Heard's Fort was established in 1774 by colonist
Stephen Heard. The settlement served as the temporary
capital of the new state of Georgia from February 3, 1780, until early 1781.
American Revolutionary War The
Battle of Kettle Creek, one of the most important battles of the American Revolutionary War to be fought in Georgia, was fought on February 14, 1779, in Wilkes County, about from present-day Washington. The American Patriots were victorious, taking 75 prisoners and killing roughly 70 Loyalists, while losing 32 of their own men.
American Civil War As a child,
Alexander H. Stephens had studied at the school in Washington presided over by
Presbyterian minister Alexander Hamilton Webster. He later became a politician and was elected as vice-president of the Confederacy. No major battles of the
Civil War were fought in or near Washington, but the city is notable as the site where Confederate President
Jefferson Davis held his last meeting with his cabinet. On April 3, 1865, with Union troops under General
Ulysses S. Grant poised to capture the capital at
Richmond, Virginia, Davis escaped for
Danville, together with the Confederate cabinet. After leaving Danville, and continuing south, Davis met with his Cabinet for the last time on May 5, 1865, in Washington, along with a hand-picked escort led by Given Campbell, including his personal body guard, Sgt. Joseph A Higgenbotham Jr., of Amherst/Nelson County, Virginia. The meeting took place at the Heard house (now used as the Georgia Branch Bank Building), with fourteen officials present.
Historic sites Several historic sites in Washington are on the
National Register of Historic Places, including the
Wilkes County Courthouse, the
Robert Toombs House State Historic Site, the
Washington-Wilkes Historical Museum, the
Mary Willis Public Library,
Cherry Grove Baptist Church Schoolhouse, and the recently restored historic
Fitzpatrick Hotel, built in 1898. ==Geography==