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Rome, Georgia

Rome is the largest city in and the county seat of Floyd County, Georgia, United States. Located in the foothills of the Appalachian Mountains, it is the principal city of the Rome, Georgia, metropolitan statistical area, which encompasses all of Floyd County. At the 2020 census, the city had a population of 37,713. It is the largest city in Northwest Georgia and the 26th-largest city in the state.

Rome, Georgia
City
City of Rome
View of Rome from Myrtle Hill Cemetery
Location in Floyd County and the state of Georgia
Rome
Location within Georgia
Rome
Location within the United States
Coordinates: 34°15′36″N 85°11′6″W / 34.26000°N 85.18500°W / 34.26000; -85.18500
CountryUnited States
StateGeorgia
CountyFloyd
IncorporatedDecember 20, 1834; 189 years ago (1834-12-20)
Named forRome, Italy
Government
 • TypeCommission–manager
 • Commission
Members
  • Sundai Stevenson – Mayor
  • Mark Cochran – Mayor Pro Tem
  • Bonny Askew
  • Elaina Beeman
  • Jim Bojo
  • William "Bill" Collins
  • Jamie Doss
  • Craig McDaniel
  • Randy Quick
 • ManagerSammy Rich
Area
 • City32.45 sq mi (84.05 km2)
 • Land31.68 sq mi (82.05 km2)
 • Water0.77 sq mi (1.99 km2)
Elevation
614 ft (187 m)
Population
 (2020)
 • City37,713
 • Density1,190.40/sq mi (459.61/km2)
 • Metro
96,317
 • Demonym
Roman
Time zoneUTC−5 (EST)
 • Summer (DST)UTC−4 (EDT)
ZIP code
30149, 30161, 30165
Area code(s)706 and 762
FIPS code13-66668[4]
GNIS feature ID0356504[5]
Major airportCHA
Websiteromega.gov

Rome was founded in 1834, after Congress passed the Indian Removal Act, and the federal government committed to removing the Cherokee and other Native Americans from the Southeast. It developed on former indigenous territory at the confluence of the Etowah and the Oostanaula rivers, which together form the Coosa River. Because of its strategic advantages, this area was long occupied by the historic Creek. Later the Cherokee people expanded into this area from their traditional homelands to the east and northeast. National leaders such as Major Ridge and John Ross resided here before Indian Removal in 1838.

The city has developed on seven hills with the rivers running between them, a feature that inspired the early European-American settlers to name it for Rome, the longtime capital of Italy that was also built on seven hills. The American Rome developed in the antebellum period as a market and trading city due to its advantageous location on the rivers. It shipped the rich regional cotton commodity crop downriver to markets on the Gulf Coast and export overseas.

In the late 1920s, a United States company built a rayon plant in a joint project with an Italian company. This project and the American city of Rome were honored by Italy in 1929, when its duce Benito Mussolini sent a replica of the statue of Romulus and Remus nursing from a mother wolf, a symbol of the founding myth of the original Rome.[6]

It is the largest city near the center of the triangular area defined by the Interstate highways between Atlanta, Birmingham, and Chattanooga. It has developed as a regional center for the fields of medical care and education. In addition to its public-school system, it has several private schools. Higher-level institutions include private Berry College and Shorter University, and the public Georgia Northwestern Technical College and Georgia Highlands College.

History edit

Indigenous history edit

The Abihka tribe of Creek in the area of Rome later became part of the Upper Creek people. They merged with other Creek tribes to become the Ulibahali, who later migrated westward into Alabama in the general region of Gadsden.[7][8] By the mid-18th century, the Iroquoian-speaking Cherokee had moved into this area and occupied it. They had moved down from areas of Tennessee, under pressure from settlement by Americans migrating across the Appalachians from eastern territories.

A Cherokee village named Etowah (Cherokee: ᎡᏙᏩ, romanized: Etowa), which means "Head of Coosa",[9][10] was settled in this area during the late 18th century, in the period of the Cherokee–American wars (1776–94) during and after the American Revolutionary War. Several Cherokee national leaders settled here and developed their own cotton plantations, including chiefs Major Ridge and John Ross. Some of the Cherokee planters and others among the Southeast tribes bought enslaved African Americans to use as laborers on such plantations.[11]

In the 20th century, Ridge's home here was preserved as Chieftain's House. It has been adapted by the state for use as the Chieftains Museum. It is used to interpret the history of the Cherokee in this area, especially Major Ridge.

In the 18th century, a high demand in Europe for American deerskins had led to a brisk trade between indian hunters and White traders. A few White traders and some settlers (primarily from the British colonies of Georgia and Carolina) were accepted by the Head of Coosa Cherokee. These were later joined by missionaries, and more settlers. After the American War of Independence, most new settlers came from the area of Georgia east of the Proclamation Line of 1763.

In 1793, in response to a Cherokee raid into Tennessee, John Sevier, the Governor of Tennessee, led a retaliatory raid against the Cherokee in the vicinity of Myrtle Hill, in what was known as the Battle of Hightower.

In 1802, the United States and Georgia executed the Compact of 1802, in which Georgia sold its claimed western lands (a claim dating to its colonial charter) to the United States. In return, the federal government agreed to ignore Cherokee land titles and remove all Cherokee from Georgia. The commitment to evict the Cherokee was not immediately enforced, and Chiefs John Ross and Major Ridge led efforts to stop their removal, including several federal lawsuits.

During the 1813 Creek Civil War, most Cherokee took the side of the Upper Creek Indians, who were more assimilated and willing to deal with European Americans, against the Red Stick or Lower Creek. As they had lived more isolated from the Whites, they had maintained strong, conservative cultural traditions. Before the Cherokee moved to Head of Coosa, Chief Ridge commanded a company of warriors as a unit of the Tennessee militia, with Chief Ross as adjutant. This Cherokee unit was under the overall command of United States Major Andrew Jackson, and supported the Upper Creek. They were the part of the Creek who had adopted more European-American customs and were more aligned with American settlers. The Creek War played out within the US-British conflict of the War of 1812.

In 1829, European Americans discovered gold near Dahlonega, Georgia, starting the first gold rush in the United States. Congressional passage of the Indian Removal Act of 1830, which fulfilled the Compact of 1802, was related to that gold discovery and the desire of Whites to settle the land, as well as President Andrew Jackson's commitment to removal of Native Americans to enable development by the whites.

Even before removal began, in 1831, Georgia's General Assembly passed legislation that claimed all Cherokee land in Northwest Georgia. This entire territory was called Cherokee County; the following year, the Assembly organized the territory as the nine counties that still exist in the 21st century.[12][13]

City founding period edit

Rome was founded in 1834 as European Americans increasingly settled in Georgia. Founders were Col. Daniel R. Mitchell, Col. Zacharia Hargrove, Maj. Philip Hemphill, Col. William Smith, and John Lumpkin (nephew of Governor Lumpkin); most were veterans of the War of 1812. They held a drawing at Alhambra to determine the name of the new city, with Col. Mitchell submitting the name of Rome because of the area's hills and rivers.[14] Mitchell's submission was drawn, and the Georgia Legislature chartered Rome as an official city in 1835. The county seat was subsequently moved east from the village of Livingston to Rome.[15]

With the entire area still occupied primarily by Cherokee, the city developed to serve the agrarian needs of the new cotton-based economy. Invention of the cotton gin in the late 18th century made processing of short-staple cotton profitable. This was the type of cotton that best thrived in the upland areas, in contrast to that grown on the Sea Islands and in the Low Country.

Much of upland Georgia was developed as what became known as the Black Belt, named for the fertile soil. Planters brought or purchased many enslaved African Americans as workers for the labor-intensive crop. The leading Cherokee participated in the cultivation of cotton as a commodity crop, which soon replaced deerskin trading as a source of wealth in the region. The first steamboat navigated the Coosa River to Rome in 1836, reducing the time-to-market for the cotton trade and speeding travel between Rome and New Orleans on the Gulf Coast, the major port for export of cotton.

By 1838, the Cherokee had run out of legal options in resisting removal. They were the last of the major Southeast tribes to be forcibly moved to the Indian Territory (in modern-day Oklahoma) on the Trail of Tears. After the removal of the Cherokee, their homes and businesses were taken over by Whites, with much of the property distributed through a land lottery.

The Rome economy continued to grow. In 1849, an 18-mile (29 km) rail spur to the Western and Atlantic Railroad in Kingston was completed, significantly improving transportation to the east. This route was later followed in the 20th-century construction of Georgia Highway 293.[16] By 1860 the population had reached 4,010 in the city, and 15,195 in the county.

Civil war period edit

 
Rome in 1864, during the occupation by Union forces

Rome's iron works were an important manufacturing center during the Civil War, supplying many cannons and other armaments to the Confederate effort. In April 1863, the city was defended by Confederate General Nathan Bedford Forrest against Union Colonel Abel Streight's "lightning mule" raid from the area east of modern-day Cedar Bluff, Alabama.[17] General Forrest tricked Colonel Streight into surrendering just a few miles shy of Rome. Realizing their vulnerability, Rome's city council had allocated $3,000 to build three fortifications. Although these became operational by October 1863, efforts to strengthen the forts continued as the war progressed. These forts were named after Romans who had been killed in action: Fort Attaway was on the western bank of the Oostanaula River, Fort Norton was on the eastern bank of the Oostanaula, and Fort Stovall was on the southern bank of the Etowah River. The Confederates later built at least one other fort on the northern side of the Coosa River.[18][19]

 
The historic Thornwood mansion was occupied by Union troops during the Civil War. The house is now part of the Shorter College
 
Vandever and his officers in Rome (1864, on East 4th Ave)

In May 1864, Union General Jefferson C. Davis, under the command of Major General William Tecumseh Sherman, attacked and captured Rome when the outflanked Confederate defenders retreated under command of Major General Samuel Gibbs French.[20] Union General William Vandever was stationed in Rome and is shown with his staff in a photograph taken there.[21] Due to Rome's forts and iron works, which included the manufacture of cannons, Rome was a significant target during Sherman's march through Georgia to take and destroy Confederate resources.[22] Davis' forces occupied Rome for several months,[23] making repairs to use the damaged forts and briefly quartering General Sherman. On November 11, 1864, in accordance with Sherman's Special Field Orders, No. 120, Union forces destroyed Rome's forts, iron works, the rail line to Kingston, and any other materiel that could be useful to the South's war effort as they withdrew from Rome to participate in Sherman's March to the Sea.[24]

Reconstruction era and 19th century edit

 
Along the Oostanaula River are the historic Floyd County Courthouse and spire (left) and the Clock Tower (right) on Neely Hill.

