Georgia Marble Company
The Georgia Marble Company was founded in 1884 by Samuel Tate. Tate leased out all the land in Pickens County, Georgia, which contained rich Georgia marble. Pickens County has a vein of marble long, a half mile wide, and up to deep.
Company history
In the 1830s Henry Fitzsimmons established the first marble quarry in Pickens County, which was part of the Murphy Marble Belt. In 1884, Samuel Tate founded the Georgia Marble Company, and leased out the land for others to use. In 1905 Colonel Sam Tate partnered with Dawson Mathias Caldwell and the two became co-presidents and general managers of the company. The business grew rapidly, until concrete began to replace marble in buildings. In 1969, with business falling, the company was purchased by Jim Walter Corporation. Over the next few decades it changed hands several times, passing through ownership by Kohlberg Kravis Roberts and Company, Hillsborough Holding Corporation, First Chicago Corporation and IMERYS.Flood
On January 7, 1946, the Etowah River in nearby Cherokee County reached a depth of, and flooded the county including the Georgia Marble Company plant, which was covered with one foot of water.Acquisition
In 2003, the dimension stone division of Georgia Marble Company was acquired by Polycor.Notable commissions
- Bok Tower Gardens in Lake Wales, Florida, designed by Milton Bennett Medary with the features sculpture by Lee Lawrie.
- New York Stock Exchange annex as the pediment in it was created by John Quincy Adams Ward and carved by the Piccirilli Brothers,
- Daniel Chester French's Abraham Lincoln statue in the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C., carved by the Piccirilli Brothers,
- National Air and Space Museum
- East Wing of the National Gallery of Art
- Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland and Integrity and Security allegorical figures by Henry Hering, carved by the Piccirilli Brothers Cleveland, Ohio ca. 1923
- Civic Virtue Triumphant Over Unrighteousness sculpture group and fountain created by sculptor Frederick William MacMonnies and architect Thomas Hastings, and carved by the Piccirilli Brothers.
- Buckingham Fountain in Chicago.
- National McKinley Birthplace Memorial, McKim, Mead and White architects and J. Massey Rhind’s statue of William McKinley, in Niles, Ohio,
- Our Lady of Victory Basilica, Emile Ulrich architect, in Lackawanna, New York,
- Century Building (St. Louis), Raeder, Coffin & Crocker, architects. The ten-story building's exterior combined three shades of the stone from the three principal quarries.