Hall Family Center of Faith Baptist Church Valdosta Ga

Urban center in Georgia, Us

Valdosta, Georgia

City

Valdosta City Hall

Valdosta Urban center Hall

Official seal of Valdosta, Georgia

Nickname(s):

Azalea Metropolis, Sportstown, Titletown USA, Winnersville

Motto(due south):

"A Metropolis Without Limits" (2002–present)[one]

Location in Lowndes County and the state of Georgia

Location in Lowndes County and the state of Georgia

Coordinates: 30°l′48″North 83°16′59″W  /  thirty.84667°North 83.28306°W  / xxx.84667; -83.28306 Coordinates: 30°50′48″N 83°sixteen′59″West  /  30.84667°N 83.28306°W  / thirty.84667; -83.28306
Land Us
State Georgia
Canton Lowndes
Incorporated December vii, 1860
Government
 • Mayor Scott James Matheson
Area

[2]

 • City 36.43 sq mi (94.35 km2)
 • Country 35.99 sq mi (93.20 kmtwo)
 • Water 0.44 sq mi (1.15 km2)
Summit 220 ft (67 m)
Population

(2020)

 • City 55,378
 • Density i,538.88/sq mi (594.xvi/km2)
 • Metro 139,588
Time zone UTC−05:00 (EST)
 • Summer (DST) UTC−04:00 (EDT)
Cypher Codes

31601-31606, 31698

Surface area code(southward) 229
FIPS code xiii-78800[3]
GNIS feature ID 0324649[4]
Website www.valdostacity.com

Valdosta is a city in and the county seat of Lowndes County, Georgia, Usa. As of 2019, Valdosta had an estimated population of 56,457.[5]

Valdosta is the principal city of the Valdosta Metropolitan Statistical Surface area, which in 2010 had a population of 139,588.[6] It includes Brooks County to the west.

Valdosta is the home of Valdosta State Academy, a regional university in the Academy System of Georgia with over 10,900 students.[7] The football team at Valdosta High Schoolhouse has more than wins than any other American high schoolhouse.[8]

Valdosta is called the Azalea City, equally the establish grows in profusion there. The urban center hosts an annual Azalea Festival in March.

History [edit]

Establishment [edit]

Valdosta was incorporated on December 7, 1860, when it was designated by the land legislature every bit the new county seat, formerly at nearby Troupville. The railroad was built to Valdosta that year, rather than Troupville, stimulating development in the new county seat.[9] Many citizens of Troupville had already relocated to Valdosta when the Atlantic and Gulf Railroad was built 4 miles (6 km) abroad. On July four, 1860, the engine known as Satilla No. 3 pulled the first train into Valdosta on the Atlantic and Gulf Railroad.[ citation needed ]

Valdosta is located on the Gulf Coastal Plain of Georgia and has a about apartment landscape. It was one time the heart of long-staple cotton growing in the United States, a lucrative crop both before and after the Civil State of war. The county had a majority-white population well before the war with a substantial blackness population, every bit the cotton plantations were dependent on masses of enslaved field laborers.[ citation needed ]

The sixty miles (97 km) of railway between Valdosta and Waycross were once the longest straight stretch of railroad in the world.[10] Today, highways stretch through the county for miles with hardly a curve, rise, or fall.

Later on beingness bypassed past the railroad and losing the county seat, Troupville was virtually abandoned. It had been named after Governor George Troup, for whom Troup County, Georgia, was also named. Valdosta was named subsequently Troup's plantation, Valdosta (occasionally the "Val d'Osta" spelling was used for the plantation). Troup had named information technology subsequently the Aosta Valley (Piedmontese: Val d'Osta) in Italian republic. The name Aosta (Latin: Augusta), refers to Emperor Augustus. A long-standing rumor held that the city's name meant "vale of dazzler."[eleven]

1861 to 1899 [edit]

The American Civil War erupted just months after the establishment of Valdosta. During the war, Valdosta was far away from battles and became a refuge for those fleeing areas of Georgia where the state of war was beingness actively fought.

