Effingham County
http://www.effga.com/effingham-history.htm
County History
from the above County Government Website
permissions requested.
In Colonial
days, Effingham County was referred to as
St. Matthews Parish, of which Ebenezer was
the center. Following the Revolution, the
legislature named Effingham County as one of
the eight original counties in Georgia,
created by the State Constitution in 1777.
When the original Effingham County was
established, it was one of the largest of
the eight counties. Since then, a number of
other counties, or portions of counties,
have been cut out of Effingham, including
Bulloch, Screven, Candler, Emanuel, Bryan
and Evans Counties.
It is named for Lord Effingham who, prior to
the Revolutionary War, served as a colonel
in the British Army. When the conflict began
and he was ordered to take up arms against
the colonists, as a strong believer in
colonial rights, he refused to do so.
In 1784, Tuckasee King was selected as the
first county site of Effingham County and
remained so for more than 10 years. The next
location for the center of county government
was Elbertston, a settlement on the Ogeechee
River.
In 1796, the Legislature of Georgia
appointed a commission of five Effingham
County citizens to name and designate a
county site within five miles of the center
of the county. On the commission were:
Jeremiah Cuyler, John G. Neidlinger,
Jonathan Rahn, Elias Hodges and John Martin
Dasher. They designated the site and named
the place Springfield in 1799.
After moving the site three times in the
first 25 years of the history of the county,
it has remained the same for almost 200
years.
In 1900, the population of the county was
8,334. That same year, the population of the
various towns was as follows: Tusculum, 50;
Stillwell, 110; Springfield, 107; Guyton,
500; Clyo, 160; Rincon, 91; Marlow, 150;
Pineora, 46; and Egypt, 250.
Governor Treutlen
Effingham
can proudly boast that it was the home of
not only a stern Revolutionary patriot, but
also Georgia's first governor, John Adam
Treutlen.
Although there is little authenticated
information about him, a record of Jerusalem
Lutheran Church at Ebenezer, Georgia, dated
1747, shows that John Adam Treutlen was 14
years old and that "he arrived in this land
with the last German people." Using family
and church records, historians concluded
that John Adam Treutlen was born in 1734.
Family records show that he was born in
Berchtesgaden, Austria, in 1726.
The Treutlen family fled from Austria to
England to avoid persecution and soon
decided to join the other German emigrants
in Georgia. However, their troubles were not
over.
At the time of their departure, England and
France were at war. Ships flying the flag of
one country would prey on the ships of the
other. Captains of these ships were often
pirates who hoisted the flag of any country
convenient for their purpose. The ship on
which the Treutlens embarked was stopped and
boarded by either Frenchmen or pirates. The
father was captured and imprisoned The later
died in prison). The family possessions were
stolen.
Mrs. Treutlen and her two sons, Frederick
and John Adam, finally reached shore in
America. Frederick, the oldest, secured a
grant of land at Vernonburg, married and
settled there.
The mother later remarried, and John Adam
was placed under the care and tutelage of
Pastor John Martin Bolzius at St. Matthew
Parish, Ebenezer. Pastor Bolzius commended
him for his industry, zeal in learning, and
his obedience in conduct:
John Adam Treutlen later became a teacher at
Ebenezer and was elected a deacon in
Jerusalem Church. He remained a high
official in the congregation and a leader in
the colony as long as he lived.
In 1756, John Adam Treutlen married
Margaretha Dupuis' at Ebenezer. Born in
Purysburg, SC, Margaretha had been orphaned
at an early age and Sent across the Savannah
River to the Lutheran school at Ebenezer.
The couple had nine children, one of whom
died in infancy.
Treutlen was active in the affairs of
Georgia for many years before and during the
Revolution. In addition to his official
duties in Jerusalem Lutheran Church, he was
appointed a Justice of the Peace for the
parish of St. Matthew and represented the
parish in the Commons House of Assembly. He
was a colonel of the militia and a soldier
in the Continental Line.
He was also selected as one of 15 members of
the Council of Safety, formed by the rebels
on June 22, 1775. This council exercised
full governmental authority while the
Provincial Congress was not in session. In
January, 1776, the Council of Safety ordered
the arrest of Royal Governor Wright.
As one of the representatives from St.
Matthew Parish, now Effingham County,
Treutlen was a member of the Provincial
Congress of Georgia, which met in Savannah
on July 4, 1775. In this congress, which'
governed Georgia for the next two years,
Treutlen took his place among such men as
Walton, Habersham, Houstoun, Telfair, Clay,
and McIntosh. This congress began the
deliberations which brought the colony
officially into the Revolution.
Treutlen was also a member of Georgia's
first Constitutional Convention, which met
intermittently from October 1776 to February
1777. A committee composed. of Treutlen,
Button Gwinnett, William Belcher, Joseph
Wood, Josiah Lewis, Henry Jones, and George
Wills was selected "to reconsider and
revise" the constitution (Rules and
Regulations of 1776). When they had
completed the writing of the constitution,
the convention itself declared this first
Constitution of the State of Georgia to be
adopted.
This Constitution of 1777 provided for a
unicameral legislature, called the House of
Assembly, which was empowered to choose a
Governor for a term of one year and an
executive council of 12 members selected by
the legislature from its own membership. In
May 1777, John Adam Treutlen was elected
Georgia's first governor under this
constitution by a large majority, winning
over his opponent, the Honorable Button
Gwinnett.
Members of Treutlen's Executive Council were
Jonathan Bryan, John Houstoun, Thomas
Chisholm, William Holzendorf, John Fulton,
John Jones, John Walton, William Few (who
later signed the Constitution of the United
States on behalf of the Georgia delegation),
Arthur Fort, John Coleman, Benjamin Andrews,
and William Peacock.
