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Digital Library of Georgia

Georgia Civil War Commission

The
Courtesy of Historic Preservation Division, Georgia Department of Natural Resources
Resaca Battlefield
pastoral landscape of north Georgia served as the arena for contending Union and Confederate armies in one of the Civil War's most decisive and crucial campaigns during the summer of 1864. Many of the bloodstained fields and forests where those Americans fought and died have long since given way to the bulldozer's blade and are now marked by interstate exits, residential neighborhoods, fast-food restaurants, and other commercial facilities.

The Georgia Civil War Commission was formed by the General Assembly in 1993 to coordinate planning, preservation, and promotion of structures, battlefields, and other sites associated with the Civil War (1861-65). The commission consists of fifteen volunteers appointed by the governor, lieutenant governor, and Speaker of the Georgia House of Representatives.

Although the sites associated with the 1864 Atlanta campaign, nearly all located along the Interstate 75 corridor linking Atlanta with Chattanooga, Tennessee, are those most threatened by development, other Civil War–related properties across the state are equally valuable historic resources.

One of these, the battlefield at Griswoldville in middle Georgia (in Jones and Twiggs counties), was an early preservation victory for the commission. In June 1997 the group acquired seventeen acres at the site of the only infantry engagement prior to Union general William T. Sherman's arrival in Savannah during the March to the Sea. That land is now a state historic site.

From its formation, the commission focused on the preservation of the battlefield at Resaca, the first major engagement of the Atlanta campaign. In 2000 a major Civil War preservation victory was realized when the state purchased a 508-acre tract of that battlefield, located near Dalton in present-day Gordon and Whitfield counties. The commission was a key player in facilitating the sale.

In September 2002 commissioners brought together several parties to fund the purchase of a 190-acre
Crossroads of Conflict (1994)
tract in southwest Atlanta near the Utoy Creek battle site. The parcel, which was included on the national Civil War Preservation Trust's list of the nation's ten most endangered sites, is laced with a network of pristine earthworks dug by Union troops during the siege of Atlanta in August 1864.

The commission published Crossroads of Conflict, a detailed guidebook to the state's Civil War sites, and Presence of the Past, a color brochure available to visitors in Georgia's welcome centers and at other locations around the state. It has sponsored and hosted national conferences and education and preservation forums and has networked extensively with local, state, and national preservation groups. Commissioners are regularly asked to endorse preservation efforts and serve as speakers at meetings and lectures.

Despite extremely limited funding, the Georgia Civil War Commission continues to raise awareness of preservation issues across the state and promote contact between preservation groups.

Suggested Reading

 Crossroads of Conflict: A Guide for Touring Civil War Sites in Georgia (Atlanta: Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Georgia Department of Industry, Trade, and Tourism, [1994]).


Dan Childs, Georgia Civil War Commission


Published 2/10/2006

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Printable Version

article links

Community Preservation
History of Historic Preservation
Battle of Resaca
Civil War Archaeology

destination links

Ten Major Civil War Sites in Georgia

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A project of the Georgia Humanities Council, in partnership with the University of Georgia Press, the University System of Georgia/GALILEO, and the Office of the Governor.