Georgia school census, 1938 [1938]

GEORGIA SCHOOL CENSUS 1938
BY
STATE DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION

THE LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA

GEORGIA SCHOOL CENSUS
1938
Published by the STATE DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION
M. D. COLLWS
State Superintendent of Schools ATLANTA, GEORGIA
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Southern Printing Co., Atlanta

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GEORGIA

SCHOOL CENSUS

1938

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(Published by the



STATE DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION

Textbook Division

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Dep-^ e i^''

M. D. COLLINS
State Superintendent of Schools ATLANTA, GEORGIA

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THE 1938 GEORGIA SCHOOL CENSUS
Published by
THE STATE DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION
as a report on Official Project No. 665-34-3 51 Conducted under the auspices of the
WORK PROJECTS ADMINISTRATION OF GEORGIA and including
ANALYSIS AND INTERPRETATION by the
STAFF OF THE COLLEGE OF EDUCATION of the
UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA
STATE DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION M. D. COLLINS
State Superintendent of Schools
ATLANTA, GEORGIA
c"T)NIVE]raU,
LIBRARY
JUN28'47

STATE OF GEORGIA SCHOOL CENSUS--1938
STATE BOARD OP EDUCATION Cooperating with
WORK PROJECTS ADMINISTRATION OF GEORGIA

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Hon. E. D. Rivers Dr. M. D. Collins

BOARD MEMBERS

Governor, Member ex-Officio

Chairman

State Superintendent of Schools. ._ .Executive Secretary

MEMBERS BY APPOINTMENT
By Congressional Districts
Dr. R. J. Kennedy Mrs. A. B. Conger Mrs. Frank David Judge Alvin H. Freeman, Vice-Chairman Walter H. Rich H. C. Williams Mrs. Elizabeth McWaters G. C. Dougherty... W. W. McCay W. C. Clary, Jr

Statesboro Bainbridge Columbus
Newnan Atlanta Adrian Cedartown Valdosta Eastanollee Harlem

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FOREWORD The 1938 school census is the most complete school census ever taken in the state of Georgia. Previous census reports have dealt only with children of school age. This census includes information on children of pre-school age and youth beyond the Georgia school age. The 1938 school census includes valuable information to school officials in their plans for future organization and administration of the public schools within their jurisdiction. It also gives valuable information for sociologists, social welfare workers, school groups, and others interested in planning a program to meet the educational needs of the youth of Georgia, including those out of the public schools as well as those in attendance in the public schools. In making this report possible, we wish to give credit to the Division of Information and Publications under whose supervision the census was taken; to the Works Progress Administration for making available a great number of workers needed in tabulating the results; to the College of Education of the University of Georgia for its co-operation in writing up some of the interpretations and implications of the census to the educational, economic, and social life of Georgia.
M. D. COLLINS, State Superintendent of Schools.
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TABLE OF CONTENTS

CHAPTER

PAGE

I. The School Census

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1. Brief History of the School Census in Georgia

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1. The 1938 Census

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3. The Purpose and Function of a School Census

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4. Suggestions for Improvement of the Georgia School Census . . 7

II. Implications of the 1938 School Census for the Organization

and Administration of Public Education

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1. Size of Administrative Units and Attendance Areas

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2. School Transportation

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3. Plant Facilities

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4. Enforcement of Compulsory Attendance Law

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5. Facilities and Organization for Adult Education

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6. A Guidance and Placement Service

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III. Implications of the 1938 School Census for the Instructional

Program of the Public Schools

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1. Illiteracy

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2. Pre-School Education.

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3. Elementary and Secondary Education

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4. Adult Education

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IV. Summary and Conclusions

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Statistical Tables

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ft CHAPTER I
THE SCHOOL CENSUS
1. Brief History of the School Census in Georgia. Georgia's first school census law was passed in 1822. This census law was
passed as a result of the Act passed in 1815 creating and establishing the first free schools throughout the state.1
The Act of 1815 is the first direct appropriation of money for the purpose of education. The law did not make any direct provision for the distribution of the School Fund, and since no record is found giving any details, we do not know how the money was disbursed for the first six years. The Act passed in 1822 determining what should be the basis of distribution of funds was the first law requiring a census to be taken in the state.2
Section 7. And be it further enacted by the authority aforesaid, that it shall be the duty of the superintendent in each district, to take a census of the children poor as well as rich, and females as well as males, between the ages of eight and eighteen years, and deliver the same to the Senator-elect of their county who shall consolidate the said returns and lay such consolidated returns before the next legislature.2
Possibly, the passing of the first census law gave the first thoughts of equalization of educational opportunities in the State. The Act calling for a school census raised the question of a fair distribution of funds, both as to counties and as to number of pupils. The Justices of the Inferior Courts were later instructed by the law to make census returns but this and all other censuses previous to 1871 were made from the enumerator's and County Grand Jury's own knowledge. No definite door to door canvass for census enumeration was made until 1871.
'Lamar's Compilation 1815--p. 325. 2Act of Georgia 1822--p. 4-5.
LiBPARY
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Another school census law was passed in 1867. Although this law called for an annual enumeration, it is quite evident, as is indicated by the law, that this enumeration was also superficial in nature.
1275.--The ordinary of each county shall annually, by the third Monday in November, report to the Governor, under his hand and seal the whole number of children in his county, as ascertained from the Tax Receiver's digest, his own knowledge, and the knowledge of the Grand Jury, as hereinafter set forth.3
After the creation of the office of County Commissioner of Schools the responsibility for the enumeration of school children was placed in the hands of the County Commissioner of Schools. From 1872 to 1887 the County Commissioner of Schools was required to take an annual census of all white and colored children between the ages of six and eighteen.4
In 1887 a new census law was passed which specified that every ten years after 1888 each city and county school superintendent should cause a census to be taken, and every ten years after 1893 it became the duty of the State Board of Education to make an estimate from the latest United States census of the number of school children in each district.5
The school census law of Georgia, which is now in effect, was passed by the State Legislature in 1919. For the purpose of exactness the law is herein quoted:
32-1601. Duty of county and city boards of education.--It shall be the duty of the county and city boards of education to cause an enumeration of the children between six and eighteen years of age inclusive to be made under instructions from the State Superintendent of Schools every five years, as hereinafter prescribed.6
'Code of Georgia of 1867. 6--1275. "Georgia Laws: 1872, p. 16. 5Code of Georgia of 1911. V.. 1.1520--1389. "The Code of Georgia of 1933. 32--1601.