In 1871, Rome constructed a water tank on Neely Hill, which overlooks the downtown district. This later was adapted as a clock tower visible from many points in the city. It has served as the town's iconic landmark ever since, and is featured in the city's crest and local business logos. As a result, Neely Hill is also referred to as Tower or Clock Tower Hill.

During Reconstruction, the state legislature authorized public schools in 1868 for the first time, and designated some funding to support them. The city established its first public schools. Schools were racially segregated and tended to have short sessions, because of limited funding. In addition, many families depended on their children to work in agriculture and other basic survival work. Freedmen had been granted the franchise and tended to join the Republican Party of President Abraham Lincoln, who had freed them. The abolition of slavery required new labor arrangements to arrange for paid labor.

Due to its riverside location, Rome has occasionally suffered serious flooding. The flood of 1886 inundated the city to such depth that a steamboat traveled down Broad Street.[16] In 1891, upon recommendation of the United States Army Corps of Engineers, the Georgia State Legislature amended Rome's charter to create a commission to oversee the construction of river levees to protect the town against future floods.[25] In the late 1890s, additional flood control measures were instituted, including raising the height of Broad Street by about 15 feet (4.6 m). As a result, the original entrances and ground-level floors of many of Rome's historic buildings became covered over and had to serve as basements.[26]

Twentieth century edit

 
Sign at the Rome bus station from 1943

In the early 20th century, the Georgia Assembly approved a charter for the city to establish a commission-manager form of government, a reform idea to add a management professional to the team.

 
Romulus and Remus

In 1928, the American Chatillon Company began construction of a rayon plant in Rome; it was a joint business effort with the Italian Chatillon Corporation. Italian premier Benito Mussolini sent a block of marble from the ancient Roman Forum, inscribed "From Old Rome to New Rome", to be used as the cornerstone of the new rayon plant. After the rayon plant was completed in 1929, Mussolini honored the American Rome with a bronze replica of the sculpture of Romulus and Remus nursing from the Capitoline Wolf. The statue was placed in front of City Hall on a base of white marble from Tate, Georgia, with a brass plaque inscribed:

This statue of the Capitoline Wolf, as a forecast of prosperity and glory, has been sent from Ancient Rome to New Rome during the consulship of Benito Mussolini in the year 1929.

In 1940, anti-Italian sentiment due to World War II became so strong that the Rome city commission moved the statue into storage to prevent vandalism.[6] They replaced it with an American flag. In 1952, the city restored the statue to its former location in front of City Hall.[27]

Great Depression edit

In Rome, the effect of the Great Depression was significantly less severe than in other, larger cities across the United States. Since Rome was an agricultural town, food could be grown in surrounding areas. Rome's textile mill continued operating, providing steady jobs for whites as a buffer against the economic hardships of the Great Depression.[28]

The Great Depression was preceded by the "Cotton Bust" across the South. This reached Rome in the mid-1920s, and caused many farmers to move away, sell their land, or convert to other agricultural crops, such as corn. Farm workers were displaced, and many African Americans left the area in the Great Migration, seeking work in cities, including those in the North and Midwest. Cotton crops were being destroyed by the boll weevil, a tiny insect that reached Georgia in 1915 (invading from Louisiana).[29] The boll weevil destroyed many fields of cotton and suppressed Rome's economy.

Many families struggled through hard financial times. Jobs were scarce, and prices of food and basic commodities went up. The federal "postal employees took a fifteen per cent cut in pay, and volunteered a further ten per cent reduction in work time to save the jobs of substitute employees who otherwise would have been thrown out of work."[30] Among fundraising activities for the poor, wealthier residents bought tickets to a show put on by local performers; the fares were paid to grocers, who made boxes of food to sell at a discount price to needy families.[31]

In a private "works project" to provide employment to men out of work, S.H. Smith Sr. decided to replace the Armstrong Hotel. After demolishing it, he employed many people to help build the towering Greystone Hotel at the corner of Broad and East Second streets. The Rome News-Tribune reported on November 30, 1933, an increase in local building permits for a total of $95,800; of this amount, $85,000 were invested by S.H. Smith Sr. in the construction of the Greystone Hotel. He added the Greystone Apartments in 1936.[32]

Geography edit

 
Rome's seven hills and three rivers

Rome is located at the confluence of the Etowah and the Oostanaula rivers, which form the Coosa River. This gave the city access to the waterways, the major transportation routes of the era. Because of this water feature, Rome developed as a regional trade center, based originally on King Cotton. As cotton plantations were developed in the area, Rome was an increasingly important market town, shipping the commodity downriver to other markets.[33] It was designated as the county seat of Floyd County.

According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 31.6 square miles (81.9 km2), of which 30.9 square miles (80.1 km2) are land and 0.73 square miles (1.9 km2), or 2.29%, are covered by water.[34]

The seven hills that inspired the name of Rome are known as Blossom, Jackson, Lumpkin, Mount Aventine, Myrtle, Old Shorter, and Neely Hills (the latter is also known as Tower or Clock Tower Hill). Some of the hills have been partially graded since Rome was founded.[35][36]

Climate edit

The climate in this area is characterized by relatively high temperatures and evenly distributed precipitation throughout the year. According to the Köppen climate classification, Rome has a humid subtropical climate, Cfa on climate maps.[37]

Climate data for Rome, Georgia (1991–2020 normals, extremes 1893–present)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °F (°C) 80
(27)
85
(29)
92
(33)
95
(35)
103
(39)
107
(42)
109
(43)
105
(41)
107
(42)
99
(37)
87
(31)
80
(27)
109
(43)
Mean daily maximum °F (°C) 52.0
(11.1)
56.1
(13.4)
64.8
(18.2)
73.7
(23.2)
80.6
(27.0)
86.5
(30.3)
89.7
(32.1)
88.9
(31.6)
83.8
(28.8)
73.8
(23.2)
63.0
(17.2)
54.3
(12.4)
72.3
(22.4)
Daily mean °F (°C) 41.1
(5.1)
44.4
(6.9)
51.9
(11.1)
60.0
(15.6)
68.0
(20.0)
75.3
(24.1)
78.8
(26.0)
77.9
(25.5)
72.2
(22.3)
61.1
(16.2)
50.3
(10.2)
43.7
(6.5)
60.4
(15.8)
Mean daily minimum °F (°C) 30.2
(−1.0)
32.8
(0.4)
39.0
(3.9)
46.4
(8.0)
55.3
(12.9)
64.1
(17.8)
67.9
(19.9)
67.0
(19.4)
60.5
(15.8)
48.4
(9.1)
37.7
(3.2)
33.1
(0.6)
48.5
(9.2)
Record low °F (°C) −9
(−23)
−5
(−21)
8
(−13)
23
(−5)
33
(1)
42
(6)
51
(11)
51
(11)
32
(0)
23
(−5)
4
(−16)
−2
(−19)
−9
(−23)
Average precipitation inches (mm) 4.98
(126)
4.81
(122)
5.42
(138)
4.88
(124)
4.11
(104)
4.79
(122)
4.89
(124)
4.20
(107)
3.66
(93)
3.78
(96)
4.27
(108)
5.30
(135)
55.09
(1,399)
Average snowfall inches (cm) 0.1
(0.25)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.0
(0.0)
0.3
(0.76)
0.4
(1.0)
Average precipitation days (≥ 0.01 in) 10.3 10.9 10.4 9.2 9.0 10.5 10.2 8.9 7.2 7.2 8.4 10.7 112.9
Average snowy days (≥ 0.1 in) 0.1 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.1
Source: NOAA[38][39]

Demographics edit

Historical population
CensusPop.Note
18604,010
18702,748−31.5%
18803,87741.1%
18906,95779.4%
19007,2914.8%
191012,09965.9%
192013,2529.5%
193021,84364.8%
194026,28220.3%
195029,61512.7%
196032,3369.2%
197030,759−4.9%
198029,654−3.6%
199030,3262.3%
200034,98015.3%
201036,3033.8%
202037,7133.9%
U.S. Decennial Census[40]

2020 census edit

Rome racial composition[41]
Race Num. Perc.
White (non-Hispanic) 17,971 47.65%
Black or African American (non-Hispanic) 10,020 26.57%
Native American 77 0.2%
Asian 742 1.97%
Pacific Islander 10 0.03%
Other/Mixed 1,474 3.91%
Hispanic or Latino 7,419 19.67%

As of the 2020 United States census, there were 37,713 people, 14,169 households, and 8,870 families residing in the city.

2000 census edit

At the 2000 census,[4] 34,980 people, 13,320 households and 8,431 families were residing in the city. The population density was 1,190.5 inhabitants per square mile (459.7/km2). The 14,508 housing units averaged 493.7 per square mile (190.7/km2). The racial makeup of the city was 63.12% White, 27.66% African American, 1.42% Asian, 0.39% Native American, 0.16% Pacific Islander, 5.61% from other races, and 1.64% from two or more races. Hispanics or Latinos of any race were 10.35% of the population.

Of the 13,320 households, 29.1% had children under the age of 18 living in them, 41.2% were married couples living together, 17.0% had a female householder with no husband present, and 36.7% were not families. About 30.9% of all households were made up of individuals, and 14.1% had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older. The average household size was 2.47, and the average family size was 3.07.

The age distribution was 24.2% under the age of 18, 12.1% from 18 to 24, 27.7% from 25 to 44, 20.1% from 45 to 64, and 15.9% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 35 years. For every 100 females, there were 90.2 males. For every 100 females age 18 and over, there were 86.2 males.

The median household income was $30,930, and the median family income was $37,775. Males had a median income of $30,179 versus $22,421 for females. The per capita income for the city was $17,327. About 15.3% of families and 20.3% of the population were below the poverty line, including 29.1% of those under the age of 18 and 16.3% of those 65 and older.

Economy edit

Rome has long had the strength of economic diversity, with an economy founded in manufacturing, education, healthcare, technology, tourism, and other industries.[42] In 1954, General Electric established a factory to build medium transformers. In the 1960s, Rome contributed to the American effort in the Vietnam War when the Rome Plow Company produced Rome plows, large armored vehicles used by the U.S. military to clear jungles. In the latter part of the 20th century, many carpet mills prospered in the areas surrounding Rome.

Rome is also well known in the region for its medical facilities, particularly Floyd Medical Center, Redmond Regional Medical Center, and Harbin Clinic. Partnering with these facilities for physician development and medical education is the Northwest Georgia Clinical Campus of the Medical College of Georgia, which is part of Georgia Health Sciences University.

National companies that are part of Rome's technology industry include Brugg Cable and Telecom,[43] Suzuki Manufacturing of America,[44] automobile parts makers Neaton Rome[45] and F&P Georgia, Peach State Labs,[46] and the North American headquarters of Pirelli Tire.[47] Other major companies in Rome include State Mutual Insurance Company.

