
Georgia Facts, State Trivia & Information
- Okefenokee Swamp encompasses over 400,000 acres of canals; moss
draped cypress trees, and lily pad prairies providing sanctuaries for
hundreds of species of birds and wildlife including several endangered
species.
- Cumberland Island National Seashore contains the ruins of Dungeness,
the once magnificent Carnegie estate. In addition, wild horses graze
among wind swept dunes.
- The late John F. Kennedy, Jr. and his future wife stopped in
Kingsland on the way to their marriage on Cumberland Island.
- Historic Saint Marys Georgia is the second oldest city in the
nation.
- The City of Savanna was the first steamship to cross the
Atlantic.
It sailed from Georgia.
- Ways Station was renamed Richmond Hill on May 1, 1941, taking the
name of automaker Henry Ford's winter estate.
- The pirate Edward "Blackbeard" Teach made a home on Blackbeard
Island. The United States Congress designated the Blackbeard Island
Wilderness Area in 1975 and it now has a total of 3,000 acres.
- On January 19, 1861, Georgia joined the Confederacy.
- The official state fish is the largemouth bass.
- In Gainesville, the Chicken Capital of the World it is illegal to
eat chicken with a fork.
- Georgia was named for King George II of England.
- Stone Mountain near Atlanta is one of the largest single masses of
exposed granite in the world.
- Georgia is the nations number one producer of the three Ps--peanuts,
pecans, and peaches.
- At the Hawkinsville Civitan Club's Annual Shoot the Bull Barbecue
Championship, people from all over Georgia and surrounding states flock
to this small south Georgia town to enter their tasty barbecue
concoctions in this famous cook-off. The funds raised from this event
benefit the Civitan International Research Center and its work toward a
cure for Down's syndrome and other developmental disabilities.
- Each year Georgia serves as a host to the International Poultry
Trade Show, the largest poultry convention in the world.
- The oldest portable steam engine in the United States is on display
at Historic Railroad Shops in Savannah.
- Known as the sweetest onion in the world, the Vidalia onion can only
be grown in the fields around Vidalia and Glennville
- Georgia is the largest state east of the Mississippi River.
- Georgia's population in 1776 was around 40,000.
- Cordele claims to be the watermelon capital of the world.
- The annual Masters Golf Tournament is played at the Augusta National
in Augusta every first week of April.
- Georgia is often called the Empire State of the South and is also
known as the Peach State and Cracker State.
- In 1828 Auraria, near the city of Dahlongea, was the site of the
first Gold Rush in America.
- Coca-Cola was invented in May 1886 by Dr. John S. Pemberton in
Atlanta, Georgia. The name "Coca-Cola" was suggested by Dr. Pemberton's
bookkeeper, Frank Robinson. He penned the name Coca-Cola in the flowing
script that is famous today. Coca-Cola was first sold at a soda fountain
in Jacob's Pharmacy in Atlanta by Willis Venable.
- Berry College in Rome has the world's largest college campus.
- The Little White House in Warm Springs was the recuperative home of
Franklin D. Roosevelt.
- In 1942 Jekyll Island was a private resort sold to the state by the
owners, a group of millionaires.
- Providence Canyon State Park, near Lumpkin, is known as the Little
Grand Canyon of Georgia.
- The Cherokee rose is the official state flower, the live oak the
official tree; and the brown thrasher the official bird.
- United States Highway 27 runs the length of Georgia and is known as
Martha Berry Highway, named after a pioneer educator.
- Marshall Forest in Rome is the only natural forest within a city
limits in the United States.
- The popular theme park - Six Flags Over Georgia, was actually named
for six flags that flew over Georgia. England, Spain, Liberty, Georgia,
Confederate States of America, and the United States.
- The locomotive engine popularly known as The General is housed in
the Big Shanty Museum in Kennesaw. It was stolen in the Andrews Railroad
Raid in 1862 and later depicted in The Great Locomotive Chase, a popular
movie.
- The name of the famous south Georgia swamp, the Okefenokee, is
derived from an Indian word meaning the trembling earth.
- Brasstown Bald Mountain is the highest point in Georgia. It has an
elevation of 4,784 feet.
- The Cyclorama is a three dimensional panorama that depicts the
famous Battle of Atlanta, and is located in Grant Park in Atlanta.
- Thomasville is known as the City of Roses.
- Chickamuga National Park is the site of the bloodiest battle in
American history.
- Plains is the home of Jimmy Carter, the 39th President.
- The figures of Stonewall Jackson, Jefferson Davis, and Robert E. Lee
make up the world's largest sculpture. It is located on the face of
Stone Mountain. Additionally Robert E. Lee's horse, Traveler, is also
carved at the same place.
- Savannah was the landing site for General James Edward Oglethorpe,
founder of Georgia.
- The world's largest Infantry training center is located at Fort
Benning.
- The largest Farmer's Market of its kind is located in Forest Park.
- Ralph Bunch, United States diplomat, was the first Georgian to win
the Nobel Peace Prize.
- Callaway Gardens is a world famous family resort, known for its
azaleas.
- Wesleyan College in Macon was the first college in the world
chartered to grant degrees to women.
- Madison is known for its beautiful antebellum homes spared during
Sherman's fiery march to the sea.
- Chehaw in Albany is a well known wild animal park.
- Ocmulgee National Monument in Macon is the largest archeological
development east of the Mississippi River.
- Athens is the location of the first university chartered and
supported by state funds.
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