Murphy Settlement-Colquitt Co
Posted by: Groundspeak Regular Member Sprinterman
N 31° 04.229 W 083° 49.426
17R E 230573 N 3440841
Located at New Hope Free Will Baptist Cemetery on U.S. 319 opposite Mack Dekle Rd. S of Moultrie
Waymark Code: WMAJJ8
Location: Georgia, United States
Date Posted: 01/21/2011
Published By:Groundspeak Regular Member Lat34North
Views: 5

Side 1

The Murphy families were among early pioneer settlers who migrated from Duplin and Sampson Counties, North Carolina to this area between the 1790´s and early 1800´s. This area and surrounding land was inhabited by Lower Creek Indian tribes with campgrounds located along the nearby Ochlocknee River. It appears that these lands, for the most part, been explored on a limited basis by early settlers (early maps indicate that DeSoto´s expedition may have also visited nearby areas).

The Murphy´s , along with several other families (Carlton´s, Lanier´s, Sloan´s and Alderman´s) apparently made several trips between here and North Carolina, using the old Thigpin Trail, in an effort to make a permanent settlement. These early families endured many hardships and dangers to establish a farming and trading community.

After the 1814 Creek and Seminole Indian war, these lands were ceded to the United States by the Treaties of 1814 and 1818, and became part of three counties granted charters under the State of Georgia. This local area was originally part of Irwin County, then part of Thomas County and now part of present-day Colquitt County. The Murphy´s and other families acquired these lands which had been divided into Land Lots of 490 acres and granted under the State Land Lotteries of 1818 and 1820.

As pioneer settlers, they brought prosperity to the region, with large sheep and cattle operations, along with other agricultural crops (corn, tobacco, and cotton). At one time, the Murphy family land holdings reportedly were from just below present-day Meigs Road near Moultrie south to areas near the current Thomas

(continued on other side)

Side 2

County line. These early settlers operated commercial enterprises (including a gristmill, timber and sawmill, narrow gauge rail, retail stores, and turpentine stills), and also worked to establish a post office and school for the thriving and growing Murphy community. Land for the Murphy School was purchased by L.T. Dunlap, George Murphy, J.T. Kennedy, and T.A. Redding and donated to the School Board in 1906. When the Murphy School was subsequently combined with Sunset School, the land was deeded back to the Murphy Cemetery.

Among the original settlers (including several Murphy brothers) was Henry Murphy, whose son, James Murphy, was a community leader during reconstruction and a candidate for the Georgia House of Representatives in 1876. He was defeated in a controversial election and is burled at the Shade Murphy Cemetery, where several of the original families are also interred. It is located about 2.56 miles west of this site.

This marker is located near the original Murphy settlement and on land known as the Murphy Cemetery, which was donated to the community for a burial site by Gibson Lanier (his parents, Murphy and Temperance Carlton Lanier, are buried at the Shade Murphy Cemetery). Gibson Lanier and his family and eight of James and Elisabeth Ann Murphy´s children are buried here. Many of the descendants of these early families are also interred in the Murphy Cemetery. This historical marker is intended to honor the memory and sacrifices of those pioneer ancestors, who were among the original settlers of this region.
Type of Marker: Highway

Marker #: none

Date: Unknown

Sponsor: Unknown

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