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EARLY GADSDEN HISTORY
HISTORY - THE EARLY YEARS
Forty-eight years after
Columbus discovered America, sixty-seven years before the
first English settlement at Jamestown, and eighty years
before the Pilgrim fathers stepped ashore at Plymouth the
white man in force traveled down the Coosa river and through
what is now Gadsden. De Soto in 1540 led a group of
Spaniards into Alabama, consisting of more than six hundred
men, including noblemen, soldiers, priests, carpenters and
smiths. De Soto found a beautiful valley in all of its
undisturbed virgin grandeur. It was inhabited by a happy,
contented group of Cherokee Indians who had probably been in
the valley and surrounding mountains for many hundred years.
He did not find a fabulous kingdom of gold for which he was
seeking and similar to that which he and Pizarro had found
and taken by force from the Incas in Peru six years before.
Four hundred years later men were still seeking for gold in
Gadsden and strange to say they claimed-to have discovered
it on school grounds. Two experienced prospectors claimed in
1949 to have discovered a vein of gold bearing ore on a
school site and sought to purchase the property. On another
occasion a high Iy nervous and excited person wanted to dig
immediately and at night on school grounds for the elusive
metal. The writer witnessed an afternoon of digging at a
spot that the superstitious person had located with a
divining rod. What he found was hard labor, clay, and
probably a satisfied mind.
De Soto left the friendly
Cherokees of the Gadsden area and traveled south along the
Coosa where later he came into contact with the unfriendly
Creek Indians who engaged him at Maubila in one of the
bloodiest battles ever to take place between the whites and
Indians in North America.
After the visit of DeSoto the
Indians of Gadsden were not disturbed by white men for about
two hundred years. Between 1717 and 1812 the French in
Mobile and the British in the Carolinas and Georgia carried
on trade with the Alabama Indians. It is likely that
occasional white traders and adventurers visited the Gadsden
area during this period. The Cherokee Indians who inhabited
north Alabama, north Georgia, east Tennessee, and the
western Carolinas were the most intelligent of North
American Indians. The men were usually tall, handsome, and
alert. The women were graceful, attractive and frequently
beautiful. Inter-marriage with the white was not unusual.
During the French and Indian war General George Washington
sent into the Cherokee nation his friend Nathaniel Gist to
win the friendship of the Cherokees for the British against
the French. Gist may not have accomplished the main purpose
of the mission but he won the friendship of a Cherokee
maiden which resulted in the birth in east Tennessee of one
of the world's most remarkable men. Sequoyah, or George
Gist, the son of Nathaniel Gist and the Cherokee maiden
moved in his youth to Willstown about forty mile~ north of
Gadsden and the home of Chief Big Will. Sequoyah lived there
for about forty years and during this time completed one of
the most difficult intellectual tasks which the mind of man
may attempt. In twelve years Sequoyah invented an alphabet
for the Cherokee language. Among all the alphabets which the
mind of man has invented and developed Sequoyah's alphabet
is ranked second only to the English which required three
thousand years to develop.
The white men returned in
force to the Gadsden area in October 1813. The Creek Indians
went on the war path in 1813 and in August of that year
massacred about four hundred men, women and children at Fort
Mims above Mobile. Appeals for help immediately went out to
General Andrew Jackson in Tennessee. He soon recruited a
force of Tennessee regulars and volunteers which was
increased by volunteer north Alabamians when Jackson
arrived at Huntsville. Leading his men by what is now
Guntersville, Sand Mountain, and Gadsden, he established
Fort Strother on the west bank of the Coosa about thirty
miles below Gadsden. In November of 1813 he attacked and
defeated a large group of Creeks at Talladega and returned
to Fort Strother. Two months later in January of 1814 Sam
Houston, a young man of twenty-one, was one of the leaders
of a group from east Tennessee who came down the Coosa and
through Gadsden to re-enforce Jackson. In front of Houston
was a scouting party of friendly Cherokee Indians led by
John and James Rogers, half breed Cherokees, friends of
Houston, and members of that Rogers family that later
produced that great American humorist, Will Rogers. Will
Rogers is a direct descendant of Tiana Rogers, half sister
of James and John. Houston with the Tennesseans and about
three hundred Cherokees joined Jackson at Fort Strother on
February 8, 1814.' Thus re-enforced Jackson marched against
the Creeks at Horseshoe Bend on the Tallapoosa where they
had concentrated their forces under the leadership of the
half breed Weatherford. Here on March 27, 1814 Jackson
defeated them decisively and broke forever the power of the
Creek nation in Alabama. Jackson went on from there to
Mobile, from which place he rushed in December 1814 to the
relief of New Orleans, which was threatened by a British
army of 10,000. On January 8, 1815 he decisively defeated
the British, killing more than 2,000 and losing only 17 of
his own men. This battle was fought about two weeks after
the treaty of peace had been signed ending the War of 1812.
