When Fannin County was created in January of 1854, less than 20 years
had passed since the Texas Revolution, but its impact was immense.
War hero James Walker Fannin was born, if legend is correct, near where
Tennessee and North Carolina border Georgia; after dropping out of West
Point, Fannin was a successful broker in Columbus, Georgia, and then
immigrated to Texas. Following several military adventures, including a
failed attempt to relieve the Alamo, Colonel Fannin was defeated at the
Battle of Coleto Creek, and his command massacred near Goliad. Shortly
after the Mexican-American War won the Texas territory for the Union,
Georgia honored Fannin's memory by naming Fannin County for him. From an
isolated region of mountain farms, gristmills, and wilderness, Fannin
County has developed alongside the arrival of the railroad and the
inauguration of logging, hydroelectric power, mining, and manufacturing
and is currently one of the premier tourist destinations and
arts-and-crafts regions in the Southeast.