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Profiles

  • John Willie Carter, Sr. (1906 - 1971)
    PVT, 21 BASE HQ & AB SO ARMY AIR FORCES WORLD WAR II
  • Aletha Howard-Carter (1908 - 1969)
    Omega, Georgia - Mrs Aletha Deer Carter, formerly of Sycamore [NOTE: Allendale County did not become a county until 1919], died Friday at her residence. The funeral will be at 3 pm Sunday in the Fairf...
  • Gwendolyn Yearwood (1937 - 2011)
    from Find A Grave Memorial# 77453018 She was one of the finest cooks to put on an apron this side of the stretch of Ga. 83 that now bears Trisha's name. After Jack died in 2005, Gwen co-authored two co...
  • Jack Howard Yearwood (1933 - 2005)
    Graduation: ABAC College & University of Georgia* served in the U.S. Army From Find A Grave Memorial# 11791665 Published September 22, 2005 in the Tifton Gazette newspaper:Jack Howard YearwoodMonticell...
  • Pvt. William Lawson, (CSA) (1834 - 1919)
    Reference: Find A Grave Memorial - SmartCopy : Aug 18 2021, 23:28:34 UTC * Residence : 1850 - Lowndes county, part of, Lowndes, Georgia, USA** Reference: 1850 United States Federal Census - SmartCopy :...

Please add profiles of those who were born, lived or died in Tift County, Georgia.

Official Website

The county was created on August 17, 1905, and is named for Henry Harding Tift, who founded Tifton in 1872. Tift purchased about 65,000 acres of virgin pine timberland there in the Wiregrass Region of South Georgia, and established a sawmill and a village for his workers. Tift eventually expanded into turpentine and barrel-making operations, and turned his barren timberlands into farms for cotton, corn, livestock, fruit, tobacco, pecans and sweet potatoes. When the Georgia Southern and Florida Railway intersected the Brunswick and Western Railroad near Tift's mill in 1888, the settlement was connected to Atlanta and became a boom town. It was incorporated as Tifton by the Georgia Legislature in 1890.

Tift provided employment and financial growth opportunities for his flourishing market center by founding the Tifton Cotton Mill, the Bank of Tifton, and other types of businesses in which he had a leading interest. These included fruit growing, groceries and general merchandise, cottonseed oil, lumber, brick and stone, and several railroads, all essential for the development of a region. Tift also established a model farm north of town and donated a large parcel of acreage for an agricultural experiment station; these enterprises led eventually to the development of Abraham Baldwin College and the Coastal Plain Experiment Station in Tifton.

Tift's civic commitment was most evident in his donation of lands for churches (Methodist, Baptist, and Episcopal) and Fulwood Park, and in his decades of service as a city councilman and mayor. Through a variety of business and civic undertakings, Tift contributed significantly to the economic and social development of south central Georgia. Though a captain of industry, agriculture, and finance, he is best remembered for his civic service and generosity.

Adjacent Counties

Cities & Communities

  • Brookfield
  • Chula
  • Omega
  • Phillipsburg
  • Tifton (County Seat)
  • Ty Ty
  • Unionville

Links

Wikipedia