On the 29th of September 1816
General Jackson returned to Gadsden but this time on a
peaceful mission. The meeting was educationally important
because the Cherokee nation for the first time gave
permission for the establishment of schools in this area. At
Turkey town, on the edge of Gadsden, a great Indian council
assembled, attended by all the chiefs of the Cherokee and
Creek nations. To this meeting came General Andrew Jackson
and Cyrus Kingsbury of the American Board of Foreign
Missions. The object of the meeting was to settle the
boundaries between the Cherokee and Creek nations, and to
ratify a treaty between the United States and the Cherokee
nation. After three days the treaty was ratified and the
boundary line agreed upon. The line was to run westward from
a point on the Chattahoochee River near Atlanta to the mouth
of Wills creek at Gadsden. The Cherokees were to occupy the
territory to the north of the line and the Creeks to the
south. The Cherokees had such a keen sense of direction that
later an Indian hunter stood on the banks of the
Chattahoochee and pointed westward to Wills Creek. The line
indicated was run by ranging and so accurate had been the
pointing of the Indian that the western end of the line
missed the mouth of Wills creek by only a few hundred feet.
Late at night on the third
day General Jackson very skillfully brought up the question
of schools and told the Cherokees of the importance of
educating their children and asked permission for Mr. Cyrus
Kingsbury to address the council. Mr. Kingsbury told them
that the society he represented would take their children
freely, without fees, but that if the parents were able to
pay for the food of the pupils that more could be taught. He
stated that the young people would be taught to speak, read
and write English, and that instruction would be given in
other basic subjects. An important part of the school
program would be to teach the pupils their duty to parents,
their fellowman, and to the Great Spirit. That it was the
intention to establish one school now and then others
throughout the nation. Although it was past midnight when
the talk was finished the chiefs stated that they would give
him an answer that night. After consultation the head chief,
Pathkiller, called The King, took Mr. Kingsbury by the hand
and told him they had heard and understood through an
interpreter his proposal and that they desired to have the
school established and hoped it would prove of great benefit
to the nation. They appointed The Glass, one of their
principal chiefs to go with Mr. Kingsbury to select a
suitable site. Mr. Kingsbury had previously talked with
President Madison and the Secretary of War about the project
and they had promised to have the Agent of Indian Affairs
provide a suitable school building and house for the
teachers. The site selected for the first school was what
is now Chattanooga, and was purchased from a Scotch trader
who had married a Cherokee maiden. The school which started
in January, 1817, was called Brainerd. In April, 1820, a
mission and school were established at Creek Path, present
day Guntersville, forty miles northwest of Gadsden.
