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TDGH - August 17

This Day in Georgia History

Compiled by

Ed Jackson and Charles Pou
Carl Vinson Institute of Government
The University of Georgia

 

August 17

1842 Julia Carlisle, Atlanta's first baby, was born. Her parents -- Willis and Sarah Carlisle -- moved to Terminus from Marietta in June 1842, becoming one of the first families to settle in the small railroad town. Sarah was expecting, and when it came time for the birth, they traveled to her parents' home in Marietta (as there were no doctors in Terminus). Three weeks after the birth of Julia, the Carlisles returned home. Though Julia was not actually born in the future site of Atlanta, she can claim to be its first baby.

1860 The Atlanta City Council passed an ordinance prohibiting residents from throwing water, dirt, and trash from their windows and doors.

1903 Gov. Joseph Terrell signed an act creating the State Board of Health. The board had broad responsibility in the area of health, but it had a special responsibility to prevent the spread of contagious diseases and infections through quarantines and other measures.

1903 The Georgia General Assembly adopted a joint resolution condemning the practice of whipping women inmates in state prisons.

1905 Gov. Joseph Terrell signed acts creating:

  • Crisp County (named for Georgia judge and speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives [1891-1893] Charles F. Crisp) from portions of Dooly County;
  • Grady County (named for former Atlanta Constitution editor Henry Grady) from portions of Thomas and Decatur counties;
  • Jenkins County (named for former governor Charles Jenkins) from portions of Burke, Emanuel, Bulloch, and Screven counties; and
  • Tift County (early Albany, Ga. pioneer and congressman Nelson Tift) from portions of Berrien, Irwin, and Worth counties.

The four new counties respectively were Georgia's 138th, 139th, 140th, and 141st.

1908 Gov. Hoke Smith signed an act prohibiting corporations doing business in Georgia, and their officers, from making contributing any corporate funds -- directly or indirectly -- to any campaign or for any other political purpose.

1908 The Georgia General Assembly adopted a joint resolution officially designating the University of Georgia's technological branch in Atlanta as the State School of Technology.

1915 Through the early morning hours, the lynch mob who had seized Leo Frank from Georgia State Prison in Milledgeville drove by back roads towards Marietta. Sometime early on the morning of the 17th, they reached the outskirts of Marietta. Here, at Frey's grove near Mary Phagan's girlhood home, the gang decided to hang Frank. Asserting his innocence to the very end, Frank's only request was that his wedding ring be returned to his wife (which it was several days later). When word of the lynching spread, crowds gathered to see the body hanging from a tree. Photographs were taken, one of which later became a souvenir postcard. A few in the crowd threatened, and even began to inflict, violence to Frank's body, before former judge Newt Morris convinced them to stop. Frank's body was rushed to an undertaker in Atlanta, with a line of vehicles trailing behind. Although the undertaker tried to keep the body concealed, a large crowd soon gathered demanding to see it. After a rock was thrown through a window, officials agreed to let the public view Frank's body. Under police supervision, thousands of curious Atlanta-area residents filed by single file to view Frank's body -- including the city detective who had arrested Frank. That night Frank's body was quickly embalmed and placed on a train for New York, where the burial services were held in Brooklyn's Mount Carmel Cemetary. As a footnote to the lynching, no one was ever prosecuted for the murder of Leo Frank.

1920 Gov. Hugh Dorsey signed into law Georgia's first Workmen's Compensation Act providing benefits to workers injured or killed in the course of their employment.

1920 Gov. Hugh Dorsey signed a proposed constitutional amendment creating Lamar County from portions of Monroe and Pike counties. The county was named for former congressman, U.S. senator, U.S. Secretary of the Interior, and justice of the U.S. Supreme Court Lucius Quintus Cincinnatus Lamar. Because the maximum number of counties allowed by the state constitution--145--had already been exceeded, creation of any additional counties required a constitutional amendment.The amendment was ratified by state voters on Nov. 2, 1920, making Lamar Georgia's 160th county.

1973 Famed Georgia poet Conrad Aiken died in Savannah. [See August 5, 1889 entry for biographical information.]

1993 Ted Turner expanded his Turner Broadcasting empire with the purchase of New Line Cinema and Castle Rock Entertainment.

1997 St. Simons Island's Davis Love III won the 79th PGA Golf Tournament, finishing eleven strokes under par at this year's championship at Winged Foot Golf Club at Mamaroneck, New York. Winning the 1997 PGA marked Love's first major tournament victory.

Georgia towns and cities incorporated by acts approved on August 17:

1903 Barwick (Brooks and Thomas counties), Isabella (Worth County), Metter (Bulloch County), and Sand Hill (Carroll County)

1908 Between (Walton County), Blairsville (Union County), Cedar Grove (Laurens County), Chamblee (DeKalb County), Dixie (Brooks County), Gratis (Walton County), Primrose (Meriwether County), Rockledge (Laurens County), Union City (Campbell, now Fulton County), Vidette (Burke County), Williamson (Pike County), Williamsville (Walton County), and Woodbine (Camden County)

1909 Arcade (Jackson County) and Clayton (Rabun County)

1912 Pine Park (Grady County)

1925 Raleigh (Meriwether County)

Other acts affecting Georgia towns and cities approved on Aug. 17:

1907 Charters of Battle Hill (Fulton County), Culverton (Hancock County), and Edgewood (DeKalb County) repealed

1912 Charter of Herod (Terrell County) repealed contingent upon referendum

 

In Their Own Words on This Day. . .

