Marietta and Cobb County in 1849

Step back in time find out what it was like to live in Marietta, Georgia in 1849. This information about the City of Marietta and Cobb County was published 12 years before the Civil War. When this was written, the population of Cobb County was more than 4 times larger than the population of Atlanta, and just two years prior to the publication of this book, Atlanta was known as the City of Marthasville.

(Please visit our About Marietta page if you are looking for more current statistics)


Excerpts from:
Statistics
of the
State of Georgia
Published by George White in 1849

COBB.

BOUNDARIES. – This county is bounded north by Cherokee and Cass, east by Forsyth and De Kalb, south by Campbell and a small portion of De Kalb, and west by Paulding.

Laid out from Cherokee, and organized in 1832.

RIVERS, CREEKS
The Chattahoochee is the main stream. The creeks are Sweet Water, Powder Spring, Pumpkin Vine, Nickajack, Olleys, Noses, Proctors, Allatoona, Vickery, Rotten Wood, Noonday, Reubs, Wylleo, Soap, and Mud.

POST OFFICES
Marietta, Powder Springs, Acworth, Golgotha, High Bridge, Lebanon, Mill Grove, and Roswell.

POPULATION, TAXES, REPRESENTATION
The population is increasing. The census of 1845 gave to Cobb 10,518 inhabitants, of which 1,474 were slaves. Amount of State tax for 1848, 82,691 61. Sends two representatives to the Legislature.

TOWNS
Marietta is the seat of justice, and-one among the most pleasant towns in Cherokee Georgia. It is situated on the highest-point between the Atlantic ocean and Tennessee river, being 1132 feet above the level of the former. It was incorporated and made the county seat in 1814. Distance from Milledgeville 113 miles northwest, from Augusta 190 miles, from Atlanta 20 by the railroad, from Dalton 80, from Cumming 35, from Canton 22, The first house was built by James Anderson, Esq.

There are four churches—Episcopal, Methodist, Presbyterian, and Baptist; several schools, hotels, stores, &c. Population, 1,500. Does considerable business, being the market for Cobb, Cherokee, part of Lumpkin, Forsyth, Gilmer, Paulding, and Carroll counties.

The town is rapidly improving. Since the 1st of May, 1848, more than 60 houses have been built. Many persons from the low country of Georgia and South Carolina have recently re-moved here. The climate arid water will compare with any in the world. Provisions are cheap. Marietta, from the advantages it possesses in point of situation, accessibility, climate, and water, is destined to be one among the most attractive places in our State.

Acworth is a small village on the Western and Atlantic Railroad, twelve miles. N. W. of Marietta, in the midst of a thickly settled country. Population about 50.

Powder Springs, twelve miles S. W. of Marietta, on the road to Villa Rica, in Carroll, has two churches, Methodist and Baptist, and one school. Population 200.

Roswell, a pretty village, so called from Roswell King, Esq., situated 13 miles from Marietta and one mile from the Chattahoochee. Settled by persons chiefly from the seaboard of Georgia and South Carolina, and is the seat of an extensive cotton factory, it has one store, one church, one male and female academy, &c.

FACE OF THE COUNTRY, NATURE OF THE SOIL, VALUE OF LAND.
The surface of the country is broken. The lands’upon the Chattahoochee are rich, and will produce 800 pounds of cotton per acre, 8 barrels of corn, and from 20 to 30 bushels of wheat.

The creek bottoms are also fertile, and well adapted to cotton, wheat, and corn.

The uplands are of a mulatto and gray colour, will produce 600 pounds of cotton per acre, 5 barrels of corn, and about 15 bushels of wheat.

Best Chattahoochee lands are worth $20 per acre ; creek bottoms, $8 ; uplands, from $1 to $8 per acre.

AVERAGE PRODUCT PER ACRE
Corn 5 barrels, wheat 6 bushels, rye 5 bushels, cotton 500 pounds.

MARKETS
Marietta, Macon, and Augusta.

