Wetumpka
Jean-Baptiste Le Moyne, seeking to create a strategic outpost for New France, built Fort Toulouse in Creek territory. This area would eventually become Wetumpka, located on the banks of the Coosa River and standing at the foot of the Appalachian Mountains. The fort became the headquarters for Gen. Andrew Jackson during the War of 1812, and later it was where Creek Indians ceded their lands to the federal government. Wetumpka's presence was also large outside of military endeavors. During the cotton boom, two years after the city's incorporation in 1834, a New York newspaper declared it and Chicago, Illinois, the "two most promising cities in the West." Although fire, floods, and the Civil War hindered growth, infrastructural transformations and cultural additions have helped mold modern Wetumpka into the "City of Natural Beauty" and propel it to occasional roles on the big screen.
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Wetumpka
Jean-Baptiste Le Moyne, seeking to create a strategic outpost for New France, built Fort Toulouse in Creek territory. This area would eventually become Wetumpka, located on the banks of the Coosa River and standing at the foot of the Appalachian Mountains. The fort became the headquarters for Gen. Andrew Jackson during the War of 1812, and later it was where Creek Indians ceded their lands to the federal government. Wetumpka's presence was also large outside of military endeavors. During the cotton boom, two years after the city's incorporation in 1834, a New York newspaper declared it and Chicago, Illinois, the "two most promising cities in the West." Although fire, floods, and the Civil War hindered growth, infrastructural transformations and cultural additions have helped mold modern Wetumpka into the "City of Natural Beauty" and propel it to occasional roles on the big screen.
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Wetumpka

Wetumpka

Wetumpka

Wetumpka

Paperback

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Overview

Jean-Baptiste Le Moyne, seeking to create a strategic outpost for New France, built Fort Toulouse in Creek territory. This area would eventually become Wetumpka, located on the banks of the Coosa River and standing at the foot of the Appalachian Mountains. The fort became the headquarters for Gen. Andrew Jackson during the War of 1812, and later it was where Creek Indians ceded their lands to the federal government. Wetumpka's presence was also large outside of military endeavors. During the cotton boom, two years after the city's incorporation in 1834, a New York newspaper declared it and Chicago, Illinois, the "two most promising cities in the West." Although fire, floods, and the Civil War hindered growth, infrastructural transformations and cultural additions have helped mold modern Wetumpka into the "City of Natural Beauty" and propel it to occasional roles on the big screen.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781467111249
Publisher: Arcadia Publishing SC
Publication date: 01/13/2014
Series: Images of America Series
Pages: 128
Product dimensions: 6.50(w) x 9.10(h) x 0.50(d)

About the Author

Jan Wood just completed a 30-year career with Community Action and the Wetumpka Area Chamber of Commerce. Her interest in history began in 1991 with researching numerous lines of her family's genealogy, and she continues to be an aspiring student of Wetumpka's history. Joe Allen Turner, affectionately known as Wetumpka's local historian, had an early, intense interest in preserving the history of his beloved hometown.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments 6

Introduction 7

1 Prehistoric Happenings and Native Culture 9

2 Development of Commerce in Wetumpka 19

3 The Coosa River 35

4 Education in Wetumpka 43

5 Institutional Structures in Wetumpka 57

6 Homes, Churches, and Cemeteries 69

7 Cultural Locations 91

8 Wetumpka Gatherings 99

9 Wetumpka's Sons and Daughters 109

About the Elmore County Historical Society and Museum 127

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