In March 2020, Kerry Group announced plans to build a food-manufacturing facility in Rome at a cost of $125 million, the company's largest ever capital investment.[48]

Arts and culture edit

 
A 1930s WPA mural depicting several landmarks around Rome, at the US Post Office

Sites include:

Sites on the National Register of Historic Places listings in Floyd County, Georgia:

  • Dr. Robert Battey House
  • Berry Schools
  • Between the Rivers Historic District
  • Chieftains
  • Double-Cola Bottling Company
  • East Rome Historic District
  • Etowah Indian Mounds
  • Floyd County Courthouse
  • Jackson Hill Historic District
  • Joseph Ford House
  • Lower Avenue A Historic District
  • Main High School
  • Mayo's Bar Lock and Dam
  • On the Coosa River, 8 miles SW of Rome
  • Mt. Aventine Historic District
  • Myrtle Hill Cemetery
  • Oakdene Place
  • Rome Clock Tower
  • South Broad Street Historic District
  • Sullivan—Hillyer House
  • Thankful Baptist Church
  • U.S. Post Office and Courthouse
  • Upper Avenue A Historic District

Sports edit

Since 2003, Rome has been the home of the Rome Emperors, the High-A affiliate of the Atlanta Braves. The Rome Emperors compete in the South Atlantic League. According to numbers released in 2010, sports tourism is a major industry in Rome and Floyd County.[50] In 2010, sport events netted over $10 million to the local economy, as reported by the Greater Rome Convention and Visitors Bureau.[51][50] Of these, tennis tournaments accounted for over $6 million to the Rome economy in 2010.[50]

Rome hosted the NAIA Football National Championship from 2008 until 2013.[52]

Rome has hosted stages of the Tour de Georgia in 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, and 2007.

The Georgia Fire was an indoor football team that played in Rome as a member of the Professional Indoor Football League.[53]

In June 2021, Rome hosted the USATF outdoor track and field championships, which was held at Barron Stadium.

Government edit

The city of Rome commission-manager form of government was adopted in 1918. The city's charter as approved by the legislature authorized a nine-member City Commission and a five-member Board of Education, to be elected concurrently, on an at-large basis by a plurality of the vote. The city was divided into nine wards, with one city commissioner from each ward to be chosen in the citywide election. There was no residency requirement for Board of Education candidates.

In 1966, after the Voting Rights Act of 1965 (VRA) was passed, the city amended its charter with approval by the state legislature, reducing the number of wards from nine to three, with commission members to be elected by at-large voting to numbered positions, three for each ward, with three wards in total. Candidates were required to win by majority vote, with run-off elections between the top two candidates for each seat if no majority emerged after the first round of voting.

From 1964 to 1975, the legislature approved the city's 60 acts for annexations, which appropriated mostly areas with white-majority populations.[citation needed][clarification needed]

At the same time, the board of education was increased to six members elected from three wards, with two numbered positions to be elected at-large from the city for each ward, A majority vote was required to win, with runoff procedures to apply to the top two candidates if no majority was achieved. A residency requirement was added for the board members.

This entire proposal was subject to review under the VRA. The city challenged the attorney general's authority to reject the annexation and electoral systems for each, as plaintiffs believed the reduction in seats and requirement for majority ranking to win would dilute the voting power of the African-American minority. In 1970, the city had a population of 30,759, with an ethnic composition of 76.6% White and 23.4% Black. Under the state constitution and previous practices making voter registration difficult, African Americans had been essentially disenfranchised since the turn of the 20th century.

In City of Rome v. United States, 446 U.S. 156 (1980), the US Supreme Court ruled on the city's argument that the attorney general had acted incorrectly in failing to approve the city's changes to its election system and its annexations. (The city did not seek pre-clearance of its charter changes to its election system in 1966, nor did it get approval of its 60 annexations from November 1, 1964, to February 10, 1975, which were both required under the law.)

The court upheld the constitutionality of the act, including the prohibition of unintentional discrimination to mitigate the potential that a jurisdiction may engage in intentional discrimination. Because of these findings, the court affirmed the lower court ruling.

In the 2000 census, White Americans made up 63.12% of the population, African Americans made up 27.66% of the city's population, and other minorities comprised the remainder. A total of 10.36% of residents identified as Hispanics of any race. The nine-member commission elects a mayor and vice mayor from among its members for specific terms. In addition, the commission hires a city manager for daily operations.

Commission members are elected at-large from three wards of the city; each ward has three seats on the commission. All voters vote for candidates for each position; and candidates may be elected by plurality voting. Members are elected for four-year staggered terms, with commissioners from wards 1 and 3 elected at the same time, and commissioners from ward 2 two years later.[54]

Education edit

Public schools edit

The Rome City School District, which serves the whole city limits,[55] holds grades preschool to grade 12, operating seven elementary schools,North Heights shutting down in 2019/2020.[citation needed] It has two secondary schools, Rome Middle School, and Rome High School.[56] The district has 323 full-time teachers and more than 5,395 students.[57]

The Floyd County School District is for families outside the city limits.[55] Two of its high schools are not in the city limits but have Rome postal addresses: Armuchee High School and Coosa High School.

Private schools edit

Rome has several private schools:

  • Darlington School is a coeducational, college-preparatory day and boarding school established in 1905. It offers classes ranging from Pre-K to grade 12, divided into lower, middle, and upper schools.
  • Unity Christian School is a private, Christian school established in 1998. It offers classes ranging from Pre-K to grade 12 with two classes per grade level.
  • Berry College Elementary and Middle School offers the resources and expertise of a liberal-arts college faculty.[58]
  • Montessori School of Rome is a coeducational school that follows the Montessori curriculum for all grades. It opened in 1980. It offers classes for Pre-K to 12th.
  • Providence Preparatory Academy offers kindergarten through the grade 11, as of 2015, and plans to complete adding grades to the 12th year.
  • St. Mary's Catholic School, established in 1945, offers Pre-K through eighth grade, with two classes per grade level.

Higher education edit

Rome is home to four colleges:

College Public/
Private
Type Notes
Berry College Private Liberal arts Founded in 1902 by Martha Berry
Georgia Northwestern Technical College Public Technical college Formerly "Coosa Valley Technical College," founded in 1962
Georgia Highlands College Public State college Formerly Floyd Junior College
Shorter University Private Liberal arts Formerly Shorter College, founded in 1873

Media edit

 
The Claremont House in Rome, Georgia was used for exterior shots of the Creel House.

Film production edit

Feature films edit

Year Title Notes
1910 King Cotton Silent documentary.[59][60]
1979 The Double McGuffin Filming took place at Berry College and Darlington School.[60]
1986 The Mosquito Coast The film features scenes from Rome and Cartersville, Georgia, representing a fictional city in Massachusetts. Visible from Rome are the historic Floyd County Courthouse and Oostanaula River.[60]
1991 Dutch The comedy features several scenes shot at Berry College and elsewhere in Rome.[60]
2000 Remember the Titans The film was shot partly on the Berry College campus.[60]
2001 The Substitute 4: Failure Is Not an Option The Direct-to-video film was shot in different locations around Georgia, including Rome.[60][61]
2002 Sweet Home Alabama The romantic comedy was filmed partially on the Berry College campus, prominently featuring the former Martha Berry residence, the Oak Hill Berry Museum. Scenes were also shot at the Coosa Country Club.[60]
2004-05 Sugar Creek Gang (series) All five films based on the children's book series of the same name were filmed in Rome.[60]
2005 The Derby Stallion [60]
2006 Dark Remains The horror movie was filmed almost entirely at the Floyd County Prison.[60]
Big Red: The Ghost of Floyd County Prison This documentary was filmed alongside the production of Dark Remains. It chronicles a ghost story from the Floyd County Prison.[60][62]
2007 Freelance [60]
2008 Dance of the Dead An independent zombie comedy filmed at various locations in Rome and North Georgia, including the old Coosa Middle School, Myrtle Hill Cemetery, Shorter College, and the Claremont House.[60][63][64]
Dangerous Calling [60]
Golgotha Scenes for the film were shot at Berry College.[60][65]
2009 Lonely Love [60][66]
Theater of the Mind A documentary about the history of the Golden Age of Radio, it shot scenes in Rome.[67]
Lynch Mob [60][68]
Di passaggio Documentary film which shot scenes on the Berry College Campus.[69]
2012 Revenge of the Sandman Low-budget horror film that was shot partly in Rome.[70]
All Hallows Evil: Lord of the Harvest Low-budget horror film that was shot partly in Rome.[60][71]
2013 Identity Thief Select "street scenes" were filmed in Rome.[72]
Butch Walker: Out of Focus Documentary film about the life of Butch Walker.[60]
2014 Need for Speed Scenes for the film were shot at Myrtle Hill Cemetery and in rural Floyd County near Cave Spring, Georgia.[60][73]
The System [60]
Blind Tiger: The Legend of Bell Tree Smith [60][74]
2015 Ivide Scenes for the film were shot at Rome Cinemas on March 6, 2015.[75]
2021 Black Widow Scenes of the film were shot in 2019 at South Broad Street, Chuck's Corner,[76] and Barron Stadium.[77]
2022 Spirit Halloween: The Movie Scenes of the film were shot at the DeSoto Theater, Celanese Mill, and a former Toys R Us store.[78]
2023 You're Killing Me 80% of filming was conducted at a home near Horseleg Creek Road.[79]

Short films edit

Television production edit

Year Title Episode(s) Notes
1984 The Baron and the Kid Starring Johnny Cash, the television film was shot in both Rome and Cedartown, Georgia.[60][89]
1991 Perfect Harmony A television film, it features several scenes shot at Berry College.[60]
1993 Class of '61 A television film.[60]
2000 Ford commercial [60]
2005 Rezoned 1.05 "Louisville Bookstore, Georgia Pants Factory, Key West Hotel, Idaho High School" Episode features the former Rome Manufacturing Company & Coosa Pants Factory in downtown Rome, now a family home.[90]
2009 16 and Pregnant 1.05: "Whitney" The subject lives in Rome and attends Rome High School
2012 Finding Your Roots 1.07: "Samuel L. Jackson, Condoleezza Rice, and Ruth Simmons" Stock footage of Rome's historic downtown is used in the opening scenes of the episode.[91]
2012 You Live in What? Episode features the same factory, and now home, featured in the 2005 episode of Rezoned.[92]
2013 The Following 1.01: "Pilot" [60][93]
Beyond Scared Straight 3.13: "Floyd County Jail, GA" [94]
4.02: "Floyd County, GA: Deputy Lyle Returns" [95]
5.02: "Floyd County, GA: Snitches Get Stitches" [96]
House Hunters 78.08: "Nurse Makes Fresh Start on a Tiny Budget in Small Town Georgia" [60][97][98][99]
The Haves and the Have Nots Filming for the production has taken place in Rome throughout the series.[60]
2014 If Loving You Is Wrong
2015 Kingmakers A television film and possible ABC series pilot, the film was produced by Loucas George and directed by James Strong. Filming started in March at Berry College and around Rome's historic downtown.[100]
2022 Stranger Things Several episodes of Season 4 were shot at the Claremont House.[101][102]
Kindred Filmed on Broad Street at Downtown Rome.[103]

