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Dahlonega Gold Museum
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Dahlonega Gold Museum

Why go to California? In that ridge lies more gold than man ever dreamt of. There's gold in it!
Mathew Fleming Stephenson
Assayer of the Branch Mint

The cry of "There's Gold in Them Thar Hills" (which is Mark Twain's version of what Mr. Stephenson said) still echoes through the halls of the Dahlonega Gold Museum in Dahlonega, Georgia. When the news spread that gold had been discovered in North Georgia on Cherokee land, thousands of gold seekers flocked into Northeast Georgia from 1828 to 1847, starting our nation's first major gold rush. Besides Lumpkin, White, Union, and Cherokee Counties each shared to some extent in the rush.

Proposed in 1833, the contract for the courthouse was originally given to John Humphries, an unscrupulous con-man who received 2,000 dollars in advance for construction on a courthouse to be completed in 18 months. When the time was up the county had paid an additional 500 dollars and no work had been completed. Humphries fled town when a deputy sheriff attempted to serve him a warrant, never to be heard from again.

Ephraim Clayton, of Asheville, North Carolina finally built the edifice completing it in 1836. Using bricks cast from gold-rich Cane Creek and mortar made from the creek's mud, the building contains significant amounts of gold. The final payment for the building was made in gold bullion.

Now the Dahlonega Gold Museum, the courthouse replaced a much smaller wooden structure that stood on the same site. The new building housed a market on the first floor and the court on the second floor, but it also housed the assayer's office where the quantity and quality of the gold brought from area placers was determined. Many people who would become moving forces in Georgia over the next 5 decades spent time in or near the courthouse including William Akin, who became a lawyer in Bartow County and ended up trying the first case in before the Georgia Supreme Court, Mark Cooper, who ran for governor in 1843, and Vice President of the United States, John C. Calhoun.

National politics played a major role in building a mint in the city. Andrew Jackson, President of the United States, felt that a strong central bank was a problem. Most of his second term was spent dismantling the institution. Part of the act that weakened the National Bank in 1835 also authorized The Dahlonega Mint, along with others in Charlotte and New Orleans. The branch mint opened three years later. Over the next 23 years the high quality ore from North Georgia produced six million dollars in gold. The mint, closed by the Confederate Government shortly after the start of the Civil War was donated to North Georgia Agricultural College in 1871 along with ten acres of land. Today North Georgia College's impressive Price Memorial Hall stands on the foundation of the mint.

The courthouse is one of the oldest still remaining in the United States. Experience first hand the architecture of one of the oldest buildings still in use in North Georgia and discover this unique portion of the history of the mountain region.

Additional links of interest:

Gold Rush links
Gold Rush of 1828
Detailed history of our nation's first gold rush
Lumpkin County
History, resources, events and links for the North Georgia county


Dahlonega Courthouse Gold Museum
P.O. Box 478,
Dahlonega, Georgia, 30533
(706)864-2257

County: Lumpkin County

Dahlonega Gold Museum




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Take Georgia 400 north to the end, then follow signs to Dahlonega

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