Why So Few Americans Live In Southern Georgia
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- Опубликовано: 25 май 2024
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Georgia is the dominant state of the U.S. south. It's home to a number of major global corporations, millions of people, and a thriving economy. But a heavy majority of Georgians live in the Atlanta metropolitan region, leaving much of the rest of the state feeling pretty empty. And, in particular, an expansive coastline that one would think would be home to a major city. So why don't more people live in southern Georgia, and why is Atlanta so dominant within the state?
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GEORGIA = "STALINLAND"
CEASE AND DESIST.
5 U.S. Code § 3331, 28 U.S. Code § 453, PUBLIC LAW 93-638, Indian Civil Rights Act of 1968 (ICRA), 25 U.S.C.§§ 1301-1304 (ICRA).
NOTICE TO
AGENT
NOTICE TO
PRINCIPAL.
FINAL PUBLIC NOTICE
_______________________________
We must realize that our party's most powerful weapon is racial tension.
By pro-pounding into the consclousness of the dark
races that for centuries they have been oppressed by the whltes, we can mould them to
the program of the Communist Party.
In America we will aim for subtile
victory.
Whlle INFLAMING the Negro minority against
the whltes, we will endeavor to instll in the
whlte gullt complex for their exploitation
of the Negroes.
We will aid the Negroes to prominence in every walk of life, in the professions and in the world of sports
and entertainment.
With thls prestige, the Negro wil be able to intermarry with the Whites and begin & process which wil direct America to OUR cause.
-Israel Cohen 1912.
You keep saying "US state of..." and you say it like it's a good thing.
US(aka DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA) is a foreign corporation which has assumed jurisdiction over The United States of America, the country.
"state of" is what the invaders use in their unlawful kangaroo courts.
Please learn about this. It's very important, because you sound like a traitor how you talk.
Not AHglethorpe ... OHglethorpe.
@@killercuddles7051 "you sound like a traitor." I assume you are often told "you sound like a lunatic."
Where is the corporate charter recorded?
Augusta and Savannah may not be big metros like Atlanta but they’re still pretty decently sized cities
I was gonna say - Savannah isn't exactly a small town (and has it's own shipping port with massive cargo ships) and Augusta is also pretty sprawling
@@InjectBleach-em9tg Savannah has around 150,000 it's not a small town.
@@InjectBleach-em9tgThen you have absolutely no idea what a small town is. We're you stuck in NYC or Tokyo your whole life? When I first went to Savannah, it felt like a huge city to me, I was amazed 😂
@@ThisAintMyGithubWho in the world would even think of it as a small town? 400,000 in the metro area, and the fastest growing city in Georgia.
Ctown in the comments. Yeah both those cities are growing rapidly
To answer your title, we refer to the fall line as the gnat line. Go below that line and it is hotter and buggy.
I’m Georgian and we call it the fall line
Completely agree I’ve always heard it called the gnat line! And I’d so much prefer to live below the gnat line the where I do now
Whatchu talking about, Willis? The entire state is buggy! I live in Barrow County, and I'm constantly bombarded with ants, wasps, bees, spiders, stink bugs, katydids, cockroaches, and more.
And we have a muggy meter on the news and pollen count.
the people in south Ga below the fall line are some of the sweetest people i have ever met. i'm from north ga but i always feel at home when i visit my brothers and sisters in dougherty, grady, thomas, muscogee countys
Atlanta isn’t just Atlanta. Marietta, Roswell, Alpharetta, Decatur etc…are HUGE suburbs.
You can add East Point, Riverdale, Forest Park as a suburb too. With all the growth anything 60 miles outside of 285 could be considered a suburb. It is getting crowded in Henry County now. The northeastern side of Atlanta seems to be booming too!
Kennesaw, Lawrenceville, John’s Creek etc
Carrollton is part of Atlanta as well. I wish we were not but it is!
Forest Park, Jonesboro, Riverdale, Fayetteville, Fairburn, Palmetto, Union City, College Park, East point, and on and on and on.......... And by the way, MARTA runs to every single one of those places now. It's solid city from Atlanta to Newnan. There is no separation. I left that hell hole 5 years ago, and will never go back. Keep it. It's the worst city I've ever lived in and it's filled to the brim with black people that absolutely hate white people.
Metro Atl spans 10+ counties. Literally over a 100 municipalities
As a native Georgian everything below the Macon line is Gnat & Mosquito infested hell. It's mostly farm land.
This guy never mentions the "Gnat Line" even once. LOL
That’s one of the reasons I would not live there.
Love the farm land.
Any real Georgian has enough money for bug spray.
It's not that bad.
Enjoyed the video but as an Atlanta native, I think you missed an opportunity to discuss geography in relation to why Atlanta became a railroad hub in the first place. It costs money to run railroads through the mountains. The rail network in the early 19th century went down the eastern slope of the Appalachians. The railroads coming in from the west and northeast met in Atlanta. There were only indigenous Indians here when the rail arrived. The rail came first and was here because it was the place the railroads happened to meet to avoid the mountains. The presence of the Chattahoochee River as a water source was also helpful.
I don't know where the travel rail network went along the eastern appalachians back then, but I do know any serious commercial trade was still predominantly by boat, and savannah/charleston were the 2 heavy hitters and already had rail to macon and augusta, respectively. The state wanted a hub to consolidate all that commerce before shipping it to "chattanooga" and beyond. the key was owning the route from "atlanta" to "chattanooga" as that would be the primary route for rail commerce from the south to the mid-west (west back then). The state had already decided on the general location based on equidistant travel time from the fall line cities, with a western bias to dodge the blue ridge mountains and minimize the tunnels required during rail construction. they had an army engineer go out and do actual surveys to make sure their assumptions were right, and he picked a spot that was elevated, flat, and easily packable to support a huge rail yard. I'm pretty sure the only consideration the chattahoochee had was to stay on the eastern side of it so they could build fewer bridges.
I'm not touching the "only indigenous indians" comment. it would be the longest comment in youtube history.
Always good stuff on this channel! 🎉😊
Thanks I always wondered why they built Atlanta where they did, when you look it on a map it seems really random...
TERMINUS!
Atlanta was originally named TERMINUS. We should have kept that name....
He forgot to mention the state bird , the
Mosquitoes 🦟
No, Minnesota already recognizes mosquitos as the State Bird.