Web-series production edit

  • My Mother/Agent (2010)[104]

Newspapers edit

Radio stations edit

Call Letters Frequency Nickname Format
WGPB 97.7 FM NPR Public Radio
WLAQ 1410 AM n/a Talk
WQTU 102.3 FM Q102 Hot AC
WRGA 1470 AM n/a News/Talk
WSRM 93.5 FM South 93.5 Country
WROM 103.1 FM Radio M Top 40
WUKV 95.7 FM K-Love Contemporary Christian
WRBF 104.9 FM 104.9 The Rebel "Classic Rock, Southern style"
WGJK 99.5 FM K Country Country

Infrastructure edit

Transportation edit

Highways edit

 
Location of Rome and major highways

Pedestrians and cycling edit

  • Downtown River Trail
  • Heritage Trail System
  • Kingfisher Trail
  • Oostanaula Levee Trail
  • Silver Creek Trail
  • Thornwood Trail

Rail transport edit

Until 1970, the Southern Railway operated the Royal Palm for passenger train service through Rome's Southern Railway Depot. Into the early 1960s the Royal Palm and the Ponce de Leon traveled a Cincinnati - Atlanta - Jacksonville route.[105][106]

Healthcare edit

Hospitals in Rome include Atrium Health Floyd, and AdventHealth Redmond.[107][108][109]

Notable people edit

Gallery edit

See also edit

References edit

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  2. ^ "Rome City Commission". RomeFloyd.com. Governments of Floyd County and City of Rome, GA. 2017. Retrieved May 16, 2017.
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Further reading edit

  • Roger Aycock, All Roads to Rome, Georgia: W. H. Wolfe Associates, 1981. Amazon.com
  • George Magruder Battey Jr., A History of Rome and Floyd County, Georgia 1540–1922, Georgia: Cherokee Publishing Company, 2000. Amazon.com
  • Morrell Johnson Darko, The Rivers Meet: A History of African-Americans in Rome, Georgia, Darko, 2003. Amazon.com
  • Jerry R. Desmond, Georgia's Rome: A Brief History, Charleston: The History Press, 2008. Amazon.com
  • Sesquicentennial Committee of the City of Rome, Rome and Floyd County: An Illustrated History, The Delmar Co 1986.Amazon.com
  • Strong, Robert Hale (1961). Halsey, Ashley (ed.). A Yankee Private's Civil War. Chicago: Henry Regnery Company. pp. 45–46. LCCN 61-10744. OCLC 1058411.
  • Orlena M. Warner, When in Rome ... , Georgia: Steven Warner, 1972. A collection of poems. Amazon.com

