Crabapple, Georgia

Centered today at the crossroads of Georgia Highways 140 and 372 (also known as "the Silos area"), Crabapple, Georgia, is one of the oldest parts of Fulton County, Georgia. Originally part of Cherokee County, Georgia, (created 1832), Crabapple was part of the land contributed in 1857 to form Milton County, Georgia. The first permanent settlement at Crabapple was made in 1874, with the community taking its name from a crabapple tree near the original town site.[1] As a result of the Great Depression, Milton County was later absorbed into Fulton County in 1932. The historic heart of Crabapple is anchored by an historic brick building at the crossroads of Crabapple Road-Mayfield Road, Birmingham Road-Broadwell Road, and Mid-Broadwell Road. In 2006, a portion of Crabapple was one of several communities incorporated into the new city of Milton; historic Crabapple is now split between the cities of Milton, Roswell, and Alpharetta.

Crabapple, Georgia.

Crabapple hosts an antique fair twice yearly (May and October) called the Old Times at Crabapple Antique Festival.

Major League Baseball pitcher Nap Rucker was born in Crabapple, as was his nephew, MLB outfielder Johnny Rucker.

Geography

Major highways

  • State Route 140
  • State Route 372
gollark: Haven't actually checked.
gollark: I assume it just errors and rolls back stuff (if relevant).
gollark: Given arbitrary time and motivation (and nice solutions to all the irritating technical questions) I could probably make something nice. I have neither of those really.
gollark: SQLite - praise be - does very robust testing, they have a thing which simulates malloc failure after varying numbers of calls during their tests.
gollark: Un-anyway, I don't think it's worth not critically failing unless you write general important "infrastructure" stuff like SQLite or embedded code.

References

  1. Krakow, Kenneth K. (1975). Georgia Place-Names: Their History and Origins (PDF). Macon, GA: Winship Press. p. 53. ISBN 0-915430-00-2.


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