And the state plant
Pollen🌸
@@haley_sports can’t forget the yellow snow fall
I'm dead 💀 accurate af
😂😂😂
Good, exacty how us south Georgia residents want it to be!
I grew up in Tifton and live on the South Carolina side of Augusta now. I love South Georgia. It’s the perfect place to live if you want to slow down a little bit
I live in Tifton
@@brandeetaylor5505 born and raised in T-Town Tifton Ga.
Tifton boy! Fitzgerald ain't too far away. Now you live in NA and I live in South Augusta. Are you following me?
My man my hometown
Born and raised in Tifton, live in Evans now. Small world!
I don't know how this video is going to spend 14+ minutes to explaining that the southern part of Georgia is even hotter and more humid than the northern part of Georgia. I mean one of the biggest swamps in this hemisphere is in southern Georgia.
The northern part of Georgia cools off after September 1. Southern Ga. the heat lasts until some time in October. And at least the eastern part of S. Ga is extremely humid - a lot of that comes from the Okefenokee swamp I assume.
I was thinking the SAME THING. Like how does anyone need 14 mins to explain something that takes 30 seconds to explain🤣🤣🤣🤣. ITS HOT AF IN GEORGIA
It might be more in the summer, but just barely. Mean-wise, you're talking about an average of 3-4% more humidity and 3-4 more degrees - except when factoring in that if you live in the ATL metro around all the traffic, asphalt and industrial/commercial activity, the localized increase in temps and humidity will cancel out all of that. The big deviation in humidity and dew points between North and South GA actually occurs during the winter months and early spring, when it's a lot more welcome.
@@MikelosM Personally I hate the cold dampness more than the hot humidity.
Oh my gosh, you have to experience the heat & humidity to understand. It drains your energy while you sweat non stop. It’s so difficult to stay hydrated consistently during all but maybe 4 months. November, December, January, & February are pretty reliably cooler. March is 1/2 hot, then get ready…
As someone born and raised in South Georgia, please don't come here. We are full.
and stay out!
Im moving there from Boston in three months, you ever heard of Townsend?
@@ts109 Yep. Right here up the road. Good location for buying land and doing whatever you want with it. Close enough to town, Brunswick and yet far enough out not to be noticed.
Only full on March 17th
Hahaha, same with the area of Charleston, SC. We FULL
The risk of getting hit by a tornado goes way up below peach tree city and also in the western slice from Rome down. Lived in northern Fulton my whole life and have constant anxiety during spring as the severe weather can be real bad. Plus it often happens at night and there are so many hills and trees you can’t see a tornado coming like you can out west.
S. Ga. here (Douglas/Coffee co.).
This reminds me of my roommate who said "to get to anywhere, you have to drive!". I always smiled & said "not my fault Ga. is 11X BIGGER than CT". 😅
The Okefenokee is one of the most unique places in the US. it's absolutely amazing to visit in the fall or early spring. A company wants to start mining titanium only a few miles from the refuge boundary, which will forever change the hydrology of the swamp; it'll most likely cause it to dry up! There's a big fight between conserving the swamp & forever changing it for 8 years worth of titanium mining. I spent a year as artist in residence at the Okefenokee & fell in love with it.
Yes I live close to where they want to mine. The Okefenokee is too unique to ruin.
A paddling paradise
You forgot about vidalia, georgia. Several metric tons of onions are grown there and shipped all over the US
I live Vidalia sweet onions....I live in Laurens county so getting access to those wonderful sweet onions are a great perk....:)
@@eh4236 Hello neighbor from Houston County
I lived in Valdosta before I ever heard of it. People there were all excited like it was famous...
Thank you from a Vidalia native.
And the famous Claxton Fruit Cakes
One word…Jobs. I was born and raised in southwest GA. Moved to Atlanta for work. The majority of factories have closed in rural GA. My dad was one of those casualties. That only leaves agriculture as primary employer. Other major cities are Savannah, Macon, and Columbus. These all benefit because of interstate proximity.
Savannah isn't big due to interstates. I-16 might be the worst, most boring piece of road in the universe.
@@earlbrown That going to end in the next few years. That's why All of the trees 🌳 have been cut.
Macon is an absolute shithole
Another reason why Savannah isn't as big as people would expect is because there is a conservation effort to preserve the historical significance of the city and its surroundings, so much so that their are policies and standards that the city has passed to actually prevent certain types of growth.
For example, you have to get very special permission to build a structure past a certain height near other tall structures. So as to not disrupt the skyline in such a way that it would interfere with the ability to see a a tall structure of historical significance. like a church steeple.
Wait, General Sherman left buildings still standing?
@@chucklee8356 Yup, Savannah was the only city that I know of that Sherman accepted the surrender of and left the city unscathed.
And SCAD somehow finds a way to ruin the city regardless. I heard they built some luxury hotel looking dorm on the river! It's insanity.
The simple two cent answer is south Georgia is and has always been rural and farms and flat. They plant Cotton, Peach trees, Pecan trees, Peanuts to Pine trees. Atlanta as pointed out is or was a major rail hub so everything went to Atlanta on it's way to parts North and West. Georgia is a major lumber producing state and it takes up to twenty years for good size pine trees to grow for house building. They cut in twenty year cycles and replant. Lots of old time farms still planting cotton and peanuts, for Planters Peanuts. Go to Macon Georgia and drive by endless Peach trees. Don't need lots of people messing up the farming.
You are correct. Folks don't sell their farms easily down here, hence less areas for development.
@@jaynix4408 I know right, I'm just south of Benning and it's all Pine trees and peanuts with cotton as you cross the river to Alabama.
Peaches are actually grown predominantly in Ft. Valley, Ga. Not Macon.
I live in SE GA and you are spot on. Most of our county's acreage are tree farms.
Actually, there’s not much peaches grown out here hasn’t been for years. Most of them come from South Carolina same with the rice he mentioned that the only thing I see growing out here is cotton and soybeans.
As someone from Atlanta with family in South Georgia, I can confirm the real reason fewer people live there is gnats. Those damn gnats.
As someone from southeast GA who now lives in Cobb County, I not only agree with you but I also want to add mosquitos and horseflies as the other two reasons. We had an abundance of them alongside the gnats. Summers down there had me wondering if we were getting hit with one of the plagues of Egypt during Moses' years. 😆
As someone who lived in southeast, southwest Ga, and Atlanta. I would rather deal with the gnats over the cost of living in Atlanta.
