For its first two decades, Americus was a small courthouse town. The Starksville Road, now Lee Street, was an important highway before the city was founded, and is now the location of many of the older buildings and homes listed in theAmericus Historic District.[7] The arrival of the railroad in 1854 and, three decades later, local attorney Samuel H. Hawkins' construction of the only privately financed railroad in state history made Americus the eighth largest city in Georgia into the 20th century. It was known as the "Metropolis of Southwest Georgia", a reflection of its status as a cotton distribution center.
In 1890, Georgia's first charteredelectric street car system went into operation in Americus. One of its restored cars is on permanent display at the Lake Blackshear Regional Library, a gift from the Robert T. Crabb family who acquired the street car in the 1940s.
The town was already graced with an abundance ofantebellum andVictorian architecture when local capitalists opened theWindsor Hotel in 1892. A five-story Queen Anne edifice, it was designed by a Swedish architect,Gottfried L. Norrman, inAtlanta. Vice-president Thomas R. Marshall gave a speech from the balcony in 1917, and soon to be New York Governor Franklin D. Roosevelt spoke in the dining room in 1928.
For the local minority community, Rev. Dr. Major W. Reddick established theAmericus Institute (1897–1932).Booker T. Washington was a guest speaker there in May 1908. Rev. Alfred S. Staley was responsible for locating the state Masonic Orphanage in Americus, which served its function from 1898 to 1940. Both men engineered the unification of the General Missionary Baptist Convention of Georgia in 1915, the former as president and the latter as recording secretary. The public school named in honor of A.S. Staley was designated a National School of Excellence in 1990.
Two other colleges were also established in Americus, the Third District Agricultural and Mechanical School in 1906 (nowGeorgia Southwestern State University), and the South Georgia Trade and Vocational School in 1948 (nowSouth Georgia Technical College). South Georgia Technical College is located on the original site of Souther Field.[9]
InWorld War I, anArmy Air Service training facility, Souther Field (nowJimmy Carter Regional Airport), was commissioned northeast of the city limits.Charles A. Lindbergh, the "Lone Eagle", bought his first airplane and made his first solo flight there during a two-week stay in May 1923. Recommissioned forWorld War II, Souther Field was used forRAF pilot training (1941–1942)[10] as well as US pilot training before ending the war as a Germanprisoner-of-war camp. The town was incorporated in 1832, and the name Americus was picked out of a hat.[11]
Shoeless Joe Jackson served as the field manager for the local baseball team after his banishment from professional baseball. A plaque at Thomas Bell Stadium commemorates his contribution to the local baseball program.
In 1913, a young black man named Will Redding was lynched by a white mob. Redding refused the Chief of Police's order to stop loitering, was arrested, a struggle ensued, and ultimately Redding grabbed the Chief's gun and shot him. He was then chased down, shot, and put in jail. An angry mob went into the jail and tore down the door to Redding's cell, dragged him out onto Forsyth street, and beat him to death with crow bars and hammers.[12]
Koinonia Farm, an interracial Christian community, was organized near Americus in 1942 byClarence Jordan. Its interracial nature occasioned much opposition from local residents. A terrorist campaign of violence, intimidation, vandalism, and harassment by theKu Klux Klan and others went on for the next 25 years, as well a boycott of Koinonia's products, such that by the late 1960s the once-thriving community was practically depopulated and essentially defunct. In the late 1960sMillard and Linda Fuller, with Clarence Jordan, revived Koinonia Farm and it thrived again. Miller and Fuller foundedHabitat for Humanity International at Koinonia in 1976 before moving it into Americus the following year. In 2005, they foundedThe Fuller Center for Housing, also in Americus. Koinonia Farm remains in operation and is currently located southwest of Americus on Highway 49.[13]
In 1963 occurred theLeesburg Stockade incident. A group of African-American girls aged 12 to 15 were arrested in Americus after trying to buy movie tickets at a theatre's whites-only window, as a form of civil protest. At least fourteen girls were taken to a filthy "hellhole",[15] an isolated prison inLeesburg, Georgia where they were held incommunicado for at least 45 days, in appalling conditions, without right of correspondence or legal representation, and with their families not knowing where they had been or disappeared to. Some weeks later, the girls were surreptitiously photographed byDanny Lyon who had learned the girls' location. The publishing of Lyon's photograph in the black press eventually brought the situation to national attention, and the girls were released some weeks later without ever having been charged with any crime.[16][17][18]
In the same year of 1963, the local Sumter Movement to endracial segregation was organized and led by Rev. Joseph R. Campbell. Four of its activists were arrested under Georgia's 1871 Anti-Treason Act. A federal court ruled the law unconstitutional, establishing that peaceful protests could not be punishable by execution.[19][20] Color barriers were first removed in 1965 when J.W. Jones and Henry L. Williams joined the Americus police force. Lewis M. Lowe was elected as the first black city councilman ten years later. With their election in 1995, Eloise R. Paschal and Eddie Rhea Walker broke the gender barrier on the city's governing body. In 1968, the last segregated black school in Americus was closed,A. S. Staley High School.[21]
In 1971, the city was featured in aMarshall Frady article, "One Another Town", inLife magazine.[21] The portrayal of the city's school integration was relatively benign, especially considering the community's history of troubled race relations.
