Inscription
WAYNESBOROUGH. On July 31, 1783, an Act was passed by the General Assembly meeting in Augusta to lay out a town, Waynesborough, on reserved or private land. Commissioners named (Thomas Lewis, Sr., Thomas Lewis, Jr., John Duhart, Edward Telfair, John Jones) were instructed to sell lots on John Thomas' land on the waters of McIntosh Creek, where the Battle of Burke's Jail was fought.
"By virtue of an Act of July 31, 1783," an indenture was made on June 9, 1799 between Commissioners Isaac Perry, Alexander Carter, William Wynne, John Whitehead, John Mitchell, Thomas Yarborough, and John Davis, to sell lots on the present site. Named for General Anthony Wayne, Waynesboro was incorporated December 10, 1812.
Samuel Moore bought the first one acre lot bounded by Shadrick, Robinson and Barron Streets. The "Munnerlyn House," built by Alexander Carter, was, by tradition, the oldest house in Waynesboro. On May 17, 1791, in his "Journal," George Washington wrote that he went 6 miles out of his way to spend the night there.
President Woodrow Wilson, as a boy, was a visitor in this famous house on Liberty Street. In 1910 President William H. Taft visited Waynesboro. 017-10 GEORGIA HISTORICAL COMMISSION 1958
Location
Sources
More markers in Burke
Botsford Church - 1773
L. on Botsford Chu, GA
BOTSFORD CHURCH - 1773.
Burke County
Waynesboro, GA
BURKE COUNTY. Burke County, an original county, was created by the Const.
Burke County's 8 Governors
Waynesboro, GA
BURKE COUNTY'S 8 GOVERNORS.
The Cavalry Actions at Waynesboro
THE CAVALRY ACTIONS AT WAYNESBORO.
Cavalry Skirmish at Thomas' Station
Burke County, GA
CAVALRY SKIRMISH AT THOMAS' STATION.
