- Nicholsonboro State Historical
Marker
- Located on White Bluff Rd. at Old Coffee Bluff Rd.,
Savannah
- 31°57.605, 081°08.209
NICHOLSONBORO
Nicholsonboro Community grew out of the
turmoil of the last year of the Civil War1 and the first years
of Reconstruction. General W. T. Sherman's Special Field Order
No. 15 reserved the sea islands from Charleston southward, plus
abandoned rice fields for thirty miles inland, for freedmen in
January 1865. During the next two years the officially appointed
agent, but self proclaimed, "Governor" Tunis G. Campbell
ruled these lands from his island kingdom on St. Catherine.
When ownership of the lands reverted, 200
former slaves mainly from St. Catherines came here and established
their own community in 1868. Ten years later eighteen Negroes
signed a mortgage for 200 acres of John Nicholson's land. In
four years the thrifty mortgage holders paid the $5,000.00 and
received the title in 1882. The community was based upon fishing
and farming with Savannah as the primary market. With changes
in fishing technology and more stringent city marketing laws,
the economic base and the community withered. The primary monument
to this community is the Nicholson Baptist Church which had been
established with the community. Two early pastors were Alexander
Harris, who served with the Confederate Army, and Daniel Wright.
025-92 GEORGIA HISTORICAL
MARKER 1978
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