After the Civil War, during the Reconstruction era, more than 100 freedmen, families of farmers, craftsmen, and laborers, emigrated from Lowndes County to Arthington, Republic of liberia, in 1871 and 1872, looking for a better life. Since earlier the war, the American Colonization Society had supported the relocation of free blacks to Liberia, an American colony in W Africa established for this purpose. The first group from Lowndes County left in 1871, and were led by Jefferson Bracewell; the second group was led in 1872 by Aaron Miller.[12] Many freedmen ended up working every bit sharecroppers and tenant farmers on area plantations in Lowndes County, as cotton agriculture continued well into the 20th century.[ citation needed ]

Ane notable event during Reconstruction was at a political meeting in front end of the courthouse. A carpetbagger named J. W. Clift was running for Congress and was looking for support from erstwhile slaves. During Clift's speech he verbally attacked whites of Valdosta. In response five men planted explosives at the courthouse, planning on setting them off at Clift's side by side political rally. When other whites arrived at the courthouse unaware of the explosives the five men decided to stop the explosives but some still managed to go off. The explosion was pocket-sized and no injuries occurred. The five men were arrested and were going to go along trial, but federal soldiers took them to Savannah for trial, which was seen by residents equally an overreach of authority and an endangerment for cocky-government.[13]

As mechanization was introduced, the number of agricultural jobs decreased and Valdosta became more industrialized by the 20th century. The world's 2nd Coca-Cola bottling plant began bottling Coca-Cola in Valdosta in 1897.[14] [xv] In 1899, the cotton mill town of Remerton was established 2 miles (3 km) from the centre of Valdosta. It has since become an enclave to the growth of Valdosta effectually Remerton.[ commendation needed ]

1900 to 1939 [edit]

Downtown Valdosta c. 1900

A new courthouse was planned in 1900 to replace the smaller courthouse. Structure began in 1904 for around $75,000. The old courthouse was torn downwardly in March 1904. The new courthouse was completed in 1904, and on April fourteen, 1905, the first session of court took place in the new courthouse.[16]

In November 1902, the Harris Nickel-Plate Circus' prize elephant, Gypsy, went on a rampage and killed her trainer James O'Rourke. After terrorizing the town for a couple of hours, she ran off to Cherry Creek, north of Valdosta. Gypsy was chased by Police force Chief Calvin Dampier and a posse. Gypsy was shot and killed and buried on site. James O'Rourke was buried in Sunset Hill Cemetery in Valdosta.[17] [18]

On July 28, 1907, Valdosta voted to go a dry city; a record $x,000 worth of whiskey was sold on the last day. The city had been moisture since its founding.[19]

In 1910, cotton fiber was notwithstanding important to the economic system, and Fortune magazine ranked Valdosta every bit the richest city in America past per capita income.[xx] Soon afterward that, the boll weevil invaded the Southward, moving east through us and killing much of the cotton wool ingather in this area in 1917. Agronomics in this expanse turned to tobacco and pine timber. In January 1913, the South Georgia State Normal College opened in Valdosta on the border of boondocks. Over the course of the post-obit century, it evolved into Valdosta State University. The schoolhouse gradually became a regional center of higher pedagogy that has drawn many to the metropolis.[ citation needed ]

Valdosta streetcar in 1912

On May 16, 1918, a white planter named Hampton Smith was shot and killed at his business firm near Morven, Georgia, by a black subcontract worker named Sidney Johnson who was routinely mistreated past Smith. Johnson too shot Smith'southward married woman but she afterwards recovered. Johnson hid for several days in Valdosta without discovery.[21] Lynch mobs formed in Valdosta ransacking Lowndes and Brooks counties for a week looking for Johnson and his declared accomplices. These mobs lynched at least 13 African Americans, among them Mary Turner and her unborn eight-calendar month-erstwhile infant who was cut from her body and murdered. Mary Turner's married man Hazel Turner was likewise lynched the day before.[21]

Sidney Johnson was turned in by an associate, and on May 22 Police Chief Calvin Dampier led a shootout at the Valdosta business firm where he was hiding. Post-obit his decease, a crowd of more than 700 castrated Johnson'south body, and so dragged it backside a vehicle downwards Patterson Street and all the way to Morven, Georgia, near the site of Smith'due south murder. There the body of Johnson was hanged and burned on a tree. That afternoon, Governor Hugh Dorsey ordered the state militia to be dispatched to Valdosta to halt the lynch mobs, only they arrived too belatedly for many victims. Dorsey later denounced the lynchings, merely none of the participants were ever prosecuted.[21]