MANUFACTURES, MILLS, DISTILLERIES
Roswell factory, at Roswell, on Vickery’s creek, incorporated in 1840. Capital $80,000.

Spindles
3,500
Looms
40
Operatives, nearly all whites
150
Bales of cotton used per day
5
Yards of shirting made per day
1,100
Osnaburgs
1,500
Bundles of yarn made per week
1,200
Hours of work per day
11

The water-power fine. Wages of operatives dependent upon their industry. The temperance principle strictly enforced. Provision made for the instruction of thè children. Goods manufactured have a high character, and are sent to Tennessee, Alabama, and to various parts of Georgia.

Nickajack factory, on Nickajack creek.

At Lebanon, the Roswell factory have an extensive merchant mill, capable of making from 1 to 300 barrels of flour per day. An extensive tannery, the property of Colonel Dunwoody, is located at this place. The leather made here is pronounced equal to any in the United States.

Grist-mills 21, saw-mills 21, besides several merchant mills on Soap creek. Seven miles east of Marietta is an extensive distillery, at, which are made 120 gallons of whiskey per day.

MOUNTAINS
Kenesaw Mountain, 2.5 miles from Marietta, is 1828 feet above the level of the ocean; so called from an Indian chief who was accidentally shot by a white man, whilst on a hunting excursion. The view from the top of the mountain is beautiful. Lost Mountain, Brushy Mountain, and Sweat Mountain, are considerable elevations.

MINERAL, SPRINGS
The Powder springs have acquired some celebrity, and will, in the course of time, attract the notice of persons seeking health and recreation. They are highly impregnated with sulphur and magnesia, and are efficacious in the cure of diseases, particularly those of a cutaneous character and dyspepsia.

MINERALS
Gold has been found on Proctor’s creek, in the northern part of the county. At Allatoona, on Powder Spring creek, on Sweet Water creek, near Kenesaw mountain, and in Marietta. Granite is abundant. Silver, iron, lead, copper, talc, soap-stone, plumbago, quartz, &c.

ROADS
The roads are as good as the nature of the country will allow. The principal road crosses the Chattahoochee at the Standing Peach-tree, passes through Marietta and Allatoona to Cassville. Another main road passes through Sand Town in Campbell county to Allatoona, and is known as the Alabama road. Another road much travelled, is the one which crosses the Chattahoochee river at McAfee’s bridge, and passes near Roswell to Vann’s valley, and North Alabama.

RELIGIOUS SECTS
The religious sects are Baptists, Missionary and Anti-Missionary, Presbyterians, Methodists, Episcopalians, and a few Universalists. There are about 20 churches in the county, and probably as many ministers.

EDUCATION
There are many respectable schools in various sections of the county, particularly at Marietta and Roswell.

CHARACTER OF THE PEOPLE
Considering the recent settlement of the county, the people generally may be said to be orderly and temperate. On public occasions irregularities are often committed, but upon the whole the population of Cobb will compare favourably with many of the older counties of the State. The tone of morals is improving every day.

AMUSEMENTS
These chiefly consist in hunting, dancing and visiting. Parties occasionally go to the Powder Springs, and the Kenesaw mountain. Soirées are quite common in Marietta.

CLIMATE
The climate, though variable, is as healthy as any portion of the United States. Exposure to the cold and rain is hardly ever attended by serious consequences. No case of consumption has ever occurred in the county. The summer diseases are bowel complaints, &c. The winter diseases are pleurisy and pneumonia.

INSTANCES OF LONGEVITY
Mr. Fleming is now living, over 94 years of age. Mr. J. Collins, a revolutionary soldier, over 88. Mrs. Henry is over 80. Mrs. Dougherty is 85. Mr. Smith is 80. Mr. Edwards died a few months ago, aged 90.