External links edit


rome, georgia, this, article, about, city, state, georgia, italian, capital, rome, other, uses, rome, disambiguation, rome, largest, city, county, seat, floyd, county, georgia, united, states, located, foothills, appalachian, mountains, principal, city, metrop. This article is about the city in the U S state of Georgia For the Italian capital see Rome For other uses see Rome disambiguation Rome is the largest city in and the county seat of Floyd County Georgia United States Located in the foothills of the Appalachian Mountains it is the principal city of the Rome Georgia metropolitan statistical area which encompasses all of Floyd County At the 2020 census the city had a population of 37 713 It is the largest city in Northwest Georgia and the 26th largest city in the state Rome GeorgiaCityCity of RomeView of Rome from Myrtle Hill CemeteryFlagLogoLocation in Floyd County and the state of GeorgiaRomeLocation within GeorgiaShow map of GeorgiaRomeLocation within the United StatesShow map of the United StatesCoordinates 34 15 36 N 85 11 6 W 34 26000 N 85 18500 W 34 26000 85 18500CountryUnited StatesStateGeorgiaCountyFloydIncorporatedDecember 20 1834 189 years ago 1834 12 20 Named forRome ItalyGovernment 1 2 TypeCommission manager CommissionMembers Sundai Stevenson MayorMark Cochran Mayor Pro TemBonny AskewElaina BeemanJim BojoWilliam Bill CollinsJamie DossCraig McDanielRandy Quick ManagerSammy RichArea 3 City32 45 sq mi 84 05 km2 Land31 68 sq mi 82 05 km2 Water0 77 sq mi 1 99 km2 Elevation614 ft 187 m Population 2020 City37 713 Density1 190 40 sq mi 459 61 km2 Metro96 317 DemonymRomanTime zoneUTC 5 EST Summer DST UTC 4 EDT ZIP code30149 30161 30165Area code s 706 and 762FIPS code13 66668 4 GNIS feature ID0356504 5 Major airportCHAWebsiteromega wbr govRome was founded in 1834 after Congress passed the Indian Removal Act and the federal government committed to removing the Cherokee and other Native Americans from the Southeast It developed on former indigenous territory at the confluence of the Etowah and the Oostanaula rivers which together form the Coosa River Because of its strategic advantages this area was long occupied by the historic Creek Later the Cherokee people expanded into this area from their traditional homelands to the east and northeast National leaders such as Major Ridge and John Ross resided here before Indian Removal in 1838 The city has developed on seven hills with the rivers running between them a feature that inspired the early European American settlers to name it for Rome the longtime capital of Italy that was also built on seven hills The American Rome developed in the antebellum period as a market and trading city due to its advantageous location on the rivers It shipped the rich regional cotton commodity crop downriver to markets on the Gulf Coast and export overseas In the late 1920s a United States company built a rayon plant in a joint project with an Italian company This project and the American city of Rome were honored by Italy in 1929 when its duce Benito Mussolini sent a replica of the statue of Romulus and Remus nursing from a mother wolf a symbol of the founding myth of the original Rome 6 It is the largest city near the center of the triangular area defined by the Interstate highways between Atlanta Birmingham and Chattanooga It has developed as a regional center for the fields of medical care and education In addition to its public school system it has several private schools Higher level institutions include private Berry College and Shorter University and the public Georgia Northwestern Technical College and Georgia Highlands College Contents 1 History 1 1 Indigenous history 1 2 City founding period 1 3 Civil war period 1 4 Reconstruction era and 19th century 1 5 Twentieth century 1 5 1 Great Depression 2 Geography 2 1 Climate 3 Demographics 3 1 2020 census 3 2 2000 census 4 Economy 5 Arts and culture 6 Sports 7 Government 8 Education 8 1 Public schools 8 2 Private schools 8 3 Higher education 9 Media 9 1 Film production 9 1 1 Feature films 9 1 2 Short films 9 2 Television production 9 3 Web series production 9 4 Newspapers 9 5 Radio stations 10 Infrastructure 10 1 Transportation 10 1 1 Highways 10 1 2 Pedestrians and cycling 10 1 3 Rail transport 10 2 Healthcare 11 Notable people 12 Gallery 13 See also 14 References 15 Further reading 16 External linksHistory editMain article History of Rome Georgia Indigenous history edit The Abihka tribe of Creek in the area of Rome later became part of the Upper Creek people They merged with other Creek tribes to become the Ulibahali who later migrated westward into Alabama in the general region of Gadsden 7 8 By the mid 18th century the Iroquoian speaking Cherokee had moved into this area and occupied it They had moved down from areas of Tennessee under pressure from settlement by Americans migrating across the Appalachians from eastern territories A Cherokee village named Etowah Cherokee ᎡᏙᏩ romanized Etowa which means Head of Coosa 9 10 was settled in this area during the late 18th century in the period of the Cherokee American wars 1776 94 during and after the American Revolutionary War Several Cherokee national leaders settled here and developed their own cotton plantations including chiefs Major Ridge and John Ross Some of the Cherokee planters and others among the Southeast tribes bought enslaved African Americans to use as laborers on such plantations 11 In the 20th century Ridge s home here was preserved as Chieftain s House It has been adapted by the state for use as the Chieftains Museum It is used to interpret the history of the Cherokee in this area especially Major Ridge In the 18th century a high demand in Europe for American deerskins had led to a brisk trade between indian hunters and White traders A few White traders and some settlers primarily from the British colonies of Georgia and Carolina were accepted by the Head of Coosa Cherokee These were later joined by missionaries and more settlers After the American War of Independence most new settlers came from the area of Georgia east of the Proclamation Line of 1763 In 1793 in response to a Cherokee raid into Tennessee John Sevier the Governor of Tennessee led a retaliatory raid against the Cherokee in the vicinity of Myrtle Hill in what was known as the Battle of Hightower In 1802 the United States and Georgia executed the Compact of 1802 in which Georgia sold its claimed western lands a claim dating to its colonial charter to the United States In return the federal government agreed to ignore Cherokee land titles and remove all Cherokee from Georgia The commitment to evict the Cherokee was not immediately enforced and Chiefs John Ross and Major Ridge led efforts to stop their removal including several federal lawsuits During the 1813 Creek Civil War most Cherokee took the side of the Upper Creek Indians who were more assimilated and willing to deal with European Americans against the Red Stick or Lower Creek As they had lived more isolated from the Whites they had maintained strong conservative cultural traditions Before the Cherokee moved to Head of Coosa Chief Ridge commanded a company of warriors as a unit of the Tennessee militia with Chief Ross as adjutant This Cherokee unit was under the overall command of United States Major Andrew Jackson and supported the Upper Creek They were the part of the Creek who had adopted more European American customs and were more aligned with American settlers The Creek War played out within the US British conflict of the War of 1812 In 1829 European Americans discovered gold near Dahlonega Georgia starting the first gold rush in the United States Congressional passage of the Indian Removal Act of 1830 which fulfilled the Compact of 1802 was related to that gold discovery and the desire of Whites to settle the land as well as President Andrew Jackson s commitment to removal of Native Americans to enable development by the whites Even before removal began in 1831 Georgia s General Assembly passed legislation that claimed all Cherokee land in Northwest Georgia This entire territory was called Cherokee County the following year the Assembly organized the territory as the nine counties that still exist in the 21st century 12 13 City founding period edit Rome was founded in 1834 as European Americans increasingly settled in Georgia Founders were Col Daniel R Mitchell Col Zacharia Hargrove Maj Philip Hemphill Col William Smith and John Lumpkin nephew of Governor Lumpkin most were veterans of the War of 1812 They held a drawing at Alhambra to determine the name of the new city with Col Mitchell submitting the name of Rome because of the area s hills and rivers 14 Mitchell s submission was drawn and the Georgia Legislature chartered Rome as an official city in 1835 The county seat was subsequently moved east from the village of Livingston to Rome 15 With the entire area still occupied primarily by Cherokee the city developed to serve the agrarian needs of the new cotton based economy Invention of the cotton gin in the late 18th century made processing of short staple cotton profitable This was the type of cotton that best thrived in the upland areas in contrast to that grown on the Sea Islands and in the Low Country Much of upland Georgia was developed as what became known as the Black Belt named for the fertile soil Planters brought or purchased many enslaved African Americans as workers for the labor intensive crop The leading Cherokee participated in the cultivation of cotton as a commodity crop which soon replaced deerskin trading as a source of wealth in the region The first steamboat navigated the Coosa River to Rome in 1836 reducing the time to market for the cotton trade and speeding travel between Rome and New Orleans on the Gulf Coast the major port for export of cotton By 1838 the Cherokee had run out of legal options in resisting removal They were the last of the major Southeast tribes to be forcibly moved to the Indian Territory in modern day Oklahoma on the Trail of Tears After the removal of the Cherokee their homes and businesses were taken over by Whites with much of the property distributed through a land lottery The Rome economy continued to grow In 1849 an 18 mile 29 km rail spur to the Western and Atlantic Railroad in Kingston was completed significantly improving transportation to the east This route was later followed in the 20th century construction of Georgia Highway 293 16 By 1860 the population had reached 4 010 in the city and 15 195 in the county Civil war period edit nbsp Rome in 1864 during the occupation by Union forcesRome s iron works were an important manufacturing center during the Civil War supplying many cannons and other armaments to the Confederate effort In April 1863 the city was defended by Confederate General Nathan Bedford Forrest against Union Colonel Abel Streight s lightning mule raid from the area east of modern day Cedar Bluff Alabama 17 General Forrest tricked Colonel Streight into surrendering just a few miles shy of Rome Realizing their vulnerability Rome s city council had allocated 3 000 to build three fortifications Although these became operational by October 1863 efforts to strengthen the forts continued as the war progressed These forts were named after Romans who had been killed in action Fort Attaway was on the western bank of the Oostanaula River Fort Norton was on the eastern bank of the Oostanaula and Fort Stovall was on the southern bank of the Etowah River The Confederates later built at least one other fort on the northern side of the Coosa River 18 19 nbsp The historic Thornwood mansion was occupied by Union troops during the Civil War The house is now part of the Shorter College nbsp Vandever and his officers in Rome 1864 on East 4th Ave In May 1864 Union General Jefferson C Davis under the command of Major General William Tecumseh Sherman attacked and captured Rome when the outflanked Confederate defenders retreated under command of Major General Samuel Gibbs French 20 Union General William Vandever was stationed in Rome and is shown with his staff in a photograph taken there 21 Due to Rome s forts and iron works which included the manufacture of cannons Rome was a significant target during Sherman s march through Georgia to take and destroy Confederate resources 22 Davis forces occupied Rome for several months 23 making repairs to use the damaged forts and briefly quartering General Sherman On November 11 1864 in accordance with Sherman s Special Field Orders No 120 Union forces destroyed Rome s forts iron works the rail line to Kingston and any other materiel that could be useful to the South s war effort as they withdrew from Rome to participate in Sherman s March to the Sea 24 Reconstruction era and 19th century edit nbsp Along the Oostanaula River are the historic Floyd County Courthouse and spire left and the Clock Tower right on Neely Hill In 1871 Rome constructed a water tank on Neely Hill which overlooks the downtown district This later was adapted as a clock tower visible from many points in the city It has served as the town s iconic landmark ever since and is featured in the city s crest and local business logos As a result Neely Hill is also referred to as Tower or Clock Tower Hill During Reconstruction the state legislature authorized public schools in 1868 for the first time and designated some funding to support them The city established its first public schools Schools were racially segregated and tended to have short sessions because of limited funding In addition