Following the violence, more than than 500 African Americans fled from Lowndes and Brooks counties to escape such oppressive conditions and violence. From 1880 to 1930, Brooks County had the highest number of lynchings in the land of Georgia.[21] By 1922 local chapters of the Ku Klux Klan, which had been revived starting in 1915, were belongings rallies openly in Valdosta.[22]

1940 to 1999 [edit]

On June 26, 1941, Moody Army Airfield opened 10 miles (16 km) northeast of boondocks as part of the United States' grooming for the land's potential involvement in World War Ii. Moody Air Force Base's part in World War Two and the postwar era has influenced the growth of Valdosta.[ citation needed ]

The local economy received an of import heave in the mid-20th century when Interstate 75 was routed and built through the surface area. Many vacationers on their way to Florida found Valdosta a user-friendly "concluding stop" on their way to Walt Disney Earth and the Orlando area. The Interstate'southward route to the west of the city has contributed to its commercial district shifting from the historic downtown surface area to nearly the Interstate.

Valdosta Land College was integrated in September 1963. In 1969, Valdosta Loftier School (the formerly all-white school) and Pinevale High Schoolhouse (the formerly all-black schoolhouse) were merged into one system. Integration had begun at Valdosta Loftier School most 1966.

During the Vietnam War, future president George Due west. Bush entered the National Baby-sit, receiving flying training at Valdosta's Moody Air Force Base in November 1968.

In 1994 Kent and Dawn Buescher opened Liberty Farms Creature Park with a playground, amusement venue and a collection of animals. An entertainment park was added, and in 1996 Liberty Farms Animal Park was renamed Wild Adventures. Wild Adventures expanded with Splash Isle Water Park in 2002. The Buescher family purchased a botanical garden and theme park called Cypress Gardens in 2004. Due to damage from iii hurricanes and a financial struggle in repairing Cypress Gardens the Buescher family were forced to sell Wild Adventures to Herschend Family Entertainment in 2007.[23]

According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics' Monthly Labor Review, the commencement automated teller machine (ATM) was installed at a C&S Bank in Valdosta in 1971.[24] That ATM was preceded by one installed in Rockville Heart, New York, in 1969.[25]

2000 to present [edit]

Valdosta was named as one of 2003'south "Top 100 U.S. Small-scale Towns" past Site Option magazine.[26] In 2010 Valdosta was named one of the "Best Pocket-size Places For Concern and Careers" by Forbes.[27]

Geography [edit]

Valdosta is located in central Lowndes County at 30°50′48″North 83°sixteen′59″W  /  thirty.84667°Due north 83.28306°Westward  / 30.84667; -83.28306 (30.846661, -83.283101),[28] 15 miles (24 km) due north of the Florida country line. Information technology is most 230 miles (370 km) south of Atlanta,[29] 138 miles (222 km) e of Dothan, Alabama, and 120 miles (190 km) northwest of Jacksonville, Florida.

Co-ordinate to the United States Census Agency, the metropolis has a total area of 36.4 square miles (94.3 km2), of which 35.9 square miles (93.1 km2) are land and 0.46 foursquare miles (ane.2 kmtwo), or 1.26%, are water.[30] The Withlacoochee River, a tributary of the Suwannee River, runs along part of the western border of the city, while the eastern side of the city drains to Mud Creek, flowing southeast to the Alapahoochee River, as well part of the Suwannee River watershed.

Climate [edit]

Valdosta has a humid subtropical climate (Köppen climate nomenclature Cfa), with mild, dry out/moisture winters and hot, humid summers.[31] Temperatures often become over ninety °F or 32.ii °C, but in extreme heatwaves, temperatures occasionally go over 100 °F or 37.8 °C. Snowfall is rare merely not unknown. Snowfall fell in Valdosta almost recently on January 3, 2018, but the last significant snow happened in 1989. Yet, low-cal frosts regularly occur between Dec and February.[32] Valdosta can experience Indian summers in the wintertime, where temperatures can get quite warm. Very rarely do wintertime lows go below 25 °F or −iii.9 °C.