EARLY SETTLERS
Among the early settlers were the following:
Mr. James Anderson, Mr. Simpson, Mr. Massey, William Crane, William Morris, Tho. Whitehead, J. D. Mullins, James Mohon,. W. P. Maloney, James Powere, Edward Mays, Bradley Smith, and J. Collins:

INDIAN TOWNS
Sweet Water Town, once inhabited by Cherokees, is on Sweet Water creek, 14-miles north of Marietta. Kenesaw Town, on Noonday creek, five miles northwest of Marietta. Buffalo Fish Town, 16 miles southwest of Marietta.

ANTIQUITIES
On Mud creek there are the remains of an ancient fortification, and on the Chattahoochee several small mounds.

NAME
John Cobb emigrated from Virginia in 17—, and settled in Columbia county, where his son Thomas W. Cobb was born, in honour of whom this county was named. For some time he went to school to Dr. Waddel near Applington, and made considerable proficiency in the languages. He afterwards studied law in the office of the Hon. Wm. H. Crawford, and settled in Lexington. In a short period he attained to a degree of eminence in his profession which probably has been seldom surpassed by any lawyer in Georgia. He was elected to Congress in 1816, and in 1823, and in 1824 was elected senator, which office he resigned in 1828, and became a judge of the Superior Court for the Ocmulgee circuit. He died in 1830 at Greenesborough, where he had removed from Lexington. Mr. Cobb was deeply versed in the knowledge of the law, eloquent and argumentative. In his intercourse with men, he was sprightly and entertaining. He held religion in -the highest veneration, and his house was open to the ministers of the gospel.
Source: Google book search.

Bonus: A couple more scanned images from the book regarding nearby Atlanta and Stone Mountain.


Haunted Places in Marietta, GA: The Kennesaw House

Marietta, Georgia, like most Southern towns, has its share of ghost stories, many of which I documented in my book, Haunted Marietta. But of all the alleged haunted places in Marietta, perhaps the most fascinating is the Kennesaw House. Located next to the railroad tracks and adjacent to the Marietta Welcome Center, the very location of the house makes it easy to picture bygone times. History is in the very air, and it does not seem unlikely that shades from the past would linger there and all around the square.

Now the home of the Marietta Museum of History, The Kennesaw House was originally built in the 1840′s as a cotton warehouse, but was then turned into a restaurant, to serve the passengers from the railroad depot next door. In 1855, the Fletchers bought the building and turned it into an inn. Its location right next to the railroad made it a natural home for Union soldiers and spies during the War Between the States, especially since Mr. Fletcher was an alleged Union sympathizer.

It was from the Kennesaw House, then known as the Fletcher House, that James Andrews and his group of spies plotted their attempt to steal the train, the General, which became the basis for such films as “The Great Locomotive Chase” in later years. In 1864, the hotel was taken over by the Union army, and Sherman briefly used it as his headquarters.

Most of the ghostly activity that has been widely reported in the Kennesaw House seems to stem from the use of the building as a makeshift hospital and morgue during the war. Television documentaries from PBS, CNN, and The History Channel have told the story of visitors who descended to the basement in the elevator, only to be greeted by the gruesome site of a crowded hospital room, men screaming in agony, blood everywhere, as weary surgeons operated and removed limbs with little or no anesthesia. Other people have seen an apparition of what appears to be a Civil War-era surgeon, dressed in uniform, who apparently likes to ride the elevator.

Another ghostly figure that has been reportedly seen, especially by children, in the Kennesaw House, is a lady in an old-fashioned dress with pink trim. Some children have identified her as the lady in a portrait in the house, Mrs. Fletcher, the wife of the second original owner.

Some years ago, the paranormal investigation group to which I belong, Ghost Hounds, investigated the house and caught what appears to be a ghostly figure of a woman on film. Other people have caught anomalies in photos, as well. The museum director, Dan Cox, has also captured several ghostly images in photos taken from the security cameras at the museum.

Whether you encounter ghosts or not, Kennesaw House is a handsome building which houses an excellent museum that is well worth your visit. The museum is open from 10 AM until 4 PM Monday-Saturday. It is located just off Marietta Square next to the railroad tracks.