32-1602. How enumeration is to be taken.--The different

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county or city boards shall employ one or more competent, reliable

persons to take the enumeration in their respective jurisdictions,

and the persons so employed shall go from house to house, making

a thorough canvass of the territory assigned to them, taking the

number of children between the ages of six and eighteen years inclusive

and distinguishing between the sexes and races. The persons thus

employed shall be known as enumerators of the school census, and

shall take and report any additional statistics required by the State

Superintendent of Schools. They shall receive as compensation a

per diem not to exceed $4.00, to be paid out of the school fund of

the jurisdiction in which the work is done. They shall, moreover,

be required to make oath that the work done by them has been

carefully and faithfully done according to the true intent and mean-

ing of this chapter, the form of oath to be prescribed by the State

Superintendent of Schools. Nothing herein contained shall be con-

strued to prevent the county boards from employing the county

superintendent of schools to do the work contemplated in this chapter.7

The greatest function of the school census in Georgia, as is evidenced by

the law, formerly, as an aid in the apportionment of school- funds to the various

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county and city school systems of the state. At present, the state does not apportion any funds on basis of the census. More recent censuses, however, and

especially the 1938 census, contain data, which if properly interpreted, are of

vital significance to the entire school program of the state.

2. The 1938 Census.
In the 1938 school census data were obtained under four general classifications, as follows: (1) persons six to eighteen years of age (school age), (2) persons under six years of age, (3) persons 19 to 25 years (employment status), and (4) illiterates. For each of the major classifications data were secured as follows:

(1) Persons six to eighteen years of age--school age. Showing date enumerated; name of person; parent or guardian;
residence; school district; miles from school; month, day, and year of birth; age last birthday; grade last completed if not in school; physical condition if defective; sex if between 10 and 19 years of age and ability to read and write.

7Ibid. 32--1602.

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(2) Persons under six years of age. Showing date enumerated, parents' name and address, and
number of children under six years of age.
(3) Persons 19 to 25 years of age--employment status. Showing date enumerated, name, address, sex, and if (1) unem-
ployed, (2) employed on farm, (3) otherwise employed, or (4) student.
Grade last completed is shown for all classifications.
(4) Illiterates.
Showing date enumerated, name, address, approximate age and sex.
In taking the school census of 1938, forms covering the information contained in each of the major classifications, as given previously, were sent out by the State Department of Education to each city and county board of education. Each city and county board of education then employed enumerators at a per diem of $4.00 to take the census. The enumerators, through a house to house canvass, filled in the forms and returned these to the boards of education. Each board of education then filed its completed forms with the State Department of Education.
After the complete census data had been filed and was ready for tabulation the State Board of Education received a grant from the Works Progress Administration for the purpose of tabulating the census data. The Works Progress Administration tabulated the data, the state summaries of which are included in the appendix of this report.
3. The Purpose and Function of a School Census. a. The Census from a State Standpoint.--From the standpoint of
educational efficiency the State Department of Education should have at its disposal each year a complete and accurate census of all school age children in the state. Such information is essential if accurate educational statistics are to be compiled annually by the State Department of Education. Without accurate statistics, the state is unable to make a reliable estimate of state school funds needed for the various systems of the state. Likewise, such data are
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essential to the wise planning of a state tax program which will yield adequate revenue for the proper maintenance of the state's educational system.

With complete census data showing present enrollments and future trends, the State Department of Education can plan annually in advance the school building needs of the state, school consolidations, transportation facilities needed, the number of teachers to be hired, teacher salary changes, curricular needs, etc.

From a state standpoint, the school census is useful not only to the State Department of Education but equally useful to those divisions of the state government which deal with health, recreation, juvenile delinquency, and social welfare problems of school-age children. It is very important that such information as is contained in an adequate school census be made available to the other state governmental agencies dealing with school-age children and youth since the efficient operation of a state educational program is dependent in a large measure upon the cooperation which is secured by the State Department of Education from these other governmental agencies.

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Not only should the information contained in the state school census be

analyzed and made available to other state governmental agencies but such informa-

tion as is needed should be made available to the federal government. The

federal government is able to recognize inter-state inequalities and needs only

to the extent that the status of the state's program is accurately interpreted

and presented to them by state authorities. It seems, therefore, that from the

standpoint of state welfare, pressure should be brought to bear by the individual

states for the requirement of uniform census records in all of the states rather

than waiting for the federal government to insist upon such cooperation.

b. The Census from a Local Standpoint.--For the local school district one of the greatest single uses of census material is in the enforcement of compulsory school attendance laws. The school cannot hope to render the service for which it was created unless it has some effective means of seeing that every school-age child is in attendance. Likewise, it is from census data that teachers and administrators are able to study problems of retardation, absence, "over-age-ness", withdrawals, occupation after withdrawal or before entrance, race, family background, and increasing or decreasing enrollment.

Population increases, decreases, and migrational movements, if interpreted correctly by the proper authorities, have meaning to the school man in that school consolidations, increased transportation facilities, and school building needs are foreseen and properly planned in accordance with the needs indicated by the data.

c. Types of Census Data.--To fulfill the purposes which the census
should perform for the state and local unit it is necessary to secure many kinds
of data. The types of census data usually needed, as given by Heck, are as follows :8

1. Name of child 2. Sex 3. Race 4. Authority for birth date 5. Date of birth 6. Name of father 7. Occupation of father 8. Name of mother 9. Birthplace of mother 10. Birthplace of father 11. Birthplace of child 12. Address

13. Grade 14. School 15. Days absent 16. Date entered each year 17. Reason for late entrance 18. Date of withdrawal 19. Cause of withdrawal 20. Block number 21. Language spoken at home 22. School session 23. Why absent 24. Nationality of parents

d. Methods of Taking the School Census.--In general, there are two types of school censuses, namely, the periodic census and the continuous census.

Periodic: A periodic school census is a periodic census taken every five years while the federal census is a periodic census taken every ten years. Various other intervals are used by different states, counties, and cities in taking a periodic census, one year being probably the most frequently used interval.

By virtue of their position and intimate knowledge of children, teachers as a group are the best qualified individuals to take the school census. Moreover, teachers as a rule do not feel that they are taking the school census merely for the money involved in the job but look upon the census data which they are gathering as being information which will be of practical use to them. On the
8A. O. Heck, Administration of Pupil Personnel, Boston: Ginn and Company, 1929. p. 178.

other hand, workers hired at random may turn out to be individuals who are not regularly employed, and lacking in experience in the work. In larger cities or counties, however, where one or more census enumerators can be permanently employed in the taking of the census it will be found profitable to hire specialists.
Continuous: A continuous census is a complete enumeration of all persons, within certain age limits, kept constantly up-to-date. In the continuous census a complete enumeration is made first by a house-to-house canvass; after this information has been recorded and filed, machinery is set-up designed to keep the records up-to-date.
In setting up the original records a filing system should be established both alphabetically and sectionally (that is, by streets, blocks, or land lots). Several means should then be utilized for keeping this material up-to-date. One commonly used method is for the teacher to assign one child to a certain area immediately adjacent to the home in which he lives. This is done until the entire school district is covered. It is then the responsibility of the child to report to the teacher each morning any new arrivals or departures from his territory. The child files his information with the teacher who in turn files it with the school principal. At the end of each day or week the principal sends these cards to the county A or city superintendent's office where corrections are properly made in the original file. The information furnished as above is often supplemented by information secured from the records of police, transportation companies, and public utilities. At regular intervals of five years the census records should be checked for accuracy by a house-to-house canvass.
4. Suggestions for the Improvement of the Georgia School Census. The school census law of Georgia calls for a school census once in every five
years. The taking of a special school census can be justified only to the extent that it is used and gives information not contained in the ten-year federal census. If continuous census records were maintained by each local school system of the state a census taken every five years would be adequate.
The school census law of Georgia, as it stands, makes it possible for the different county or city boards of education to use either teachers or specialists as census enumerators. The wealthier school systems such as Fulton, Richmond, Bibb, and Chatham, would probably find the employment of a full-time enumerator profitable, while all other counties in the state would most likely find the use of teachers as census enumerators the most satisfactory method for the taking of the school census.