Climate data for Valdosta, Georgia (Valdosta Regional Airport) 1991–2020 normals, extremes 1948–present
Month Jan Feb Mar April May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record loftier °F (°C) 84
(29)
87
(31)
95
(35)
96
(36)
100
(38)
106
(41)
104
(40)
106
(41)
101
(38)
96
(36)
89
(32)
85
(29)
106
(41)
Average high °F (°C) 62.eight
(17.one)
67.0
(19.4)
72.9
(22.vii)
79.six
(26.4)
86.four
(30.2)
xc.ane
(32.3)
92.ane
(33.four)
91.5
(33.1)
87.8
(31.0)
80.5
(26.ix)
71.4
(21.nine)
65.0
(18.3)
78.9
(26.1)
Daily mean °F (°C) 50.vii
(10.4)
54.vi
(12.6)
60.1
(15.6)
66.ii
(19.0)
73.4
(23.0)
79.0
(26.1)
81.i
(27.3)
81.two
(27.3)
77.two
(25.1)
68.six
(xx.3)
59.0
(fifteen.0)
53.2
(11.eight)
67.0
(19.4)
Average depression °F (°C) 38.6
(3.seven)
42.2
(5.7)
47.2
(eight.iv)
52.8
(11.six)
sixty.3
(15.vii)
67.9
(xix.9)
70.1
(21.2)
71.0
(21.seven)
66.5
(19.2)
56.viii
(13.eight)
46.half dozen
(8.i)
41.3
(5.2)
55.i
(12.8)
Tape low °F (°C) 3
(−sixteen)
xv
(−ix)
18
(−viii)
30
(−1)
41
(5)
46
(viii)
59
(15)
59
(xv)
46
(8)
27
(−3)
17
(−8)
10
(−12)
three
(−16)
Boilerplate precipitation inches (mm) 3.83
(97)
three.31
(84)
three.73
(95)
3.66
(93)
ii.84
(72)
vii.08
(180)
5.33
(135)
5.11
(130)
4.22
(107)
3.71
(94)
2.47
(63)
3.12
(79)
48.41
(1,230)
Boilerplate precipitation days (≥ 0.01 in) ix.3 ix.1 9.0 7.1 8.one xiii.5 14.two 14.seven ix.two seven.half-dozen vii.iv ix.i 118.3
Source: NOAA[33] [34]

Demographics [edit]

MSA [edit]

Co-ordinate to the Bureau of Census, the Valdosta, Georgia Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA) had an estimated population of 135,804 and ranked #281 in the U.S. in 2009. (The MSA consists of Lowndes, Brooks, Lanier and Echols counties.)

City [edit]

Historical population
Demography Pop.
1860 166
1870 1,199 622.3%
1880 i,515 26.4%
1890 2,854 88.4%
1900 v,613 96.7%
1910 seven,656 36.four%
1920 ten,783 40.8%
1930 13,482 25.0%
1940 15,595 15.vii%
1950 twenty,046 28.5%
1960 30,652 52.9%
1970 32,303 5.iv%
1980 37,596 16.iv%
1990 39,806 v.nine%
2000 43,724 9.8%
2010 54,518 24.vii%
2020 55,378 i.6%
U.Due south. Decennial Census[35]

2010 census [edit]

Equally of the census[3] of 2010 and estimates from 2005 to 2009, there were 54,518 people, 20,280 households, and eleven,876 families residing in the city. The population density was 1,521.7 people per square mile (563.9/kmtwo). There were 22,709 housing units available in Valdosta. The racial makeup of the city was 51.2% African American, 41.v% White, 0.iii% Native American, i.seven% Asian, 0.i% Pacific Islander, 1.2% from other races, and 1.9% from 2 or more races. Hispanic or Latino of any race were iv.0% of the population.

According to the census[iii] of 2000 the largest self-reported beginnings groups in Valdosta were: · Black or African American - 51% · English - 9% · Irish - seven% · German - 6% · Scotch-Irish gaelic - two% · Italian - 2%

At that place were 20,280 households, out of which 27.4% had children under the historic period of 18 living in them, 35.5% were married couples living together, nineteen.3% had a female householder with no spouse present, and 41.4% were non-families. 28.4% of all households were made upward of individuals, and seven.four% had someone living solitary who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.35 and the average family unit size was 2.93. In the city, the population was spread out, with 30% 19 years of age and younger, 19.3% from 20 to 24, 23.ii% from 25 to 44, xviii.3% from 45 to 64, and 9.4% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 25.v years. 53.1% of the population of Valdosta was female and 46.9% was male person. Females eighteen and over made up 54.iv% of the population compared to 45.6% male.

