Nash Family & Farm History
THE HISTORICAL GEOGRAPHY
OF THE NASH FARM SITE
Although it is in Henry County, at one time, all or part of the
Nash Farm was located in Clayton County, which was created in
1858 from Henry and Fayette County. The original east line of
the county ran between Land Lots 121 and 122, rather than 122
and 123 as it does today. The line was adjusted in the mid
twentieth century. Originally, all of this land was part of
Henry County, which was created in 1821 from lands acquired from
the Creek
tribe in the Treaty of Indian Springs in 1821. The
land was surveyed into 202.5-acre lots that were distributed in
a lottery to qualified citizens of Georgia. The winner of these
lots usually sold them to interested parties rather than settle
the land themselves.
Early settlers to the area farmed cotton and corn and raised
livestock as the principal products of their farms. Farms
varied in size, with a number of local farmers owning large
tracts and employing teams of slaves to work the fields. Other
farmers had more modest holdings and relied on their families,
tenants, or hired hands to tend the farm. The value of land in
this part of Henry County increased significantly in the 1840's
when the Macon
& Western Railroad was
constructed through the area, making it easier for farmers to
market their products in Macon and Savannah. The rail
connection also brought more manufactured goods into the
backcountry of Georgia.
The railroad followed the ridge between the Ocmulgee and Flint
River drainages and passed about 2 miles from the Nash Farm
property, which is located at the headwaters of Walnut Creek.
The land is rolling and somewhat rocky, but is well-drained and
suitable for cotton or corn production. Among the earliest
roads through the area was the Macon or (Griffin) Road, which
parallels the railroad and the other major road was the
McDonough - Fayetteville Road connecting the county seats of
Henry and Fayette counties. The McDonough - Fayetteville Road
crossed the Macon & Western railroad in the vicinity of
Lovejoy's Station. A road forked from the McDonough -
Fayetteville Road at Farmer Road, (located two miles west of
I-75) and it also ran via to Lovejoy from the direction of Mt.
Carmel Road. Several early maps show the McDonough Road taking
a more northerly east/west course between the two towns, roughly
following the current McDonough Road (Burroughs 1846; Mitchell
1850). On these maps, the village of Fosterville is shown
between McDonough and the railroad, in the vicinity of where
McDonough Road today crosses Walnut Creek, (Figure
5), at the (old Samuel Foster Home site). On the Colton (1854)
and the Johnson (1858)
maps, the McDonough - Fayetteville Road takes a more westerly
route, roughly along the current Mt. Carmel Road, (Figure
6). On these maps, Fosterville is shown close to or at the
railroad and just south of the current McDonough Road. The 1858
map is one of the first to show the newly created Clayton
County, which more clearly illustrates that the McDonough -
Fayetteville Road ran in a northerly east/west direction.
Lovejoy's Station first appears on a state map in 1863 (Johnson
1863), and the McDonough - Fayetteville Road ran in
the same direction, with Fosterville shown east of the railroad
around the current Mt. Carmel area. It is likely that the main
road to (Mt. Carmel ) from Lovejoy shifted south in the 1850's,
while the northerly McDonough-Fayetteville Road remained open.
When Lovejoy's Station was established, the more northerly route
may have become the most preferred one. The 1865 Lindenkohl
State map clearly shows Fosterville northeast of Lovejoy's RR
Station. (Figure
6B)
Some local family folklore places the First Fosterville Post
Office across the road from the modern day County Line Methodist
Church near the entrance of Pates Creek Sub-Division. It is
well documented and interesting to note that Thompson Edward
Nash was the first Post Office Master of Fosterville. (Source -
Communication with Nash Family relatives - Nash Family Records -
Photocopy of original "Post Office Master" certificate - Henry
County Genealogy Society).
Most of the roads back during this period were maintained by
nearby property owners because of the need to transport their
crops either to McDonough or by the new Macon & Western
Railroad. Two prominent wealthy planters, Stephen Green Dorsey
and Thompson Edward Nash lived on the same stretch of the
McDonough - Fayetteville Road in the vicinity of northeast
Lovejoy. These men were both wealthy and had the resources to
maintain good care of this stretch of road as their livelihoods
depended on it.
The location of the roads is important to the Nash Farm site
because the descriptions of the area from many Civil War sources
reference the names of the roads. This can be confusing because
they were generally referred to by the name of the town to which
they led. Since there were two roads that led to McDonough from
the vicinity of Lovejoy's, and the location of Fosterville did
not remain constant, the same roads were referred to by
different names, and different roads often had the same name.
Two Civil War-era maps (Poe
1877; Ruger
1895) show slightly different roads plans in the area
are different (Figures
7 and
8). Both sets of maps are compilations, made by the army
after the war from field maps and other maps used during the
war. They represent conditions as they existed at the time the
maps were made, but are not entirely accurate, since in many
cases they were made by army surveyors in combat conditions.
Example; (Ruger map was completed on September 2, 1864, at the
beginning of the Lovejoy infantry battles). The fortifications
on the Ruger map (indicated in blue for Union and red or
Confederate appear to have been mapped years after the action
was over and represent the positions of the armies at the time
the positions were held on that particular day.
The Civil War maps show a more complex network of roads than the
earlier state maps. Although the configuration of the McDonough
- Fayetteville Road differs somewhat on each, they both show a
road branching off of the road and leading to Lee's Mill, on
Line Creek. This road ran beside the old (1855 era) Thompson E.
Nash place and portions of it are still visible today.
(Communication with Joe Acker, previous property owner, 2007).
As evident, this road must have branched off north of the Nash
Farm property. However, it could not have branched off Freeman
Road in Clayton County because that road did not exist in 1864.
Fosterville is not indicated on either of these maps, but it is
referred to in Civil War correspondence, which seems to place it
in the more northerly east/west location, on the McDonough -
Fayetteville Road near Walnut Creek, as shown on the 1858 map (see
Figure 5). This makes sense because this area was also the
location of the Samuel Foster family home, which location was
prominently marked on both the Poe & Ruger maps at Walnut Creek.
Although the two Civil War maps were both compiled from field
maps and other maps from the Civil War and purport to represent
conditions during the war, there are differences between them
and the way the area around the Nash farm property is
represented. The Poe map (see Figure
7) seems to represent the roads more accurately, and places
most of the Confederate lines on the north side of the road
while the Ruger map shows them on both sides of the road. The
Poe map shows no house in the location of the current Nash Farm
house. The Ruger map (see Figure
8) shows a vacant house on McDonough - Fayetteville Road,
but the road is not represented accurately so it is difficult to
place the vacant house in relation to modern landmarks. The
Ruger map accurately represents the locations of the Union and
Confederate lines in relation to the current McDonough Road and
Walnut Creek, however.
Deed research, reviews of Civil War records and accounts, and
reviews of historical maps shed some light on the questions
about Nash farm property and the historical events that occurred
there. The results of this historical research are represented
in the following chapters after a view of maps of Clayton &
Henry County.
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