Walthourville (/ˈwɔːltaʊərvɪl/) is a city in Liberty County, Georgia, United States. When it was incorporated in 1974, it had a government entirely composed of women; and in 1978 it elected Carrie Kent, the first African-American woman mayor in Georgia history. Walthourville is a part of the Hinesville-Fort Stewartmetropolitan statistical area (MSA). The population was 3,680 at the 2020 Census.
History
Walthourville draws its name from Andrew Walthour, a revolutionary soldier and a physician who established a plantation in the area circa 1795. The Walthourville Presbyterian Church was originally housed in a structure, erected in 1820, which served as a meeting place for both Baptists and Presbyterians. In 1845 a Presbyterian church was erected, which was destroyed by fire in 1877. The following year a new church was completed, with that structure being destroyed in a storm in 1881. The present church was dedicated in July 1884.[4][5]
The Walthourville Academy, a non-sectarian co-educational school, was founded in 1823.[6] A post office was established on July 3, 1837[7]
By the 1840s the town was one of the most prosperous towns in south Georgia.[8] In 1854 the North Newport Church moved to Walthourville.[9]
The tracks of the Savannah, Albany & Gulf Railroad reached Walthourville in 1857. The railroad merged with the Atlantic & Gulf Railroad and traversed south Georgia from Savannah to Bainbridge. The Walthourville depot was Station No. 4, the fourth to be constructed on the line from Savannah.[10][11]
An 1862 guide to Confederate railroads provided the following description of Walthourville, "a post-town in Liberty county, Georgia, forty miles South-west of Savannah, is the largest place in the county. It contains two flourishing academies, and about 400 inhabitants."[12]
By 1974 the town had an airstrip and an industrial park, and there was some concern the area might be annexed by nearby Hinesville, Georgia. Although the town was 179 years old, it was not officially chartered by the state. An attempt to do so by the male leaders of the town some 12 years earlier had failed due in part to "bickering."[13]
A committee entirely composed of women completed the necessary census and circulated a petition as required, getting 300 signatures.[14] When they filed the paperwork with the Georgia General Assembly for approval they named themselves the incorporating officers. "We thought it was all just on paper", said Mayor Lyndol Anderson.[13] But when the approved papers arrived (signed by then-Governor Jimmy Carter[15]) they realized they were required to serve as town government until the first election in December.[13]
In December 1974 the all-woman slate ran in its first election, and were challenged by a slate of male candidates, none of whom succeeded.[18][21][25] The women had proven themselves good campaigners[24] as well as good governors. They had gotten streetlights installed in the town and put up street signs, and had not only levied no new taxes, but they had donated their own (nominal) official salaries back to the town.[13]
Four years later, one man did join the council in the 1978 election.[26] In the same election, council member Carrie Kent was elected mayor - the first African-american woman to be elected mayor in Georgia.[26] In 2007 the town erected a historical marker commemorating the history of its incorporation (see photo).
Points of interest
In the vicinity of Walthourville across the county line near the intersection of Tibet Highway and Griffin Road lies Tea Grove Plantation, an outdoor collection of historic buildings, vehicles, and farming equipment open to the public.[27]