The median income for a household in the urban center was $31,940, and the median income for a family was $39,295. Males had a median income of $33,230 versus $25,689 for females. The per capita income for the city was $19,003. Near 20.iii% of families and 28.2% of the population were below the poverty line, including 34.3% of those under historic period 18 and 13.1% of those age 65 or over.[36] [37] [38]

2020 demography [edit]

Valdosta Racial Composition[39]
Race Num. Perc.
White eighteen,863 34.06%
Black or African American 30,060 54.28%
Native American 109 0.2%
Asian 865 one.56%
Pacific Islander 34 0.06%
Other/Mixed 2,092 three.78%
Hispanic or Latino iii,355 half dozen.06%

As of the 2020 United States Demography, there were 55,378 people, 21,153 households, and 11,224 families residing in the city.

Economy [edit]

Located in the far southern portion of the land, near the Florida line forth the Interstate 75 corridor, information technology is a commercial heart of South Georgia with numerous manufacturing plants. The surrounding area produces tobacco, naval stores, particularly turpentine, as well equally pine lumber and pulpwood. According to the Georgia Department of Community Diplomacy, Valdosta is called the "Naval Stores Upper-case letter of the Globe" because it supplies 80% of the world need for naval stores.[forty] [41]

In the retailing field, Valdosta has one major regional mall, Valdosta Mall, which features national chain anchor stores like JCPenney, Bed, Bath & Across, Buckle, PetSmart, Belk, Old Navy, and Ross Stores. Several big stores surround the mall or are most the mall, including All-time Buy, Home Depot, Kohl's, Lowe's, Part Max, Target, and Publix. Valdosta has other notable shopping areas such as the Historic Downtown area with many local businesses,[42] and the V Points area which has a Big Lots, Winn-Dixie, and numerous national franchise and local restaurants.

Moody Air Force Base is located about 10 miles (xvi km) northeast of Valdosta in northern Lowndes County.

Wild Adventures, a 166-acre (67 ha) theme and h2o park, is located 10 miles (16 km) s of the center of Valdosta in rural Lowndes County. Wild Adventures is endemic by Herschend Family Entertainment.

Arts and civilisation [edit]

Public libraries [edit]

Valdosta Lowndes County Library

The S Georgia Regional Library operates two libraries in Valdosta: Valdosta Lowndes County Library and Mae Wisenbaker McMullen Memorial Southside Library. Valdosta Lowndes County Library, with over 32,000 square feet (3,000 one thousand2) of space, houses the administrative offices of the library system. Built for $450,000, it first opened in 1968.[43] The Mae Wisenbaker McMullen Memorial Southside Library opened on May 31, 1992. An area businessperson, J.C. McMullen, donated the land used for the Southside Library, which was built as part of a larger library construction programme; it was named after Mae Wisenbaker McMullen, the mother of J.C. McMullen.[44]

The commencement library for African-Americans in Lowndes County began operations in the Walton Building on January 21, 1935, closed in February 1939, and reopened in 1955. In 1963 all libraries became available to patrons of all races.[44]

Museum [edit]

Lowndes County Historical Order & Museum in the former Carnegie Library

The Lowndes County Historical Society & Museum is located at the Carnegie Library of Valdosta, a National Register of Historic Places listed building and Carnegie library,[45] one of 24 Carnegie libraries in Georgia.

Borough middle [edit]

The Lowndes County Civic Center is a 120-seat multi-purpose arena that can be rented by the public and is often used to host community sporting events.[46] The arena was besides an occasional venue for Southern Championship Wrestling[ citation needed ] and Spinebusters Championship Wrestling.[47]

[edit]

The S Georgia Pride Festival is held every third Saturday in September. The first festival was held in 2008 on the front end lawn of Valdosta State University. In 2009, the festival became South Georgia Pride and held its festival at the John Due west. Saunders Park in Valdosta in 2010. Valdosta Mayor John J. Fretti proclaimed September 17, 2011, every bit South Georgia Pride Day.[48] Since 2010, the festival has grown to over 3,000 people attention. In July 2012, Mayor John Gayle refused to requite a proclamation to South Georgia Pride, the only one he has refused.[49] [50]

Sports [edit]

Modest league baseball game [edit]

Valdosta hosted several unlike pocket-size league baseball teams during the twentieth century, and was one of six cities in the Georgia State League which began play in 1906, with the squad known equally the Valdosta Stars.[51] [52] From 1946 to 1958, the Valdosta Tigers were a "Class-D" minor league squad. Valdosta was also home to the Valdosta Trojans which was a "farm" team for the Brooklyn Dodgers.

