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Effingham County Historic Population Profile

The land that would form Effingham County was ceded to the English by the Creeks in the Treaty of Savannah on May 21, 1733, confirmed and expanded by agreements of 1735 and 1736. By an act of March 15, 1758, the colonial legislature created seven parishes. The area of present-day Effingham County primarily fell in St. Matthews Parish, which stretched along the Savannah River north of Savannah. With the outbreak of the American Revolution, Whig forces took control of government in Georgia. On Feb. 5, 1777, they adopted the state's first constitution -- the Constitution of 1777. Art. IV of that document transformed the existing colonial parishes into seven counties, with Indian ceded lands forming an eighth county. Effingham County consisted of all of Saint Matthew Parish and that part of Saint Philip Parish north of the Canoochee River (see map). In 1793, the legislature created Screven County from portions of Effingham and Burke counties. Land from Effingham County also was used to enlarge Bryan County (1794) and Chatham County (1850).

 

Useful Census Links:

U.S. Census Bureau

U.S. Historical Census Data Browser

Census 2000 (Georgia Tech State Data and Research Center)

Georgia 2000 Information System (University of Georgia ITOS)

Galileo Demographic & Census Data

 

Census

Pop. 

2000

 37,535

1990

25,687

1980

 18,327

1970

13,632

1960

10,144

1950

9,133

1940

 9,646

1930

 10,164

1920

9,985

1910

9,971

1900

8,334

1890

5,599

1880

5,979

1870

4,214

1860

4,755

1850

3,864

1840

3,075

1830

2,924

1820

3,018

1810

2,586

1800

2,072

1790

 2,424

Source: U.S. Census Bureau

 

© Carl Vinson Institute of Government, The University of Georgia


Go to Effingham County Historical Maps page

Go to Effingham County Courthouse page

Go to Effingham County Links page

Go to Georgia Counties section



This page has been accessed times from sites outside the Institute since Mar. 20, 2001. This page was last modified on .
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