Willstown school and mission forty miles north of Gadsden
in Will's valley was founded in 1823. Haweis mission and
school, east of Center, and thirty-five miles northeast of
Gadsden was founded in 1823. Within seven years after the
great council at Turkeytown three schools had been
established near Gadsden and the education of the Cherokees
was on its way. But this educational program was to be cut
short. Fifteen years later in 1838 all Cherokees were
forcibly removed from northeast Alabama. The advance of the
white man westward from the Atlantic was a part of the
building of America. The manner of the removal of the
Cherokees from north Alabama and north Georgia is a tragic
story not to be related here. The Cherokees did not wish to
leave the beautiful mountains, valleys and streams of
northeast Alabama. By means of the schools and through more
frequent contact with the white man they were rapidly
becoming civilized. In 1835, at New Echota, Georgia, now
Calhoun, Georgia, a few of the Cherokee chiefs signed the
removal treaty. The paramount chief of the Cherokee nation
at that time was John Ross, who was born at Turkey town and
lived there for many years. He refused to sign or recognize
the treaty because the preliminary agreement had provided
that any Cherokee who so desired could remain in this
region. The treaty as passed by the Senate of the U. S. and
approved by President Jackson required all Cherokees to be
removed. In 1838 U. S. soldiers under the command of General
Winfield Scott rounded up several thousand Cherokees from
north Alabama, north Georgia, eastern Tennessee, and western
Carolinas and forced them to go to what is now Guntersville,
Alabama, Chattanooga and Hiwassee, Tennessee, where they
were loaded on flat boats for removal to the territory
beyond the Mississippi. The total number removed was about
seventeen thousand. All were removed except a remnant who
escaped to the Great Smoky Mountains in western North
Carolina where their descendants have been permitted to
remain.
LAYING THE FOUNDATIONS
Northeast Alabama was the
last section of the state from which the Indians were
removed, consequently it was the last area in which
permanent settlements were established. Although Alabama was
admitted to the Union in 1819 this section of the state
belonged to the Cherokee Indians until 1835. The first road
to be built through the region was about 1812, from Georgia.
The road was rough and ungraded and was simply a passage
through the forests from which the trees had been cut but
leaving the stumps and mud holes. It crossed the state line
near Cave Springs, Georgia, and passed through the present
site of Center, across Lookout Mountain to Collinsville,
across Raccoon (Sand) Mountain to Guntersville, thence to
Huntsville. In 1813 General Andrew Jackson hacked a military
road from Huntsville to Gadsden and south along the Coosa.
Huntsville was the first permanent settlement in North
Alabama, having been founded in 1805 by settlers moving down
from Tennessee. The Cherokees ceded to the U. S. Government
in 1806 that portion of their lands consisting approximately
of what is now Madison and Limestone counties.
The area through the central
part of the state, lying west• of the Coosa and South from
Huntsville to Montgomery, Tuscaloosa, Cahaba, and Mobile was
the region next relinquished, after the Huntsville area, by
the Indians. In the northern part of the state Madison was
the first county created, followed by Blount and St. Clair.
Madison County was created when the Alabama region was still
a part of the Mississippi Territory. The Mississippi
Territory was divided on March 3, 1817 by an Act admitting
Mississippi to the Union and creating the present Alabama as
a territory. At the first meeting of the Alabama Territorial
Legislature on January 19, 1818, thirteen new counties were
created, one of which was Blount County. At the second
session in November, 1818, St. Clair County was created.
Etowah County was created by Act of the Legislature on
December 7, 1866, as Baine County. The name did not prove
popular and the Constitutional Convention of 1867 abolished
the name and county. It was recreated by the Legislature of
1868 and given the name of Etowah County. It was created
from parts of Blount, St. Clair, Cherokee, Calhoun, DeKalb,
and Marshall Counties. Calhoun (Benton) County was created
in December, 1832, from lands of the Creek Indian session.
Cherokee, DeKalb, and Marshall counties were all created by
the Legislature on January 9, 1836, from lands ceded by the
Cherokee Indians in 1835.
The present site of Gadsden
was in the Cherokee Indian Nation until January 9, 1836.
From 1836 to 1866 Gadsden was in the extreme southwest
corner of Cherokee County. It was the junction point of
Cherokee, St. Clair, and Calhoun counties. The point at
which Wills creek empties into the Coosa was a very
important boundary control point. We have previously
described how a line drawn from this point east toward
Atlanta and northwest to Guntersville became the
Cherokee/Creek boundary line. This line on the west side of
the Coosa formed the boundary between St. Clair and Cherokee
counties and on the east of the Coosa the line divided
Cherokee and Calhoun counties. These lines were, of course,
obliterated in 1866, upon the creation of Baine County.
