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NGE >> Cities and Counties >> Cities and Towns >> Thomson |
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Thomson Thomson,
Thomson grew with the railroad. The wooden station gave way to the 1860 granite depot, later augmented with brick. John Langston, a farmer who owned much of the land that made up Thomson, converted his house to a hotel serving railroad crew and travelers. Langston's son-in-law, the Reverend J. H. Stockton, bought land south of the railroad, dividing it into building lots.
Gold was discovered near Thomson in 1823. Most of this gold, totaling $80,000 in bullion, was obtained close to the earth's surface and refined by the use of a stamp mill, constructed by the local mine owner Jeremiah Griffin. After the Civil War (1861-65) gold mining declined. Today Thomson's industries include kaolin mining, textile manufacturing, iron works distribution facilities, and agribusiness. Several large industrial parks surround the city. According to the 2010 U.S. census, Thomson's population was 6,778. Thomson is known as the "Camellia City of the South"
Among the
Augusta Techncial College operates a satellite campus in town. Thomson was the hometown of statesman and politician Thomas E. Watson, a prominent member of the Populist Party in Georgia and the namesake of the Watson-Brown Foundation. Other Thomson natives include the blues musician "Blind Willie" McTell and the folk artists Jake McCord and Zebedee Armstrong. Suggested Reading Mrs. W. C. McCommons and Miss Clara Stovall, History of McDuffie County, Georgia (Tignall, Ga.: Boyd, 1988). Susan D. Morris, University of Georgia Libraries Updated 12/19/2011 |
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