- Source: Coweta County, Georgia
Coweta County is a county in the West Central region of the U.S. state of Georgia. It is part of Metro Atlanta. As of the 2020 census, the population was 146,158. The county seat is Newnan.
Coweta County is included in the Atlanta-Sandy Springs-Roswell metropolitan statistical area.
History
The land for Lee, Muscogee, Troup, Coweta and Carroll counties was ceded by the Creek people in the 1825 Treaty of Indian Springs. The counties' boundaries were created by the Georgia General Assembly on June 9, 1826, but they were not named until December 14, 1826. Coweta County was named for the Koweta Indians (a sub-group of the Creek people), who had several towns in and around the present-day county.
In the city of Newnan, on April 23, 1899, a notorious lynching occurred after an African-American man by the name of Sam Hose (born Tom Wilkes) was accused of killing his boss, Alfred Cranford. Hose was tortured and burned alive by a lynch mob of approximately 2,000 citizens of Coweta County.
On August 9, 1882, Aleck Brown was lynched.
Geography
According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the county has a total area of 446 square miles (1,160 km2), of which 441 square miles (1,140 km2) is land and 4.9 square miles (13 km2) (1.1%) is water. The county is located in the Piedmont region of the state.
The eastern half of Coweta County, from Palmetto southwest to Newnan, then south to Luthersville, is in the Upper Flint River sub-basin of the ACF River Basin (Apalachicola-Chattahoochee-Flint River Basin). The western half is in the Middle Chattahoochee River-Lake Harding sub-basin of the same ACF River Basin.
= Major highways
== Adjacent counties
=Fulton County – northeast
Fayette County – east
Spalding County – East/southeast
Meriwether County – south
Troup County – southwest
Heard County – west
Carroll County – northwest
Communities
= Cities
=Grantville
Newnan
Palmetto (partly in Fulton County)
Senoia
= Towns
=Haralson
Moreland
Sharpsburg
Turin
= Census-designated place
=East Newnan
= Unincorporated communities
=Corinth (partly in Heard County)
Raymond
Roscoe
Sargent
Thomas Crossroads
= Planned town
=In the federal government's National Urban Policy and New Community Development Act of 1970, funding was provided for thirteen "new towns" or planned cities throughout the country. One 70,000-acre location was set to be developed in Coweta County and was known as Shenandoah. The project was launched in the early 1970s and was foreclosed on in 1981, when it included 170 families and 108 residential lots.
Demographics
As of the 2020 United States census, there were 146,158 people, 53,640 households, and 37,400 families residing in the county.
Education
The Coweta County School System holds pre-school to grade 12, and consists of nineteen elementary schools, six middle schools and three high schools. The system has 1,164 full-time teachers and more than 18,389 students. Private schools in the county include The Heritage School and Trinity Christian School.
Mercer University has a Regional Academic Center in Newnan. The center, opened in 2010, offers programs through the university's College of Continuing and Professional Studies. The University of West Georgia has a campus near downtown Newnan on the site of the old Newnan Hospital. This campus offers two undergraduate programs - Bachelor of Science in nursing and early childhood education.
Newnan is also home to a campus of West Georgia Technical College.
Government
The legislative body of Coweta is the Coweta County Commission, which consists of five members elected from numbered districts. The chairmanship rotates among the members. Coweta County is the only county in Georgia that operates with a rotating chairmanship.
In the General Assembly, it is currently divided between State House district 70, 71, 72 and 132, and is within State Senate district 28 (currently held by Matt Brass). In Congress, it is in the 3rd congressional district, currently represented by Drew Ferguson.
= Politics
=Coweta is a strongly Republican county, voting 68.4 percent for Donald Trump in 2016 and 69.9 percent for Brian Kemp in 2018.
Notable people
Ellis Gibbs Arnall, governor of Georgia, 1943-1947
William Yates Atkinson, governor of Georgia, 1894–1896; founded Georgia State College for Women, now Georgia College & State University
Steve Bedrosian, former Major League baseball player; National League Cy Young Award winner in 1987
Eric Berry, football player for the Kansas City Chiefs
Keith Brooking, football player for the Atlanta Falcons and Dallas Cowboys
Erskine Caldwell, author of the novels Tobacco Road and God's Little Acre
Lewis Grizzard, newspaper columnist, author and humorist
Drew Hill, played for the pro football Houston Oilers, Los Angeles Rams and Atlanta Falcons
Sam Hose, African-American man who was brutally murdered by a lynch mob after accusations of murder, assault and rape
Alan Jackson, country music singer and musician
Joe M. Jackson, colonel, U.S. Air Force, Medal of Honor recipient
Warren Newson, played pro baseball for the Chicago White Sox
Stephen W. Pless, major, U.S. Marine Corps, Medal of Honor recipient
Jefferson Randolph "Soapy" Smith, confidence man and crime boss
Charles Wadsworth, retired director of the Chamber Music Society at the Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts
Jerome Walton, former Major League baseball player; Rookie of the Year in the National League in 1989
Rutledge Wood, auto racing analyst and host of Top Gear
Will Smith, professional baseball player for the Kansas City Royals
See also
National Register of Historic Places listings in Coweta County, Georgia
B. T. Brown Reservoir
Murder in Coweta County
Murder in Coweta County 1983 film
List of counties in Georgia
References
External links
Website
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Palmetto, Georgia
- Soapy Smith
- Southern Rivers
- Daftar county dan daerah setingkat county di Amerika Serikat
- Coweta County, Georgia
- Newnan, Georgia
- Coweta (disambiguation)
- Sharpsburg, Georgia
- East Newnan, Georgia
- Palmetto, Georgia
- Murder in Coweta County
- Grantville, Georgia
- Haralson, Georgia
- Murder in Coweta County (film)