ESPN'southward Titletown, USA [edit]

TitleTown The states was a month-long segment on ESPN that started in the spring of 2008 and continued through July. Fans nominated towns and cities across the country based on their championship pedigree. A panel reviewed the nominees, and fan voting in May determined the 20th finalist. SportsCenter visited each city in July, and fan voting July 23–27 determined the winner.[ citation needed ]

Due to the Valdosta High School football team's record also every bit multiple championships in many sports by Valdosta State University, Lowndes Loftier Schoolhouse, Valwood School, Georgia Christian Schoolhouse, and other academic institutions in the town, Valdosta was nominated as a finalist in 2008 for ESPN's "Titletown The states" contest. On July 28, 2008, with 29.two% of fan votes on ESPN's website poll, Valdosta was named TitleTown Usa.[53]

Didactics [edit]

Public schools [edit]

The Valdosta Metropolis School District holds grades pre-schoolhouse to grade twelve, consisting of five unproblematic schools, two middle schools, and one high school. The school district serves the city of Valdosta and the surrounding communities of Lowndes Canton.[54] As of 2010[update] the district has 447 full-time teachers and over 7,178 students.[55]

The Lowndes Canton School District serves communities of Lowndes Canton outside of the Valdosta city limits.[56]

Scintilla Lease Academy is a free public school of choice open to any student who resides in Lowndes county or the urban center of Valdosta. SCA holds grades kindergarten to grade Seven.

Private schools [edit]

Valwood School is an contained college preparatory schoolhouse north of Valdosta enrolling students in Pre-Kindergarten through twelfth course.[57] Several Christian schools offering grades One thousand-12 also operate in and near Valdosta, including Crossroads Baptist Schoolhouse, Georgia Christian School, Lighthouse Christian Schoolhouse, Open Bible Christian Schoolhouse, Highland Christian Academy, St. John Catholic School, and Victory Christian Schoolhouse.

Higher educational activity [edit]

Valdosta is the home of Valdosta State Academy[58] (VSU), founded in 1906 as South Georgia State Normal Higher for Women. Information technology became part of the University Organisation of Georgia in 1950 as Valdosta State Higher. It achieved university status and became VSU in 1993 and is i of two regional universities in Georgia.

An extension of Georgia Armed forces College[59] is in the city limits, and Wiregrass Georgia Technical Higher[sixty] is located a mile outside of the city limits off Interstate 75.

Also located in Valdosta is Embry-Riddle Aeronautical Academy-Worldwide: Moody Campus.[61]

Media [edit]

Paper [edit]

  • The Valdosta Daily Times

Radio [edit]

AM:

  • WJEM 1150 AM; five kW Gospel
  • WVLD 1450 AM; 1 kW Rock (Rock 106.9)
  • WGUN 950 AM; 4 kW Adult Urban Contemporary
  • WRFV 910 AM; 50 kW

FM:

  • WDDQ TALK 92.one FM Talk radio
  • WAYT 88.one FM Christian Contemporary (licensed to Thomasville)
  • WVVS ninety.9 FM VSU station
  • WWET 91.vii FM (Georgia Public Broadcasting)
  • WAAC 92.9 FM Country
  • WJYF 95.3 FM Christian Contemporary
  • WQPW 95.vii FM Adult Gimmicky
  • WJEM 96.1 (repeater of 1150 AM)
  • WGOV-FM 96.vii FM Urban
  • WAFT 101.one FM Christian
  • WXHT 102.7 FM Pop Hits (Broadcast from Valdosta merely licensed to Madison, Florida)
  • WSTI 105.3 FM Classic Soul and R&B (Broadcast from Valdosta simply licensed to Quitman)
  • W295AO 106.ix Rock (repeater of WVLD 1450AM)
  • WWRQ 107.nine FM The Crush

Goggle box [edit]

Valdosta and Lowndes County is function of the Tallahassee, Florida, telly market and receives well-nigh channels from that city; it besides receives some channels from the neighboring Albany market. See Template:Tallahassee TV and Template:Albany GA Television set.

