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CITY
HISTORY - HISTORIC FIGURES -
BATTLE OF JONESBORO -
BATTLE MAPS
The history of Jonesboro as a settlement goes back to the early days of
the white man's arrival in upper middle Georgia. Jonesboro was
originally called Leaksville, and records show that as early as 1823,
the State of Georgia granted a charter for the Leaksville Academy, in
what was then Fayette County.
The region comprising Clayton County was first
settled by the white man in 1821, as a result of the Treaty of Indian
Springs, in which the Creek Indians ceded a vast portion of their domain
to the State of Georgia. Counties were promptly laid off, and settlers
immediately began to arrive from older parts of Georgia and the Southern
coastal states. Clayton County was created in 1858 from portions of
Henry and Fayette, and was named for Augustin S. Clayton, a
distinguished judge of Western Circuit of Georgia. Jonesboro was
designated the County Seat.
In 1825, the Flint River Baptist Church was
constituted and erected on a hill above Hynds Spring, near the present
Jonesboro Middle School. From these origins, Leaksville developed as a
small rural community.
In 1836, there began a series of events which would
have a great influence on the growth and prosperity of this country
village, for in that year, the Monroe Railroad and Banking Company was
organized in Macon, Georgia. A course was surveyed from Macon to a point
just below the Chattahoochee River, where the city of Atlanta soon grew
up, and construction of the railroad was begun. The tracks reached
Leaksville in 1843, but a financial depression which began in that year
caused a delay in construction, and resulted in the bankruptcy of the
Monroe Railroad in 1844. The following year marked the organization of
the Macon and Western Railroad Company. In 1846, the railroad was
completed to Atlanta and regular rail service was established between
there and Macon.
One of the civil engineers who planned this
portion of the railroad was Colonel Samuel Goode Jones. Apparently he
took an interest in the future growth of Leaksville, and applied his
engineering skills to the laying out of new streets in the village.
Numbers were applied to sections and lots. About 1845, the local
citizens expressed their gratitude by renaming the village Jonesboro,
after Colonel Jones. New business came into the town and there was a
steady period of growth until the outbreak of war in 1861.
Jonesboro was incorporated as a town in 1859,
by which time it was the center of a prosperous community. In 1860, its
assets included several substantial brick business houses, a new Baptist
Church representing the Classical style of architecture, and a brick
courthouse which was then under construction. In November, 1860 the
Clayton County Superior Court made the following observations: "We
can state with pleasure the society in Jonesboro and its vicinity are
much improving. This to a considerable extent is attributed to a
rigorous enforcement of our incorporation laws; we are proud also to say
that we have one of the most flourishing High Schools in the State of
Georgia under the guidance of our efficient teachers whose services have
been procured for the next year."
At this time, Jonesboro contained within its
corporate limits two churches, the Baptist and the Methodist;
Philadelphia Presbyterian Church had been erected several miles north of
Jonesboro in 1825, and served the town as well as the countryside.
Members of other denominations attended services in Atlanta, which in
1869, was twenty miles away.
Because of the railroad, Jonesboro was a
commercial center serving Fayette and Henry Counties as well as Clayton.
On market days, its streets and loading docks were the scene of much
activity, and during autumn, countless bales of cotton lined the
railroad near the depot waiting shipment to other points. Aside from its
prosperous business activity, Jonesboro in 1860 boasted several private
residences which were large and imposing. Surrounding the town were the
farms and plantations which formed the backbone of local economy.
When the War Between the States began in 1861,
Clayton County met the severe demands of the times. Local cavalry and
infantry units were organized, and citizen-soldiers drilled for war
behind the courthouse in Jonesboro, before departing for Virginia
battlefields. In 1864, the war was brought home. Throughout the spring
and summer of that year, bitter battles were fought in a line from
Chattanooga to Atlanta. The climax, after months of righting, thousands
of deaths and untold destruction of property, was reached during the two
days of August 31st and September 1st, 1864.
The Battle of Jonesboro was the most crucial
engagement of the Georgia Campaign, and therefore, one of the most
important battles of the entire war, for it directly resulted in the
fall of Atlanta. Atlanta had become the Confederacy's most important
center of munitions and war supplies, and its capture was the objective
of the campaign. Primarily through a tragedy of errors on the part of
the Confederate high command, the Battle of Jonesboro was lost, and as
its final shots were being exchanged, Atlanta was evacuated.
After the war's end in 1865, Jonesboro began
the task of rebuilding. The court house, depot, and other buildings had
been destroyed during the war, and the town bore many scars of battle.
The so-called "Reconstruction Era" did much to hinder local
progress, and the decade following the war was marked by much turmoil
and confusion. Nevertheless, Jonesboro emerged from the war with
indications of returning prosperity, and the decade of the 1880's saw
this realized in an increasingly stabilized business and agricultural
economy.
The importance of education had always been
recognized by Jonesboro's citizens, and from the time of the first local
academy in 1823, Jonesboro had always made provisions for the schooling
of its youth. During the war, the progress of civilization had been
severely disrupted, but immediately after the war, classes at the
academy were resumed. Soon it became apparent that educational
opportunities should be expanded in Jonesboro. In 1880, a group of the
town's leading citizens organized as trustees, and founded Middle
Georgia College. The
institution played a vital role in the community for nearly thirty
years, and from it emerged Jonesboro High School. Middle Georgia College
was a private school, teaching young people of all ages. The Collegiate
Division was similar to the junior colleges of today and placed great
emphasis upon proper conduct and gentle manners as well as upon
scholastic excellence. Pupils in the Collegiate Division were drawn not
only from Jonesboro, but from other communities across the state as
well. After the turn of the present century, an effort was made to
establish the Middle Georgia Military Academy as a branch of the
college, but after a few years, this was given up.
By the second decade of the present century,
Jonesboro had begun to suffer a decline similar to that experienced by
nearly all the smaller towns surrounding Atlanta. The improvement of
transportation facilities, popularity of the automobile, and the loss of
young people to larger cities combined to take a great toll on the town
and its development. Then came the depression of the 1920's and this had
as devastating an effect upon Jonesboro as upon Georgia and the South.
Recent years have brought a new prosperity, and Jonesboro is now
distinguished by a strong spirit of new growth.
Jonesboro received international attention in
1936, with the publication of Margaret Mitchell's novel, Gone with The Wind.
Numerous scenes of this book were set in Clayton County. The characters
and their homes were products of the author's imagination, and only
their inspirational prototypes may be found in the county today.
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