About Rhetta Akamatsu
Rhetta Akamatsu is a long-time resident of Marietta and the author of Haunted Marietta, which is available at local bookstores and online at Amazon and all other major bookstores. She also writes about the Atlanta area for examiner.com as the Atlanta Historic Places Examiner.

 

Free Acting Class at Theatre in the Square


On Saturday, May 7, 2011, Theatre in the Square will open the doors to all youth grades 1-12 who have ever thought they have what it takes to be on stage for a FREE acting class. The free one-hour class is for youth grades 1-5 at 10 a.m. and for grades 6 -12 at 11:30 a.m. Classes will take place on the Alley Stage. Anyone who attends the free class can have the $25 application fee waived for the summer camp by registering after the free class. Education Director Susan Reid will be on site to facilitate any questions. Registration is free, but required by 12 noon on Thursday, May 4, 2011. To register, call Susan Reid at 770-422-8369 x14 or send email to susan@theatreinthesquare.com.

Camp for grades 1-5 will take place July 5 – 15 from 9 a.m. to 12 noon. In the Production Explosion, Jr. Camp, our youngest students will put on a production of a classic story. Each day, students will gain valuable experience as they spend time rehearsing, crafting costumes, and helping with set pieces. The 1-2 graders will perform The Little Red Hen and the 3-5 graders will perform James and the Giant Peach.

Camps for grades 6-8 will take place June 20 – July 1 from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. In our T-Square Middle School Company Camp, we introduce a wide variety of training techniques including acting, singing, dancing and improvisation.

Camps for high school students will take place July 18 – 29 from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. T-Square High School Company Camp includes two-weeks of intense training that combines improvisation, dancing, singing and acting on stage.

All classes will take place at Theatre in the Square. Friends and family are invited to see a final performance that’s a little bit GLEE and a whole lot of FUN. A $100 non-refundable deposit is required for registration.

For more information or to register for classes, call Susan Reid at 770-422-8369 or e-mail her at susan@theatreinthesquare.com. Theatre in the Square is located off of historic Marietta Square at 11 Whitlock Ave.

Brew With A View

Brew with a view!

The Strand’s popular Brew with a View – a rooftop terrace bar with one of the best views in Marietta – has become the talk of the town, and it’s back many Friday and Saturday nights in 2011. At the popular Brew with a View, meet with friends and enjoy a beverage and an incredible view of Glover Park and Kennesaw Mountain from the Cobb Terrace on The Strand’s rooftop.

Admission:
21 and over only please. Beer, wine, and mixed drinks are available for patrons’ enjoyment. Cash and credit accepted at the bar. There is no cover charge.

Hours:
6pm-10pm

2011 Schedule:
*Dates subject to change. Please call the box office at (770) 293-0080 to verify.

8/05 – Brew with a View (5-10 PM); Art Walk feat. Linda Flournoy (6-9 PM)(Featuring music by Hurricane Wilson)
8/12 – Brew with a View
8/13 – Brew with a View (Featuring music by The Head)
8/19 – Brew with a View (Featuring music by Bret Reeves) 8/20 – Brew with a View
8/26 – Brew with a View & Glover Park Concert

*Dates subject to change. Please call the box office at (770) 293-0080 to verify.

Address:
Rooftop of The Strand Theatre
117 North Park Square
Marietta, GA

Parking:
Cobb County Parking Garage/Marietta Square

For more information, please call (770) 293-0080.

Brew with a concert view!

March 15 SPLOST vote critical to Cobb’s future

Important news from the Cobb Chamber: On Tuesday, March 15 the citizens of Cobb will vote on a one-cent four year Special Purpose Local Option Sales Tax (SPLOST). If approved by voters, it will be in effect from January 1, 2012 through December 31, 2015. Currently, 4% of Cobb County’s 6% sales tax (one of the lowest sales tax rates in the state) goes to the state, 1% to the School SPLOST and the final %1 to the current County SPLOST (set to expire Dec. 31, 2011).