1775 Georgia governor James Wright wrote once again to Lord Dartmouth, British secretary of state for the colonies, about the independence movement in Georgia:

"I am now again constrained to write Your Lordship a farther [sic] disagreeable account of the proceedings of the [Provincial] Congress and [Sons of] Liberty People here. The Congress determined that no militia officers should remain but such as signed the [Articles of] Association and directed that the Captains of the militia should order musters throughout the province and that any of the officers that might refuse to sign the Association should not be suffered to act any longer but that the people should elect others in their place. Thus Your Lordship sees how they are going on here, and the scheme and attempt to wrest the command of the militia out of my hands, and it is said that the Committee of Safety are to give commissions to the people who are to chose officers in the room of those who refuse to sign the Association.

"My Lord, I mentioned in my last some means used to compel people to sign the Association and those, with tarring and feathering and the punishment of ordering any that refuse to quit their habitations on a few days' notice, are executed without any hesitation. One Mr. Brown, a young gentleman who appeared a little active in opposing the Liberty people, has been most cruelly treated in the town of Augusta. He, having threatened to get a party and take satisfaction, the offenders raised a number of men in the country and wrote to Savannah to the Council of Safety for assistance, and a party of the grenadier company and some of the light infantry company, who signed the Association, set out from hence to Augusta the 9th instant without any application to or authority from me, but I am well informed were ordered to do so by the Council of Safety and it's said they, by persuasions and threats, prevailed on a great number to joint them as they went through the country and what outrages of acts of violence they may commit before they return it's difficult to say, though I am just informed Mr. Brown has retired into Carolina. My Lord, are these things to be suffered in a British government?"

Source: Mills Lane (ed.), Georgia: History written by Those who lived It (Savannah: Beehive Press, 1995), pp. 34-35.

1868 In a letter to Bishop Bahnson, school teacher Elizabeth Sterchi did not portray Atlanta in a flattering light:

"Atlanta is more or less round, and about three miles in diameter. Taking the thickness of 3/4 of a mile in circle all around, this circle, or ribbon if you will, is crowded with poor people piled the one upon the other, perfect heathen in a civilized country, with the most savage tastes, fighting, murdering, stealing, quarreling, begging, swearing, drinking, and possessing the most abject ideas of life -- they are beasts with a soul. They know not how exactly how to manage them. . . .

"They go to a certain Rev. Speleman, Yanky [sic] nutmeg character who marries them whether they elope or not, and causes with his elastic-rubber conscience a perfect misery. . . .

"We have a lottery here which helps also to do evil; . . . .

"The Germans have a beer-garden, where there is dancing every week, sometimes every night -- it seems to me that the devil has taken hold of the place; The Negroes also have dancing and drinking. It is every day worse and worse. Gambling and houses of infamy are in the face of the new large brick buildings in the main streets, and nobody is ashamed of it."

Source: Franklin M. Garrett, Atlanta and Environs: A Chronicle of Its People and Events (Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1954), p. 792.

1879 Gertrude Thomas's family misfortunes continued well after Reconstruction, and the toll it took on her family life became more difficult. Though she tried to keep these despondent feelings from her journal, sometimes it was impossible, as this entry indicates:

"My head aches and so does my face, and so does my heart. It is not the cook's sickness or my own, that is a small matter, but all my life I have tried to make the best of things, hide from outside persons, even from you my Journal anything which would not reflect credit upon my family. Either I have grown more careless or Mr. Thomas more reckless for alas the worst state of things prevail. He has taken his name from the church book and profanes God's name constantly- There are times when my own faith fails. I do not know in whom to trust, to what to pray. I cannot write of this, indeed I ought not. I could stand it if it was confined to one room, only to my hearing but alas when children and servants prove no restraint! . . ."

Source: Virginia Ingraham Burr (ed.), The Secret Eye: The Journal of Ella Gertrude Clanton Thomas, 1848-1889 (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1990), p. 385.

1915 Former judge Newt Morris arrived at the site of Leo Frank's lynching outside of Marietta to find a frenzied crowd threatening to do even more violence to Frank's lifeless body. Morris' plea managed to calm the crowd:

"Whoever did this thing [lynching of Frank] left nothing more for us to do. Little Mary Phagan is vindicated. Her foul murder is avenged. Now I ask you, I appeal to you, as citizens of Cobb County, in the good name of our county, not to do more. I appeal to you let the undertaker take it."

Source: Atlanta Journal, Aug. 17, 1915.


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© Carl Vinson Institute of Government, The University of Georgia


If you have a date related to Georgia history or people that ought to be included, or if know of entries that should be corrected, send a note to Ed Jackson or Charles Pou.


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