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  2. Jul 21, 2010 · In 1788, Georgia became the first southern state to ratify the U.S. Constitution.

    • Prehistory and European Exploration
    • Colonial and Revolutionary Georgia
    • Civil War and Reconstruction
    • The “New South” and Populism
    • Jim Crow
    • The Great Depression and World War II
    • The Civil Rights Era and Sunbelt Georgia
    • Developments in The Twenty-First Century

    The human history of Georgia begins well before the founding of the colony, with Native American cultures that date back to the Paleoindian Period at the end of the Ice Age, nearly 13,000 years ago. The Clovis culture, identified by its unique projectile points, is the earliest documented group to have lived in present-day Georgia. The more permane...

    Georgia’s colonial experience was very different from that of the other British colonies in North America. Established in 1732, with settlement in Savannah in 1733, Georgia was the last of the thirteen colonies to be founded. Its formation came a half-century after the twelfth British colony, Pennsylvania, was chartered (in 1681) and seventy years ...

    By 1860 the “Empire State of the South,” as an increasingly industrialized Georgia had come to be known, was the second-largest state in area east of the Mississippi River. (Only Virginia was larger, until its northwestern counties withdrew to form the separate state of West Virginia in 1863.) As both an Atlantic seaboard state and a Deep South sta...

    The Redemption era in Georgia marked a return to power of several antebellum and wartime leaders, most notably the group known as the “Bourbon Triumvirate,” consisting of former Confederate governor Joseph E. Brown and former Confederate generals John B. Gordon and Alfred H. Colquitt. These three politicians maintained power within Georgia as gover...

    The demise of the Populists had consequences in Georgia (and across the South) that extended beyond their failure as a third party. In the wake of Populism’s unsuccessful efforts to challenge the established racial hierarchy, reactionary heirs of the Bourbon Triumvirate worked to curtail the political power of Black voters, as well as to formalize ...

    Meanwhile, for all the talk of progress and prosperity emanating from Atlanta and other cities, conditions in the countryside went from bad to worse. The boll weevilbecame a major problem upon its introduction to the state in 1915 and led to a precipitous drop in cotton production, with the number of bales produced in 1923 only about a fourth of th...

    As the civil rights era of the 1950s and 1960s unfolded, the interests, aims, and ambitions of Atlanta’s political and economic leaders diverged dramatically in many ways from those that prevailed in the state at large. As the city’s population surged, Atlanta voters chafed under the state’s county unit system, which gave, for example, three rural ...

    In state politics white support for Democrats eroded steadily in the twenty-first century as Republicans rode their presidential momentum to victories further down the ticket. In 2003 Sonny Perduebecame the first Republican governor since Reconstruction, and he easily won reelection in 2006. By 2009 the Republican Party controlled both houses of th...

  3. The end of the war saw a new wave of migration to the state, particularly from the frontiers of Virginia and the Carolinas. George Mathews, soon to be governor of Georgia, was instrumental in this migration. [23] Georgia ratified the U.S. Constitution on January 2, 1788.

  4. Aug 12, 2002 · On January 2, 1788, Georgia became the fourth state to ratify the U.S. Constitution. In November of that year, to assure conformity with the federal document, Georgia revised the Constitution of 1777 through a constitutional convention.

  5. Jan 2, 2017 · 01/01/2017 11:28 PM EST. Georgia voted on this day in 1788 to ratify the recently drafted U.S. Constitution, becoming the fourth state to enter the Union. It was the first Southern state to...

  6. georgian.how › guides › how-georgia-became-a-stateHow Georgia Became a State

    Mar 9, 2023 · As the population of the area grew, so did the desire to become a state, and in 1788, Georgia was officially admitted to the Union as the fourth state. Pre-State History Early Native American settlements. The first inhabitants of what is now known as the state of Georgia were Native American tribes, including the Creek, Cherokee, and Seminole.

  7. Nov 9, 2009 · On January 2, 1788, Georgia became the fourth U.S. state when it ratified the U.S. Constitution.

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