Many trials beset the new governor. Shortly
after he assumed office, his wife,
Margaretha, died. As commander-in-chief of
the State Militia, he had to defend the
state not only from invasion by the British,
raids by the Tories and uprisings by hostile
Indians on the Western border, but also from
incorporation by the neighboring state of
South Carolina. The Assembly of South
Carolina had adopted a resolution to extend
its borders to the Mississippi River.
William Henry Drayton Esq. was very active
in a campaign to persuade Georgians to favor
the scheme.
On July 15, 1777, on advice of the Executive
Council, Governor Treutlen issued a fiery
proclamation "offering a reward of one
hundred pounds, lawful money of the said
State, to be paid to any person or persons
who shall apprehend the said William Henry
Drayton.." Drayton eluded the aroused
citizens of Georgia and escaped to his home
in South Carolina. The State of Georgia was
preserved.
Securing money for the struggling army of
patriots was one of the major problems of
the new states. Governor Treutlen helped
meet this need in Georgia by mortgaging his
property, which was quite extensive.
At the expiration of his term as Governor,
Treutlen retired to his plantation, north of
Ebenezer at Sisters' Ferry (near the present
town of Clyo). At this home site, he married
Mrs. Anne Undsette (Unselt) in 1778 or 79.
There were no children by this marriage.
Trouble
continued to pursue Treutlen. He suffered
constant harassment by the Tories. who knew
that his name was on the list of persons
proscribed by the British Parliament as
Rebels. In this proscription, Treutlen was
listed Rebel Governor and exempted from all
amnesty proclamations. This harassment
continued until, in 1779. his home and barn
were burned and he left his devastated
plantation, fleeing to St. Matthews Parish,
S.C. with his family.
Treutlen still remained active in the
affairs of Georgia and was elected in 1781
from his old parish to the Georgia
legislature, which met in Augusta in 1782,
and in which he served. He was also elected
at the same time from St. Matthews Parish,
S.C., to the South Carolina General
Assembly, but he did not accept.
During that same year, Treutlen met his
death under mysterious circumstances. There
are several versions of his brutal murder in
South Carolina by Tories. One is that he was
killed at his home near Two Sisters' Ferry
and buried in one of his fields near the
Savannah River.
A monument to Governor Treutlen was erected
several years ago on the grounds of
Jerusalem Lutheran Church at Ebenezer by his
interested local and out-of-state
descendants. It was unveiled at special
services during the Labor Day meeting of the
Georgia Salzburger Society on Sept. 19,
1963.
Jerusalem Lutheran Church
At the site of
the historic town of Ebenezer stands
Jerusalem Lutheran Church. Built in 1769, it
is the oldest church, or for that matter,
public building, in the state of Georgia.
It seems symbolic that the white swan
steeple should have endured through the
years and even two great wars in this area
of the country. There is a bullet hole in
the swan that was put there by a British
musket during the occupation of Ebenezer by
the Tories during the Revolutionary War.
Two bells in the bellfry are used to toll
the call to worship. An interesting story is
behind the two bells. In 1738, before the
church was built, the Rev. George Whitfield,
English revivalist, visited Ebenezer and was
so impressed by the community and its
religious endeavors that upon returning to
England, he sent them a gift. It was a bell,
which was placed in the old wooden church
that served them at that time.
In 1750, the Salzburgers felt the need for a
larger bell, since many of the congregation
had
moved further away and could not hear the
original bell. So they wrote to Rev.
Whitfield to send them another and larger
bell, for which they paid.
But on the arrival of the new bell, the
congregation could not bear to give up their
little bell. Both bells were then placed in
Jerusalem Lutheran Church when it was
completed. Since shortly after 1750, these
two bells - the oldest bells in Georgia -
have called the people to worship in
Ebenezer.
So here, after traces of the town of
Ebenezer have all but disappeared, survives
the swan and the church, in perhaps more
beauty and glory than ever before.
The church was built by the citizens of
Ebenezer in the years 1767-69 and is built
of the hand-made bricks of the Salzburgers.
The bricks made of clay deposits from around
the site are of irregular size and many
still carry visible fingerprints of these
early workmen. It is said that the women of
the town carried the bricks from the kiln to
the building site in their aprons.
It was in this church and the wooden
structure that preceded it that the
Salzburgers operated their fine school. Here
many of Georgia's outstanding Colonial
leaders received their education.
In its more than 200 years of history, the
old church has felt the severe effects of
the wars that have transpired. The British
soldiers occupied the church during most of
the Revolutionary War, using it for a
hospital at first, and later as stables and
a commissary. It is said that the beautiful
alter of the church was further desecrated
by using it as a butcher block.
The red brick walls of the old church are 23
inches thick, and show light spots on the
sides, which are said to be the result of
salt meat being stored inside during the
Revolutionary War.
After Gen. Anthony Wayne drove the British
out of Ebenezer in 1782, the Georgia
Legislature met in the church in July 1782.
Jerusalem was occupied by soldiers once
again when General Sherman, on his march to
the sea, took over the church. He burned all
the fences and the church pews.
The pews in the balcony are original, as are
some of the panes of glass. The pews used in
the sanctuary are hand-carved of pines and
dated around 1830.
The old cemetery adjoining the church is
said to be the oldest cemetery in Georgia
which is still in use, dating back to the
very early days of Ebenezer.
Since the very beginning, church services
have been held regularly, having never been
discontinued. Up until 1803, all services
were conducted in the mother tongue of the
Salzburgers - German. |