Ware County, Georgia's 60th county, was created on December 15, 1824, by an act of the
Georgia General Assembly from land that was originally part of
Appling County. The county is named for
Nicholas Ware, the
mayor of
Augusta,
Georgia from (1819–1821) and
United States Senator who represented Georgia from 1821 until his death in 1824. Several counties were later created from parts of the original Ware County borders: •
Bacon County (from portions of Appling, Pierce, and Ware counties in 1917) •
Charlton County (from portions of
Camden and Ware county in 1854) •
Clinch County (from portions of
Lowndes and Ware counties in 1850) •
Coffee County (from portions of Clinch,
Irwin,
Telfair, and Ware counties in 1854) •
Pierce County (from portions of Appling and Ware counties in 1857) Ware County was home to
Laura S. Walker (1861–1955) a noted author and
conservationist. Walker promoted a comprehensive program of forestry activity, including the establishment of forest parks. She erected markers and monuments along old trails and at historic sites, in Waycross and Ware County so that local history would not be forgotten. Walker wrote three books about the land and history of her home. They are:
History of Ware County, Georgia About "Old Okefenåok" and
Doctors of Primitive Times and Horse and Buggy Days of Ware County. An effort to recognize her work culminated in President
Franklin D. Roosevelt issuing a proclamation to establish the
Laura S. Walker National Park, located in Ware County, in her honor. She was the only living person for whom a state or national park was named. In 1937, the federal government purchased distressed farmland for the park. ==Geography==