At its January Board Meeting, the Cobb Chamber Board of Directors unanimously approved to support the 2011 SPLOST renewal, based on the following facts: (1) Since it will not raise taxes, it will keep Cobb County’s taxes the lowest in the region while providing critical infrastructure improvements which are vital for economic growth and job creation while reducing traffic congestion. (2) Not continuing the SPLOST, and loss of this revenue, may force the county to raise property taxes, incur costly deferment of maintenance, and incur debt to keep pace with our past and future growth. (3) 30 percent of the SPLOST revenues are collected from non-county residents. (4)The project list has been vetted by the taxpayers and has a four-year sunset that ensures accountability.

Where will the money go? If approved, SPLOST funds will go to parks, transportation, public safety, libraries, senior centers and other Cobb and city facilities. Each Cobb city will receive a portion of the funds allocated according to 2009 Census estimates.

  • FACILITIES TOTAL $16,748,420
    Libraries, Senior Services, Judicial, Public Health and other County facilities in need of repairs, capital improvements, energy efficient upgrades and modernization.
  • PUBLIC SAFETY TOTAL $12,896,400
    Funds will go to Public Safety (Fire and Police) critical needs to replace aging facilities, equipment and apparatus. Also planned are improvements to public safety communications systems along with judicial and public health facilities.
  • TRANSPORTATION TOTAL $250,885,000
    Projects include infrastructure preservation (resurfacing, bridges and drainage), pedestrian improvements, transit, traffic congestion relief, safety and operational improvements (roadways, intersections and school zones), and federal/state matching funds. SPLOST funding will be leveraged to receive additional funding from other sources, including Federal, State and Community Improvements Districts.
  • PARKS TOTAL $82,023,000
    Funding for these projects will be geared toward revitalization of existing parks, and renovations to existing park buildings and facilities including athletic field upgrades.

For more information, see www.cobbsplost2011.org or www.cobbsfuture.org.

Cobb County & Marietta City Schools Closed Friday, January 14, 2011

Closing out the week, it’s official – Cobb County Schools and Marietta City Schools are closed due to inclement weather on Friday, January 14, 2011.  For more information, please visit www.cobbk12.org or www.marietta-city.org


Marietta’s Haunted History

Are there ghosts in Marietta? I believe there are.

Marietta is a town rich in history. Most of the town’s buildings, with a few notable exceptions, were burned in the War Between the States, and rebuilt when the town began to prosper again in the late 1800’s. But while the Civil War buildings may be gone, plenty of people can testify that some of those spirits remain in Marietta to this day. Much of the paranormal activity reported in this city over the years, although not all of it, springs from that era.

To understand why, it is important to understand that not only was there tremendous fighting all around Marietta, but after the war, the city was actually occupied by Northern troops for longer than Atlanta was. There were encampments and hospital tents all over what is now the downtown area and all around it. Most of the people had evacuated the town. There was no food for civilians, no money, and little housing. People who did stay were starving. It is no wonder that many of the tragic deaths of those times have left paranormal reminders in the town.

The Kennesaw House, which now houses the excellent Marietta Museum of History, is probably the most haunted location in Marietta. During the Civil War, the building was used by both sides as a hospital and Sherman used it briefly as his headquarters. It was the site of the planning for the “Great Locomotive Chase.” Over the years, voices have been heard, apparitions seen, and even photos taken of what appear to be spirits from that time.

Some of the allegedly haunted places in Marietta, such as 1848 House, are no longer open to the public, but among those that are Kennesaw Mountain Battlefield, where both Civil War and Native American spirits are regularly reported, Kolb Farm, site of a fierce battle and allegedly haunted by soldiers and slaves, and The Root House, although the staff there denies the stories of sightings of Mrs. Root and the bed that unmakes itself. Many more seemingly haunted places and stories of true experiences with Civil War ghosts and those of other times, including the recent present, are detailed in my book, Haunted Marietta, as well as much of the engrossing history of our charming and historically significant city.