CHAPTER II
IMPLICATIONS OF THE 1938 SCHOOL CENSUS FOR THE ORGANIZATION AND ADMINISTRATION OF PUBLIC EDUCATION
1. Size of Administrative Units and Attendance Areas. In the United States education is a responsibility of the state government.
The State of Georgia, as have other states, has delegated the responsibility for local administration to the various administrative units. In Georgia, there are three distinct types of administrative units, namely, the county unit, the countylocal district, and the independent school system.
The maximum size of the administrative area is at present limited by state law to the county. However, the 155 counties which operate under the general school law plan of local district organization maintain numerous administrative areas. In many of these counties the size of the local administrative unit has been enlarged by school consolidations, expecially on the high school level.
The report of the Committee representing the Conference on Reorganization of Local School Units called by the United States Office of Education recommended that:1
(a) An administrative unit should comprise one or more attendance areas (ordinarily two or more) offering educational facilities at least through the twelfth grade. (Only under exceptional circumstances, due to such factors as extremely sparse population or rugged topography, should an administrative unit comprise only an elementary or an elementary-junior high school attendance area.) Administrative units comprising elementary-junior-senior high school and junior-college attendance units may be recognized for the larger centers of population.
'Katherine M. Cook, Reorganization of School Units. Washington, Office of Education, U. S. Dep't. of the Interior, Bulletin 1935, No. 15. pp. 17-18.

(b) An administrative unit should be sufficiently large to warrant the provision of all essential and desirable administrative and supervisory services except those provided directly by the State. Ordinarily, several elementary-junior-high-senior high school attendance units will be involved.
(c) The boundaries of the school administrative unit need not be coterminous with the boundaries of any political subdivision of the State. An administrative unit may include part of a county, a county, or two or more counties or cities, or a city and part of a county.
(d) If the principle of State support of a minimum educational program is recognized and applied there will be little occasion for organizing administrative units in terms of their ability to be selfsustaining. Emphasis can then be placed increasingly on the optimum unit for the efficient and economical provision of the desirable educational offerings.
(e) The State should make provision for any administrative unit to contract or arrange with any larger administrative unit for the education of children who need more highly specialized types of educational opportunity than are provided in their own unit.
Working in accordance with the recommendations given above, it is evident that school population changes are of vital signifiicance in the determination of the size of the school administrative unit. Likewise, school attendance areas are affected. The following principles are suggested as pertinent to the organization of attendance areas:2
(a) The attendance area includes all the children attending or eligible to attend a single school. In general, it should be considered an elastic subdivision of an administrative unit. The area of the attendance unit will probably vary from state to state and from locality to locality, depending on roads, age of the children involved, climatic conditions, population density, educational leadership, and other related factors.
2Ibid,, pp. 16-17.
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(b) The elementary attendance area should, insofar as pos-

sible, be large enough to meet the following minimum criteria:

(1) Make possible a school with at least one grade per teacher, with a desirable ratio of 30 pupils per teacher. The pupils, however, should not have to walk more than 1| or 2 miles to or from school, or ride on a school bus more than 1 hour (preferably including time of walking to the bus) each morning or evening, or be transported over roads that present extreme hazards.

(c) The high-school attendance area may be subdivided as occasion demands into junior and senior high school attendance areas, which may, in turn, comprise several elementary school attendance areas. The optimum size of the unit will depend largely on density of population and facilities for transportation; but it should, except under unusual circumstances, be large enough to meet the following minimum criteria:

(1) Make possible a junior high school with at least 300 pupils and 10 teachers, a senior high school of 300 pupils and 10 teachers, or a junior-senior high school of 300 pupils and 10 teachers.

The pupils, however, should not have to walk more than 2 or 2\ miles to or from school or ride on a school bus more than lj hours (preferably including time of walking to the bus) each morning or evening. It is recognized that wherever density of population permits or transportation is feasible, high school attendance units large enough to make possible the development of considerably larger schools are desirable.

Population trends, as shown by the 1938 school census, indicate that, at the present and in the future, a great amount of reorganization of administrative and attendance areas will be both possible and desirable. The principal trends, as indicated by the school census, are as follows:
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(1) A declining birth rate.3 For every 100 children of pre-school age in 1938 there were 107 children of pre-school age in 1930. The decrease in preschool age children from 1930 to 1938 was greater among whites than among Negroes. For example, for every 100 white children of pre-school age in 1938 there were 110 white children of pre-school age in 1930, whereas for every 100 Negro children of pre-school age in 1938 there were only 103 Negro children of pre-school age in 1930.
(2) A migration of rural inhabitants to urban areas. The increasing size of Georgia cities, with the retention of a fairly stable state population, indicates a migration of rural inhabitants to urban areas. However, the greater amount of this urban increase is for the older, out-of-school groups. This fact, coupled with the fact that the birth rate in urban areas is much lower than for the rural areas, indicates that the number of children of school age in the urban areas will not materially increase but will in many cases decrease.
(3) An increase in the percentage of children of school age enrolled in school.4 In 1938, 89.4 per cent of all school age children were enrolled in school as compared with 89 per cent for 1933 and 82.2 per cent for 1930. Of the 809,157 children of school age, 512,934, or 63.6 per cent were whites and 296,223, or 36.6 per cent were Negroes. A slightly greater percentage of white children (89.2 per cent) than of Negro children (88.6 per cent) were enrolled in school.
(4) A progressive decrease in the percentage of school age children enrolled in school at each successive age level.6 For white children, in 1938, 97.5 per cent of all children between the ages of six and nine were enrolled in school, whereas 59.6 per cent of those 17 and 18 years of age were enrolled in school. Among Negroes the decrease was even more pronounced, decreasing from 97.1 per cent for years six through nine to 54.0 per cent for years 17 and 18. Among both races, and particularly among Negroes, males had a greater decrease in enrollment at successive age levels than did females.
(5) A decrease in the number of small schools in Georgia. In 1927-
1928, white children attended 3,476 schools, of which 1120 were one-teacher, 943 were two-teacher, and 311 were three-teacher types. Negro children at-
8See Appendix. Table I. 'Appendix. Table n. 'Appendix, Tables Vm and IX.
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tended 3339 schools, of which 2654 were one-teacher, 453 were two-teacher, and 103 wen: three-teacher types. In 1937-38, the total number of white schools had been reduced to 2531 schools, including 443 one-teacher, 531 two-teacher, and 223 three-teacher schools. The total number of Negro schools increased to 3372, of which 2189 were one-teacher, 715 two-teacher, and 145 were threeteacher types.6
(6) A decrease in the teacher-pupil ratio. In 1936, there were 34.6 white pupils enrolled in school for every teacher employed, whereas, in 1938, the teacher-pupil ratio was 1 to 32, or a decrease of 2.6 students per teacher. Similarly, the teacher-pupil ratio for Negroes decreased from 1 to 46.9 in 1928 to 1 to 42.6 in 1938.7
In light of the standards which have been set up on the organization of school attendance and administrative areas and the facts and trends of the school population which have been pointed out, certain implications are drawn:
The declining birth rate, producing fewer children than formerly, will eventually cause a falling off in the number of children enrolled in the schools of the state (especially in the elementary grades). Such being the case, it is evident that in order to establish and maintain schools in which there will be one teacher for every 30 children enrolled and one teacher for each grade (as recommended by the Committee on Reorganization of Local School Units) it will be necessary to increase the size of the attendance unit. With the enlargement of the attendance unit, a subsequent enlargement of the administrative area would be advisable.
Similarly, the migration of rural inhabitants to urban areas will call for an enlargement of rural attendance and administrative areas. In the past, Georgia has coped with such problems by consolidating small school units, establishing county high schools, and making provision for the transportation of school children. When carefully planned such consolidations should provide better educational opportunity for children.
2. School Transportation.
The character of the school transportation service is a major consideration in the determination of the size of an attendance area. In the standards set up
6Sixty-Sirth and Sixty-Seventh Annual Reports, State Department of Education, Atlanta. 1938. p. 146. 'Ibid., p. 108.
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for the determination of the size of an attendance area it was pointed out that no elementary school child should be on a school bus for more than one hour, either going or returning from school. For high school students, the time limit was set at one and one-half hours. The topography of the land, the condition of the roads, and the transportation equipment available will then be an important consideration in determining the size of the attendance area.

