County History
Polk
County, created on December 20, 1851, by legislative act and named
for President James K. Polk, is located in the Coosa
Valley area of Northwest Georgia. Prior to the
1830's legend has it the area was prized by both the Creek
and Cherokee Indian camps due to a large, natural limestone spring,
known as the Big Spring, so ownership was settled by a game of ball
which the Cherokees won. The Cherokees established a
village named "Charley Town" in the western part of what was
to become Polk County.
In 1838
Cherokee possession came to an end as President Andrew Jackson
decreed that the Cherokee nation would be forcibly relocated to
Oklahoma. A containment camp, called Cedar Town, was
established near the Big Spring. This encampment became the
southernmost camp for the forced roundup and removal of the
Cherokees to Oklahoma on what became known as the "Trail of
Tears".
The War Between the States came to Polk County near the end of the
war when Kilpatrick's Calvary burned the Courthouse and numerous
buildings in Cedartown, now the county seat. About the
same time a wing of the Union Army of Tennessee swept through
eastern Polk and engaged in a minor skirmish near Van Wert
Church.
Polk County survived reconstruction and developed industrial
mining of hematite iron ore in the western part of the county and
mining of slate in the eastern portion. After the turn
of the century cotton farming became king and industrial giants
like Goodyear and Julliard came and constructed mills where local
cotton was loomed into thread and fabric.
Today, Polk County has a diversified economy with modern
industrial parks in both Cedartown and Rockmart. Four
lane US 278 runs east and west in the county, and four lane US27
runs north and south. The highly popular Silver Comet
Trail for hiking and biking runs from the eastern boundary at
Paulding to the western boundary at the Alabama state
line.
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