Americus was hit by an EF3 tornado around 9:15 pm onMarch 1, 2007. The tornado was up to 1 mi-wide (1.6 km), and carved a 38 mi (61 km) path of destruction through the city and surrounding residential areas.[22] It destroyed parts ofSumter Regional Hospital, forcing the evacuations of all of the patients there. There were two fatalities at a Hudson Street residence near the hospital; all SRH patients were evacuated safely. The hospital, however, faced major reconstruction issues and was eventually torn down. A new hospital, Phoebe Sumter, opened at a new location on the corner of US 19 and Highway 280 in December 2011.
GeorgiaGovernorSonny Perdue said, "It was worse that [sic] I had feared. The hospital was hit, but the devastation within the area of Sumter County and Americus was more than I imagined. The businesses around the hospital are totally destroyed. Power is still not restored in many places. It's just a blessing frankly that we didn't have more fatalities than we did."[23] Over 500 homes were affected, with around 100 completely destroyed. Several businesses throughout the town were seriously damaged or destroyed as well.
President George W. Bush visited the area on March 3, calling what he saw "tough devastation."
According to theUnited States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 10.7 square miles (28 km2), of which 10.5 square miles (27 km2) is land and 0.2 square miles (0.52 km2) (1.87%) is water.
TheSumter County School District holds grades pre-school to twelfth, which consist of one primary school and one elementary school, two middle schools, and two high schools.[42] The district has 353 full-time teachers and over 5,774 students.[43]
The community has the Lake Blackshear Regional Library, a part of theLake Blackshear Regional Library System. It was temporarily relocated to a shirt factory warehouse also located in Americus after the tornado in 2007, but, once the reconstruction of the library finished around 2012, it was moved back to its original place.
There have been eightminor league teams that have represented the city of Americus during 20 seasons spanning 1906–2002. Since classification of the minors began, seven of them have been labeled as class D loops and one played in an independent league. Several ballplayers for Americus teams subsequently played in themajor leagues.
^Gilbert S. Guinn,The Arnold Scheme: British Pilots, The American South and the Allies Daring Plan, History Press, 2007
^Watson, Stephanie; Lisa Wojna (2008).Weird, Wacky, and Wild Georgia Trivia. Blue Bike Books. p. 59.ISBN978-1-897278-44-4.
^Anderson, Alan (July 30, 2006).Remembering Americus Georgia: Essays on Southern Life. History Press (SC). pp. 73–74https://books.google.com/books?id=svf_7DV9i6UC&pg=PA129&lpg=PA129&dq=remembering+americus+georgia+essays&source=bl&ots=8fJVoP2Xbf&sig=Z4YA9QeYHCJoQkww6tZLuGRoLv4&hl=en&sa=X&ei=J64cVLmbAoGZyAS8lIHYDg&ved=0CCwQ6AEwAg#v=onepage&q=remembering%20americus%20georgia%20essays&f=false.ISBN9781596291317.
^Bradley George, Grant Blankenship (August 15, 2016)."The Girls Of The Leesburg Stockade". GBP (Georgia Public Broadcasting). RetrievedSeptember 18, 2023.