The data on distance from school of enrolled pupils excludes persons residing in cities with independent systems.8 Of the 569,354 pupils for whom data on distance from school is reported, 359,650, or 63.2 per cent were white and 209,704, or 36.8 per cent were Negroes. Of this number, 46.9 per cent of all white pupils and 56.1 per cent of all Negro pupils lived within two miles of school. Apparently the reason for such a large percentage of enrollees living so close to school is due to the unusually large number of one and two-teacher schools in the state. Only 2.0 per cent of the white pupils and 0.4 per cent of the Negro pupils lived ten or more miles from school. The reason for a smaller percentage of Negroes than whites living ten or more miles from school is due to the fact that the Negro attendance area in Georgia is generally much smaller than the white attendance area. So far, the state has accepted little responsibility for the transportation of Negro students.

3. Plant Facilities.

Dawson, in discussing standards for schools, presents the following in relation to the school plant:9

All schools should be housed in plants that are consistent with

acceptable standards, that are properly and efficiently operated,

and are equipped with textbooks, instructional materials, and

library facilities

In all cases where schools of the

desirable size have been located at too great a distance for the

pupils to walk to school conveniently from their homes, transpor-

tation facilities at public expense should be provided for all children

who live more than 1| miles from the school.

From the statement given above, it is evident that the problem of providing adequate school plant facilities is closely allied with the problems of attendance areas and transportation. Since census data affecting the size of attendance

8Appendix, Table IV. "Howard A. Dawson. Satisfactory Local School Units, Field Study No. 7, Surveys in Field Studies. George
Peabody College for Teachers. Nashville, Tennessee, 1934. p. 39.

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areas and transportation have already been presented, a presentation of such data is not necessary at this point. '.
With an apparent need for the reorganization of attendance areas in Georgia, it is evident that in the majority of all cases new plant facilities will have to be provided. The need for an extension of the school program and for the increased use of the school plant by the community, which is to be pointed out in the Chapter III, will call for an extension of plant facilities.
So far as is possible, schools should be located in relatively permanent centers of population. Population permanency should not be judged alone by population trends but should take into account local factors such as certain industries which promise to grow or decline. By locating the school in the principal center of population, education is made more available to a greater number of pupils and transportation expenses are kept at a minimum. It is even justifiable to abandon usable school buildings whenever it can be demonstrated that the erection of new plant facilities in a new center of population will be more economical in the long run.
4. Enforcement of Compulsory Attendance Law. In 1938, 10.8 per cent of all white children of school age and 11.4 per cent
of all Negro children of school age were not enrolled in school. For both Negroes and whites, a greater percentage of boys than girls were not enrolled in school. Thus, 54.0 per cent of all white pupils not enrolled in school were boys, and 55.1 per cent of all Negroes were boys. As has already been pointed out, there was a progressive decrease in the percentage of school age children enrolled in school at each successive age level.1"
The facts indicate that those who enforce the compulsory attendance law will in a large measure have to deal with boys of the older age groups. The proper enforcement of this law will mean that the state will be called upon to increase its educational facilities.
5. Facilities and Organization for Adult Education. In recent years, the state has shown a tendency to accept more and more
responsibility for adult education. The great need for an adult education program is realized when it is found that of the 169,280 white persons (19-24 years of age), 38,570, or 22.8 per cent, were unemployed in 1938, and of all Negroes
"Appendix, Table X.
15

in the age group 19 to 25, 16, 528, or 19.8 per cent were unemployed in 1938. The average white person within the age group 19-24 years had completed 9.1 school grades as compared with an average school attainment of 5.8 grades among Negroes--a difference favorable to whites of 3.3 school grades.11
The acceptance of the responsibility for the furthering of the education of this group will call for an extension of the school program. Some Georgia school systems and the state, through its vocational program, have recognized this problem through the agencies of part-time education, evening classes, and opportunity schools. The public schools of the state are equipped to fulfill the needs of adult education and already have the administrative machinery requisite to the establishment of such a program.
6. A Guidance and Placement Service.
With 22.8 per cent of all white youth and 19.8 per cent of all Negro youth between the ages of 19 and 25 unemployed, it is evident that a need exists for a public school guidance and employment service.12 Of these unemployed persons 35.4 per cent of the white persons and 16.8 per cent of the Negroes had no schooling whatsoever. In this connection, it is interesting to note that the uneducated Negro has a better chance of employment than does the uneducated white. It is also very significant that the percentage of unemployment was smaller for whites who had had college or vocational training (20.1 per cent) than for unselected whites (22.8 per cent), whereas the percentage of unemployment was greater for Negroes who had had college or vocational training (24.5 per cent) than for unselected Negroes (19.8 per cent). Stated differently, college or vocational training is somewhat favorable for employment among white but somewhat unfavorable for employment among Negroes. Apparently, college guidance and placement service for whites has proven somewhat successful while Negro college students have not been materially aided.
Among both races the percentage of persons employed on farms decreased uniformly at each successive level of school training from the first grade through the eleventh grade; however, the rate of decreasing farm employment at successive levels of schooling was more pronounced among Negroes than among whites. Thus, it seems that while Georgia is largely an agricultural state, the further advanced a person becomes in school the more likely is it that he will
"Appendix. Table X. "Appendix, Table X.
16

leave the farm. There could be three reasons for such a tendency, namely, (1) a belief that agricultural pursuits do not present good opportunities for remuneration, (2) the character of the school program has been such as to educate the individual away from the farm, and (3) the student has not been given the proper guidance in the selection of a vocation and inadequate provision has been made for placing him in that vocation.
All of these facts seem to indicate that a good guidance and placement service should be an integral part of the school program. Such a service has been instituted in several Georgia school systems without large financial cost. The essential job is to set in motion the administrative machinery which is necessary for the institution of such a service.
17