many families depended on their children to work in agriculture and other basic survival work Freedmen had been granted the franchise and tended to join the Republican Party of President Abraham Lincoln who had freed them The abolition of slavery required new labor arrangements to arrange for paid labor Due to its riverside location Rome has occasionally suffered serious flooding The flood of 1886 inundated the city to such depth that a steamboat traveled down Broad Street 16 In 1891 upon recommendation of the United States Army Corps of Engineers the Georgia State Legislature amended Rome s charter to create a commission to oversee the construction of river levees to protect the town against future floods 25 In the late 1890s additional flood control measures were instituted including raising the height of Broad Street by about 15 feet 4 6 m As a result the original entrances and ground level floors of many of Rome s historic buildings became covered over and had to serve as basements 26 Twentieth century edit nbsp Sign at the Rome bus station from 1943In the early 20th century the Georgia Assembly approved a charter for the city to establish a commission manager form of government a reform idea to add a management professional to the team nbsp Romulus and RemusIn 1928 the American Chatillon Company began construction of a rayon plant in Rome it was a joint business effort with the Italian Chatillon Corporation Italian premier Benito Mussolini sent a block of marble from the ancient Roman Forum inscribed From Old Rome to New Rome to be used as the cornerstone of the new rayon plant After the rayon plant was completed in 1929 Mussolini honored the American Rome with a bronze replica of the sculpture of Romulus and Remus nursing from the Capitoline Wolf The statue was placed in front of City Hall on a base of white marble from Tate Georgia with a brass plaque inscribed This statue of the Capitoline Wolf as a forecast of prosperity and glory has been sent from Ancient Rome to New Rome during the consulship of Benito Mussolini in the year 1929 In 1940 anti Italian sentiment due to World War II became so strong that the Rome city commission moved the statue into storage to prevent vandalism 6 They replaced it with an American flag In 1952 the city restored the statue to its former location in front of City Hall 27 Great Depression edit In Rome the effect of the Great Depression was significantly less severe than in other larger cities across the United States Since Rome was an agricultural town food could be grown in surrounding areas Rome s textile mill continued operating providing steady jobs for whites as a buffer against the economic hardships of the Great Depression 28 The Great Depression was preceded by the Cotton Bust across the South This reached Rome in the mid 1920s and caused many farmers to move away sell their land or convert to other agricultural crops such as corn Farm workers were displaced and many African Americans left the area in the Great Migration seeking work in cities including those in the North and Midwest Cotton crops were being destroyed by the boll weevil a tiny insect that reached Georgia in 1915 invading from Louisiana 29 The boll weevil destroyed many fields of cotton and suppressed Rome s economy Many families struggled through hard financial times Jobs were scarce and prices of food and basic commodities went up The federal postal employees took a fifteen per cent cut in pay and volunteered a further ten per cent reduction in work time to save the jobs of substitute employees who otherwise would have been thrown out of work 30 Among fundraising activities for the poor wealthier residents bought tickets to a show put on by local performers the fares were paid to grocers who made boxes of food to sell at a discount price to needy families 31 In a private works project to provide employment to men out of work S H Smith Sr decided to replace the Armstrong Hotel After demolishing it he employed many people to help build the towering Greystone Hotel at the corner of Broad and East Second streets The Rome News Tribune reported on November 30 1933 an increase in local building permits for a total of 95 800 of this amount 85 000 were invested by S H Smith Sr in the construction of the Greystone Hotel He added the Greystone Apartments in 1936 32 Geography edit nbsp Rome s seven hills and three riversRome is located at the confluence of the Etowah and the Oostanaula rivers which form the Coosa River This gave the city access to the waterways the major transportation routes of the era Because of this water feature Rome developed as a regional trade center based originally on King Cotton As cotton plantations were developed in the area Rome was an increasingly important market town shipping the commodity downriver to other markets 33 It was designated as the county seat of Floyd County According to the United States Census Bureau the city has a total area of 31 6 square miles 81 9 km2 of which 30 9 square miles 80 1 km2 are land and 0 73 square miles 1 9 km2 or 2 29 are covered by water 34 The seven hills that inspired the name of Rome are known as Blossom Jackson Lumpkin Mount Aventine Myrtle Old Shorter and Neely Hills the latter is also known as Tower or Clock Tower Hill Some of the hills have been partially graded since Rome was founded 35 36 Climate edit The climate in this area is characterized by relatively high temperatures and evenly distributed precipitation throughout the year According to the Koppen climate classification Rome has a humid subtropical climate Cfa on climate maps 37 Climate data for Rome Georgia 1991 2020 normals extremes 1893 present Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high F C 80 27 85 29 92 33 95 35 103 39 107 42 109 43 105 41 107 42 99 37 87 31 80 27 109 43 Mean daily maximum F C 52 0 11 1 56 1 13 4 64 8 18 2 73 7 23 2 80 6 27 0 86 5 30 3 89 7 32 1 88 9 31 6 83 8 28 8 73 8 23 2 63 0 17 2 54 3 12 4 72 3 22 4 Daily mean F C 41 1 5 1 44 4 6 9 51 9 11 1 60 0 15 6 68 0 20 0 75 3 24 1 78 8 26 0 77 9 25 5 72 2 22 3 61 1 16 2 50 3 10 2 43 7 6 5 60 4 15 8 Mean daily minimum F C 30 2 1 0 32 8 0 4 39 0 3 9 46 4 8 0 55 3 12 9 64 1 17 8 67 9 19 9 67 0 19 4 60 5 15 8 48 4 9 1 37 7 3 2 33 1 0 6 48 5 9 2 Record low F C 9 23 5 21 8 13 23 5 33 1 42 6 51 11 51 11 32 0 23 5 4 16 2 19 9 23 Average precipitation inches mm 4 98 126 4 81 122 5 42 138 4 88 124 4 11 104 4 79 122 4 89 124 4 20 107 3 66 93 3 78 96 4 27 108 5 30 135 55 09 1 399 Average snowfall inches cm 0 1 0 25 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 76 0 4 1 0 Average precipitation days 0 01 in 10 3 10 9 10 4 9 2 9 0 10 5 10 2 8 9 7 2 7 2 8 4 10 7 112 9Average snowy days 0 1 in 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1Source NOAA 38 39 Demographics editHistorical population CensusPop Note 18604 010 18702 748 31 5 18803 87741 1 18906 95779 4 19007 2914 8 191012 09965 9 192013 2529 5 193021 84364 8 194026 28220 3 195029 61512 7 196032 3369 2 197030 759 4 9 198029 654 3 6 199030 3262 3 200034 98015 3 201036 3033 8 202037 7133 9 U S Decennial Census 40 2020 census edit Rome racial composition 41 Race Num Perc White non Hispanic 17 971 47 65 Black or African American non Hispanic 10 020 26 57 Native American 77 0 2 Asian 742 1 97 Pacific Islander 10 0 03 Other Mixed 1 474 3 91 Hispanic or Latino 7 419 19 67 As of the 2020 United States census there were 37 713 people 14 169 households and 8 870 families residing in the city 2000 census edit At the 2000 census 4 34 980 people 13 320 households and 8 431 families were residing in the city The population density was 1 190 5 inhabitants per square mile 459 7 km2 The 14 508 housing units averaged 493 7 per square mile 190 7 km2 The racial makeup of the city was 63 12 White 27 66 African American 1 42 Asian 0 39 Native American 0 16 Pacific Islander 5 61 from other races and 1 64 from two or more races Hispanics or Latinos of any race were 10 35 of the population Of the 13 320 households 29 1 had children under the age of 18 living in them 41 2 were married couples living together 17 0 had a female householder with no husband present and 36 7 were not families About 30 9 of all households were made up of individuals and 14 1 had someone living alone who was 65 years of age or older The average household size was 2 47 and the average family size was 3 07 The age distribution was 24 2 under the age of 18 12 1 from 18 to 24 27 7 from 25 to 44 20 1 from 45 to 64 and 15 9 who were 65 years of age or older The median age was 35 years For every 100 females there were 90 2 males For every 100 females age 18 and over there were 86 2 males The median household income was 30 930 and the median family income was 37 775 Males had a median income of 30 179 versus 22 421 for females The per capita income for the city was 17 327 About 15 3 of families and 20 3 of the population were below the poverty line including 29 1 of those under the age of 18 and 16 3 of those 65 and older Economy editRome has long had the strength of economic diversity with an economy founded in manufacturing education healthcare technology tourism and other industries 42 In 1954 General Electric established a factory to build medium transformers In the 1960s Rome contributed to the American effort in the Vietnam War when the Rome Plow Company produced Rome plows large armored vehicles used by the U S military to clear jungles In the latter part of the 20th century many carpet mills prospered in the areas surrounding Rome Rome is also well known in the region for its medical facilities particularly Floyd Medical Center Redmond Regional Medical Center and Harbin Clinic Partnering with these facilities for physician development and medical education is the Northwest Georgia Clinical Campus of the Medical College of Georgia which is part of Georgia Health Sciences University National companies that are part of Rome s technology industry include Brugg Cable and Telecom 43 Suzuki Manufacturing of America 44 automobile parts makers Neaton Rome 45 and F amp P Georgia Peach State Labs 46 and the North American headquarters of Pirelli Tire 47 Other major companies in Rome include State Mutual Insurance Company In March 2020 Kerry Group announced plans to build a food manufacturing facility in Rome at a cost of 125 million the company s largest ever capital investment 48 Arts and culture edit nbsp A 1930s WPA mural depicting several landmarks around Rome at the US Post OfficeSites include Martha Berry Museum a museum honoring Martha Berry the founder of Berry College Rome Area History Museum Chieftains Museum Major Ridge Home a museum of Cherokee history honoring chief Major Ridge and other leaders Clock Tower a clock tower museum Rome Symphony Orchestra oldest symphony orchestra in the Southern United States 49 Sites on the National Register of Historic Places listings in Floyd County Georgia Dr Robert Battey House Berry Schools Between the Rivers Historic District Chieftains Double Cola Bottling Company East Rome Historic District Etowah Indian Mounds Floyd County Courthouse Jackson Hill Historic District Joseph Ford House Lower Avenue A Historic District Main High School Mayo s Bar Lock and Dam On the Coosa River 8 miles SW of Rome Mt Aventine Historic District Myrtle Hill Cemetery Oakdene Place Rome Clock Tower South Broad Street Historic District Sullivan Hillyer House Thankful Baptist Church U S Post Office and Courthouse Upper Avenue A Historic DistrictSports editSince 2003 Rome has been the home of the Rome Emperors the High A affiliate of the Atlanta Braves The Rome Emperors compete in the South Atlantic League According to numbers released in 2010 sports tourism is a major industry in Rome and Floyd County 50 In 2010 sport events netted over 10 million to the local economy as reported by the Greater Rome Convention and Visitors Bureau 51 50 Of these tennis tournaments accounted for over 6 million to the Rome economy in 2010 50 Rome hosted the NAIA Football National Championship from 2008 until 2013 52 Rome has hosted stages of the Tour de Georgia in 2003 2004 2005 2006 and 2007 The Georgia Fire was an indoor football team that played in Rome as a member of the Professional Indoor Football League 53 In June 2021 Rome hosted the USATF outdoor track and field championships which was held at Barron Stadium Government editThe city of Rome commission manager form of government was adopted in 1918 The city s charter as approved by the legislature authorized a nine member City Commission and a five member Board of Education to be elected concurrently on an at large basis by a plurality of the vote The city was divided into nine wards with one city commissioner from each ward to be chosen in the citywide election There was no residency requirement for Board of Education candidates In 1966 after the Voting Rights Act of 1965 VRA was passed the city amended its charter with approval by the state legislature reducing the number of wards from nine to three with commission members to be elected by at large voting to numbered positions three for each ward with three wards in total Candidates were required to win by majority vote with run off elections between the top two candidates for each seat if no majority emerged after the first round of voting From 1964 to 1975 the legislature approved the city s 60 acts for annexations which appropriated mostly areas with white majority populations citation needed clarification needed At the same time the board of education was increased to six members elected from three wards with two