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NGE >> Cities and Counties >> Counties >> Baker County |
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Baker County Baker County, In 1828 the settlement of Byron (near Albany) was designated the first county seat, but residents complained that the location was too close to the Lee County border. Subsequently, the county seat was moved to Newton in 1831. Newton, named for another Revolutionary War hero, Sergeant John Newton, was incorporated in 1872. One of the last battles in the Creek Indian War of 1836 took place in Baker County. Several county
Much of Baker County's history is marked by flooding from the Flint River. The courthouse, built in 1906, was damaged by the floods of 1925, 1929, and 1994. The current courthouse is located in a 1930s-era school; the old courthouse has been repaired and today houses the public library and the historical society. The area around the town square that was submerged by the 1994 flood is now overgrown, and most of its former structures are gone. Baker County encompasses almost 350 square miles and, according to the 2010 U.S. census, has a population of 3,451, a decrease from the 2000 population of 4,074. The county is governed by a five-person commission with a manager, and the school system comprises one school, a prekindergarten through seventh-grade elementary school. Baker County shares a high school with Mitchell County. Farmers in the county produce beef cattle, corn, cotton, hogs, peanuts, poultry, and soybeans. The Joseph W. Jones Ecological Research Center specializes in natural resources management
Among the Baker County landmarks listed on the National Register of Historic Places are Notchaway Baptist Church and its cemetery; the county courthouse; and two plantations, Pine Bloom, a Greek revival–style structure that was home to Governor Alfred H. Colquitt, and Tarver Plantation, also Greek revival. Suggested Reading Baker County Historical Society, comp., The History of Baker County, Georgia (Roswell, Ga.: W. H. Wolfe Associates, 1991). Raymond L. Chambers, Bainbridge College Updated 11/10/2011 |
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