That's why SkinSoSoft was REALLY invented.
The sand gnats are the devil. It was in savannah that I learned that mosquitos can bit you through your clothes
You said Atlanta has good soil. WRONG! ‘Red Georgia Clay’
I came from Europe 1997, i loooove ❤❤ South, everything from TX to NC. People, food, culture, weather. Georgia is sooo nice and romantic state. I drive semi truck , i know all places.
Savannah is a major city on the coast
I’m a savannah native. Great city, fantastic food, awesome parties 🎉 !
Like the one in the Borat movie?
Yea I am going to have to call BS on that. Savannah is my second home. I find it a shithole. Been trying to get my son to leave it practically ever since he moved there. The traffic is maddening anytime of the day, one can't swing a cat without hitting a panhandler, People that work in public service have attitudes, working class property owners are treated as cash cows by the local government to support all the people that just can't be bothered working God bless them. The same people that hang out in the public parks and raise hell all hours of the day an night.
I agree. You should tell people to NOT move there and preserve it.
Horrible trashy city.
@@randolphkersey5155 I thought you were describing Atlanta which is a bigger shithole. Seems like it also applies to most of Florida, NC, Va & La. Lived in big cities in all of those places & all seem to be the same.
I live in southern GA, born here. The most annoying part is how far away everything is, you put some serious milage on your car. But it's really pretty, and the emptiness is kinda nice. Atlanta is the hellhole you avoid as much as possible, just for the traffic alone 😂. People from Atlanta will often drive the highways at night with no headlights on, because they are so used to the streetlights and evidently don't know how to turn their headlights on. I'm baffled as well, but that's Atlanta for you. Savannah on the other hand is absolutely lovely, especially compared to Atlanta.
So true 😂
You guys came a long way… We’re shocked some of you guys outside of Metro Atlanta can actually form a sentence nowadays. #kudos
@@augustbaby8254 😂😂☠️☠️
People in Phoenix often drive at night without headlights too. There's an epidemic of stupid overcoming the cities in this country, yet the government lets people too stupid to use headlights operate motor vehicles. No surprise pedestrian deaths from car accidents are sharply on the rise.
why waste a light bulb when you dont need it
I live in southwest GA and I love it mild winters and early springs and great riding weather year round I don't ever want to leave
Love the video. Ive lived here in georgia most of my life and you taught me a few things
Another native Georgian here. Savannah was NOT destroyed by Sherman during the Civil War. He ordered his men to burn Atlanta but said Savannah was too beautiful to destroy. Us Atlantans would LOVE to spread some of the growth around the state. Metro atlanta traffic is soul crushing but I love it other than that part. Good video
He instead burned Darien which is where I’m from
Na, were good! Keep that shit in Atlanta
Mhmm. That's why Savannah still has its older architecture. And even though General Sherman did not march there, Charleston, South Carolina has similar architectural styles.
Yeah I believe Gen. Sherman presented Savannah as a gift to Pres. Lincoln, or so the story goes.
He burned everything between Atlanta and Savannah... He probably ran out of Kerosene.
Lived in southwestern Michigan for almost half my life. Lived in Atlanta suburbs for 30 years. Live in rural Georgia now. I'm done with cities. Don't even enjoy driving into the suburbs anymore. Please be quiet and keep the secret of rural Georgia. We wouldn't want to be over run with newcomers!
I was actually thinking that the more people talked about how much better Atlanta was than South Georgia, the more I thought, "Hmmm. Sounds perfect for me". But I live in an area that's pretty equivalent in the northern half of Alabama, so I'm happy. I used to be a people person til people ruined it for me.
You'll get a few anyway as climate refugees from Florida, though most will try to head to the piedmont areas. South Florida will have to be evacuated well before actual submersion because of saltwater intrusion to aquifers and property being uninsurable from too many disasters.
@@k.b.tidwell People will do that.
@@myfriendgoo2816i agree and with the way everyone talks about Augusta, they'll skip right over and head to Savannah, Atlanta, Charlotte, maybe even Columbia
Agree. It’s one of the best kept secrets that about 120 counties in Georgia are still rural. 🤫 shh.
I will drive 2 hrs out of the way to go around Atlanta. 129 to 441 goes through some of the most beautiful areas of Ga. Now the traffic on the 2 lane parts of the highway can be a nightmare. The area around FDR National Park, Warm Springs, Callaway Gardens is nice as well. Just don't "let the bed bugs bite!" Oh, am I steering you away from where I live, uhm, maybe.
And this is one of the reasons we love this area and people like move here.
I actually live in North GA on the Border currently but have lived all over GA and since it is such a larfe state you can go from the beautiful mountains of the north or the flat wet swamps and marshes in the Chatahoochee swamp, been there on a field trip in Middle school.
I love my state. 🎉
Hot and Humid. Hot and Humid.
🧢
Hot as balls.
True. But the summers are great!
So South Florida should be empty then too huh?
You mean the winter is great. Summer is terrible! @@LV4EVR
I just returned from South Georgia(Thomasville Area) and it's as populated as West Georgia and the houses & properties there are not cheap
Go to Fitzgerald Georgia and check out the home prices.
I have family that’s lives in Thomasville. Great city, but housing is shockingly expensive relative to what you get. Over half the single family homes are rental properties.
Excellent video bro. Very informative.
I feel like Statesboro Ga. Is growing every year. And now with the Hyundai plant, towns are forced to grow with subdivision after subdivision
Atlanta is a massive railway hub and Savannah is a deep water port. Atlanta is within a 2.5 hour flight of 85% of the entire US population, the rest of Georgia is not. Atlanta is home to several large companies-Coca Cola, Delta, Home Depot, UPS, Chick-fil-A, Arby's, CNN, Invesco, Mercedes-Benz USA, Novelis, Orkin, etc. The list goes on. But Atlanta has to Georgia what New York City is to New York. It's such a dominant economic draw that there is little reason to live in the rest of the state for job opportunities. It isn't like Florida, where the population is more spreadout across Orlando, Miami, Tampa, and Jacksonville and it isn't like Texas, which has oil in the interior to prop up DFW all the time. The central hub has been Atlanta. Much the same like Chicago in the Midwest, it is the largest and most dominant economic drawer of activity until you get into the Appalachian Mountains and it is geographically favorable for rail and air traffic as well.