CHAPTER III
IMPLICATIONS OF THE 1938 SCHOOL CENSUS FOR THE INSTRUCTIONAL PROGRAM OF THE PUBLIC SCHOOLS
Properly interpreted, the 1938 Georgia school census reveals information of significance to the instructional program of the public schools. The census contains information pertinent to adult education, vocational education, elementary and secondary education, and the effect of attendance on educational achievement.
1. Illiteracy. In considering the problem of illiteracy the public school is naturally con-
cerned with two distinct groups--one, illiterates of school age, and two, adult illiterates.
According to the 1938 census there were 118,098 illiterates in the State of Georgia, with 30,950 whites (26.2 per cent) and 87,148 Negroes (73.8 per cent).1 In the age groups 10 to 18, there were 10,941 illiterates, with 4,041 whites and 6,900 Negroes.
The fact that there were 10,941 illiterates of school age in Georgia in 1938 indicates that the public schools had failed to reach any of these children for a period of time sufficient to teach them to read and write. Among Negroes of this age group there were 2.9 illiterates per 100 of the general population as compared with a ratio of 1.1 to 100 for whites. Such a difference indicates that white schools have been more successful in reaching the child than have the Negro schools. However, the fact remains that both white and Negro schools have here a social problem which is their responsibility to attack. To remedy such a situation will call for a strict enforcement of the compulsory attendance law.
Appendix. Table VII.
19

For the age group 19 years and above, there were 107,157 illiterates, with 26,909 whites and 80,248 Negroes. In the age group from 35 up (including "unknowns"), there were 70,622 illiterates, with 17,963 whites and 52,659 Negroes. It should be noted that approximately 60 per cent of all illiterates were of age 35 and above. A study of illiteracy rates by age groups showed that the proportion of illiterates in the general population increases markedly with each of the successive age groups. This trend is especially true of the Negroes. This trend would seem to indicate that the public schools have been yearly performing more efficiently and reaching a larger number of children. That the Negro rate of illiteracy has decreased more rapidly than that of the whites is explained by the fact that they have had further to advance than have the whites. Even now, three of four illiterates are Negroes.
Efforts to stamp out illiteracy in Georgia since 1930 have been very successful. The illiteracy rates decreased 55 per cent and 35 per cent in the age groups 10-14, and 15-24, respectively, between 1930 and 1938.2 The decrease in the rate of illiteracy for whites amounted to 36 per cent and 22 per cent in the two age groups 10-14, and 15-24. It should be noted that the greatest decrease, 61 per cent, occurred among Negroes in the 10-14 age group.
According to the state school law, the public schools are under specific obligation to educate every child between the ages of 6 and 18. The school, then, has the responsibility to educate all children up to 18 years of age and consequently wipe out illiteracy in the age group 10 to 18. However, when illiteracy exists in the age group 19 and above, it is prima facie evidence to the effect that the school has failed to fulfill completely the purpose for which it was created. Accordingly, the schools are obligated to see that all adult illiterates have the opportunity to learn to read and write.
The fact that the Works Progress Administration will spend in the immediate future one million dollars on adult education does not release the public schools from the responsibility of literacy education. On the other hand, it means that the public schools of the state should be spurred on into more immediate action and should make their instructional facilities available for use. The public schools should take the lead in the program and point the way for action and cooperation on the part of the Works Progress Administration.
Appendix. Table X.
20

2. Pre-School Education. No one can define, as yet, the state's responsibility for the education of
children under six years of age. Obviously there is a responsibility which ultimately must be defined.
In 1938, there were 359,152 children in Georgia under six years of age.3 Of this number, 221,179, or 61.6 per cent, were white and 137,973, or 38.4 per cent, were Negroes. According to the Federal Census of 1930 there were 385,916 persons under six years of age, of whom 244,060, or 63.2 per cent, were white and 141,856 or 36.8 per cent, were Negroes. Stated differently, for every 100 children of pre-school age in 1938 there were 107 children of pre-school age in 1930. The decrease in pre-school age children from 1930 to 1938 was greater for whites than for Negroes. For every 100 white children of pre-school age in 1938 there were 110 white children of pre-school age in 1930, whereas for every 100 Negro children of pre-school age in 1938 there were only 103 Negro children of pre-school age in 1930.
In 1938, there were 4,806 children enrolled in public kindergartens, in the State of Georgia.4 Of this number only 93 were Negroes, all of whom were enrolled in the public kindergartens of Columbus, Georgia. Ten Georgia public schools enrolled 713 white children in kindergarten. No data are available as to the number of children enrolled in the private kindergartens of the state, but the figure would probably closely approximate 5,000. On the basis of this assumption, it is evident that nearly 10,000 children are enrolled in kindergarten each year, about 95 per cent of whom are whites.
Assuming the great majority of all kindergarten pupils to be in the fiveyear-old group, in which there are approximately 60,000 children (37,000 whites and 23,000 Negroes), it is found that one child in six in Georgia is enrolled in kindergarten. Among five year old whites, one out of 3.7 are enrolled in kindergarten as compared with one out of every 115 for Negroes.
For the most part, the 10,000 children that are enrolled in kindergarten live in urban centers. This indicates that an even larger proportion of white five-year-olds are attending kindergarten in the cities than for the state as a whole. In part this can be explained by the facts that transportation facilities are not generally available to five-year-olds in the rural areas, that generally
'Appendix. Table I. ^Sixty-Sixth and Sixty-Seventh Annual Reports, Atlanta: State Department of Education. 1938. pp. 83-84.
21

