The first act of the Georgian Revolutionary War occurred after the fight between Lexington and Concorde when a revolutionary rushed into a powder magazine at Savanna on 11 May 1775. After the barbarous violence, the port of British warships full of US forces was seized in Savanna George Walton and Barton Gwinett joined Dr. Lehmann Hall to sign the Declaration of Independence.
When the war reached a dead end, the British commander turned to the South. On 14th February 1779, Augusta was arrested and abandoned immediately after the battle of the state's most notorious Kettle Creek. Today's visitors can visit battlefields and historic sites named after combat heroes including Elija Clark.
In the same year, Morrisburg collapsed, and the British governor returned to Savannah, and Georgia became the only colony to restore the royal loyalty. But in 1782 the British were deported and the state government elected the first post colonial government and the war in Georgia was concluded.
To see a tour of the revolutionary war ruins from the coastal to the mountains in the northeastern part of Georgia from Georgia's 7 travel areas, please see the explanation below.
"Georgia's intersection conflict: Civil War manual", scheduled for publication in the fall of 2010, covers Georgia's 350 historic sites. This book is a dual purpose of the tour guide and it is also a deep history of the Georgian war. The intersection of the new conflict, written by the Civil War Committee staff Barry L. Brown and Gordon R. Elwell, is an updated, enhanced version of the 50 page guide published by Georgia in 1994. Motrtle Hill Cemetery, Rome, Eph Lloyd's County Cemetery is one of Georgia's most important historical resources. There are over 40,000 states in the state, of which over 100 are presumed to be registered as national history registered goods. Of course, the cemetery is a place to commemorate the dead, but it is also an important place for sculpture art, landscaping, historical association.
Georgia is the forefront of the civil war and there are many related historical sites that can make the most of the history of civil war and the possibilities of sightseeing. Georgia was an important theater for the civil war, from the bombing of Fort Plaqi in 1862 to the capture of South President David at the end of the war in May 1965. The Atlanta campaign by General William T. Sherman and success in March against the ocean, including the destruction of most countries, ensured Abraham Lincoln 's re - election and the end of the war. Because the influence of Sherman is spreading throughout the state, Georgia community that has hardly changed