Also Atlanta is farther west than Detroit.
This is the correct answer. Source: someone who has lived on Georgia for 52 years. Lived in south Ga. central Ga, and now in N Georgia.
excellent analysis
@@tadlambert1493
ein Beitrag des Mittwoches, 26. März 2024 (die Karwoche)
"Joseph Stalin´s revenche"
The Republic of Georgia (~ Sakartwelo), has reached a spot of the UEFA European Champion for Gentlemen
° Association Football
Happy Easter!
Hush Da goat.
Why is southern Georgia not largely populated? In a word,,,,, Summer.
The heat is nothing unique, travel more.
@@neox9369 I have been all over this planet, and have watched hundreds die in other countries when the heat and humidity reached levels that are common in the southeast U.S. I once heard a woman in Arizona complain about it being 110 plus F. I suggested she should spend a week in southern Mississippi then consider how lucky she was to have cool weather in Arizona in the summer.
@@DraggonCanoe I agree. 110f and dry is nothing on 105f and humid which It can be that way all day and night. No escape from it until a thunderstorm and expect it to be worse which is why I believe Savannah takes the cake with the heat.
@@User78813 One thing is for certain, the southeast U.S. isn't for the faint of heart when it comes to weather. I grew up without air conditioning, and remember very well those sweatbox nights.
@@User78813Valdosta is worse than Savannah.
Augusta isn’t just Richmond county. The Augusta metropolitan area includes aiken county in SC and has a total population close to 700k. Decent size and economy.
As someone who has lived in the Atlanta area his whole life, I enjoyed hearing stuff I already knew about the state and even learning some new things I didn’t know. Great video!
The population of Georgia outside Atlanta is comparable to the population of Ireland or Scotland or Wales. Does that mean Ireland, Scotland, and Wales are "empty" and "nobody" lives there?
Most Georgians are Scott-irish ancestry.
Georgia (59,425 sq. mi) is nearly 2x the size of Ireland (32,595) and Scotland (30,081) and is over 7x the size of Wales (8,023).
Damn didn't know that, but yes it does
Yes. Most of England is empty. They all in London.
Relatively yes the population of Scotland and Ireland is low in comparison to an American context. Also keep in mind its the population density of the area which makes it empty or not. If 4 million people live in one city versus on millions of acres it makes a clear difference.
I live in South Georgia, and Orlando or Tampa are closer than Atlanta.
Valdosta?
Hi neighbor
Thanks for the video. I am from and currently live in NW Georgia, near Rome, but I have lived in Atlanta and in SE Georgia at Statesboro, and I can assure you that the weather is different in all those places. The heat and humidity in south Georgia is a limiting factor for many people who visit, they do not want to spend much time there. Like anything you can get used to it, I did, but it takes time. Atlanta offers everything you could want if you are looking to move someplace, more temperate climate because it is over 1,000 higher in elevation than most people realize, but with all the growth has come the urban sprawl and a road system that is 10 years behind the growth. This leads to some of the worst traffic in the country. However, you can get anyplace in the world from Atlanta because of Hartsfield, so that helps business relocate to that area quickly and easily. Georgia has a little of everything, rural areas, smaller cities that are big enough, but not too big, and of course the huge metro Atlanta area that is a economic powerhouse in the South and Nation. My mom moved to Las Vegas years ago and will occasionally complain about their 114 degree days in summer. Every time she says something about the heat, I tell her I will trade her 114 degree dry heat for our 95 with 95% humidity, and she always declines the offer, that should tell you how bad it can get here at times.
I haven't watched the video yet, but I live at the state line between Florida and Georgia. We have the Okefenokee Swamp and a lot of rural homesteads.
I lived in St. Mary's for 5 longgggg years!! Glad to be back out west with the beautiful mountains and the DRY heat & 4 seasons!!!😊
Large pieces of terrain in southern Georgia are occupied by military bases, specifically Robins and Moody Air Force Bases, Kings Bay Naval Submarine Base, Marine Corps Logistics Base Albany, and Army Forts Moore/Benning and Stewart, and Hunter Army Airfield. By definition, the Army bases offer room for training by not having high population density so Joe has room to run around. The Moore/Benning effect is somewhat offset by the 3rd biggest city, Columbus, located right next door, and Savannah -- 5th biggest -- is right next to Fort Stewart/Hunter AAF.
You lying dawg ...Augusta Georgia has it's own metropolitan area and Savanah Georgia is our Costal City
I downvoted the video because of it.
@@nunyabeezwacks1408 Me too
He's also off about GA population. It's now 11 million. Savannah is the biggest coastal city in the state but even Brunswick and it's metro area is over 100K further south of Savannah.
Philly is the same distance from a beach as Savannah
He's counting the metro area in that 600K figure, I checked. Augusta/Hephzibah/Fort Eisenhower (aka the base formerly known as Fort Gordon ) / Martinez / Evans / Aiken / Edgefield all get rolled into that number, and it's still only around 600-700K max depending whether you include the base.
I was born in SW Georgia and have lived in the Atlanta area for over 30 years. It never felt empty to me. Nobody moves away because of the weather or the gnats. If that was the case, nobody would live in Florida except for the beach towns. They move for the economic opportunities and the abundance of things to do. However, as I get older I am having less patience for the crowds and the Atlanta traffic and am seriously considering building a second home in my hometown.
Hey I use to live in GA, in a town called Kingsland. The down town area is one street and everyone knows everyone, I loved it.
Speaking for those of us in the south east corner of Georgia, we like it not being so populated! When my former high school students used to complain about “nothing to do” in Jesup… I told them they live 40 miles from the beach, about 80-90 miles from Jacksonville, and 70 miles from Savannah. There will come a day (if they are still around) you will love our location that has fewer problems found in cities. That’s probably not as true today as it was 30-40 years ago 😢.
As someone who has lived in the northwest region in Georgia his whole life, can we send some of our population down there? It’s way too crowded up here. We’re just minutes outside of Chattanooga and people are moving here in droves. lol we need y’all to take some of these guys off our hands…. 🤣
@@tangofett4065 🥴No thank you! Seriously, every time we are in the “above the knat line” traffic… the comment regularly is, “so glad we don’t live in this!” Bless you🙏
Exactly..