The rivers were used as the
principal routes of travel and transportation during the
early years of the Republic. A few brave and energetic
pioneers came early to develop the river trade. The most
prominent river man to settle in this area was Cap¬tain John
Lay. About the year 1820, John Lay, an able man of character
and some means built a substantial house on the Coosa near
what is now Cedar Bluff, twenty five miles northeast of
Gadsden. The Lay family has contributed greatly to the
cul¬tural, industrial, and commercial progress not only of
Gadsden but of the State and Nation. John Lay built the
finest flatboats that were used on the Coosa. He became the
most successful boat Captain on the river.
Commerce from Virginia, the
Carolinas, and Tennessee, moved down the Holston River into
Tennessee, down the Tennessee to the Hiwassee, up the
Hiwassee to the Ocoee, up the Ocoee to a point where it was
unloaded and carried by portage twelve miles to the
Conasauga, where it was reloaded on flat boats which moved
down the Conasauga to the Oostanaula, thence into the Coosa
and down the Coosa into the Alabama, and down the Alabama to
the Gulf of Mexico. Merchandise thus moved about seven
hundred miles by water from the western boundary of Virginia
to the Gulf with the exception of only twelve miles of land
transportation. No wonder that proposals for connecting the
waters of the Tennessee and Coosa with a canal were
seriously considered and pressed as early as 1820. It is
said that John C. Calhoun, as Secretary of War, advocated
such a canal. In 1822 the Governor of Tennessee wrote the
Governors of Alabama and Georgia urging joint efforts for
the construction of the canal. Flatboats from the upper
Coosa and its tributaries frequently assembled at John Lay's
where convoys were formed and put under the command of
Captain Lay who took them down the Coosa and over the one
hundred miles of dangerous rapids between Greensport and
Wetumpka which could only be navigated during high waters
and even then it required extraordinary skill and knowledge
of the river to prevent loss of the boats. Captain Lay
rarely lost a boat. He guided the boats safely to their
destination at Montgomery, Selma or Mobile. Cummins Lay, the
son of John Lay, made many trips with his father and became
equally as famous as a river Captain.
In 1853 there was born to
Cummins Lay a son, William Patrick Lay, who was to become
one of America's great Captains of Industry. As a young man
he was also an expert river Captain but on steamboats. The
steamboats replaced the flatboats in 1845 on the Coosa.
Patrick Lay moved from the ancestral home to nearby Gadsden
when he was a young man. He understood the river. He knew
that flowing water had the power to be either beneficial or
destructive. Under his plan conceived and developed in
Gadsden the river was to be controlled and made to serve man
in a triple manner. The plan seems simple now, but in Pat
Lay's time it was for a long time rejected as impractical
and visionary. His plan was to build high dams for the
triple purpose of flood control, improving navigation, and
the generation of electricity by water power. The Government
was committed to the principle of building low lift dams on
its river systems for the single purpose of aiding
navigation. It was an extremely expensive method because
numerous such dams were required. The struggle of Captain
Lay to secure the capital to put his plan into effect is
perhaps unparalleled in America. The Government repeatedly
rejected his plan and refused aid. Undaunted, Captain Lay
organized the Alabama Power Company with the meager capital
of five thousand dollars and undertook to interest private
capital in his venture. The difficulties and disappointments
he experienced would have broken the heart of anyone not
possessed of the high courage, faith, and persistence of
Captain Lay. The capital was finally obtained from British
sources and a high dam was built on the Coosa bringing into
reality and fully justifying the plan and all of its
benefits. This high dam helped to establish the pattern for
all future river developments. Since that time similar dams
have been built on many rivers resulting in untold blessings
to all phases of American life.
Another river man, Captain
James Lafferty is connected with the early history of
Gadsden. It is probable that he settled on the Coosa a few
years after Captain John Lay. It is known that he brought
the first steamboat to the Coosa in 1845. The boat was
constructed in Cincinnati, Ohio. Captain Lafferty took it
down the Ohio and Mississippi to New Orleans, then through
the protected coastal channels to Mobile, then up the
Alabama to Wetumpka where it was taken apart and transported
overland to Greensport. At Greensport it was re-assembled
and steamed up the Coosa to Gadsden, thus ending the period
of the flatboats and ushering in the steamers on the Coosa.