HMi
urban areas are more financially able to support kindergarten education, and that the tempo of urban life is such that a greater demand is made upon the parent to be away from home. Further, urban parents are usually more able financially to send their children to private kindergartens than are rural parents. Such facts indicate that urban parents have come to realize the values of kindergarten education, and where public facilities are not available, those who are financially able generally send their children to private kindergartens. This does not mean that rural parents have failed to see the values of kindergarten education, but rather implies that facilities are not available for their use.
3. Elementary and Secondary Education. (1) Making the regular program of the public school more practical and meaningful.5 According to the 1938 school census there were 809,157 children of school
age (6 to 18) in Georgia. Of this number 512,934, or 63.4 per cent, were white and 296,223, or 36.6 per cent, were Negroes. Among white children there were 51 males to 49 females, whereas among Negroes there were 49 males to 51 females.
For 12 years preceding 1938, the average annual decrease in number of children born in Georgia amounted to about 7500 a year. This decrease in the birth rate will undoubtedly result in a smaller enrollment. Most likely the results will be felt first in the elementary school. If teachers are retained, rather than dismissed, the decrease in enrollment will make for a lower pupil-teacher ratio and should ultimately result in an improved instructional program. That is, the size of classes being smaller, the teacher will have more opportunity for individualized instruction. This, of course, does not mean that incompetent teachers with large classes will suddenly become good teachers by virtue of having smaller classes. On the other hand, it means that school administrators, foreseeing a decreasing enrollment in the elementary school, should encourage teachers to further this education in such a way that they will be competent to take full advantage of the instructional opportunities offered by the small class. Likewise, a decrease in enrollment should mean that the public schools will be able to provide a more adequate plant and better equipment for the schools.
By providing better plants and equipment, and by taking advantage of the opportunity for more individualized instruction, the public schools of Georgia should be able to better adapt their instructional programs to the interests, needs.
5Appendix, Tables II. III. IV, and V.
22

and abilities of the child. Where the school program is adapted to the interests, needs, and abilities of the student the holding power of the school should increase materially.
(2) An expanded program of vocational education. In 1938, 55,000, or one out of five young people in Georgia between the ages of 19 and 25, were without gainful employment.* Of this number one-third were males; the proportion of Negro males unemployed (one in ten) being larger than for white males (one in eight).
It is very significant that the highest percentage of unemployment was among the better educated young people. That is, of young people who had attended the high schools, larger percentages were unemployed than in the case of young people who had attended only the elementary schools; and of those who had gone to colleges, a higher percentage was unemployed than for those who had left off their education in the high schools.
For the most part, those who left the elementary schools for jobs found them on the farm, whereas those who left high schools and colleges sought employment in business and industry. Generally, those leaving school with an elementary education found jobs on the farm and were contented to remain there as day laborers, tenants, or sharecroppers. Those seeking employment in business and industry (the high school and college graduates) often failed to secure employment because of a scarcity of jobs, lack of vocational training, or because they were unwilling to take jobs involving manual labor and offering little opportunity for advancement.
The facts of unemployment, as revealed by the census, indicate that an expanded program of vocational education is one of the greatest needs of public education in Georgia. Furthermore, the fact that 27.3 per cent of all white youth (19-24 years) and 41.6 per cent of all Negro youth (19-24 years) were employed on the farm indicates that the greatest single need for vocational training lies in the field of agriculture.7 However, the industrial arts are becoming increasingly important, and due to the comparatively small amount of training now offered in this field, should be the vocational field in which the greatest gain is made.
'Appendix. Table X. 'Appendix. Table X.
23

Difficulties with costs, and with teaching such a variety of vocational subjects as appears to be necessary, can probably be met quite successfully by the installation of a system of part-time education. In such a system, there is a cooperative tie-up between the school, business, and industry, whereby a student interested in a particular type of business or industrial job attends school half of the time and works on the job for which he is preparing half of the time. The school program of the student is linked as closely as possible to the job which he is performing and to the vocation for which he is preparing.
4. Adult Education. That a need exists for a sound program of early adult education is revealed
by the fact that the average white person within the age group 19-24 years had completed 9.1 school grades as compared with an average school attainment of 5.8 grades among Negroes.8 One-fourth of the whites had completed fewer than 7.0 school grades, whereas one-fourth of the Negroes had completed fewer than 4.2 school grades. In other words, the least educated fourth of the Negroes had made only 60 per cent as much school progress as the least educated fourth of the whites. One out of four whites had completed more than 11.1 school grades as compared with 7.6 school grades for the highest one-fourth of the Negroes.8
Evidence presented in the section on vocational education, showing that unemployment was found to a great extent among the more highly educated group, indicates that the adult education which is offered should largely be of a guidance and vocational nature. This is true for most all unemployed whether they have finished the first or eleventh grade. Certainly though, those of a low educational status should be given sufficient training in the use of necessary skills and abilities to enable them to master the techniques required in the field of their vocational choice.
Special governmental agencies, such as the Works Progress Administration and the National Youth Administration, are now spending large sums of money on adult education. To reap the greatest profit from the expenditure of these moneys it is necessary for the public schools to give full cooperation and act as the guide in all such movements.
'Appendix, Table X. 'Appendix. Table X.
24

CHAPTER IV
SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS
1. Introduction. A school census has a two-fold objective. Its first objective is to aid the
administrators of schools to organize their programs and to conduct them in such ways as to perform the educational tasks which need to be done. Without census data educational programs would have to be planned much more haphazardly and much less effectively than is otherwise the case. Census data continuously aid the school administrator to know the size of his task, the type of program which is needed, and the extent to which the program is reaching those who need it. The second objective of the school census is to provide information for the public which they should have in order to understand the work of the schools. Many data including, number of children of school age, location of these children, enrollment in schools, size of families, employment status, race status, etc., are available to interested persons if they but examine the records which school censuses provide. It should be appreciated, therefore, that the proper taking of a census and the intelligent use of the data are important procedures to a well rounded educational program.
2. The Georgia School Census. Under the present Georgia law the school census is taken every five years.
The local Boards of Education, county and independent, through their superintendents of schools select a group of enumerators who actually perform the task of a house-to-house canvass collecting the data prescribed. The State Department of Education provides the blanks on which the information is to be gathered and plans what data are to be included. When the census is completed the reports are made to the State Department of Education where the data are compiled, presented to the public, and the records kept on file. Records of the data for a given county or independent school district are kept in the Board of Education office of each district and are used by the school authorities in the administration of their school systems.
85

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^i^MMB^MBJ

The 1938 census in Georgia was especially significant in that several additional types of data were included in this census which have not been heretofore gathered. Among such items were: children below six years of age, the employment status of young people between the ages of 19 and 24, the amount of illiteracy, etc. All such items are not only important from the standpoint of information but can be used in the proper organization of school programs throughout the state.
It is also probable that the 1938 census was the most extensive and the most carefully taken of any yet made. The State Board of Education and the State Department of Education have considered the findings of this census so important that they have had this bulletin prepared with a view of making available to the people of the state a summary of the information which was found in the census returns. It is hoped that each succeeding census will contain still other pertinent information and will be more and more intelligently made and used.
3. Administrative Units and Attendance Areas.
The 1938 census provided school authorities with a great deal of pertinent information which has a bearing upon the number and character of administrative units in the state and the size of the district which a given school building serves. It is evident from the findings of the census that the number of births in Georgia is constantly decreasing and, if the present migration remains relatively constant, therefore the number of children seeking admittance to the public schools will decrease somewhat in the years which lie ahead. This is evident from the census data and this trend is likely to continue for a number of years.
It is also further evident that the population of Georgia is redistricting itself into units of changing character. That is to say, some areas which formerly had a heavy population saturation are growing less dense while other areas, due to the establishment of industries, etc., are showing a constant increase in the number of people. Such situations have a direct bearing upon school organization requiring that a continuous study of proper school organization units and the proper location and size of districts which a given building serves be made. It seems to be wise for the people of Georgia to consider carefully the question as to what should be the proper size of an administrative unit for schools, whether the independent school district should be continued or