You tell that to high school kids who most likely don't have a car or know how to drive
@@jesse76th96 Not the case here! Our student parking lot is full of trucks and cars. You are right that many do not drive to school. But the lack of transportation was not a factor in that analogy and at the time, did not mess with their understanding 🤔
Geoff, you left out Saint Marys with Naval Submarine Base Kings Bay. We have approximately 1/4 of the strategic nuclear weapons of the nation. As such, we are critical to the nation's defense.
In the far southeast corner of the state, Saint Marys is as far as you can get from Atlanta and stay in Georgia. We like it that way.
st mary's very close to Florida's border...susceptible for hurricanes passing through or remnants by it.
@@GheeRook Georia's coast is fortunate to have a lot of shallow sea floor next to it and thus most hurricanes bounce off or weaken when the come up north
Imagine bragging you're closer to Jacksonville than Atlanta; Atlanta is a much better city lol
@@Droidman1231 I don't go to Jacksonville either. I don't even go up to Brunswick, much less Savannah. I'll still pass on Atlanta.
@@GheeRook The Gulf Stream generally keep the storms off shore. Fortunately we have a lot of marshland to soak up any storm surge.
Simple answer to the title: because it's hot, uncomfortable and riddled with bugs, half of which want to suck your blood.
I'm from small town in south Georgia and it's called Adel Georgia
Great trace track there outside Adel Nashville in Wren. My home track and site of biggest street tire race in the world
LIGHTS OUT! Was called X-275 in the early days
Valdosta here
Cordele checking in. Now living in Baltimore.
It's not exactly empty with 4 million people. But once you get into GA and SC, there is a fourth geographic area, the lowlands. This area is markedly different from coastal plains.
Yeah, but those 4 million aren't equally distributed. Take Clinch county, third largest county in the state by area (2,137 km2), has a population of about 6800, with about a third of them (2,300) living in the county seat of Homerville (9 km2), leaving about 4,500 people and an average density of about 2 people per square kilometer, or about 5.2 per square mile for the rest of the county. If you look at satellite photos the most dominant feature are clearcuts from forestry with nothing else around.
The lowlands he mentions are actually the Piedmont - or else what is he talking about?
@keith6706 I visit Clinch county for the Okefenokee, Suwanee river, dark skies and nature. 30 miles to the nearest supermarket though.
@@stephenpowstinger733 The Low country is different. It's the Coastal Empire and Low Country.
8:06 Now you’re talking, Coastal GA! Also, I guess it’s only fair that the 13th has the 13th biggest port. 😊
As someone who drives up and down the Eastern seaboard a lot, the southern Georgia coast actually has a lot of vacation spots -- Brunswick, for example.
Also, the idea of the "simple" lives of the Eastern indigenous American tribes is purely a product of Rousseau-influenced modernity. The Cherokee, for example, were known even in the Antebellum days as one of the "Five Civilized Tribes" respected by the settlers & their descendants for their sophisticated culture. The saying among whites was that the best way to tell a Cherokee home from a white American home was by checking how many books they had -- because the Cherokee could be expected to have more literature than the whites. It's part of why there was never any stigma about having Cherokee ancestry in the U.S. and why many will falsely claim it to try and gain clout in American society (eg: Elizabeth Warren).
she is 1032nd indian.
@@davehughesfarm7983 😂
The way they done those Native Americans, I wouldn't want that designation of "civilized".
Cherokee people have a copper/dark hue skin tone, its not hard to recognize the difference.
The FS Key Bridge Collapse helped you get a view from me. I heard that the port of Savannah may get ships formerly bound for Baltimore. That reminded me that Georgia has coastline! Up here in Michigan we have plenty of our own (freshwater) coastline. We've lost a lot of population to Georgia after the film tax credits were cancelled. I watch videos of all of the growing places like Atlanta, Florida, Texas and the Southwest to see where all the lost population of the Great Lakes and Northeast go. Lansing, the capitol of Michigan, looks like a lot of what you've seen from Detroit; trash everywhere, cratered streets that are too wide, empty blocks, and a few nice things.
Thank you dude! I needed that rich lesson.
Good video. I have to laugh a little at the way you said Oglethorpe's name though just because I'm from Georgia hehe. The "O" is pronounced more like the "o" in "oath" not "off"
I always enjoyed saying "ogleethorpe"
Beat me to it.
What about when he said the OKAfenokee swamp...lol
@@frankmarsh1159 lol
This. Also, it's pronounced Oh-co-knee
I thought he was going to mention that Georgia small towns are disappearing. I have relatives in Vidalia, a town of ten thousand, but it hasn’t grown since 1980. There a lots of static towns in S. Ga. They screamed when Walmart came to town but if a Walmart closes they are devastated.
These rural areas have trouble sustaining doctors, hospitals and basic services.
Well Vidalia is one of the few towns in south ga growing. It’s bigger than the town next door which is the county seat. I was surprised how much it’s grown
Southwest Georgia around Albany, Tifton , Moultrie , and Valdosta has been growing. Towns that size and bigger have anyway. Some of the really small towns have been shrinking and disappearing as all the offices, retail etc. have been consolidated into the larger towns.
Racism is the key factor to their underdevelopment. Let’s not pretend..
@@gacaptain yes. Migrants.
@@talmadgewilliams8831 That too.
I'm in Henry county by Atlanta motor speedway..it's too hot in Georgia.. Crawford county where peaches grow is 98 degrees today .just blazing
Douglas Georgia 1963-1965 wonderful town, moved to Athens Georgia in 1965-1968 fine town and some great football games there. Visit Atlanta and be prepared for traffic. I went back in 2020 and visited all three cities. All have gotten bigger and much more traffic!!! If you want to shop, support the local stores and if they do not have it; don’t drive, it’s completely computer time!! A great large glass of tea and browse for the things you want!!! Try to shop local for anything and enjoy the tall pines.
The main issue with traffic that I see in Atlanta is caused by Atlanta not having a true bypass. All traffic must go through Atlanta. (Stright through or the loop) What our capital needs is a true bypass for I75, 85 and 20 for everyone, NOT stopping in Atlanta. A bypass without exits, every mile. Or maybe just build a new road from Chattanooga to Macon, etc.
