Georgia
Compared to the rest of GEORGIA , the largest of the
Southern states, the bright lights of its capital Atlanta
are a wild aberration. Apart from some beaches and towns on the
highly indented coastline, this overwhelmingly rural state is
composed of slow, easygoing settlements where the best, and
sometimes the only, way to enjoy your time is to sip iced tea and
have a chat on the porch.
Settlement in Georgia, the thirteenth British colony (named
after King George II), started in 1733 at Savannah, intended as a
haven of Christian principles for poor Britons, with both alcohol
and slavery banned. However, under pressure from planters,
slavery was introduced in 1752, and by the time of the
Civil War almost half the population were black slaves.
Little fighting took place on Georgian soil until Sherman's troops
marched in from Tennessee, burned Atlanta to the ground and laid
waste to all property on the way to the coast. The economy
successfully re-established itself after the war, attracting
substantial investment in the latter years of the nineteenth
century.
Today, bustling Atlanta stands as the unofficial capital
of the South. The city where Dr Martin Luther King Jr was
born, preached and is buried bears little relation to Gone with
the Wind stereotypes, and its forward-looking energy is upheld
as a role model for other cities with large black populations -
though it does still suffer high levels of urban poverty and
violent crime.
Atlanta's main rival as a tourist destination is the Georgia
coast , stretching south from beautiful old Savannah via
the sea islands to the semitropical Okefenokee Swamp
, inland near Florida. In the northeast , the Appalachian
foothills are particularly fetching in fall, while
Athens has a reputation for producing offbeat rock groups
such as REM and the B-52's. Further south , the agricultural
heartlands are rich in musical history, but only Macon and
ancient Ocmulgee provide reasons to stop.
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