eliminated, whether county lines should be made the boundary lines of school administrative units, and kindred problems. It is very clear from the data that in many, many cases the district served by a given school should be considerably enlarged if a proper educational program is to be economically and effectively administered.
4. Transportation. Considerable evidence is available from the census that the problem of
school transportation in Georgia will become of greater and greater importance as time goes on. Due to the shifting of population within the state and due to the fact that the number of births is decreasing there is a considerably increasing scarcity of population in many sections. As a result it is difficult to provide an adequate and economical type of education in many situations. This situation requires that consideration be given to many possible consolidations of schools with the resulting necessity of providing transportation. School transportation at best is expensive. Careful study needs to be made continuously throughout the state for the purpose of finding better and more efficient ways of handling the school transportation problem.
Special mention should be made of transportation in relation to the Negro schools. Up to the present time Georgia has provided very little school transportation for Negro children. As a result the ordinary school for Negroes outside of the urban areas is very small, usually a one or two room program. Negro births are decreasing more rapidly than among whites. Migration of Negroes to the state is growing less and in addition far more Negroes are leaving the state for other centers than formerly. The result in many areas is that it is difficult if not quite impossible to locate Negro schools in our rural sections so that they are within walking distance of a sufficient number of Negro children to justify the organization of a school. An immediate problem before the people of the state is to find a solution for this situation and to consider among other possibilities some plan for enlarging the areas which a Negro school serves.
5. Plant Facilities. The shifting population within the state which the school census reveals
presents important implications with respect to school buildings. Many of the present buildings are becoming more and more poorly situated to serve the population. Fortunately many school plants will soon be unfitted for use due to obsolescence and, therefore, in a great many situations, communities as they
27

plan new school buildings can also plan to locate them on sites more nearly at the centers of the present population.
Also, as the program of consolidation of schools continues to increase, and as the character of the school program develops, new school plants will be built with provision for proper educational facilities and located, it is hoped, at such places as they may best serve the future needs of the state. The program of planning and locating school buildings must be studied continuously and is a matter of vital concern to every school district in the state.
6. Compulsory Attendance Law. Georgia's compulsory attendance law requires that all children who have
not completed the seventh grade, and who are between the ages of eight and fourteen inclusive, must attend school. The school census reveals that this law is not being adequately enforced at the present time. Almost 100,000 children of school age are out of school. The education of people is so important to their social and economic welfare that it seems most essential that much greater attention be paid to the necessity of getting all children of school age in school and keeping them there. This problem largely falls upon the boards of education and superintendents of the local school units. In the final analysis the successful performance of this law is dependent upon an aroused public opinion regarding the importance and necessity of having all children in school. It would seem that Parent-Teacher Associations and civic groups might well sponsor a program of improvement.
7. Adult Education. If additional information were necessary to demonstrate the need for a
much larger and more comprehensive program for adult education, the data from the school census would seem to provide it. The census shows that there is a good deal of illiteracy yet to be found in Georgia. It further shows that for the age group between 19 and 24, inclusive, among whites, the average school training is 9.2 years and among Negroes is only slightly more than two years. This fact alone would seem to indicate that there must be an adult educational program not only to correct illiteracy but to provide for the continued education of those who failed to avail themselves of their educational opportunity when they were children. It can also be urged with equal truth that if a proper type of adult citizenship is to be found in Georgia there must be an active program of adult education available throughout the state with the paramount objective of teaching good citizenship.
28

It also should be pointed out that new industries, formerly unknown in Georgia, are constantly being organized in the state and that there is an ever increasing mobility of the workers from one vocation to another. This situation likewise shows the necessity of providing an adult educational program to train workers constantly for new occupational opportunities. It may truly be said that the organization and conduct of an adequate adult educational program is one of Georgia's great educational needs at the present time. The census data give added emphasis to this statement.
8. Guidance and Placement. The census reveals that there is an alarming amount of unemployment
among young people in Georgia between the ages of 19 and 25. This situation is true for both whites and Negroes. The data reveal that in the majority of cases there is a direct relationship between the amount of education which an individual has and the character of the vocational work which he does. The formula can be finally written that the more educational opportunity an individual has enjoyed the better vocational opportunity and economic security he will ultimately enjoy. There seems to be only one clear exception in Georgia to this fact. The census data reveal that on farms the Negro who has little or no education seems to enjoy an employment status preferable to Negroes with education. This is to say that the great majority of Negroes on farms have little education and that those with education seem to leave the farms for other occupational pursuits. That fact, and others which the census data present provide, conclusive evidence of the need of a greatly improved guidance and placement service for all of the young people of Georgia. The establishment of such a service and its efficient conduct are matters which should receive careful consideration on the part of the people of the state at the earliest possible time.
9. Illiteracy. The results of the school census in 1938 are gratifying with respect to the
illiteracy situation. The figures, when taken in comparison to those presented as a result of the 1930 Federal census, show conclusively that the amount of illiteracy in the state has been markedly decreased during the eight intervening years. If the present rate of reduction in illiteracy continues there will be little if any adult illiteracy after 1943. This situation is indeed promising. The results which have been achieved since 1930 are due largely to the efforts of the
29

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program sponsored by the State Department of Education and the local school districts and, particularly, to the educational program under the direction of the Federal Work Projects Administration. Since the establishment of this program in 1934, great emphasis has been placed on the reduction of illiteracy. Literacy schools have been conducted in every part of the state and as a result of this work a great number of people have experienced for the first time an educational opportunity. It is to be hoped that the people of the state will realize the importance of continuing this movement until the last vestige of illiteracy shall be eliminated. The work of the last eight years has demonstrated that illiteracy not only can be reduced but actually can be eliminated.
10. Pre-Schools. A new feature to the school census of 1938 was the inclusion of data deal-
ing with the number of children under six years of age. The pre-school period of growth and development of a child is one of the most important educational phases of his entire life. There is a great deal of evidence for the belief that the success of a child in school, and later in his adult life, is greatly influenced by the character of his development during his first six years. Many states realizing the importance of this pre-school period have organized extensive programs of what is known as pre-school education. In Georgia at present there is very little being done in this respect. The Federal Work Projects Administration has provided a limited amount of such training. A few public schools and private schools have endeavored to develop programs for children under six years of age. Little, if anything, on a state-wide basis has yet been accomplished. The need for such a program takes on added significance in Georgia with the continuing trend toward the congregation of population into larger centers. This need has also been enhanced due to the fact that more and more mothers, as well as the fathers, are finding part-time or full-time work. It would seem that in the future in the educational program of the state that a much greater attention must be directed to providing educational facilities for the children under six years of age.
11. Elementary and Secondary School Programs. Children within the legal school age (6-18 inclusive), particularly those
within the compulsory school age (8-14 inclusive), make up the population of the public schools, elementary and high schools. The 1938 census presents certain facts of importance to the program of these schools. The decrease in births now approximates 7,500 less per year and this fact has its effect upon
30

