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NGE >> Cities and Counties >> Cities and Towns >> Cartersville |
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Cartersville Located in northwest Georgia, forty-four miles north of Atlanta and seventy-nine miles south of Chattanooga, Tennessee,
Cultural and historical attractions include four museums (the Booth Museum of Western Art, the William Weinman Mineral Museum,
History Immediately after Cherokee Removal in 1838-39, Cartersville was settled in anticipation of the construction of the Western and Atlantic Railroad (W&A) through the Etowah Valley. Supposedly named for Colonel Farish Carter, a wealthy Georgia planter and entrepreneur, Cartersville was incorporated in 1850. Migration via the Alabama Road, originally an Indian trace leading west through the Cartersville area, accounted for much of its early growth, as did the W&A, which allowed the exportation of natural resources. An abundance of iron ore in the region sparked an early, though short-lived, iron industry pioneered by ironmasters Jacob and Moses Stroup. Cartersville saw only one minor skirmish during the Civil War (1861-65), on May 20, 1864, when Confederate troops under the command of General Joseph E. Johnston occupied the depot, holding Union forces at bay while fellow Confederates escaped south across the Etowah River. The depot fell to Union fire by nightfall, and occupation followed. After the destruction of the original county seat of Cassville in 1864, Cartersville became the new seat of government in 1867. Economy Cartersville's economy had long relied heavily on cotton. Infestation by the boll weevil in 1917 devastated cotton production, causing a depressed economy that, even though supplemented with state road projects, remained weak until the construction of Allatoona Dam, a few miles east of the city, in 1950. The subsequent creation of Lake Allatoona and nearby Red Top Mountain State Park further improved the economy. By the mid-1970s Cartersville's agrarian economy had given way to an industrial economy, supplemented by increasing tourism.
Population In 1850, when the town was incorporated, Cartersville had about 150 citizens; within two years its population exceeded 2,400. A steady increase until 1880 was followed by sixty years of stagnation, as the population remained consistently near 5,000. From 1940 to the early 1990s, increased jobs through industry and tourism more than doubled the population, to 12,035. Cartersville was selected for the 1993 edition of the book The 100 Best Small Towns in America. This recognition, coupled with the growth of metropolitan Atlanta, probably accounts for the almost 25 percent growth, to 15,925, by the year 2000. Demographically, Cartersville has remained predominantly white. About one in five residents is African American, and the Hispanic population, though small, grew rapidly through the 1990s. Government Equal to the population growth of the last decade of the twentieth century has been the city's growth in size, from 23.9 to 35 square miles. Cartersville operates under a council-manager form of government and manages all utilities. Its entire tax base was used to support the Cartersville City School System, Georgia's first charter school system; however, the school system's charter status ended in 2001. A historic preservation ordinance, which failed to pass in 1990, was approved in 2001. Suggested Reading Lucy Josephine Cunyus, History of Bartow County, Formerly Cass (Cartersville, Ga.: Tribune, 1933). Chantal Parker, Cartersville Updated 9/30/2003 |
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