numbered positions to be elected at large from the city for each ward A majority vote was required to win with runoff procedures to apply to the top two candidates if no majority was achieved A residency requirement was added for the board members This entire proposal was subject to review under the VRA The city challenged the attorney general s authority to reject the annexation and electoral systems for each as plaintiffs believed the reduction in seats and requirement for majority ranking to win would dilute the voting power of the African American minority In 1970 the city had a population of 30 759 with an ethnic composition of 76 6 White and 23 4 Black Under the state constitution and previous practices making voter registration difficult African Americans had been essentially disenfranchised since the turn of the 20th century In City of Rome v United States 446 U S 156 1980 the US Supreme Court ruled on the city s argument that the attorney general had acted incorrectly in failing to approve the city s changes to its election system and its annexations The city did not seek pre clearance of its charter changes to its election system in 1966 nor did it get approval of its 60 annexations from November 1 1964 to February 10 1975 which were both required under the law The court upheld the constitutionality of the act including the prohibition of unintentional discrimination to mitigate the potential that a jurisdiction may engage in intentional discrimination Because of these findings the court affirmed the lower court ruling In the 2000 census White Americans made up 63 12 of the population African Americans made up 27 66 of the city s population and other minorities comprised the remainder A total of 10 36 of residents identified as Hispanics of any race The nine member commission elects a mayor and vice mayor from among its members for specific terms In addition the commission hires a city manager for daily operations Commission members are elected at large from three wards of the city each ward has three seats on the commission All voters vote for candidates for each position and candidates may be elected by plurality voting Members are elected for four year staggered terms with commissioners from wards 1 and 3 elected at the same time and commissioners from ward 2 two years later 54 Education editPublic schools edit The Rome City School District which serves the whole city limits 55 holds grades preschool to grade 12 operating seven elementary schools North Heights shutting down in 2019 2020 citation needed It has two secondary schools Rome Middle School and Rome High School 56 The district has 323 full time teachers and more than 5 395 students 57 The Floyd County School District is for families outside the city limits 55 Two of its high schools are not in the city limits but have Rome postal addresses Armuchee High School and Coosa High School Private schools edit Rome has several private schools Darlington School is a coeducational college preparatory day and boarding school established in 1905 It offers classes ranging from Pre K to grade 12 divided into lower middle and upper schools Unity Christian School is a private Christian school established in 1998 It offers classes ranging from Pre K to grade 12 with two classes per grade level Berry College Elementary and Middle School offers the resources and expertise of a liberal arts college faculty 58 Montessori School of Rome is a coeducational school that follows the Montessori curriculum for all grades It opened in 1980 It offers classes for Pre K to 12th Providence Preparatory Academy offers kindergarten through the grade 11 as of 2015 and plans to complete adding grades to the 12th year St Mary s Catholic School established in 1945 offers Pre K through eighth grade with two classes per grade level Higher education edit Rome is home to four colleges College Public Private Type NotesBerry College Private Liberal arts Founded in 1902 by Martha BerryGeorgia Northwestern Technical College Public Technical college Formerly Coosa Valley Technical College founded in 1962Georgia Highlands College Public State college Formerly Floyd Junior CollegeShorter University Private Liberal arts Formerly Shorter College founded in 1873Media edit nbsp The Claremont House in Rome Georgia was used for exterior shots of the Creel House Film production edit Feature films edit Year Title Notes1910 King Cotton Silent documentary 59 60 1979 The Double McGuffin Filming took place at Berry College and Darlington School 60 1986 The Mosquito Coast The film features scenes from Rome and Cartersville Georgia representing a fictional city in Massachusetts Visible from Rome are the historic Floyd County Courthouse and Oostanaula River 60 1991 Dutch The comedy features several scenes shot at Berry College and elsewhere in Rome 60 2000 Remember the Titans The film was shot partly on the Berry College campus 60 2001 The Substitute 4 Failure Is Not an Option The Direct to video film was shot in different locations around Georgia including Rome 60 61 2002 Sweet Home Alabama The romantic comedy was filmed partially on the Berry College campus prominently featuring the former Martha Berry residence the Oak Hill Berry Museum Scenes were also shot at the Coosa Country Club 60 2004 05 Sugar Creek Gang series All five films based on the children s book series of the same name were filmed in Rome 60 2005 The Derby Stallion 60 2006 Dark Remains The horror movie was filmed almost entirely at the Floyd County Prison 60 Big Red The Ghost of Floyd County Prison This documentary was filmed alongside the production of Dark Remains It chronicles a ghost story from the Floyd County Prison 60 62 2007 Freelance 60 2008 Dance of the Dead An independent zombie comedy filmed at various locations in Rome and North Georgia including the old Coosa Middle School Myrtle Hill Cemetery Shorter College and the Claremont House 60 63 64 Dangerous Calling 60 Golgotha Scenes for the film were shot at Berry College 60 65 2009 Lonely Love 60 66 Theater of the Mind A documentary about the history of the Golden Age of Radio it shot scenes in Rome 67 Lynch Mob 60 68 Di passaggio Documentary film which shot scenes on the Berry College Campus 69 2012 Revenge of the Sandman Low budget horror film that was shot partly in Rome 70 All Hallows Evil Lord of the Harvest Low budget horror film that was shot partly in Rome 60 71 2013 Identity Thief Select street scenes were filmed in Rome 72 Butch Walker Out of Focus Documentary film about the life of Butch Walker 60 2014 Need for Speed Scenes for the film were shot at Myrtle Hill Cemetery and in rural Floyd County near Cave Spring Georgia 60 73 The System 60 Blind Tiger The Legend of Bell Tree Smith 60 74 2015 Ivide Scenes for the film were shot at Rome Cinemas on March 6 2015 75 2021 Black Widow Scenes of the film were shot in 2019 at South Broad Street Chuck s Corner 76 and Barron Stadium 77 2022 Spirit Halloween The Movie Scenes of the film were shot at the DeSoto Theater Celanese Mill and a former Toys R Us store 78 2023 You re Killing Me 80 of filming was conducted at a home near Horseleg Creek Road 79 Short films edit The Bread Squeezer 2006 60 80 Capitalism Rocks 2006 60 81 Apparition Point 2007 60 82 Death Waits 2009 60 83 The Other Half 2009 60 84 Der Gries 2010 60 85 Storage 2011 filmed at Berry College 86 Next of Kin 2012 87 The Design 2014 88 Television production edit Year Title Episode s Notes1984 The Baron and the Kid Starring Johnny Cash the television film was shot in both Rome and Cedartown Georgia 60 89 1991 Perfect Harmony A television film it features several scenes shot at Berry College 60 1993 Class of 61 A television film 60 2000 Ford commercial 60 2005 Rezoned 1 05 Louisville Bookstore Georgia Pants Factory Key West Hotel Idaho High School Episode features the former Rome Manufacturing Company amp Coosa Pants Factory in downtown Rome now a family home 90 2009 16 and Pregnant 1 05 Whitney The subject lives in Rome and attends Rome High School2012 Finding Your Roots 1 07 Samuel L Jackson Condoleezza Rice and Ruth Simmons Stock footage of Rome s historic downtown is used in the opening scenes of the episode 91 2012 You Live in What Episode features the same factory and now home featured in the 2005 episode of Rezoned 92 2013 The Following 1 01 Pilot 60 93 Beyond Scared Straight 3 13 Floyd County Jail GA 94 4 02 Floyd County GA Deputy Lyle Returns 95 5 02 Floyd County GA Snitches Get Stitches 96 House Hunters 78 08 Nurse Makes Fresh Start on a Tiny Budget in Small Town Georgia 60 97 98 99 The Haves and the Have Nots Filming for the production has taken place in Rome throughout the series 60 2014 If Loving You Is Wrong2015 Kingmakers A television film and possible ABC series pilot the film was produced by Loucas George and directed by James Strong Filming started in March at Berry College and around Rome s historic downtown 100 2022 Stranger Things Several episodes of Season 4 were shot at the Claremont House 101 102 Kindred Filmed on Broad Street at Downtown Rome 103 Web series production edit My Mother Agent 2010 104 Newspapers edit Rome News TribuneRadio stations edit Call Letters Frequency Nickname FormatWGPB 97 7 FM NPR Public RadioWLAQ 1410 AM n a TalkWQTU 102 3 FM Q102 Hot ACWRGA 1470 AM n a News TalkWSRM 93 5 FM South 93 5 CountryWROM 103 1 FM Radio M Top 40WUKV 95 7 FM K Love Contemporary ChristianWRBF 104 9 FM 104 9 The Rebel Classic Rock Southern style WGJK 99 5 FM K Country CountryInfrastructure editTransportation edit Highways edit nbsp Location of Rome and major highways nbsp U S Route 27 nbsp U S Route 411 nbsp Georgia State Route 20 nbsp Georgia State Route 53 nbsp Georgia State Route 100 nbsp Georgia State Route 101 nbsp Georgia State Route 293 nbsp Georgia State Route 140 Pedestrians and cycling edit Downtown River Trail Heritage Trail System Kingfisher Trail Oostanaula Levee Trail Silver Creek Trail Thornwood Trail Rail transport edit Until 1970 the Southern Railway operated the Royal Palm for passenger train service through Rome s Southern Railway Depot Into the early 1960s the Royal Palm and the Ponce de Leon traveled a Cincinnati Atlanta Jacksonville route 105 106 Healthcare edit Hospitals in Rome include Atrium Health Floyd and AdventHealth Redmond 107 108 109 Notable people editAdam Anderson born 2001 former college player Arn Anderson birth name Martin Lunde born 1958 professional wrestler Bill Arp birth name Charles H Smith 1826 1903 Rome mayor and 19th century writer 110 Jamie Barton born 1981 opera singer Charlie Culberson born 1989 Major League Baseball player Ashley Diamond born 1978 prison and LGBTQ rights activist Kris Durham born 1988 American football player 111 Charles Fahy 1892 1979 U S Solicitor General and Navy Cross 112 Betty Fountain All American Girls Professional Baseball League player 113 Benn Fraker born 1989 canoeist 114 115 Mike Glenn born 1955 NBA 116 Henley Gray born 1933 racing driver Steve Gray born 1956 racing driver Marjorie Taylor Greene born 1974 conservative politician businesswoman Ethel Hillyer Harris 1859 1931 author Betty Hester 1923 1998 literary correspondent 117 Ken Irvin born 1972 professional football player 118 Albert E Jarrell born 1901 Vice Admiral U S Navy Randy Johnson born 1953 football player Chris Jones born 1989 punter National Football League Dallas Cowboys 2011 present Larry Kinnebrew born 1960 professional football player 119 John H Lumpkin 1812 1860 co founder of Rome Superior Court judge and member of the U S House of Representatives 120 Homer V M Miller 1814 1896 U S senator senior Confederate medical officer 121 George Stephen Morrison 1919 2008 admiral father of singer Jim Morrison 122 Will Muschamp born 1971 college football coach Willard Nixon 1928 2000 Major League Baseball player Robert Ernest Noble 1870 1956 U S Army major general 123 John Pemberton 1831 1888 inventor of Coca Cola Ralph Presley 1930 2022 aviator and politician Ma Rainey 1886 1939 blues singer 124 Dan Reeves born 1944 American football player and head coach Major Ridge c 1771 1839 Cherokee chief and co signer of the Treaty of New Echota John Ross 1790 1866 principal chief of the United Cherokee Nation Victaria Saxton born 1999 WNBA Melanie Sumner born 1963 novelist and writer John H Towers 1885 1955 U S Navy admiral and pioneer Navy aviator Butch Walker born 1969 rock and roll musician Nina B Ward 1885 1944 artist who helped found the Kalamazoo Institute of Arts Stand Watie 1806 1871 Cherokee leader and Confederate general Ernest West 1867 1914 Georgia Tech s first football coach Calder Willingham 1922 1995 screenwriter and novelist Ellen L A Wilson 1860 1914 First Lady of the United States 1913 14 and first wife of U S President Woodrow Wilson 125 Gallery edit nbsp Aerial view of downtown Rome circa 1989 nbsp Downtown Rome nbsp Historic Floyd County Courthouse nbsp Historic Clock Tower on Neely Hill nbsp The Rome Area History Museum nbsp Rome City Hall and Auditorium The statue of Romulus and Remus nursing from the Capitoline Wolf stands in front of the building nbsp This house built in 1892 at 315 East Fourth Street was destroyed by a falling tree in April 2011 nbsp The waterwheel of Berry College s Old Mill nbsp Rome Town Green nbsp Chief John Ross pedestrian bridge nbsp Stained Glass at St Peter s Episcopal ChurchSee also editChiaha Harvest Fair List of municipalities in Georgia Noble Brothers Foundry Open Door Children s Home National Register of Historic Places listings in Floyd County Georgia Saint Mary s Catholic Church Rome Georgia References