A History of Sautee Nacoochee
download cover image ►

A History of Sautee Nacoochee

Title Details

Pages: 327

Illustrations: 114 color images

Trim size: 7.000in x 9.000in

Formats

Hardcover

Pub Date: 05/01/2025

ISBN: 9-780-8203-6958-7

List Price: $34.95

Web PDF

Pub Date: 05/01/2025

ISBN: 9-780-8203-6959-4

List Price: $34.95

EPUB

Pub Date: 05/01/2025

ISBN: 9-780-8203-6960-0

List Price: $34.95

Subsidies and Partnerships

Published with the generous support of John and Laura Hardman , Shell and Wyck Knox, and the Dot and Lam Hardman Family Foundation

A History of Sautee Nacoochee

A deep history of a unique rural community in Northeast Georgia

Skip to

  • Description
  • Reviews

Virtually every landscape is a palimpsest, created by the imprint, however ephemeral, that people have left everywhere they have been. As one peels back layers of history, the true nature of a place can be better understood. A History of Sautee Nacoochee does precisely this for a small Appalachian community with a remarkably long history.

Sautee Nacoochee is a rural community located in White County in northeastern Georgia. It is centered around two large valleys, Sautee, drained by Sautee Creek, and Nacoochee, drained by the Chattahoochee River. In the broadest terms, this book synthesizes an enormous amount of information from many disparate sources into a narrative that identifies historical contexts, that documents and incorporates site-specific information, and that strives to illuminate the lives of the people who over many centuries of human occupation and in many different ways contributed to making Sautee Nacoochee what it is today. It is not a typical “pioneer” history. Indeed, Tommy Hart Jones illuminates the lives of all the people who have occupied the valleys over many thousands of years and connects the deep past to the present.

Jones presents a deeply researched history of the Sautee Nacoochee region within White County, Georgia. Unlike local histories produced a century ago during the apex of similarly published works, A History of Sautee Nacoochee devotes significant attention to historical actors beyond white ‘pioneers.’ American Indians and African Americans appear throughout the manuscript. A History of Sautee Nacoochee thus achieves a level of diversity and inclusiveness that few earlier works of local history achieved.

—Keith S. Hébert, author of Cornerstone of the Confederacy: Alexander H. Stephens and the Speech That Defined the Lost Cause

About the Author/Editor

TOMMY JONES, an eighth-generation Georgian, has spent his decades-long career in support of historic preservation. He is retired from the National Park Service where he was an architectural historian and cultural resource specialist in the Southeast Regional Office with a wide range of professional duties supporting the agency’s efforts to preserve, protect, and interpret historic sites, buildings, and landscapes. He worked for the Georgia Trust for Historic Preservation for many years and has had a variety of other clients, including the Atlanta History Center, local governments, and historical societies. He has authored dozens of studies on a wide variety of historic structures.