Happy Founding Eve!
You might have heard that Thomas County turns 200 years old this year. This specifically happens on December 23, 2025, the day when, 200 years ago, the Georgia House of Representatives passed an act which created two new counties: Lowndes County to our right and Thomas County, a much bigger county than what we know it as today. So, what was going on as this momentous occasion occurred? Who was there, and what were they up to? And what does it say about us 200 years later (and going)? Let’s take a look.

The area that was soon to become Thomas County was carved out of Irwin County, founded in 1818 as part of the land ceded by the Muskogee people, and Decatur County which had only recently been carved out of Early County. Today, the Thomas and Irwin County are over eighty miles apart from one another, but in 1825 Irwin County stretched from its current location down to the state line and over to the west, encompassing a large swath of South Georgia. The county was divided into sixteen districts which were twenty-mile plots of land further divided in to 490-acre square lots. Districts 13 and 14 went into Thomas County. Decatur County reached from the Alabama-Georgia border in the west over to Irwin County and from the Florida-Georgia Border in the south up to its current northern border. Parts of districts 23 and 19 went into Thomas County.
Within these original counties, there were pockets of settlement, mostly in the northern part of Irwin County, with little developments trickling southward. Looking backwards in 1875, the newspapers in Thomasville suggested Thomas Hill Bryan was the first United States citizen to settle in what would become Thomas County back in 1819. We can’t be totally sure of that information, but he was definitely among the earliest of the new settlers. In the 1820 census, there were nearly 400 White citizens in Irwin County with 39 enslaved workers. The settlement of Glasgow first popped up around this time close to the Florida border near present-day Metcalfe. As you might guess from the name, the settlers were mostly of a Scottish background.

One of the early settlers we know of was Thomas Jefferson Johnson. His property in the southern part of Irwin County became the plantation we know today as Pebble Hill. Johnson was responsible for introducing the bill to create Thomas and Lowndes Counties. He was also responsible for naming the county, choosing to name it after his distant relative General Jett Thomas, a veteran of the War of 1812 and the architect behind the oldest buildings at the University of Georgia. Whether or not he chose this relative because they shared a name is up for debate.
Once Thomas County was officially recognized as its own county, the people of the area put forth a list of men to serve as commissioners: Duncan Ray, William J. Forson, Simon Hadley Sr., Michael Horn, and Thomas Hill Bryan. They decided to hold court in the middle of the new county at the home of Charles Kingsley. The Kingsley property covered Land Lot 54, or what would become part of the boundaries of Thomasville by the end of the 19th century. It was conveniently located next door to Land Lot 39, later owned by Thomas Jefferson Johnson who sold it to the County Commissioners in 1826 to form the new town of Thomasville.
With this event and two hundred years change, we end up in modern Thomas County. And you can help us mark such a momentous occasion by joining us on Victorian Christmas at the Historic Courthouse for a reading of our founding document. Alongside our hosts, the Thomas County Board of Commissioners, we’ll be bringing out artifacts from the past two hundred years of Thomas County’s history and making new memories as a community. We hope to see you there!




Our first lesson is in drawing. Using simple shapes like circles, you can add in detail to create something new from a spooky Jack-O-Lantern to a flying witch. What creepy Halloween critters can you come up with?