  • WSWG channel 44 is the local CBS affiliate licensed to Valdosta and based in Moultrie. The station serves the Valdosta and Albany areas, and includes subchannels offer programming from MyNetworkTV and Me-TV.
  • WXGA-TV channel 8 is the local GPB outlet, licensed to Waycross.

Infrastructure [edit]

Transportation [edit]

Major highways [edit]

Other transportation [edit]

  • The Valdosta Regional Airport, 3 miles (v km) s of the center of Valdosta, is served by Delta Air Lines to Hartsfield–Jackson Atlanta International Airport and past Atlantic Southeast Airlines every bit a Delta Connection. At that place is also a Greyhound autobus station.

Pedestrians and cycling [edit]

  • Azalea City Trail
  • VSU Walking Trail System

Streetcar [edit]

  • In 1898, the Valdosta Street Railway Visitor secured the correct to operate streetcars on Patterson, Ashley, Toombs, Lee, Colina, Central, Crane and Gordon streets. Valdosta was one of the smallest cities in America to have a street railway organisation. The streetcar operated in the downtown surface area betwixt 1899 and 1924. The abandoned tracks were removed in the 1940s to be used as bit metallic for the war effort.[62]

Intercity rail [edit]

For several decades the Atlantic Coast Line and the Southern Railway ran regular passenger trains on a Chicago to Florida circuit, making stops in Valdosta, admitting at different stations. The Atlantic Declension Line ran the S Wind through Valdosta, and the Southern operated the Ponce de Leon and the Royal Palm through the town.

Afterwards Amtrak assumed passenger rail operations in the Us in 1971 information technology operated the Floridian from Chicago to Leningrad and Miami. In a grouping of several train disestablishments in 1979, Amtrak discontinued the Floridian, thus marker the last time that rider trains served south Georgia (excepting the New York-Florida service in eastern Georgia).

Notable people [edit]

  • Michelle Anderson, president of Brooklyn College and a scholar on rape law
  • Alex Westward. Bealer, Atlanta blacksmith and author; born in Valdosta in 1921
  • Alfred Corn, poet and essayist; raised in Valdosta
  • Doc Holliday, Western dentist, gunfighter and gambler; spent his youth in Valdosta
  • Louis Lomax, African-American journalist and the son of a leading local educator
  • James Lord Pierpont, composer of "Jingle Bells"; lived many years in Valdosta, where he taught music
  • Elsie Quarterman, constitute biologist and professor of biology at Vanderbilt University; born in Valdosta in 1910
  • Mary Turner, African-American lynching victim

Entertainment [edit]

  • Rhett Akins, state artist, two-time Songwriter of the Year, member of the Peach Pickers writing trio and his son, Thomas Rhett, country music creative person
  • Don Fleming, indie stone musician and producer
  • From Showtime to Last (Matt Good, Derek Bloom and Travis Richer), post-hardcore band
  • Ben Hayslip, two-time Country Music Songwriter of the Year. Member of The Peach Pickers along with Valdosta native Rhett Akins
  • Bill Hicks, comedian; built-in in Valdosta
  • NewSong, Christian band
  • Margaret Pardee, violinist and violin teacher
  • Pauley Perrette, actress best known for NCIS; attended Valdosta Land University
  • Billy Joe Royal, country music and pop artist; born in Valdosta
  • Sonny Shroyer, actor best known for role as Enos Strate on The Dukes of Hazzard; born in Valdosta
  • Domonique Simone, adult film star
  • Demond Wilson, minister and TV player best known for playing Lamont on Sanford and Son
  • William Workman, opera vocalist[63]

Sports [edit]