Probably the best comment I've read thus far..awesome insight.
285 is the supposed to be the bypass but they definitely need another one lol maybe a 220 or something.
There was discussion years ago about building a bypass about 50 miles further out than 285.
Here in Detroit we have local and express interstates. Express only has a few off ramps where it's intended to get you to and from the airport as fast as possible. the local has an off ramp for each major street.
It's called 285 and 675.
Hey! Great job. Ive never watched a(n) US geo vid but live in ATL, saw it on suggestions… 1. Great speed (you dont talk too slowly) 2. You spoke so clearly and no umms and uhs and …just great job! 3. Content - i learned so much! (E.g. grew up in AL & didnt know that current day MS and AL were OG part of GA.
Thanks for your effort/time/creation!
"Why isn't there a major city on the coast?" Was all I needed to hear to know this video was shat out.
Savannah is one of the most important ports in the country, dude. Savannah, Augusta, Macon, Columbus, Athens- all of these cities have notable metro populations and are fairly major. While none of them exceed 1 mil their economic importance is noteworthy.
Now that the port of Baltimore is closed Savannah should see a big boost in their economy because that’s where they are possibly going to relocate all the business to.
That plus the Hyundai plant that is coming in too.
@@DrJonLubinand we are NOT happy about that
It's already the 3rd largest port in America and was already growing faster than any other port in the country before the FSK bridge was sabotaged. If i recall correctly, Baltimore is the 6th largest port.
@@PatriotGinj why is that
@@PatriotGinj sabotaged very interesting 🤔
Savannah did not grow into a major city because, Its haunted lol. Actually the port in Savannah does not have a channel deep enough to support a cruise terminal. The Corps of Engineers dredges it once in a while so the shipping container barges can make it down the channel. There is some problem with keeping it deep enough for the cruise terminals which I have yet to understand.
Maybe because of that hydrogen bomb that was accidentally dropped off Tybee Island in 1958. Maybe the dredge boats are afraid of hitting it and setting off an explosion. It could ruin their whole day. 😒😐
Our City Council considered the addition of a cruise terminal several years ago. It became obvious there isn’t a good place to put one and our tourism industry already brings in piles of money every year without one. Aside from that, Savannahians could clearly see the severe buyer’s remorse among Charlestonians about their cruise terminal, and local opposition to building one here was strong. The depth of the river was not a factor. Savannah is the fourth busiest container port in the US and container ships are way more massive than cruise ships. Rest assured, lack of a cruise terminal has not hampered the city’s growth.
Probably a major reason none of our coastal cites are especially large is because the State of Georgia has done a surprisingly good job of preserving our coast line, rather than letting developers build wherever they want and turn everything into another Miami.
Geoff.... Ever heard of Savannah Georgia? You know that massive city where most of the ships doc at the PORT of SAVANNAH, to discharge their contents.... Maybe you should go there, its on the COSTAL WATERWAY...
I noticed you included Carroll County in the Atlanta area on your map... Carroll County however, is not part of the Atlanta area, its considered rural.
As for the Southern parts of the state, there are large cities South of Atlanta (Macon, Albany, Valdosta for instance)
The reason the Southern parts of the state are not as populated as the Atlanta area... is because those area is mostly Farming lands, as they have been historically. If you ever wear cotton clothes, or eat peanuts or pecans, or peaches, they are likely grown in that area of the state.
Play less games and study more...
Carroll county is suburban /exurban , not truly rural.
South of GA has many micropolitans like Thomasville, Warner Robins, Tifton, Adele, Perry, Cordell, Douglas , Moultrie etc and many others
Native Savannahian here. We are the STATE of Chatham and we always liked it that way. Ive always traveled to and through ATL and y'all can keep it. Always loved being tucked away on the coast but the world has found us and they wont quit coming. We are a major port city with major industries, 3 military bases and much much history. We have the Savannah College of Art and Design with a billion dollar tourist industry. We are full now with no room to spare.
The other reason i heard from another video is, the Atlanta area has a slightly higher elevation, around 1500 ft i think, which makes it slightly cooler.
And now Atlanta doesn't have the infrastructure to support all those people. It has become a sprawling mess with terrible traffic, and you would hardly believe it developed as a transportation hub given its lack of high speed rail and its mediocre transit system.
Wait!? We have a transit system???
As opposed to LA (sprawling mess with terrible traffic plus California government), NYC (sprawling mess with terrible traffic and subways where people push you in front of trains), or Chicago (sprawling mess with terrible traffic, insane crime, and Cubs fans)?
High speed rail to where? The closest metro areas to Atlanta with at least 2 million people are Charlotte and Nashville which are both 250 miles away.
@@HeavyTopspin I can only comment on LA, whose traffic is much worse than Atlanta, in my experience
Atlanta is a miserable and Charlotte NC seems like they want to copy that plan.
I moved from Atlanta to Milledgeville in 2003.. Milledgeville was Georgia s first Capital.. I loved my years in Atlanta, then moved to a more rural part of central GA.. for anyone planning on moving here, WE'RE FULL!!! we love our rural lifestyle, our low cost of living.. we really don't want new people driving that up..
Milledgeville was NOT the first capital of GA. It was Louisville.
@@pacoboyd4977 personally, living here, I don't see WHY Milledgeville was ever the capital??? must have been a small capital.. 🤣😂🤣😂
Thanks for the history lesson on my home state, very interesting and we have allot of hidden gems thru out the state.
Actually, Georgia's population is at more than 11 million
Missouri is bigger and only has 6 mil..Thank God.
Right, if you count the illegals
Yeah, I was wondering what outdated info was Geoff researching.
@@davehughesfarm7983Missouri state population is only 6 million
@@hoodboyzAtl Missouri is bigger in area and 6 mil..Re-read.
Omg Savannah is so beautiful. I just wish there were better beaches in GA.
I do also enjoy all the beautiful pine trees in the Atlanta area. I think one of its nicknames is “the city in the forest”
St Simons island has decent beaches. Sea island has fabulous beaches but you better be a Multimillionaire
I'll vouch for Tybee Island as well. The barrier islands have Georgia's best beaches.
The Atlanta area is primarily broadleaf, deciduous trees, as is most of the northern third of the state. Sure, we do have some pines and areas where the soil has been disturbed you tend to see more of them, but they'll eventually all be choked out by deciduous trees if the area is allowed to become forest.
