Georgia Native American History
The first people arrived in Georgia at least 13,000 years ago, forming various tribes across the state. After the Spanish brought diseases, such as smallpox, that decimated much of the Indigenous population in the 1600s, Georgia's Indigenous people reorganized into the Muskogee and the Cherokee.
The Muskogee people were an alliance of several tribes based around river valleys, with shared culture and individual political systems. These tribes—collectively called the “Creeks” by colonists—established a robust trading relationship with the first British settlers to arrive in Georgia in the 1700s; some married and had children. Throughout the 18th century, the Muskogee welcomed escaped African American slaves, who influenced their culture. The Muskogee were driven to cede their land to American colonists seeking to set up plantations after the American Revolutionary War. By 1826, a series of treaties forced the Muskogee to give up the rest of their land in Georgia.
The Cherokee people were among the largest tribes in the southeastern United States. During the Yamasee War (1715-1717), the Cherokee backed the British against the Creek in the Carolinas. This led to decades of battles between the Creek and the Cherokee in Georgia. The relationship between the Cherokees and the British fell apart during the Seven Years’ War (1756-1763). The resulting periodic warfare, along with a smallpox outbreak, destroyed much of the Cherokee land in Georgia and decimated its population.
During the Revolutionary War, the Cherokee were divided in supporting the British and patriots. Over a series of treaties in the 1790s and 1800s, the Cherokee were forced to cede much of their land in the southeastern United States. Some Cherokee integrated with settlers and formed the Cherokee Nation, with its own constitutional government based in Georgia. Nevertheless, Georgia attempted to remove all Cherokee from the state, especially after the discovery of gold in 1829.
Indian Removal Act and the Trail of Tears
In 1830, President Andrew Jackson signed the Indian Removal Act. The U.S. government took Native American lands in Georgia and several other eastern states, and Indigenous people were forced to move west of the Mississippi into “Indian Territory” (modern-day Oklahoma). Some Creeks and Muskogee moved voluntarily, while others refused to leave.
In 1836 and 1837, American troops and militia forced many of the remaining Muskogee to move. The voyage from Alabama and Georgia to Oklahoma resulted in the loss of an estimated 8,000 Creek lives. Some Creeks managed to remain in southern Georgia, where they were joined by Creek refugees from Alabama and Florida.
From 1838 to 1839, full-blooded Cherokee were forced out of Georgia and surrounding states, and 4,000 died on what became known as the Trail of Tears. Cherokee families with a white head of household were allowed to remain in the state, and many maintained and celebrated their Cherokee cultural heritage.
Today, there are three federally-recognized Native American tribes in Georgia: the Cherokee of Georgia, the Georgia Tribe of Eastern Cherokee and the Lower Muskogee Creek Tribe.
Georgia Colonial History
Spanish conquistadors were the first Europeans to arrive in modern-day Georgia, most famously Hernando de Soto, in 1540. In the 1600s, the Spanish sent missionaries to Georgia to establish trading and settlements, and they compelled Indigenous people to adopt Christianity and Spanish culture.
After the Spanish and British, settlers arrived in Georgia from Scotland, Ireland, Salzburg, Portugal, France and the neighboring Carolinas. Europeans began vying for control of Georgia in the early 1700s, Spain claiming it was part of its Florida territory and England part of its Carolina territory. In 1733, British military leader James Oglethorpe established the last of the 13 original British colonies, Georgia, named after King George II.
Oglethorpe was one of 21 Trustees who otherwise governed Georgia from London for two decades until royally-appointed governors were installed. He developed relationships with Indigenous people that were critical for the colony’s survival and induced the Spanish to depart. Initially conceived by Oglethorpe as a refuge for London’s indebted prisoners, Georgia became a buffer for England against Spanish Florida. In 1742, the Spanish invaded Georgia and lost what would be their last attack on East Coast British colonies.
Revolutionary War
At the start of the American Revolution in 1775, the American colonists established a Provincial Congress in Georgia to counter the British Royal government. A Council of Safety managed the military and directed the colony’s entry into war in 1776, with important battles occurring in Savannah and Augusta.
Many colonists in Georgia, however, were recent British immigrants who remained loyal to England and Georgia’s popular British Royal Governor, Sir James Wright. Savannah remained a British stronghold from 1778 until 1781. In 1782, the British were driven out of Georgia, and the state elected its first post-colonial government. On January 2, 1788, Georgia became the fourth U.S. state when it ratified the U.S. Constitution.