  • Briny Baird, professional golfer on PGA Tour and Nationwide Tour
  • Buck Belue, former Valdosta Loftier Schoolhouse standout and quarterback of the University of Georgia's 1980 national championship team, now a radio talk bear witness host
  • Dusty Bonner, VSU quarterback, later played for Kentucky, NFL's Atlanta Falcons and arena football league
  • Dana Brinson, former NFL player
  • Vincent Burns, NFL defensive tackle (Indianapolis Colts)
  • Lorenzo Cain, MLB middle fielder for the Milwaukee Brewers, 2015 Earth Series champion
  • Ellis Clary, former Major League Baseball (MLB) player, coach, and sentinel
  • Buck Coats, former MLB player
  • Pepper Daniels, baseball player in the Negro leagues[64]
  • William "Red" Dawson, merely surviving coach of the 1970 Marshall tragedy, chronicled in the film We Are Marshall [65] [66]
  • Harris English, professional golfer on the PGA Tour
  • Dot Fulghum, played in MLB for the Philadelphia Athletics in 1921
  • Willie Gary, NFL, St. Louis Rams, played in Super Bowl XXXVI
  • Randall Godfrey, NFL linebacker, Dallas Cowboys, Seattle Seahawks and San Diego Chargers
  • DL Hall, MLB prospect and onetime beginning-round choice
  • Brice Hunter, NFL broad receiver, Tampa Bay Buccaneers
  • Malcolm Mitchell, NFL wide receiver, New England Patriots
  • Kenny Moore, NFL player
  • Todd Peterson, former NFL player
  • Jay Ratliff, NFL nose tackle, Dallas Cowboys, Chicago Bears
  • Greg Reid, former Florida State and Valdosta Land football thespian, at present plays for Arena Football League team, Tampa Bay Storm
  • Desmond (Desi) Relaford, MLB infielder
  • Stan Rome, NFL role player, Kansas Metropolis Chiefs (1979–1982)[67]
  • Coleman Rudolph, football game role player, Georgia Tech and NFL's New York Giants and Jets
  • Telvin Smith, NFL linebacker, played for Florida Land Football, before being drafted to the Jacksonville Jaguars

Politics [edit]

  • Allen Boyd, served equally a Democrat in the U.S. House of Representatives from Florida from 1997 to 2011
  • Charlie Norwood, served as a Republican congressman from Georgia from 1995 to 2007
  • Melvin E. Thompson, the 71st governor of Georgia, retired and died in Valdosta

Valdosta in fiction [edit]

  • Parts of Fannie Flagg'southward novel Fried Green Tomatoes at the Whistle Terminate Cafe and the 1991 film based upon the novel are set up in Valdosta.
  • In Allen Steele'south scientific discipline fiction novel Coyote Frontier, Valdosta in the year 2070 is the site of Camp Buchanan, an internment camp for dissident liberal intellectuals.
  • Scenes from Ernest in the Army take place in Valdosta, even though the entire film was shot in South Africa.
  • Scenes from the film Zombieland, starring Woody Harrelson, were shot on Valdosta streets and at nearby Wild Adventures theme park.[68]
  • In Cotton Patch Gospel, Joe moves Jesus and the remainder of the family to Valdosta when Herod dies.
  • The Lady Chablis performed in Valdosta in the novel Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil past John Berendt.
  • The 1986 movie As Summers Dice starring Bette Davis and Jamie Lee Curtis was filmed in Valdosta.
  • In John Steinbeck's novel East of Eden, Adam Trask stops in Valdosta to steal supplies and request money from his brother Charles after escaping from a Florida chain gang on his way back to Connecticut.
  • In the movie The Further Adventures of Tennessee Buck, the title character claims that they are heading towards "the roughest land this side of Valdosta, Georgia".
  • One of the opening sketches of the second episode of the showtime season of the sketch comedy serial Mr. Show with Bob and David features a Dixiecrat senator, played by Bob Odenkirk, attending a folk festival in Valdosta and ordering it shut downward when he decides the featured exhibits are also suggestive.

References [edit]

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  63. ^ Nicolas Slonimsky (1984). Theodore Baker (ed.). William Workman. Bakery's Biographical Dictionary of Musicians. Vol. 2. Thou. Schirmer, Inc. ISBN9780028702704.
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External links [edit]

  • City of Valdosta official website
  • Valdosta at New Georgia Encyclopedia
  • Southward Georgia Historic Newspapers Archive, Digital Library of Georgia

bennettvies2000.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Valdosta,_Georgia

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