Southern Georgia is really where pines thrive as the dominant tree species, except near the coast and coastal marshlands.
Driftwood beach is considered one of the most beautiful in the world.
Better beaches....? So you've never been to Ga. huh ?
When Terminus was founded (later renamed Marthasville then Atlanta) it was basically a failing ghost town of a railroad stop. Later it was burned to the ground by Sherman. The fact that Atlanta exists and has become such a big metropolitan area is kind of a miracle
Two largest ports in country are Savannah and Brunswick. GA coast is mostly protected and uniquely beautiful. Then there is Valdosta, Albany, Macon and Columbus. All south of Atlanta.
I live in West Palm Beach Florida so we got you beat. Summer can be tough, but you get used to it & there's AC everywhere
As of March 2024, Savannah is the 3rd busiest port in the U.S. #1 - Los Angeles/Long Beach, #2 - New York/New Jersey. LA/LB and NY/NJ are 1 1/2 hrs or less from the sea buoy to a deepwater dock. But getting from the port out of the city is a nightmare for trucks. Savannah is 4 hrs from sea buoy to a dock that needs constant dreging to maintain 40 ft, so you lose 1/3 of a day in and out. But trucks leave the port on freeways connected to I-95 and are out of the city immediately north, south, or to Atlanta. Plus Class 1 rail service for the port including double decker container flats and heavy lift from ships.
Born and raised in Southern Georgia. I grew up in the very small town of Willacoochee. I lived in Athens for 4 years and hated every minute there! So thankful when I moved back to South Georgia!!!
I live in Augusta & it’s growing. It may never be like Atlanta but it has potential to grow & become a huge city of its own.
Yeah same here. Grovetown is pushing Augusta to bigger tbh. Nearly 75% here are military
I agree with the humid summer part. Years ago I went of a job interview which would be a relocation to the south coast of Georgia..I could hardly breath and the heat was unreal.
Move to Phoenix when its 115°😂
Its unreal
Being from the Ohio valley, my military career was in Columbia, SC and Augusta Ga. I found the climate better that the Cincinnati area all around. So I decided to make Georgia my home, and never looked back at Ohio. Only place close to rural Ga is southwest Arkansas about 50 miles northeast of Texarkana, Ark.
Climate is sooo much better than Ohio. I made the move about a year ago and love it in Augusta.
@@GabeHandleWhat’s cost of living like? I thought Georgia was one of the top 10 cheapest states to live in.
@@connormenosky1420 Georgia is cheap if you stay out of the Atlanta region.
@@RebelCowboysRVs I don’t live in Georgia by the way. Cities are expensive and countryside is cheaper (I don’t know why younger generations don’t like the countryside these days other than jobs). I heard about Atlanta’s horrible traffic and more people flocking there make it worse. Savannah doesn’t look like a cheap place since it is a mini Charleston. Augusta looks like an affordable place to live in.
Shout out to the black belt region
I guess nobody on the GA coast never heard of Savannah.
There's also this little town just south of my called Columbus. It's kinda big because the largest army base in the world, Ft Benning, is right below it.
I live in metro Atlanta and can say it's a beautiful city, Atlanta that is.
Savannahs port is getting enlarged by a huge margin. Also. The “gnat line” is huge for differences in climate and where people live. Valdosta and Albany being the only outliers
Dosta has a much different demographic than other non-coastal metro areas............
Albany is ghetto as shoes on a powerline
And now because of the Hyundai vehicle factory going up 15 miles away off I 16 real estate has gone up over a 40 mile circle. Savannah will be the new Austin.
@@chad78ismhow so? Im from Valdosta
I live 15 miles east of the okefenokee swamp, but in florida. The nearest town to mine is folkston, one of the entry points to the swamp.
I'm in Saint Marys. Wave.
@@HarryWHill-GA Hilliard 👋
My wife is originally from Hoboken. Ga, not NJ. She left as soon as she could.
@herman452 my grandmother was from Blackshear. That is a pretty poor area. It's not as bad in hilliard or callahan.
@@thomasnelson6161 I'm very familiar with Blackshear. And Waycross and Nahunta. Jerry J's in Nahunta is wonderful country cooking. We do go back to Hoboken several times a year.
The coastal plain, below the gnat/fall line and it flattens out.
Gotta point out a few discrepancies. I grew up in Northeast Georgia on the SC coast on the shores of Lake Hartwell. I lived in Augusta for 4 years - med school at Medical College of Georgia. I lived in Savannah for 5 years - 3 years Internal medical residency and 2 years of private practice.
You are missing several large cities - Columbus in WSW Georgia; Macon in middle Georgia has Mercer Medical School. Bainbridge in SSW Georgia - home to Taurus Firearms.
If you study the fall line. South of the fall line was underwater before the oceans receded in prehistoric times.
OK, yeah, I currently live on the Alabama line in the Metro Atlanta region. I was recruited here out of residency but the remainder of my family still live near Lake Hartwell. Our three kids, all raised in Metro Atlanta all live in different states. One stayed in Georgia, one went to Louisiana and one is in SC.
If your talking about the area near Anderson SC then you have a crime problem.
@@MrCountrycuz Nope. Not talking Anderson. Although the wife was born there, I and all my immediate family (before marriage) were born in Athens. It seems strange that each of our kids was born in a different Georgia city.
Great summary, thanks! Although the Atlanta metro represents over half the population of Georgia, there's a LOT to see and explore throughout the rest of the Peach State! Atlantans often travel to Columbus for a nice relaxing getaway from Atlanta's big city stresses and hassles. Columbus also now has a new Mercer Medical School, the largest urban whitewater rafting course in the world, and the National Infantry Museum that's repeatedly been rated the No. 1 free museum in America (no military ID required) by USA Today readers.
The GA coast also lacks a major, navigable river leading deep inland. Yes it has creeks and streams, but nothing like a Hudson or Columbia or Mississippi etc.
Not a big deal
Brunswick has the best natural port South of New York. It also sits right off I-95.
You never heard of the Savannah river???
@@sophial.2438 was going to say the same thing.
When I read into the Mississippi River and its cities founded near it, transportation seems OP and simply godly. Wonder how many other locations on earth have a set up as such
I'm from Georgia. In spring, summer and fall it is baking hot and the nats will absolutely drive you insane.
