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Cherokee County, Georgia, USA

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Profiles

  • Capt. Charles Flournoy Linthicum, (CSA) (1838 - 1864)
    Confederate Army Officer. A farmer in Cherokee County, Georgia before the Civil War, he enlisted in the Cherokee Brown Rangers in 1861. Elected Captain in the 14th Georgia Infantry Regiment in 1861, h...
  • Sgt. James L. Hughes, (CSA) (1823 - 1885)
    (Information from Lynda Gibbs)The Cherokee Advance 6 Feb 1885 p 3 Died.-James Hughes died at his home, about 5 miles north of Canton, on the morning of the 2nd inst., with congestion of the brain, in t...
  • Pvt. Joseph Christian Bates, (CSA) (1841 - 1925)
    Joseph Christian Bates married Martha Herrington "Bertha" Wheeler on 9-18-1860 in Cherokee Co. Ga.. They had 8 known children: William, D.Z., E.C., Franklin M., Alvarilla Bates Tatum, J. Kimsey Bates, ...
  • Sgt. Samuel Homer McCollum, (CSA) (1846 - 1916)
    FIRST WIFE OF SAMUEL HOMER MCCOLLUM WAS NANCY FARMER. SAMUEL AND NANCY 1864. Samuel must have stayed married to Nancy Farmer only a short time.**********************************************************...
  • 1st Lieutenant (CSA), William Jackson Sams (1832 - 1862)
    Sams, William J., 1st Lieutenant, Co.E, 27th Regiment; Georgia Volunteer Army of Tenn,C.S.A., Campbell and Fayette Counties, Georgia Bethsaida Rifle Guards: Aug. 9,1861. Died at Battle of Cedar Mountai...

Please add profiles for those who were born, lived or died in Cherokee County, Georgia

Cherokee County was created by an act of the Georgia General Assembly on December 26, 1831, covering a vast area northwest of the Chattahoochee River and Chestatee River (except for Carroll County). It was named after the Cherokee people who lived in the area at that time.

The discovery of gold in local streams accelerated the push of settlers to expel the Cherokee from their land.

In 1832, the State of Georgia implemented the Cherokee Land Lottery, which gave deeds of land that had previously belonged to the Cherokee people to white male citizens. The forcible removal of the Cherokee people to Indian Territory west of the Mississippi River began during this year.

In the 1890s, The Atlanta & Knoxville Railroad (later renamed the Marietta & North Georgia Railroad when it could not be completed to Knoxville) built a branch line through the middle of the county. When this line was bought by the Louisville & Nashville Railroad in the following decade, the L&N Railroad built stations at Woodstock and Holly Springs.

Cherokee County began to see rapid population growth following the construction of Interstate 575, the first phase of which opened in 1979. The freeway bisects the county and serves as its primary thoroughfare, running from Kennesaw north through Woodstock, Holly Springs, Canton, and Ball Ground. Today, the county is most densely populated in its southern areas, which are closest to the City of Atlanta.

Wikipedia

Roadside Georgia