Southeast and the area's chief distributor of goods.

Georgia leads the nation in the production of paper and board, tufted textile products, and processed chicken. Other major manufactured products are transportation equipment, food products, apparel, and chemicals.

Important agricultural products are corn, cotton, tobacco, soybeans, eggs, and peaches. Georgia produces twice as many peanuts as the next leading state. From its vast stands of pine come more than half of the world's resins and turpentine and 74.4 percent of the U.S. supply. Georgia is a leader in the production of marble, kaolin, barite, and bauxite.

Principal tourist attractions in Georgia include the Okefenokee National Wildlife Refuge, Andersonville Prison Park and National Cemetery, Chickamauga and Chattanooga National Military Park, the Little White House at Warm Springs where Pres. Franklin D. Roosevelt died in 1945, Sea Island, the enormous Confederate Memorial at Stone Mountain, Kennesaw Mountain National Battlefield Park, and Cumberland Island National Seashore.

Coming!

See more on Georgia:
Encyclopedia: Georgia
Encyclopedia: Geography
Encyclopedia: Economy
Encyclopedia: Government
Encyclopedia: History
Monthly Temperature Extremes

Accredited Colleges and Universities

Selected famous natives and residents:

Conrad Aiken poet;
James Bowie soldier;
James Brown singer;
Jim Brown actor and athlete;
Erskine Caldwell writer;
James E. Carter former president;
Ray Charles singer;
Lucius D. Clay banker and general;
Ty Cobb baseball player;
Ossie Davis actor and writer;
James Dickey poet;
Mattiwilda Dobbs soprano;
Melvyn Douglas actor;
Rebecca Latimer Felton first appointed woman U.S. senator;
Roosevelt Grier entertainer and former athlete;
Oliver Hardy comedian;
Joel Chandler Harris journalist and author;
Larry Holmes boxer;
Miriam Hopkins actress;
Alan Jackson singer;
Harry James trumpeter;
Jasper Johns painter and sculptor;
Bobby Jones golfer;
Stacy Keach actor;
DeForest Kelley actor;
Martin Luther King, Jr. civil rights leader;
Gladys Knight singer;
Joseph R. Lamar jurist;
Little Richard singer;
Juliette Gordon Low U.S. Girl Scouts founder;
Carson McCullers novelist;
Johnny Mercer songwriter;
Margaret Mitchell novelist;
Elijah Muhammad religious leader;
Jessye Norman soprano;
Otis Redding singer;
Burt Reynolds actor;
Jackie Robinson baseball player;
Dean Rusk former secretary of state;
Nipsey Russell comedian;
Travis Tritt singer;
Alice Walker author;
Joanne Woodward actress;
Trisha Yearwood singer.

 
 
Capital: Atlanta
State abbreviation/Postal code: Ga./GA
Governor: Sonny Perdue, R (to Jan. 2007)
Lieut. Governor: Mark Taylor, D (to Jan. 2007)
Senators: Saxby Chambliss, R (to Jan. 2009); Johnny Isakson, R (to Jan. 2011)
U.S. Representatives: 13
Secy. of State: Cathy Cox, D (to Jan. 2007)
Atty. General: Thurbert Baker, D (to Jan. 2007)
Entered Union (rank): Jan. 2, 1788 (4)
Present constitution adopted: 1983
Motto: Wisdom, justice, and moderation
State symbols: flower Cherokee rose (1916)
tree live oak (1937)
bird brown thrasher (1935)
song “Georgia on My Mind” (1922)
Nicknames: Peach State, Empire State of the South
Origin of name: In honor of George II of England
10 largest cities (2003 est.): Atlanta, 423,019; Augusta-Richmond County,1 193,316; Columbus,1 185,702; Savannah, 127,573; Athens-Clarke County,1 102,498; Macon, 95,267; Roswell, 78,229; Albany, 76,202; Marietta, 61,282; Warner Robins, 54,264
Land area: 57,906 sq mi. (149,977 sq km)
Geographic center: In Twiggs Co., 18 mi. SE of Macon
Number of counties: 159
Largest county by population and area: Fulton, 814,438 (2004); Ware, 903 sq mi.
State forests: 6 (63,294 ac.)
State parks: 63 (72,835 ac.)
Residents: Georgian
2004 resident population est.: 8,829,383
2000 resident census population (rank): 8,186,453 (10). Male: 4,027,113 (49.2%); Female: 4,159,340 (50.8%). White: 5,327,281 (65.1%); Black: 2,349,542 (28.7%); American Indian: 21,737 (0.3%); Asian: 173,170 (2.1%); Other race: 196,289 (2.4%); Two or more races: 114,188 (1.4%); Hispanic/Latino: 435,227 (5.3%). 2000 percent population 18 and over: 73.5; 65 and over: 9.6; median age: 33.4.
1. The city is part of a consolidated city-county government; the city and county are coextensive

 

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     
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