As time goes by: Former governor leaves his house to University
MIMI ENSLEY
Issue date: 4/17/09 Section: News
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Students trying to navigate the area around Connor Hall may be familiar with Lumpkin's legacy. His two-story antebellum house sits as an historic anomaly among the other, more modern buildings of Science Row.
The house, which stands in a prime campus location, has had varied uses over the years, but it is too small to have any significant or lasting purpose, said Nash Boney, a retired history professor and author of "A Pictorial History of the University of Georgia."
"In a practical sense, it's not a whole lot of use," Boney said.
But the University won't tear down the Lumpkin House - that is, unless it wants to forfeit its claim to acres of land.
In 1907, the Lumpkin family deeded the house and surrounding area to the University - with a catch. The family stipulated if the University destroyed or moved the house, it would have to surrender all of the land to the Lumpkin clan.
Boney said the clause is obscure and would probably not be upheld if the house were removed, but he didn't think the University would bulldoze the home.
"It's one of the few things on the South Campus that goes back to the 19th century," Boney said.
Lumpkin, who built the house in 1844, served as governor of Georgia in the 1830s. He is most remembered for his role in the forced removal of the Cherokee Native American tribe from the state.
"Lumpkin included [the Cherokee removal] among his proudest achievements," said Claudio Saunt, associate director of the Institute of Native American Studies at the University.
Fueled by the discovery of gold on Cherokee lands and the desire for Georgia citizens to possess the land, the state divvied up the Cherokee territory in a lottery - even while the native people still lived in the area, Saunt said. The state then forced the Cherokee into the West. The incident became known as the "Trail of Tears," because of the deaths resulting from the harsh journey out of Georgia.
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