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NGE >> History and Archaeology >> Antebellum Era, 1800-1860 >> Topics >> Georgia in 1860 |
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Georgia in 1860 Georgia,
Population Georgia's population passed 1 million residents for the first time in 1860. Census figures that year indicate that more than 591,000 of those residents (56 percent) were white, and nearly 466,000 (44 percent) were black.
In terms of geographical distribution, nearly 60 percent of the populace lived in the Black Belt region, a broad swath running diagonally through the state's center from South Carolina toward the southwest along the Alabama and Florida line. The vast pine barrens or wiregrass region of southeastern Georgia was the state's most sparsely populated area, with only 5.6 percent of the state's total population; the narrow strip of six coastal counties had about the same percentage of the population as the southeastern counties, though concentrated in a far smaller area. The upcountry and mountain counties together claimed nearly a third of the populace. Slaves
Like the rest of the South, Georgia remained overwhelmingly rural in the mid-nineteenth century, averaging a population density of fewer than 16 people per square mile. In 1860 nearly 8 percent of Georgians lived in towns or cities of more than 2,000 people, up from 4.6 percent in 1850. Savannah remained Georgia's largest city, as it had always been, with the highest concentration of slaves (around 35 percent). With 22,292 residents, Savannah was nearly twice the size of Augusta, the second-largest city in the state, with 12,493 people. Columbus, with 9,621 residents, was only slightly larger than rapidly growing Atlanta, with 9,554. (Atlanta had nearly quadrupled in size since 1850 and would almost double in size by 1862; by 1880 it had become the state's largest city.) Macon was the state's fifth-largest city, with a population of 8,247. Slaves made up roughly a third of all of these cities' populations, except Atlanta, where only 1 in 5 residents were enslaved. Free blacks made up a mere 0.3 percent of the state's black population in 1860, and they were concentrated largely in urban areas, especially Savannah and Augusta. Nearly 99 percent of white Georgians in 1850 were American by birth; slightly more than three-fourths of those were born in Georgia. By 1860 newcomers to the state included an increasing number of northerners, attracted by business opportunities in growing cities like Atlanta. The largest foreign-born concentration was in Chatham County, where nearly a third of its free residents, primarily Irish laborers and a small but influential group of German Jews, were born abroad. Class and Wealth Georgia
A
Slaveholders who did not fall into the planter class but owned more than five slaves comprised 21 percent of free households; along with planters, they held approximately 90 percent of the state's wealth, according to one estimate. Many of these slaveholders were professionals, including lawyers, politicians, and doctors, or businessmen who lived in towns or cities while still maintaining plantation operations nearby. Nearly
Agriculture Nearly
Corn, claiming 40 percent of the state's cultivated land, rivaled cotton as an agricultural commodity and was the mainstay of smaller farmers outside the Black Belt. Much of that corn was grown to feed hogs, with more than 2 million raised throughout the state in 1860. As a result, pork was the most-consumed meat by Georgians, black and white, as was true
On the coast, rice continued to be among the most lucrative of crops, and Georgia trailed only South Carolina as the nation's largest rice producer. After a lag of several decades, rice made a dramatic comeback in the late antebellum period, moving from 39 million pounds produced in 1850 to more than 52.5 million pounds ten years later. A number of secondary crops, including tobacco, wheat and oats, and sweet potatoes, were grown in abundance throughout the state; more sweet potatoes were grown in Georgia than anywhere else in the world in 1860. Industry The
Southerners' campaign to bring cotton mills to the cotton fields, rather than sending their cotton off to New England, began in the 1810s, and early efforts at building textile mills in Georgia took place in the 1820s and 1830s. But it was only in the 1850s that the industry came of age, fueled both by the cotton boom of that decade and by more efficient applications of steam and water power in fall-line cities like Augusta, Columbus, and Macon, as well as in smaller communities like Athens, Roswell, and Sparta. In 1860 Georgia led the South in the number of textile workers, with 2,800 (more than half of them female) employed in thirty-three mills. The
Slaves made up much of the state's industrial workforce. Many were hired by companies on annual contracts to work in mines, sawmills, railroad construction, and other enterprises, both urban and rural. Only the textile industry resisted opportunities to employ many slaves, and it was the focus of an ongoing debate as to the benefits or detriments of putting slaves into factories. The 1860 census indicates that 5 percent of Georgia's
Among the most important developments that would shape the war in Georgia was the dramatic expansion of railroad tracks in the state during the 1840s and 1850s. By 1860 the state had the most extensive system of rail lines in the Deep South and was second only to Virginia in the South as a whole. Eighteen railroad companies had constructed 1,400 miles of track, at a cost of more than $26 million in private and public funding. These lines were vital to the state's economic and industrial expansion and had much to do with driving Atlanta's rapid growth as well as its strategic importance during the war. Suggested Reading Numan V. Bartley, The Creation of Modern Georgia (Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1983). F. N. Boney, Rebel Georgia (Macon, Ga.: Mercer University Press, 1997). Anthony Gene Carey, Parties, Slavery, and the Union in Antebellum Georgia (Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1997). Kenneth Coleman, ed., A History of Georgia, 2d ed. (Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1991). Michael P. Johnson, Toward a Patriarchal Republic: The Secession of Georgia (Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1977). Clarence L. Mohr, On the Threshold of Freedom: Masters and Slaves in Civil War Georgia (Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 2001). John C. Inscoe, University of Georgia Updated 9/17/2010 |
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