Until the creation of Berrien County in 1856, the seat of county government for the pioneer settlers of Ray City, GA was situated at Troupville, Lowndes County, GA. Troupville was not only the center of governance, but also the commercial and social center of the county. As related in J. N. Talley’s account of An Antebellum Trial at Troupville:
Court Week always attracted a great concourse of people. Some attended from necessity or compulsion, some to enjoy the feast of erudition and eloquence; others to trade, traffic or electioneer, but to many it was an occasion for much drinking and horse swapping, and for indulgence in cock fighting, horse racing, and other “Worldly amusements” for which Troupville became somewhat notorious. Indeed, among the Godly, it was regarded as a wild town – almost as wicked as Hawkinsville.
A brief legal notice which appeared in the April 2, 1852 edition of the Albany Patriot indicates that one of the “worldly amusements” available at Troupville was a ten pin alley, or bowling alley, operated by Daniel W. Thomas before his death.
Albany Patriot
April 2, 1852Administrator’s Sale
Will be sold on the first Tuesday in May next, by order of the Judge of Ordinary, within the usual hours of sale, before the Court House door in Troupville, Lowndes county, the following property to wit:
Lot of Land No. ninety-one (91) in the 12th dist. of originally Irwin now Lowndes county, containing 410 acres more or less.
Also Town lot No. 17 containing one-fourth of an acre, well improved, with a Ten Pin Alley on said lot. Said lot is laid out in the town of Troupville, in Clyatts first survey. Sold as the property of Daniel W. Thomas late of Lowndes county deceased, for the benefit the benefit of the heirs and creditors of said deceased. Terms on the day of sale.THOMAS B. GRIFFIN, Adm’r.
March 19, 1852.
Daniel W. Thomas (1820-1851) originated from Connecticut, but came to Troupville, Georgia some time before 1847. He was a shopkeeper and a bachelor , residing in a Troupville hotel owned by George W. Stansell. A Democrat in politics, he was elected as one of three Lowndes county representatives to the 1847 gubernatorial convention.
The Ten Pin Alley at Troupville may have resembled an early wooden outdoor bowling alley pictured below at Eudora, KS. (Image courtesy of Eudora Area Historical Society)
The 1870 Tax Digest of Lowndes County, GA indicates that S. B. Lester operated a ten-pin alley and a billiard table in the 663 Georgia Militia District.
Related Posts:
- An Antebellum Trial at Troupville
- Reverend William A. Knight at old Troupville, GA
- Map of Old Troupville, GA with Notes on the Residents
- Big Thumb McCranie was First Postmaster of Lowndes
- More About Troupville, GA and the Withlacoochee River
- Levi J. Knight Reports Indian Fight of July 13, 1836
- Coffee Road Led to Creation of Lowndes County
- Sheriff Swain and Legal Affairs in Old Troupville
- Reverend William A. Knight at old Troupville, GA
- The State vs Burrell Hamilton Bailey
- Reverend John Slade of the Troupville Circuit
- Levi J. Knight and Lowndes First Superior Court
- Morgan Goodgame Swain and the Estate of Canneth Swain
- Coffee’s Road Passed Seven Miles West of Ray City
- Judge Hansell: Distinguished Man of Georgia
- Memorial of Judge Hansell
- The Grand Jury of 1868, Berrien County, Georgia
- Death Claims Judge Hansell, Feb 10, 1907
- Post Offices of the Old Berrien Pioneers
- Ray City Masons Celebrated Saint John the Baptist Day In 1936
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