Fort Attaway
rome’s only connection to the
chickamauga campaign heritage trail
and
900,000
civil War Tourists
per year
greatly enhances
Fort Attaway’s
economic Potential
for
Rome, Floyd county
and
The State of Georgia
forcing governer
Sonny Perdue
to
request a formal response
from the
Georgia Department of Transportation Commissioner
Harold E. Linnenkohl
On January 8, 2007, the Fort Attaway
Preservation Society sent out a Tourism Package to State Senator
Jeff Mullis and State Representative Barbara Massey-Reece; Governor
Perdue was included in the long list of those it was copied to. The
package focused on the excellent tourism potential that
Fort Attaway, if not destroyed, possesses because it is
Rome’s only connection to the Chickamauga Campaign Heritage Trail
and the Chickamauga Battlefield’s 900,000 tourists per year. It also
focused on the facts that have repeatedly proven the irreversible
damage the GDOT’s project will needlessly impose onto Fort Attaway
and virtually eliminate its ability to generate tourism dollars.
On January 18, 2007
Governor Perdue notified us that he had forwarded our package to
GDOT Commissioner Harold Linnenkohl, and had requested a response
from the GDOT. Our Tourism Package, Governor Perdue’s letter, Harold
Linnenkohl’s formal response and our Fort Attaway Preservation
Society reply to Mr. Linnenkohl’s response can be viewed on our home
page under the heading “Governor Sonny Perdue requests formal
response from Georgia Department of Transportation Commissioner.”
www.fortattaway.com
Fort Attaway Preservation Society, inc.
Officially becomes a
501(c)(3)
non-profit corporation
On February 26, 2007,
the Fort Attaway Preservation Society became a 501 (c)(3) non-profit
corporation making all future donations tax deductible. Accountant
Ansley Rice, of Rome, Georgia based accounting firm Howse & Rice,
filed the application six weeks earlier. Already, the tax deductible
donations have started coming in. Our very first
tax deductible donation
came from Linda and Robert Baker. Linda is the secretary for the
Georgia Chapter of the Trail of Tears Association whom we met at our
first membership meeting after we (David and Cailey Fowler) joined
the association.
During our historic research on
Fort Attaway we have learned that the Fort Attaway
Preservation Society and the Georgia Chapter of the Trail of Tears
Association have similar missions. That similarity is in location.
Cherokee Indian, Major Ridge, who was instrumental in the treaty of
New Echota, lived in Rome. The only thing separating his home and
property, known as the Chieftain’s Museum, from Fort Attaway is the
Oostanaula River. Fort Attaway is located on DeSoto Hill which was
in the Town of DeSoto (Town of DeSoto predates Rome, Georgia).
Major Ridge’s house (Chieftain’s
Museum) is on the east side of the Oostanaula River
along with the City of Rome’s Ridge Ferry Park that is also named
for Major Ridge. Fort Attaway is located on the west side of the
Oostanaula River, in an area known as DeSoto, and is directly across
from Ridge’s house (Chieftain’s Museum) and Rome’s Ridge Ferry Park.
The DeSoto area, also formerly known as the Town of DeSoto predates
the City of Rome, and was named for the Spanish Explorer Hernando
DeSoto. August 31, 1540 it is believed that Hernando DeSoto
traveling on the Coosa River stopped here in his search for Native
American gold, thus forever leaving his mark on the Native American
Town of Chiaha through disease. Hernando DeSoto also left his mark
on the land because it was known there after as the Town of DeSoto.
(Further documentation on the DeSoto area can be found on our home
page under |