Captain Lafferty arrived on July 4, 1845 and was to play an
important part in the naming of Gadsden.
Soon after John Lay located
on the banks of the Coosa a settlement was started about
twenty-five miles down the river which grew into present day
Gadsden. Two brothers, Gabriel and Joseph Hughes, selected
the site with' care and with the expressed intention of
building a city. John S. Moragne preceded the Hughes
brothers by a few years and in the early eighteen thirties
he staked out a claim on the west bank of the Coosa and
south of what is now Broad Street. In 1838 Gabriel Hughes
came to the Gadsden area looking for a gap in the mountains
through which a railroad could be built. He found the gap,
which is also the southern terminus of Lookout Mountain.
After this exploratory visit he returned to Dahlonega,
Georgia where he and his brother Joseph had come in 1836
from North Carolina and purchased land upon which they
started the mining of gold. So impressed was Gabriel Hughes
with what he had seen that he and his brother sold their
gold mines and made plans to move to the Gadsden area.
Gabriel Hughes had probably witnessed in 1830 at
Charlestown, South Carolina the operation of one of the
first steam locomotives on a railroad. Under consideration
at the time was the building of a railroad from Savannah to
Nashville. Gabriel Hughes wanted this railroad to be located
by the way of the gap at the southern end of Lookout
Mountain. He decided to locate permanently at this beautiful
spot. There was only one well-built, substantial house
existing in the area at the time. It had been built about
1830 by John Riley a half breed Cherokee. In 1836 John Riley
sold the house to William Walker who opened the first post
office in the building in 1836. The house was also used as
an inn and stagecoach stop. William Walker owned and
operated a ferry on the Coosa River near the house, which
was known as Walker's ferry. The small settlement was called
Double Springs, so named because of two bold springs near
the house and at the foot of Shinbone Ridge. The first
mention of Double Springs in the national records is in the
Acts of Congress of July 2, 1836 establishing a mail route
as follows: From LaFayette in Chambers County, via Randolph
county courthouse, crossing Tallapoosa River at Sawyer's
ferry, via White Plains, Jacksonville in Benton (Calhoun)
county, thence crossing Coosa River at Walkers ferry, by
Double Springs, by Bennettsville, to Ashville in St. Clair
county. Two other mail routes passing through or near Double
Springs were established by Act of Congress at the same
time. One starting at Columbus, Georgia, via Chambers County
courthouse, Randolph County courthouse, Benton County
courthouse, through Double Springs, to Huntsville, Alabama.
The other route, "Starting from Dallas in Hamilton county
Tennessee, through Lookout and Wills valleys, via Reason,
Rollins, the seat of justice of DeKalb county, to
Bennettsville in St. Clair county. While Double Springs is
not mentioned in this route it is altogether likely that it
did come by Double Springs. No other mail route relating to
this area is mentioned until the Act of Congress of March 3,
1845 which established a route from Elyton (Birmingham) in
Jefferson County, by Ashville, St. Clair County, thence to
Rome, Georgia. The route could hardly have missed passing
through Double Springs.
In 1840 Gabriel Hughes bought
the house owned by William Walker and brought his wife and
brother Joseph to the frontier home. He had planned from the
beginning that this would be the site of a great future
city. He and John S. Moragne invited their friends from the
Carolinas to come here, and among those who came the most
prominent was General Daniel C. Turrentine who came in 1842.
These four were well educated men of ability, courage and
sound character. Here in a beautiful spot where the river
and the mountains meet, possessing an ideal climate, rich in
natural resources of iron ore, coal, limestone, lumber, and
waterpower, these early pioneers, undergoing extreme
hardship and working with meager resources bequeathed to us
a heritage upon which the greatness of Gadsden has been
built. The conquering spirit of the pioneers, suffering
much, complaining little, pressing ever forward, has been
transmitted to each generation, and is the never changing
factor present at each period of Gadsden's growth.
