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City of Guyton
Guyton,
Georgia is a small community of approximately 750 people.
Located just 25 miles north of Savannah, it is an easy
commute for its many citizens who work in Savannah.
While some of the early
settlers came from the Savannah area, it seems that most
came from North and South Carolina. In 1792 a tract of 250
acres of land in the form of a land warrant from Effingham
County was issued to Squire Zachariah White. The community
became known as Whitesville. The Squire was not married and
left no heir when he died in 1838. White had granted a
right-of-way to the new Central of Georgia Railway Co.,
prior to his death. He was buried on his own land, as was
the custom then. His grave is in the rear of the present New
Providence Church. Years later, a local controversy was
started when some of this community tried to have Squire
White's grave moved to the new local cemetery. It was never
moved.
Shortly after Whites death,
the Effingham County Commissioners took over White's land
for unpaid taxes. They had a survey made, laid off lots and
streets just as they still are today, and sold it all at
public auction as payment of his taxes. Many lots were
bought by affluent Savannah residents as a place for a
summer home. At this time, the fever was very bad in
Savannah.
When the Central of Georgia
Railroad Company, having a charter to build and operate a
railroad from Savannah to Macon and on to Marthasville (now
ca1led Atlanta) laid their tract through Whitesville in 1837
or 1838, they referred to this place as Station Number 30.
After
a short time, local people ask the railroad company to give
this place a name so they could request the federal
government place a post office here. Since there was another
town in the state named Whitesville, Mr. W. W. Gordon,
President of the Central Railroad, named this location
Guyton, after Archibald Guyton, a prominent, local citizen.
The U. S. Post Office established a post office at Guyton,
Georgia, December 3l, 1851.
Guyton was an affluent town
by the time of the Civil War. During the Civil War, the
Confederacy built a hospital in Guyton. There are buried 26
Confederate soldiers buried in the local cemetery. When
General Sherman marched from Atlanta to Savannah on his burn
and destroy mission, he came through Guyton with his main
body of troops. It took five days for his army to pass
through, with some of his troops looting, burning and
stealing. The depot and tracts were destroyed, which could
explain why some records of this period are not complete.
In 1887, Guyton was
incorporated and issued a town charter by the State of
Georgia. The local member of the Georgia Legislature who had
the bill introduced and passed was Colonel Clarance Guyton,
a grandson of Archibald Guyton.
The
Guyton City Hall has had many requests for information about
the family of Guytons. However, little is known about their
background. They were rumored to have come from England to
North Carolina. Then, Archibald Guyton came to this area
from North Carolina in l825. Archibald was married twice.
His first wife was the widow Tondee of Savannah. There is a
Tondee farm or plantation listed in Effingham County near
Guyton during this period, so she may have had connections
there. The Georgia census of l850 shows Archibald came to
Georgia in l825. He was in the timber business. His first
wife, widow Tondee died (fever) and is buried in the old
Providence Baptist Cemetery. His second wife was Harriet
Patterson, of this area. Archibald had a son, Robert, by his
first wife and a son, Charles, by his second wife. There
were several girls also as are listed in his cemetery plot.
Archibald's grandson, Clarance, was an attorney and
maintained a law office in Savannah. Everyone called him
Colonel Guyton. He was a member of the Georgia Legislature
and was very prominent.
There are no families named
Guyton living in the community today. The last Guyton family
home, which was occupied by Clarance, his sister Belle
Hendry and also his sister Tallullah and her husband Fred
Seckinger is still in excellent condition. It is located on
Highway. 17, just north of the Guyton city limits.
Every
December, the spirit of Christmas is highlighted in Guyton
with an annual tour of homes. This community-sponsored event
will usually host around three to four thousand visitors
every year. Visitors will usually tour about a dozen homes
and nearly all of the churches are open for the tour. Many
homes in the historic district will have lighted doors. The
festivities usually begin with a country supper and tour of
the historical city. As visitors drive down main street in
Guyton, they can view the lighted trees that line the old
railroad median for one mile. The Guyton Volunteer Fire
Department usually illuminates the nearly 7,000 lights each
year on the Saturday following Thanksgiving.
Today, Guyton is still a
small town, but one with much history. As visitors drive
through its narrow lanes and streets, particularly in
December of each year, they see a Georgia town pretty much
the way it was nearly a century ago.
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