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  2. Sep 12, 2002 · Disenchanted with a settled Georgia, discredited, and almost bankrupt, Elijah Clarke died in Augusta on December 5, 1799. Clarke County, on the former Oconee frontier, is named for him. Several of his descendants have been prominent in politics, including his son John Clark, governor of Georgia from 1819 to 1823.

  3. Elijah Clarke (1742 – December 15, 1799) was an American military officer and Georgia legislator. Career. Elijah Clarke was born near Tarboro in Edgecombe County, Province of North Carolina, the son of John Clarke of Anson County, North Carolina. [1] [2] served in the Georgia Militia during the American Revolutionary War.

  4. Elijah Clark State Park is named for a frontiersman and Georgia war hero who led pioneers during the Revolutionary War. A log cabin replica of the Clark home displays furniture, utensils and tools circa 1780 and is open weekends April through November. Visitors can also view the graves of Clark and his wife, Hannah.

  5. Sep 15, 2014 · In response to Elijah Clarke’s attack on Augusta, Lord Cornwallis sent orders to Patrick Ferguson to pursue the Refugees and try to cut them off before they could cross the mountains. By the 3 rd of October, Ferguson reported failure to Cornwallis.

    • Wayne Lynch
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  7. Official website. Elijah Clark State Park is a 447-acre (1.81 km 2) Georgia state park located in Lincolnton, on the western shore of Lake Strom Thurmond. The park is named for Elijah Clarke, a frontiersman and war hero who led a force of pioneers in Georgia during the American Revolution. [1]

  8. Elijah Clark, who moved to Georgia from the Carolinas in 1774 became one of Georgia’s greatest Revolutionary War heroes. The museum is a memorial to the brave men and women who pioneered Georgia and fought for its independence in the Revolutionary War.

  9. CLARKE, ELIJAH. (c. 1733–1742–1799). Patriot militia commander, adventurer. North Carolina and Georgia. Born in Edgecombe County, North Carolina, probably of Scottish-Irish stock, Elijah Clarke moved with his family to Wilkes County (to the so-called "ceded lands"), Georgia, by 1773.

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