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On Aug. 11, 1914, the General Assembly proposed a constitutional
amendment to create Evans County from Bulloch and Tattnall counties
(Ga. Laws 1914, p. 33). In that year's general election, Georgia
voters ratified the proposed amendment on Nov. 3, 1914, which
marks the official date of Evans County's creation (although
a state historical marker on the courthouse grounds incorrectly
cites the county's creation as the day the legislative act proposing
the constitutional amendment was approved).
According to the 1914 constitutional amendment, Candler County
was created from portions of Bulloch and Tattnall counties (see
map) with the following boundaries:
"Commencing at a point known as Johnson's Old Ferry on
the Canoochee River and running thence in a southwesterly direction
along the boundary line between Liberty and Tattnall Counties
to a point known as the Ford on Canoochee Creek; thence in a
westerly direction, a straight line to Jennie; thence a westerly
direction a straight line to Roger's Crossing, at the intersection
of the Bellville and Reidsville Roads; thence in a northerly
direction in a straight line to a point on the Seaboard Air Line
Railway, half way between the towns of Bellville and Manassas,
thence northerly in the same direction in a straight line until
it intersects the line of the proposed county of Candler, thence
along said line to the Canoochee River, thence in a southerly
direction down the Canoochee River to Kennedy's Bridge, thence
in an easterly direction along the public road leading from Kennedy's
Bridge to Ada Belle on the Register and Glennville Railroad;
thence in an easterly direction along the old Dublin Road, to
the right-of-way of the old Dublin Railroad bed; thence in a
southeasterly direction down said right-of-way to Scott's Creek,
thence in the same direction down Scott's Creek to its mouth
in Lott's Creek, thence in a southerly direction down Lott's
Creek to its mouth into Canoochee River; and from thence down
Canoochee River in a southeasterly direction to the starting
point at Johnson's Ferry."
Why was Evans County created by constitutional amendment instead
of an act of the General Assembly? In 1904, Georgia voters had
approved a constitutional amendment limiting the number of counties
in the state to 145. The next year, the General Assembly created
eight new counties, bringing the total number to 145 -- the constitutional
limit. Nevertheless, there was continuing pressure to create
more counties. Beginning in 1906, lawmakers got around the 145-county
limitation by creating new counties through constitutional amendments
that were not subject to the limitation. By 1924, Georgia had
161 counties -- 16 of which had been created by constitutional
amendment. On Jan. 1, 1932, Milton and Campbell counties merged
with Fulton, leaving 159 counties. In 1945, Georgia voters ratified
a new constitution -- one which provided an absolute limit of
159 counties, with an additional provision (see
text) that no new country could be created except through
consolidation of existing counties.
Georgia's 150th county was named for former Confederate general
Clement
A. Evans (1833-1911), who had died three years earlier.
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- 1895
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- 1952
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- 1955
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- 1970a
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- 1999
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- 2001b
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