edit City Manager s Office RomeFloyd com Governments of Floyd County and City of Rome GA 2017 Retrieved May 16 2017 Rome City Commission RomeFloyd com Governments of Floyd County and City of Rome GA 2017 Retrieved May 16 2017 2020 U S Gazetteer Files United States Census Bureau Retrieved December 18 2021 a b U S Census website United States Census Bureau Retrieved January 31 2008 US Board on Geographic Names United States Geological Survey October 25 2007 Retrieved January 31 2008 a b Rome Ga Levels Statue Presented by Mussolini The New York Times Retrieved December 7 2022 Waselkov Gregory A and Marvin T Smith Upper Creek Archaeology in McEwan Bonnie G ed Indians of the Greater Southeast Historical Archaeology and Ethnohistory Gainesville University of Florida Press 2000 p 244 245 Ethridge Robbie Franklyn Creek Country The Creek Indians and Their World Chapel Hill North Carolina UNC Press p 27 Rome roadsidegeorgia com Retrieved October 26 2020 Britannica Encyclopedia Rome Georgia United States www britannica com Retrieved October 26 2020 Rome City Commission Archives PDF March 3 2008 Archived from the original PDF on October 29 2008 Cherokee County Historical Maps Georgia Info Digital Library of Georgia 2001 Retrieved March 8 2011 Original Cherokee County Divided Georgia Info Digital Library of Georgia May 28 2001 Archived from the original on January 18 2011 Retrieved March 8 2011 Floyd County Calhoun Times September 1 2004 p 75 Retrieved April 24 2015 Hart Brett July 1999 Founders of Rome Guide to Rome Georgia RomeGeorgia com RomeGeorgia com Retrieved March 8 2011 a b McElwee Bobby Rome Georgia Roadside Georgia Golden Ink Retrieved March 8 2011 Willett Robert L 2011 The Lightning Mule Brigade Attack on Rome Georgia About North Georgia Golden Ink Retrieved March 8 2011 RomeGeorgia com Article on the history of Rome s forts Archived November 20 2008 at the Wayback Machine Fort Norton Rome Georgia Roadside Georgia Retrieved March 8 2011 Charles A Dana and J H Wilson The Life of Ulysses S Grant Gurdon Bill amp Company 1868 p 275 Eicher amp Eicher Civil War High Commands p 542 Noble Brothers Foundry Sons of Confederate Veterans Camp 469 Archived from the original on July 16 2011 Retrieved March 8 2011 Slay David 2006 Playing a Sinking Piano The Struggle for Position in Occupied Rome Georgia Georgia Historical Quarterly 90 4 483 504 Retrieved February 15 2018 Welcome Fort Attaway Preservation Society Fort Attaway Preservation Society Inc 2009 Archived from the original on July 11 2011 Retrieved March 8 2011 Acts Passed by the General Assembly of Georgia Volume II Atlanta Georgia Geo W Harrison State Printer Franklin Publishing House 1892 Creating Levee Commission for Rome Etc No 625 pp 585 590 Between the Rivers Historic District Guide to Rome Georgia RomeGeorgia com Retrieved March 8 2011 Romulus and Remus Statue Georgia Info Digital Library of Georgia 2010 Retrieved March 8 2011 Great Depression New Georgia Encyclopedia November 8 2007 Retrieved September 14 2010 Boll Weevil The New Georgia Encyclopedia Retrieved October 20 2010 Battey George Magruder 1887 1965 A History of Rome and Floyd County State of Georgia Volume 1 Page 412 Battey Page 409 Battey pp 412 and 415 Pullen George July 1 2009 Rome New Georgia Encyclopedia Georgia Humanities Council and the University of Georgia Press Retrieved March 8 2011 Geographic Identifiers 2010 Census Summary File 1 G001 Rome city Georgia American FactFinder U S Census Bureau Archived from the original on February 13 2020 Retrieved April 28 2016 Wilson CC The Seven Hills of Rome RomeGeorgia com February 23 2002 Retrieved March 17 2018 Denmon Shirley The Enchanted Land Eighth Hill 2012 pp 5 ISBN 9781452089553 Rome Georgia Koppen Climate Classification Weatherbase Weatherbase Retrieved March 30 2018 NowData NOAA Online Weather Data National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Retrieved May 24 2021 Station Rome GA U S Climate Normals 2020 U S Monthly Climate Normals 1991 2020 National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration Retrieved May 24 2021 Census of Population and Housing Census gov Retrieved June 4 2015 Explore Census Data data census gov Retrieved December 12 2021 Rome Georgia New Georgia Encyclopedia Brugg Cable amp Telecom bruggcables com Archived from the original on December 19 2016 Retrieved March 30 2018 Suzuki Motor of America Inc Suzuki Motor of America Inc Retrieved March 30 2018 Home Neaton Auto Products Manufacturing Inc neaton com Retrieved September 1 2019 Peach State Labs LLC peachstatelabs com Retrieved March 30 2018 Pirelli Tire Manufacturing Archived from the original on May 17 2007 Retrieved May 12 2007 Taylor Charlie Kerry Group to build 125m facility in US as FDI from Ireland jumps The Irish Times Retrieved March 11 2020 History RSO History romesymphony org Retrieved February 19 2018 a b c Rome tourism officials say visitors brought 9 million to area in 2010 Archived July 15 2011 at the Wayback Machine Rome News Tribune Georgia s Rome Office of Tourism Georgia s Rome Office of Tourism Retrieved September 1 2019 Visitor Info Football National Championship naia org Retrieved March 30 2018 PIFL welcomes Georgia Fire Archived February 27 2014 at the Wayback Machine City of Rome Organization Archived April 1 2015 at the Wayback Machine Rome Floyd County website a b 2020 CENSUS SCHOOL DISTRICT REFERENCE MAP Floyd County GA PDF U S Census Bureau Retrieved July 16 2022 Schools in Rome city Georgia Department of Education Retrieved March 8 2011 permanent dead link Free District Report for Rome City School Stats com 2005 Retrieved March 8 2011 Freygan Andrea June 18 2007 Berry Elementary to celebrate 30 year Local New Rome News Tribune Retrieved October 24 2022 King Cotton IMDb Retrieved November 22 2014 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai Filming in Georgia s Rome romegeorgia org Retrieved November 22 2014 The Substitute Failure Is Not an Option IMDb Retrieved November 22 2014 Drak Remains The Prison darkremains com Retrieved November 22 2014 Movie wants to film in Rome if school board grants use of the old Coosa Middle School Rome News Tribune OME ga March 3 2007 Dance of the Dead movie filmed in Rome to be released on DVD Rome News Tribune Rome GA August 21 2008 Golgotha 2009 Filming Locations IMDb Retrieved November 22 2014 Lonely Love 2009 Filming Locations IMDb Retrieved November 22 2014 Theater of the Mind 2009 Filming Locations IMDb Retrieved November 22 2014 Lynch Mob 2009 Filming Locations IMDb Retrieved November 22 2014 Di passaggio 2009 Filming Locations IMDb Retrieved November 22 2014 Revenge of the Sandman 2012 Filming Locations IMDb Retrieved November 22 2014 All Hallows Evil Lord of the Harvest 2012 Filming Locations IMDb Retrieved November 22 2014 Identity Thief 2013 Filming Locations IMDb Retrieved November 22 2014 Need for Speed 2014 Filming Locations IMDb Retrieved November 22 2014 Blind Tiger The Legend of Bell Tree Smith 2014 IMDb Retrieved November 22 2014 Stewart Jeremy March 7 2015 Cast crew of Ivide shoot scenes at movie theater Film moves to Rome for a day Rome News Tribune Retrieved March 7 2015 Singh Prerna July 8 2021 Where Was Black Widow Filmed All Black Widow Filming Locations The Cinemaholic Retrieved July 11 2021 DeLetter Emily July 9 2021 No spoilers but Black Widow is probably from Cincinnati like the rest of us The Enquirer Retrieved July 10 2021 Druckenmiller John August 2 2022 The DeSoto Celanese and former Toys R Us all have cameos in the just released teaser trailer for Spirit Halloween The Movie Northwest Georgia News Retrieved October 24 2022 Druckenmiller John April 21 2022 That s a wrap Filming with Anne Heche and Dermot Mulroney ends at Rome home Rome News Tribune Retrieved June 11 2023 The Bread Squeezer 2006 Filming Locations IMDb Retrieved November 22 2014 Capitalism Rocks 2006 Filming Locations IMDb Retrieved November 22 2014 Apparition Point 2007 IMDb Retrieved November 22 2014 Death Waits 2009 IMDb Retrieved November 22 2014 The Other Half 2009 Filming Locations IMDb Retrieved November 22 2014 Der Gries 2010 IMDb Retrieved November 22 2014 Storage 2011 IMDb Retrieved November 22 2014 Next of Kin 2012 IMDb Retrieved November 22 2014 The Design 2014 IMDb Retrieved November 22 2014 The Baron and the Kid 1984 IMDb Retrieved November 22 2014 Episode Detail Louisville Bookstore Georgia Pants Factory Key West Hotel Idaho High School Rezoned TV Guide November 6 2005 Retrieved November 22 2014 Full Episode Samuel L Jackson Condoleezza Rice and Ruth Simmons PBS April 29 2012 Retrieved November 22 2014 Former Pants Factory HGTV Retrieved November 22 2014 The Following Season 1 Episode 1 Pilot IMDb January 21 2013 Retrieved November 22 2014 Beyond Scared Straight Episode Guide Season 3 A amp E August 20 2012 Retrieved November 22 2014 Beyond Scared Straight Episode Guide Season 4 A amp E May 30 2013 Retrieved November 22 2014 Beyond Scared Straight Season 5 Episode 2 A amp E October 9 2013 Retrieved November 22 2014 Nurse Makes Fresh Start on a Tiny Budget in Small Town Georgia includes correct episode number HGTV September 23 2013 Retrieved November 22 2014 House Hunters Episode Guide includes airdate TV Guide September 23 2013 Retrieved November 22 2014 Nurse Makes Fresh Start on a Tiny Budget in Small Town Georgia includes full episode description HGTV Canadian TV channel September 23 2013 Retrieved November 22 2014 Walker Doug February 28 2015 TV movie Kingmakers to be filmed in Rome next month Rome News Tribune Retrieved March 7 2015 Georgia film industry bounces back from pandemic with record year Northwest Georgia News July 21 2021 Retrieved August 12 2021 Bailey John July 27 2021 Portion of Second Avenue closed until Thursday as Stranger Things films Northwest Georgia News Retrieved August 12 2021 Downtown Rome Transforms to 1800s Era for Filming of FX Series Show Coosa Valley News June 21 2022 Retrieved June 24 2022 My Mother Agent 2010 IMDb Retrieved November 22 2014 Southern Railway June 1952 Tables 4 and 10 http streamlinermemories info South SOU52TT pdf Southern Railway Table 5 Official Guide of the Railways National Railway Publication Company 96 1 June 1963 Walker Doug Bailey John July 14 2021 Merger between Floyd Health System and North Carolina based Atrium Healthcare finalize Rome News Tribune Retrieved November 19 2021 Bailey John May 13 2021 AdventHealth signs 635 million agreement to buy Redmond Regional Medical Center Rome News Tribune Retrieved April 25 2023 Bailey John October 1 2021 Redmond sale to AdventHealth finalized Rome News Tribune Retrieved April 25 2023 Arp Bill 1884 Bill Arp s Scrap Book Humor and Philosophy J P Harrison amp Company Kris Durham National Football League Fahy Charles 1937 Goal of National Labor Relations Act Betty Fountain Profile All American Girls Professional Baseball League Official Website Benn FRAKER Olympic Canoe Slalom United States of America International Olympic Committee June 21 2016 Racing to a Different Drummer Canoe amp Kayak Magazine May 7 2013 Mike Glenn Stats Basketball Reference com Basketball Reference com O CONNOR FLANNERY Letters to Betty Hester 1955 1964 Emory University Library Ken Irvin Stats Pro Football Reference com Pro Football Reference com Larry Kinnebrew Stats Pro Football Reference com Pro Football Reference com Hicks Paul DeForest February 2012 Joseph Henry Lumpkin Georgia s First Chief Justice University of Georgia Press ISBN 9780820340999 MILLER Homer Virgil Milton Biographical Information bioguide congress gov Archived from the original on September 1 1999 Retrieved January 30 2018 Grimes William December 8 2008 George S Morrison 89 Navy Commander and Father of Rock Singer The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved January 30 2018 Hobson Sarah ed December 1918 Biographical Summary Robert E Noble Journal of the American Institute of Homœopathy Chicago IL American Institute of Homeopathy p 591 via Google Books Ma Rainey American singer Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved January 30 2018 Ellen Wilson Biography National First Ladies Library firstladies org Retrieved May 25 2016 Further reading editRoger Aycock All Roads to Rome Georgia W H Wolfe Associates 1981 Amazon com George Magruder Battey Jr A History of Rome and Floyd County Georgia 1540 1922 Georgia Cherokee Publishing Company 2000 Amazon com Morrell Johnson Darko The Rivers Meet A History of African Americans in Rome Georgia Darko 2003 Amazon com Jerry R Desmond Georgia s Rome A Brief History Charleston The History Press 2008 Amazon com Sesquicentennial Committee of the City of Rome Rome and Floyd County An Illustrated History The Delmar Co 1986 Amazon com Strong Robert Hale 1961 Halsey Ashley ed A Yankee Private s Civil War Chicago Henry Regnery Company pp 45 46 LCCN 61 10744 OCLC 1058411 Orlena M Warner When in Rome Georgia Steven Warner 1972 A collection of poems Amazon comExternal links editRome Georgia at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Media from Commons nbsp Texts from Wikisource nbsp Travel information from Wikivoyage nbsp Data from Wikidata Official website Federal Occupation of Rome at Digital Library of Georgia Greater Rome Convention amp Visitors Bureau Rome Georgia at New Georgia Encyclopedia Rome Floyd Chamber of Commerce Portals nbsp North America nbsp United States nbsp Georgia U S state nbsp Cities Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rome Georgia amp oldid 1203450809, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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