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Kingston, Georgia
could be the town with more historical markers
per capita than any town in the state. It is
located in the northwest corner of Bartow County
, at nearly an equal distance between
Cartersville and Rome, Kingston reached her
zenith in the mid-19th Century. Like so many
towns, her history and fate are inextricably
tied to the rise and fall of the railroad as the
main form of travel. The town was even named for
a railroad financier, John Pendleton King of
Augusta, Georgia.
For thousands of
years before the train, Native Americans thrived
in the area. The Cherokee was the last native
culture to occupy Kingston. Besides farming and
trading, the Cherokee mined saltpeter, an
ingredient in gunpowder, and sold it to British
and American buyers as late as the War of 1812.
The Land Lottery of 1832 brought White settlers
in, and many more followed after the forced
removal of the Indians in 1838.
A stage coach route
preceded the railroad through Kingston, spawning
commerce.
Hotels were built to accommodate travelers and
tourists who came to enjoy the nearby springs.
Among those early stage coach travelers was one
party that would have an enduring influence on
the region: Francis Bartow, Reverand Charles
Wallace Howard, William Henry Stiles and Godfrey
Barnsley.
According to Bartow
County historian Lucy Cunyus, early Kingston had
a wicked reputation, but by 1852 was ?improving
in morals. In 1849 the Memphis Branch Railroad
was opened connecting Rome with the newly
completed Western and Atlantic Railroad at
Kingston. Thus, Kingston became an important
north-south and east-west nexus. A rail yard was
built providing a major employer, supplementing
the booming cotton market and tourist trade
which supported four hotels.
With the outbreak of
the Civil War, Kingston became a hospital and
supply center because of the rail connections.
The first Wayside Home, or Confederate hospital,
was established here in 1861; more than 10,000
sick and wounded troops passed through it. In
1864, after the Confederate Army retreated,
Union troops were attended here.
Kingston played a
pivotal role in the Civil War espionage episode
remembered as The Great Locomotive Chase. On
April 12, 1862 Union spies, known as Andrews?
Raiders, stole a steam engine called The General
at Big Shanty, and set out to destroy the
W&A rail lines through northwest Georgia.
They had to wait for almost an hour at Kingston
while several southbound freight trains cleared
the tracks. Four minutes after the
Union-commandeered General left Kingston's yard,
the Confederate crew arrived on the Yonah.
Instead of trying to negotiate the complicated
Kingston rail yard, the Confederates took a
locomotive owned by the Rome Railroad and
continued the chase, finally capturing the
General near Ringgold. The Raiders? delay at
Kingston is credited with the failure of their
mission. (Hollywood immortalized this event the
1920?s silent movie ?The General,? starring
Buster Keaton and the 1957 Disney classic ?The
Great Locomotive Chase, starring Fess Parker.)
Ultimately, Kingston
fell into the hands of General William T.
Sherman [US]. During the Atlanta Campaign,
Sherman marched into Kingston on May 19, 1864
with two of his three armies expecting to fight
the Confederates. General Joe Johnston [CS] had
tricked him, however, and was waiting just to
the east at Cassville. After Johnston's retreat
from Cassville, Sherman's army moved south from
Kingston, for the first time leaving the
railroad.
Over the next
several months, Union and Confederate cavalry
met eight times in the area. When General John
B. Hood began his abortive Nashville Campaign
after the fall of Atlanta, Sherman headquartered
in Kingston. It was here that he solidified his
plan to March to the Sea. Sherman requested
permission to execute the plan and at Kingston,
on November 2, 1864, he received permission from
Gen. Ulysses S. Grant [US] to begin his march
?to make Georgia howl. On November 12th, 60,000
men left northwest Georgia, emerging six weeks
later in Savannah.
During the War, the
women of the Kingston began a springtime rite of
decorating the graves of Confederate soldiers
with flowers in the town's ever-swelling
cemetery. In the spring of 1865, the town was
under military rule. When the women requested
permission from the military commander to
continue their tradition, they were told that
they would have to decorate all the soldiers
graves. By then, hundreds of Union soldiers lay
in the hillside as well. The women agreed, and
thus ?Decoration Day, the forerunner of Memorial
Day, was started. The Kingston Woman?s Club
continues the ritual to this day.
The Confederate
Cemetery in Kingston now harbors only two Union
soldiers, the others moved to the National
Cemetery in Marietta; 249 unknown Confederate
soldiers and two known Confederates. The annual
Kingston Confederate Memorial Service is the
oldest continuous memorial service in the
nation.
Also in the spring
of 1865, on May 12th, the last contingent of
Confederate troops east of the Mississippi were
surrendered at Kingston by General William
Wofford. (A native of Cassville, Woffords grave
is in the Cassville Confederate Cemetery.)
Though wrecked by
war, the railroad revived Kingston during
reconstruction. With its central location and
excellent transportation facilities, the city
was used as a post-war distribution center.
People from Rome and the surrounding area would
travel here to receive food allotments. Because Kingston's
churches had been spared as military
headquarters, ministers sought out those few
intact pulpits and their flocks followed. Kingston's
church services became quite popular. Regulars
would often take the train to Kingston from as
far as Atlanta to hear the sermons.
In 1911 Kingston
suffered a major fire. Soon, the railroad was no
longer a primary mode of travel and the new
automobile routes bypassed the town. Once
bustling, supposedly even wicked, Kingston
slipped into sleep.
Though Kingston
probably will never regain prominence among her
northwest Georgia sister cities, people are once
again finding their way to her streets. The Woman's
History Club has an impressive new addition to
their history museum, and Morel's Corner Cafe offer
down-home southern specialties daily. There's a
fully stocked grocery in one of the renovated
downtown buildings, and Kingston Military
Antiques attracts collectors every weekend. Just
a few miles from the Kingston stagecoach stop
Godfrey Barnsley made 160 years ago, a resort
destination has emerged which bears his name.
And in 1997, that springtime super social, the
Atlanta Steeplechase, moved to a newly developed
course called Kingston Downs.
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