I don't remember Fitzgerald being to bad for gnats. Bigotry and being run by a small group of old white men was the real problem and still is.
September is my favorite month in GA.
🧢
@@MrCountrycuzwhich is why it’s fading to oblivion and stagnant
Empty is relative for southern Georgia terms. A lot of towns down in South Georgia are still relatively large with hubs like Valdosta, Tifton, Albany, and Brunswick
While some people complain about our weather, I love it. Being warm lets you open doors & windows getting freah air in the house. Also, I enjoy sleeping with the window open hearing all the nightly sounds of the animals & insects.
"fresh air" as long as you don't mind 70% humidity
I wouldn't really call Georgia outside of Atlanta empty. It has a population of 4.5 million while Alabama has a population of 5 million right next to Georgia and at a similar size. It's moreso that Atlanta is an outlier here.
One's growing a LOT faster than the other. That's also changing state politics, despite all the gerrymandering and vote-suppression attempts. Cobb and Gwinnett used to be ruby red. Now they're both blue and Cherokee is the most populous red county. Really mind-blowing.
@@myfriendgoo2816Nonwhites who moved into Gwinnett and Cobb are the reason for the shift from red to blue. It has nothing to do with changing ideologies of the long time residents of those counties.
@@myfriendgoo2816The moveins leave bad places and bring their bad politics with them; then sit and wonder why the new place is going downhill. Gwinnett is a perfect example of destruction by urbanization. 2020 to 2050 should be watched closely, because 2010 to 2020 was already terrible.
@@myfriendgoo2816 one the fastest growing counties in the state is Bryan (outside of Chatham... where Savannah is located) and Chatham is growing rapidly as well. And state politics are pretty much the same... more evidence points to 2020 being the outlier. Georgia is bright red except that the state has 2 Democratic Senators. We will see in 2024 but people have wanted Georgia to become purple since it flipped in 2000.
@@myfriendgoo2816 one more thing... it seems that people vote Blue when they move to Georgia and over time shift to voting purple then red. You have STRONG democratic enclaves (Dekalb and Fulton Counties for example) and a few places that have changed (Cobb and Gwinnett) but for the most part the internal politics statewide have been pretty consistent since 2000.
I grew up in south GA and live in Atlanta. Basically south GA is so hot and “buggy” that it’s essentially hell on earth from May until October. They weren’t sending debtors prisons to prime real estate. Most of the year is beautiful, but summer in South GA will deter most people no matter how pleasant the lifestyle and cost of living are.
🧢
@@neox9369 lol where’s the lie? It’s so freakin hot and gnats are a plague sent from the devil 😂
@@aldengish5952cap , it’s no different from any coastal plain region from the mid Atlantic to north Florida. I’m originally from the DC area and it gets the same their during warmer months. GA is no special butterfly with the elements you mentioned
@neox9369 Lies...I lived in Norfolk VA for 2 yrs..The summers are milder than GA.Hence, the winters are colder.
@@neox9369Major cap, I'm from Valdosta Georgia and I currently live in the DC area. It does not in anyway get as hot as Valdosta in DC. DC has a very mild summer compared to any city in South Georgia. You do realize Florida is walking distance from Valdosta and a lot of cities in South Georgia. I'm moving back home very soon bc I love the heat. It doesn't even get hot in DC until late June. Right now its in the 60s in DC and we are at the end of May ...
Savannah is a major trade hub on the coast, with its shipping industry growing still; however, it is also where one of the country’s first city historical societies was established that keeps a large portion of the city from tearing down buildings that have been there since the city was founded up to the 1800s that are protected by city law. The city also can no longer expand as it has been surrounded by smaller but growing towns. With less space to build new housing it cannot expand its population. Also, Savannah was not as injured by the Civil War because it was not destroyed by Sherman. However, Sherman’s destruction of Atlanta is part of why the city was able to eventually build back up to the major city it is today.
The Atlanta metropolitan area is overcrowded, densely populated and full of traffic and congestion. It takes 30 minutes just to get somewhere that's right down the road.
With that said, North Georgia is more than just the Atlanta metropolitan area. North Georgia has several counties that are scarcely populated.
Just drove to Dawson county and Forsyth county, I’m here to tell you no amount of mountains can stop the growth and development we witnessed. This includes Floyd and Bartow, they will become Cobb and Gwinnett sooner than later, mark my words
Edit, Forsyth is already almost finished
thank you for making a video on our state.
I grew up in SE GA and now live in Atlanta. There's a significant difference in weather and climate. Although, there's not much snow around Atlanta, there's what we call love bugs and many other insects in the southern part of the state that when I drive home quickly cover my windshield around south of Macon. Also, the humidity is often 100% and suffocating in the summer with temps around 100 degrees.
We trade the love bugs for the pollen & tornados.
@@duckducknight problem with that, I'm over near Savannah and we had a tornado watch literally yesterday, and almost 2 years ago my house had a near miss.
@@UnknownCape I know the feeling . Tornado yesterday in Rockdale County not far from my house. Pollen is terrible almost a 7000 count & we still have love bugs, not quite as bad as down home (south Ga). now we can deal with the Cicadas.
I love in southern GA and ill tell you why. Most counties are majority poverty stricken, less job opportunities, and quality of living can be affected busy certain times of year (summer mainly). Most people that reside in the southern areas are either Florida transplants or are generational families that remained in the area for over 100 years. Every small town has a "known" family that are either large farming families or own a lot of rental property.
Substantial growth in both population and port traffic in recent years could spell another boom chapter yet for Savannah (and Charleston, SC for that matter).
Atlanta Metro's main problem is traffic. Depending on the issue, it might take two hours to take a trip that should only take thirty minutes. smh. I saw these issues coming in the early 2000s. Too many people relocating to an area that is not ready for the growth or has the room for it. Too crowded.
We dont want a bunch of huge cities ruining our enviroment and historic roots in this state, ists a good balance
Last time I checked Savannah was a fairly large city.........150,000 and that does not include the surrounding areas that are growing rapidly.
8:37 As of the 2023 census Atlanta now has over 6.3 million people making it the 6th largest metro in the United States...Only New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, Dallas, and Houston are bigger than Atlanta.
...& all of those places are total shite holes...not something to be proud of.
@@safromnc8616 aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaall
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