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Franklin County was formed on December 21, 1809, the county was the fourth to organize and ties with Neshoba in area; ranking forth-first. Named for Benjamin Franklin, Franklin County was formed eleven years following the organization of the Mississippi Territory and eight years before Mississippi was admitted as a State. The newly organized county was 568 square miles.
At the time of organization, Robert Williams was Territorial Governor and Thomas Jefferson was President of the United States. Meadville, named for Cowles Mead, became the first county seat in 1819. Judge William Proby donated the land for the county seat.
The first Mississippi Representative to the Territory was Bailey Chaney. Joseph Winn was the first Representative from Franklin County to the state of Mississippi and David Dickerson was the first Senator.
The first Charter School in Franklin County was Little Springs High School. The school was organized by a Franklin County Representative, Dr. D. P. Butler.
Towns that have been established in Franklin County Mississippi:
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Meadville - Established in 1809 two miles west of its present site and was know as Franklin at that time. In 1809 a committee was appointed to purchase land for the county seat for the new county of Franklin which had been formed from Adams County. The Committee was made up of John Spivars, Richard Coleman, Dougal McLaughlin, Stephen Middleton and Samuel Ratcliff. The county seat was moved to the new town of Meadville in 1820 and the town was incorporated in 1860. Meadville was named for Cowles Mead, second Secretary of the Mississippi Territory. Mississippi Congressman Dan C. McGeehee was a native of Meadville.
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Bude - Located about four miles east of Meadville, was formed in 1912 and named for the old home in England of Mrs. F. L. Peck whose husband was one of the founders of the town. The place was established strictly as a sawmill town. The sawmill started operation on January 28, 1912. Bude was incorporated in 1912.
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Eddiceton - Located five miles northeast of Bude. Eddiceton was formed in 1907 and named for Miss Eddice Dodds, daughter of Dr. A. M. Dodds who once owned the land where the town was located. In the past Eddiceton was known for the number of cucumbers raised in the area and brought to the pickling vat located here.
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Garden City - Garden City was established southwest of Roxie toward Knoxville about 1900 by a Dutchman from New York who chose the name, Garden City. In its early days this was a thriving settlement with a sawmill, planing mill, and a woodworking shop. The town was laid out in streets with paved sidewalk and boasted a hotel, church, school, and several stores but gradually the citizens moved away until Garden City became nothing more than a ghost town.
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Hamburg - Located five miles north of Roxie, Hamburg was formed in 1885 and named for Hamburg, Germany. The original settlement was one mile from its present site as the town moved to the railroad when it was built through the area and was incorporated in 1886. It is said that during the yellow fever epidemic, land for the burial of children was donated by Dr. McGeehee.
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Herring - Located ten miles out of Meadville, Herring was established as a flag stop on the Y & M V Railroad and was named for A. Herring. A few years later, the stop was discontinued an Herring became extinct.
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McCall Creek - Located ten miles northeast of Bude was formed in 1907 as a sawmill town and named for a creek which had been named for an early settler. Incorporated in 1911, the town was once a busy place with the operation of a sawmill and a pickle vat, the latter being used by the farmers who grew cucumbers.
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Monroe - Located two miles of Bude, in 1817 was known as Holly and served as a voting precinct as well as a post office. It was here that horse races, fights, and liquor were found by the early settlers and was also known as an Indian Trading Post. The settlement was named Monroe in 1910 for a family by that name and was incorporated in 1912.
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Oldenburg - Located only seven miles from the town of Hamburg, this small settlement formed in 1906 and named for Oldenburg, Germany. The distance being the same between the two towns of the same name in Germany.
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Roxie - Located ten miles northwest of Meadville, Roxie was formed on the Y & M V Railroad in 1886 as a shipping point. The land on this site was owned by a man named Graves who named the place for his daughter, Roxie. The town was incorporated in 1890.
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Worthington - Located two miles southeast of McCall Creek, was established in 1907. Worthington was named for the Worthington Construction Company who built the Mississippi Central Railroad through this section. There was a post office located here at one time but it was discontinued in favor of Rural Free Delivery.
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