About Rhetta Akamatsu
Rhetta Akamatsu is a long-time resident of Marietta and the author of Haunted Marietta, which is available at local bookstores and online at Amazon and all other major bookstores. She also writes about the Atlanta area for examiner.com as the Atlanta Historic Places Examiner.

 

Witty Pirates Batten Down the Hatches at Theatre in the Square

Theatre in the Square’s Theatre for Youth production for the 2010-11 season, How I Became a Pirate, by Alyn Cardarelli and Steve Goers, is based on the award-winning, best selling children’s book by the same title written by Melinda Young and illustrated by David Shannon. How I Became a Pirate opens Tuesday, September 14, at 10 a.m. on the Alley Stage. Tickets are available at the Box Office by calling 770-422-8369.

While spending an afternoon on North Beach with his family, Jeremy Jacob realizes that his mom is too distracted with his new baby sister to see his amazing sandcastle that is under attack by pirate figurines. However, a group of real pirates, lead by Captain Braid Beard come ashore, take note of Jeremy’s exceptional digging skills and ask him to come on board and join the crew as a digger. Jeremy enjoys the pirate life filled with a lack of table manners and an opposition to changing diapers, until there is no one to kiss him and tuck him in at night. The Pirates, Captain Braid Beard (Brad Raymond), Jacque LaToe (David Howard), Millicent “Milt” Skeeter (Allison Murphey), Stubby Barbossa (Nick Arapoglou), and Wheezing McGee(Jimi Kocina), teach Jeremy (Jeremy Ledbetter) how to talk like a pirate and Jeremy teaches them about soccer.

How I Became a Pirate includes colorful songs like “Talk Like a Pirate”, “Pirates Never Tuck You In” and “The Treasure song” each sung to the tune classic kid’s songs. The show features a multicultural cast of Atlanta actors. Director Clint Thornton says the one hour production will be “thrilling, suspenseful, joyful, and hopefully exhilarating.”

Other members of the production team that will be dropping anchor for How I Became a Pirate include music director Bryan Mercer, sound designer Thom Jenkins, set designer Seamus M. Bourne, costume designer Lindsey Paris and props designer Lindsay Moore.

Performances are Tuesdays through Fridays at 10 a.m. (with 12 noon performances on select weekdays) and Saturdays and Sundays at 2:30 p.m. September 14 through October 10. On Saturday, September 19, for International Talk Like A Pirate Day, Theatre in the Square invites guests to come dressed like pirates and enjoy fun activities like making pirate hats and a “tattoo” parlor. Activities will begin at 1:30 p.m. in the Alley Stage lobby.

Tickets are $12 for adults and $8 for children and are available at the Theatre in the Square Box Office by calling 770-422-8369. Discount rates for are available for groups of 10 or more by calling 770-422-8369 x29. Theatre in the Square is located off of historic Marietta Square at 11 Whitlock Ave.

Banks and Shane

Since 1972, Banks Burgess and Paul Shane have entertained audiences in Atlanta and around the globe with their fun folk sounds. With Banks Burgess on banjo and guitar, Paul Shane on guitar and trombone, Chuck Shane on drums and bass, Jim Durand on Electric and acoustic guitars, the high-energy band has fans dancing in the aisles to party favorites and reminiscing with memorable ballads.

Phone:
(770) 642-2041

Email:
theband@banksandshane.com

Address:
P.O. Box 768022
Roswell, GA 30076

Juneteenth Celebration Cool Breezin’ Under the Stars

Enjoy Smooth Jazz, R & B, and The Spoken Word with the Cobb County NAACP Branch Celebration “Cool Breezin’ Under the Stars.”

Date:
Friday, June 18th, 2010
7 p.m. – 11 p.m.

Admission:
FREE

Address:
50 Park Square
Marietta, GA 30060

For more information, please call (770) 425-5757