Pulaski County

Incorporated: December 13, 1808
2000 Population: 9,588
Total Area: 247.4 Square miles
Pulaski County was
created in 1808 from what was then Laurens County. Georgia's
36th county was named for Polish Count Casimir Pulaski who died
in Savannah of wounds suffered in the Revolutionary War. The
Pulaski area was the capital of the Creek Indian Confederacy.
The
City of Hawkinsville
was named for Colonel Benjamin Hawkins, a Revolutionary War hero
and the federal Indian Agent for the four Southeastern tribes.
He lived in Crawford County from 1794 until 1816.
Hawkinsville, the
county seat of Pulaski County, was incorporated December 2,
1830. The city, nicknamed "City of Thirteen Highways", is named
after Colonel Benjamin Hawkins, a soldier in the Revolutionary
War and U.S. Senator from North Carolina. According to the 2000
Census, the City of Hawkinsville had a population of 3,280
persons.
Hawkinsville is home
to one of the largest harness racing training facilities in the
country. The town has had a long history of horse racing, and
celebrates the Hawkinsville Harness Horse Festival every spring.
There are three
entries on the National Register of Historic Places from Pulaski
County: the Hawkinsville Opera House, the Pulaski County
Courthouse, and Taylor Hall.
The Ocmulgee River
runs through the county.
Several notable
people have ties to Pulaski County. Butler Brown, an artist, has
had his work displayed in the White House; Mary Culler White was
a missionary in China for most of her life; and "Salty Sol"
Fleischman, a respected sportscaster in the Tampa Bay area, was
born in the county.
The town has had a long history of horse racing, and celebrates
the Hawkinsville Harness Festival every spring.
* From:
http://pulaskicounty.georgia.gov/03/home.
Thank you to the
Georgia Dept. of Community Affairs.
A Brief History of Pulaski County and the City of
Hawkinsville *
Pulaski
County was originally the capital of the Creek Indian
Confederacy. Attracted by the lush countryside and abundant
wildlife, the area was home to the Creeks until the turn of the
nineteenth century when treaties declared the land American
territory.
Located on
the banks of the Ocmulgee River, the town quickly became a
thriving trading post for Native Americans who lived to the
west. General Andrew Jackson camped here with his army troops
on the way to fight the Seminoles in Florida. In memory of the
famous general, a large boulder with a bronze tablet bearing the
inscription, "General Jackson's Trail 1818," can be seen on what
is now the corner of Broad and Jackson Streets.
The County came within one vote of being the state capitol's new
site, and disgruntled residents mumbled the town's loss was due
to one man going fishing when he should have been voting.
Pulaski County's land area began to grow in 1826 when the upper
part of Dooly County was added. The General Assembly later
granted Pulaski a portion of Houston County, which is currently
the City of Hawkinsville.
Conveniently located on the Ocmulgee River, Hawkinsville became
an important center for transporting freight. Today, the city
is the terminal county seat of highways leading in from seven
adjoining capitals- Perry, Cochran, Eastman, Abbeville, Vienna,
Cordele and Oglethorpe- earning the city the title of
"Hawkinsville, the Highway Hub."
Hawkinsville is also known as the "Harness Horse Capital of
Georgia," and has been the winter home for harness horse
training since the early 1920's, serving horsemen from Northern
and Midwestern states.
An interesting landmark in Pulaski County is the Old Opera
House. Listed on the National Register of Historical Places,
the Old Opera House was completely renovated in 2001 using local
option sales taxes. Build in 1907, the Facility has given top
billing to famous entertainers and politicians over the years.
Oliver Hardy, part of the comedy duo of Laurel and Hardy, once
sang on stage in a quartet during his stay with an aunt in
Hawkinsville. Today, the Old Opera House is a popular location
for community plays, music and dance recitals and other cultural
events.
Also listed on the National Register of Historical Places is
Taylor Hall, the oldest house in Pulaski County. The house was
first constructed on the Ocmulgee River in 1824 by Robert
Newsom, the county's first physician.
Pulaski County's rich heritage has been carefully preserved by
residents and the Pulaski Historical Commission. Both the
Commission and the
Chamber of Commerce can provide additional
information and direct visitors to points of interest.
* From
http://www.hawkinsvillega.net/history.htm.
Thank You to
Georgia.Gov.
About the County’s Namesake:
General Casimir Pulaski
(1747-1779)
*
After surviving numerous bloody
campaigns against Russia, Count Casimir Pulaski retired to
France in 1777, bitterly disappointed and deeply depressed at
Poland's failure to defeat her foes.
In Paris Pulaski met Benjamin Franklin, who was recruiting
volunteers to fight in America's War of Independence. Mindful
that England had recommended that Poland be partitioned by her
hostile neighbors in 1772, Pulaski enthusiastically responded to
Franklin's plea for assistance. In his letter of introduction to
Washington, Franklin wrote of Pulaski as "an officer famous
throughout Europe for his bravery and conduct in defense of the
liberties of his country against ... great invading powers".
While awaiting his formal appointment by Congress, Pulaski was
invited by Washington to serve on his staff during the Battle of
Brandywine in September, 1777. Pulaski's performance during this
baptism of blood in America earned him a commission as Brigadier
General of the entire American cavalry.
In 1779, Pulaski was ordered to join General Lincoln in the
South to help recapture Savannah. After French General
D'Estaing, leader in the attack on the southern capital, fell
wounded, Pulaski is reported to have rushed forward to assume
command and raise the soldiers' spirits by his example and
courage, only to be mortally wounded himself. Pulaski was named
the "Father of the American Cavalry", and remains one of the
well known figures of the American Revolutionary War. There is
hardly a state in America without a county or town, street or
square, monument or tablet, school or highway named in grateful
memory of General Casimir Pulaski.
*
From
http://www.polishamericancenter.org/Pulaski.htm.