A NAME IS CHOSEN
Shall the future city be
given a name of Indian origin, Old World origin, a prominent
American, the first permanent settler, or of a physical
feature? Double Springs was a physical feature, but Gabriel
Hughes did not consider the name suitable for the great city
that would grow from his initial planning. Trade and
commerce were the basis for the growth of early American
cities. Transportation was the key to expanding commerce.
Gabriel Hughes foresaw the tremendous importance of the new
method of transportation-the railway with the steam
locomotive. The period of initial railroad expansion was
1830-50. Gabriel Hughes was determined to 'try and secure
the location of a trunk line railroad through the site he
had chosen. He gave much of his time and fortune for this
purpose. He became thoroughly familiar with the topography
for many miles in all directions. The two Hughes brothers,
General Turrentine, and John S. Moragne had friends among
the most prominent and influential men then living in
Georgia and the Carolinas. Among the friends was a man of
national importance, James Gadsden of Charleston, South
Carolina. Because of his position and the nature of his
activity, the support and influence of James Gadsden was
extremely important to Gabriel Hughes when he founded the
city.
James Gadsden was born at
Charleston, South Carolina on the 15th of May, 1788, the
grandson of Christopher Gadsden, who had been a member of
The First Continental Congress, General in the Revolution,
and prominent in state and national affairs. James Gadsden
graduated from Yale in 1806 and became a merchant in
Charleston. In the War of 1812 he was a lieutenant in the U.
S. Army. In the Seminole War of 1818 he was a Captain on the
staff of General Andrew Jackson. In 1820 he became
inspector-general of the Southern Division of the Army with
the rank of colonel, and was made adjutant-general in •1821.
In 1822 he resigned from the Army and became a planter in
Florida, continuing as such until the Second Seminole War of
1836, during which he served as Quartermaster-general. In
1839 he returned to Charleston and a year later was made
president of the Louisville, Cincinnati, and Charleston
Railroad, in which he had been financially interested since
1835. The railroad had become involved in financial
difficulties during the panic of 1837, and was
re-incorporated in 1842 as the South Carolina Railroad.
Gadsden came into power and prominence with his dream of
building missing railway links to join the small
disconnected railway systems of the South into one great
system, and of connecting the whole with the Pacific coast
with a line to be constructed through the southern and
southwestern states. His plan was to bind the West with the
South and develop a direct trade between the South and
Europe, thereby breaking the dependency of this region upon
the North and East. He organized Conventions in southern
cities and worker tirelessly in advocating the plan. He was
chairman of the Augusta Convention of 1838 which issued a
statement to the South and Southwest emphasizing the
advantages of direct trade with Europe. He was prominent in
the Charleston Convention of 1839. He became the leading
promoter of the Memphis Commercial Convention of 1845, where
he served on several committees and was chairman of the
Committee on Railroads. At this Convention he continued to
urge the construction of a railway to the Pacific. During
the next five years he devoted all of his time and energy to
bring about the connection of sufficient southern railroads
to form a continuous line from the Atlantic to the
Mississippi River; Lines had been built from Savannah and
Charleston to Atlanta by 1845 but a line westward from
Atlanta to Memphis or Nashville had to be built to complete
the project.
It is here that Gabriel
Hughes entered actively in to his great effort to have the
line from Atlanta to Memphis located so as to pass through
the present site of Gadsden. Gadsden would thus be on the
great trans-continental railroad from the Atlantic to the
Pacific. That he had cause for optimism is apparent, because
a straight line drawn from Atlanta to Memphis passes near
Gadsden. Gabriel Hughes in all probability attended the
Memphis Convention. He was in touch with James Gadsden and
other promoters of the project. He had numerous conferences
with W. S. Brown, the chief engineer who was engaged to
survey the Tennessee & Coosa Railroad which was planned to
become one of the connecting links in the great system
proposed by James Gadsden. Upon completion of the railroad
survey in 1846, Hughes invited Brown to make a survey of the
future city, and to layoff the streets and lots. What is now
Broad Street was established as the central street, and at
the request of Hughes it was laid off much wider than the
customary practice at that time, because it was his
intention for the anticipated railroad to run down the
center of the street. The area surveyed was rather small,
being about seven blocks long (east and west), and four
blocks wide (north and south). The western boundary was a
line about half-way between what is now Sixth and Seventh
Streets, which is the point where Broad Street now changes
direction; the northern boundary was a line about two
hundred feet north of Locust Street; a!1d the southern
boundary about the present Duncan Street extended. The site
of Double Springs was thus not included in the original
survey. Most of the land within the survey was owned by
Gabriel & Joseph Hughes and John S. Moragne. They reached an
agreement that the property within the survey would be
distributed by lot among certain parties. Those parties
were, Gabriel Hughes, John S. Moragne, W. S. Brown, and
Captain James Lafferty. W. S. Brown apparently received his
lots as compensation for making the survey. Captain James
Lafferty had agreed in 1845 to stop his steamboat at the
foot of Broad Street (originally Railroad Street) and to
make that point a permanent landing. This would be a big
boost to the new town and as a result he was made a
participant in the lot drawing, receiving about one-fourth
as many lots as the other parties.
