It is easy to miss the exit for Darien, Georgia, while zipping along I-95. Yet while the Federals did not have Eisenhower’s interstate system to work with, they did not miss Darien in 1863.
Settled in 1736 by
Scottish Highlanders, the community was originally known as New Inverness. The
name was changed to Darien in honor of Darien Scheme, another Scottish colony
in Panama. The new colony was seen as being on the edge of the frontier between
the Spanish and the English, and hence there were two forts built at different
times to protect the frontier: Fort St. Georgia, followed by Fort Frederica. In
1739, the colonists in Darien signed the first petition in Georgia against the
introduction of slavery into the colony. During the American Revolution, Darien became
an important port town. Rice and cotton were rafted down the Altamaha River for
export. The port town continued to grow following independence, and the county
seat was moved to Darien, which was incorporated in 1816. Later, yellow pine
was rafted down the river and shipped North to meet a growing demand for
building materials.
In June 1863, Darien
was raided by two African-American regiments stationed at nearby St. Simons
Island. Those two regiments were the 2nd South Carolina Infantry
(US), commanded by Col. James Montgomery, and the 54th Massachusetts
Infantry, commanded by Col. Robert G. Shaw. Most of the town was looted and
destroyed, including the homes of black residents and slaves and the First
African Baptist Church, reported to be the oldest African-American church in
the country. Colonel Shaw would later call the raid on an undefended site of
little strategic importance, a “Satanic Action.” Local citizens fled to the
nearby community of Jonesboro as refugees. The burning of Darien was featured
in the movie Glory (1989).
Some parts of the town were later rebuilt, but there are still ruins visible, ever after 160 years.
As an aside, John
McIntosh Kell (1823-1900), a Confederate naval officer on both the Sumter
and the Alabama, was born nearby at Laurel Grove Plantation.
I last visited
Darien in December 2013.
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