Toomsboro, Georgia


Toomsboro is a town in Wilkinson County, Georgia, United States. The population was 383 in 2020.

History

Toomsboro was founded when the Georgia Railway">Georgia (U.S. state)">Georgia Railway was extended to that point. Its railroad terminal was built in 1869.
On August 30, 1871, Matthew Deason, a white man, and an African American woman who was possibly his wife, Serena Dul Cat C. Johnson were lynched in Toomsboro by members of the Ku Klux Klan. Deason, a former Confederate soldier, was the elected sheriff of Wilkinson County. It was the first documented lynching of a black woman in Georgia after the Civil War.
The Georgia General Assembly incorporated Toomsboro as a town in 1904. The community is named for 18th-century Georgia politician Robert Toombs.

Freedom, Georgia

David Bumgardner, a developer who bought properties at auction, intended to turn the property he owned into a quaint tourist destination. In April 2012, Bumgardner and Bill Lucado, who also owned property, announced they were seeking a buyer for the properties by advertising "Toomsboro for sale" although the existing community of Toomsboro maintains its own identity. They suggested a movie production company might be interested in using Toomsboro as a film set. In September 2018, 36 pieces of property over went up for sale for an asking price of $1.7 million, with an eye toward a preservation-minded buyer "who appreciates its history". In the aftermath of the murder of Ahmaud Arbery in 2020, 19 families cooperatively bought of land in Toomsboro to establish a Black community "where all Black people feel safe without fear of being murdered for who they are". The Freedom Georgia Initiative promotes the new community as Freedom, Georgia.

Geography

Toomsboro is located at . According to the United States Census Bureau, the town has a total area of, all land.

Demographics

Race / Ethnicity Pop 2000Pop 2010% 2000% 2010
White alone 28023320845.02%49.36%54.31%
Black or African American alone 33422314553.70%47.25%37.86%
Native American or Alaska Native alone 0130.00%0.21%0.78%
Asian alone 0000.00%0.00%0.00%
Pacific Islander alone 0000.00%0.00%0.00%
Race and ethnicity in [the United States census|Other race] alone 1000.16%0.00%0.00%
Mixed race or Multiracial 210140.32%2.12%3.66%
Hispanic or Latino 55130.80%1.06%3.39%
Total622472383100.00%100.00%100.00%

As of the census of 2000, there were 622 people, 209 households, and 146 families residing in the town. In 2020, its population was 383.