The next step was to name the
new city. A small group consisting of Gabriel & Joseph
Hughes, John S. Moragne, General D. C. Turrentine, and
Captain James Lafferty, met for the purpose of selecting a
name. The name of Lafferty's Landing was suggested. Captain
Lafferty refused the honor, perhaps because he detected that
there was not too much enthusiasm for the name. Lafferty was
a river man; Hughes was interested in railroads. The most
influential railroad man in the South at the time was James
Gadsden. Naming the new city Gadsden might result in James
Gadsden using his support and influence to bring about the
location of a main line railroad through the site. It is
probably true that friendship played some part in the
selection of the name, but the' most important consideration
must have been the influence James Gadsden possessed in
railway circles.
The name did not produce the
result that Gabriel Hughes had expected. Before 1850 the
railroad line from Savannah to Atlanta was extended to
Chat¬tano09a, Tennessee, and later from that point a line
was built to Nashville and also to Memphis. Thus tile
Atlantic and Mississippi River were connected via
Chattanooga rather than via Gadsden. This was a serious
disappointment to Gabriel Hughes but he never relaxed his
efforts to bring rail facilities to Gadsden. The War Between
the States interrupted railway construction and it was not
until 1871 that a line was built to the city.
In 1853 James Gadsden had an
opportunity to further advance his plan for a
trans-continental railroad system. In that year he was
appointed Minister to Mexico through the influence of his
good friend Jefferson Davis. Mr. Davis at that time was
Secretary of War, and chief counselor to President Franklin
Pierce. Santa Anna, Dictator of Mexico, was in great need of
financial assistance to prevent the collapse of his
Government. James Gadsden had determined several years
before 1853 that the best route for his trans-continental
railroad would be through the area south of the Gila River.
The Gila River at the time was the boundary between Mexico
and the U. S. Territory which later became the states of
Arizona and New Mexico. Gadsden thought that he would be
able to purchase from Mexico all of Lower California and a
considerable part of northern Mexico. President Pierce and
Congress approved the plan, and an appropriation of
$50,000,000.00 was made available for the purpose. However,
in the final negotiations Mexico refused to sell Lower
California and only a part of the area hoped for in northern
Mexico. Gadsden finally purchased for $10,000,000.00 an area
of 45,535 sq. mi., lying south of the Gila River and forming
the southern section of what is now the states of Arizona
and New Mexico. The area is slightly less than that of
Alabama (51,998 sq. mi). It was much less than Gadsden had
desired but it was more than sufficient through which his
beloved railroad system could be built. However he did not
live to see his dream become a reality. A railroad was not
built through the area until after his death. This purchase
marked the culmination of Gadsden's career. He remained in
Mexico as Minister until 1856 when he returned to
Charleston, where he died in 1858.

Gadsden-Etowah County Alabama
Request brochures
-
email us -
tourism@gadsden-etowahtourismboard.com
Send questions and comments to:
Gadsden-Etowah
Tourism Board
P.O. Box 8269
Gadsden, AL 35902
We are located at
105 Locust St.
in
Gadsden
(256) 549-0351
or
1-888-565-0411
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