the size of the elementary school population. At the same time, as the need for education is more and more recognized, and as employment is more and more difficult to secure, a greater and greater number of young people are attending the high schools and staying there for a longer period of time. From the data in the census it can be predicted that within five years the enrollment in the elementary schools will decrease slightly while the number in the high schools for some years to come will tend to increase, if the present trends are to continue.
With the ever increasing complexities of modern life, and the greater diversity of occupation as shown by the census, it would appear that the school program, and especially the school curriculum, must continuously be revised with a view of gearing it more and more to the actual needs which Georgia young people have. An examination of the census data would seem to point conclusively to the necessity of restudying the elementary and high schools of the state from the point of view of their better meeting the needs of boys and girls, as well as the welfare of the state.
12. Vocational Education. If the schools are to be more realistic in their programs, there is need that
they give a greater emphasis than ever before to employment opportunities. At present something over 300 schools in the state are providing definite training for agriculture, and something over 200 have special programs for girls in homemaking. In a few other schools some attention is being paid to the preparation of young people for various trades and industries. On the whole, however, it is only truthful to report that slight attention is being paid to training young people for an occupation. These conditions must not continue. Greater attention should be paid to the development of vocational opportunities in agriculture and in homemaking, and a much greater emphasis must be exerted all over the state in providing vocational training for the various occupational opportunities which are open to Georgia young people at the completion of a high school education. In addition, since many of Georgia's young people drop out of school after fourteen years of age who do not have a high school education, programs should be provided which will make it possible for these groups to secure additional educational preparation as they feel the necessity for it.
13. Conclusions. Thus, in brief, there has been presented in the foregoing pages some analysis
of the findings of the school census taken in Georgia in 1938. Many other
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implications may be drawn from the data. It is hoped that the analysis here presented is sufficient to attract the attention of the people of Georgia and assist them to realize the continued importance to the welfare of the state of the improvement of the public school system. The problems herein raised, as well as others, do not belong solely to the school administrators and teachers'of the state but are finally the responsibility of its citizens. The extent to which these problems are faced and solutions found for them will in large measure determine the future social and economic welfare of Georgia.
32

GEORGIA SCHOOL CENSUS 1938

STATISTICAL TABLES
TABLE 1. CHILDREN UNDER SIX YEARS OF AGE By School System and by Race

PAGE
37

TABLE 2. PERSONS SIX TO EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE ... 41 By School System, by Sex and by School Attendance

TABLE 3. PERSONS SIX TO EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE NOT

ATTENDING SCHOOL

55

By School Systems and by Grades Last Attended

TABLE 4.

PERSONS SIX TO EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE AT-

TENDING SCHOOL

67

By Counties, by Race and by Number of Miles from School

(Does not include persons residing in cities with indepen-

dent systems.)

TABLE 5. RATIO OF TEACHERS TO TOTAL PERSONS SIX TO

EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE

85

By School System and by Race

TABLE 6. PERSONS SIX TO EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE BY

DENSITY OF POPULATION

97

By Counties and by Race

TABLE 7. ILLITERATES TEN YEARS OF AGE AND OVER . . 105 By Counties, Age Groups and by Race

TABLE 8. PERSONS SIX TO EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE . . .119 By School Systems, by Age and by School Attendance

TABLE 9. PERSONS SIX TO EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE . . .147 By Age Levels, by Race, by Sex, and by School Attendance

TABLE 10. EMPLOYMENT STATUS OF PERSONS NINETEEN TO

TWENTY-FIVE YEARS OF AGE

149

By School Systems and by Race

33

SUMMARY: Tabulations show that according to the State of Georgia School Census for 1938 there are in the State of Georgia:
359,152 children under six years of age. Of these 221,179 are white persons and 137,973 colored. (Table 1.)
The total number of persons six to eighteen years of age is 809,157. Of these, 512,934 are white, 261,705 males and 251,229 females; 296,223 are'colored divided: 145,556 males and 150,667 females. (Table No. 2.)
Of the above, 715,434 are attending school. The white persons attending school are composed of 231,713 males and 225,648 females for a total white attendance of 457,361. The colored persons attending school are composed of 124.531 males and 133,542 females for a total of 258,073. (Table No. 2.)
168,675 white children and 117,722 colored children live within two miles of the school building; 129,443 white children and 80,978 colored children live between two and five miles from the school building; 44,859 white children and 6,509 colored children live between five and ten miles from the school building; and 7,019 white children and 875 colored children live more than ten miles from the school building. The distance of 9,654 white children and 3,620 colored children from the school building is unknown.
231,713 white boys and 225,648 white girls attend school. The number of boys exceed the number of girls by 6,065. On the other hand, 89.81% of the girls and 88.54% of the boys attend school. The percentage of girls attending school exceeds the percentage of boys by 1.27%.
Those six to eighteen years of age not attending school number 93,723 or 11.583% of the total number. 55,573 of these are white persons--29,992 male and 25,581 female--and have a non-attending percentage of 10.83. 38,150 are colored persons --21,025 male and 17,125 female--and have a non-attending percentage of 12.88. It is to be considered that those not attending school include the very young ages possibly not yet entered, defectives and illiterates. Of the 55,573 white boys and girls, 7,528 have completed high school. This leaves 48,045 white boys and girls between the ages of six and eighteen who do not have a high school education and are not now attending school. Of the 38,150 colored boys and girls, 973 have completed high school. This leaves 37,177 colored boys and girls between the ages of six and eighteen who do not have a high school education and are not now attending school. (Table No. 2.)
34

Illiterates of School Age or rather those from 10 to 18 years of age who cannot read or write number 10,941 of which 4,041 are white and 6,900 are colored. (Table No. 7.)
In the Ratio of Teachers to Total Persons Six to Eighteen Years of Age there is a state average of 36.28 persons per teacher; the white average 32.50 persons and the colored average 45.43 persons. (Table No. 5.)
In the Density of Population, or total number of persons of school age per square mile, there is a state average of 13,779 persons per square mile. Of these, 8,735 persons are white and 5,044 colored. (Table No. 6.)
From age Nineteen to Twenty-five there are 252,959 persons, of which 169,280 are white and 83,679 colored.
Of the 169,280 white persons, there are 84,772 males, 10,262 being unemployed, 31,120 working on the farm, 39,843 otherwise employed and 3,547 students in school or college. Of the 84,508 white females, 28,308 are unemployed (includes housewives), 15,138 work on the farm, 37,781 are otherwise employed and 3,281 are students.
Of the 83,679 colored persons, 37,527 are males. Of the 37,527 colored males, there are 4,039 unemployed, 18,956 employed on farm, 14,112 otherwise employed and 420 students. Of the 46,152 colored females, there are 12,489 unemployed, 15,830 employed on farm, 17,208 otherwise employed and 625 students.
Not including the 4,041 white and 6,900 colored illiterates of school age (10 to 18) mentioned above there are 107,157 illiterates over 18 years old. This gives a grand total of 118,098 illiterates ten years old and over; 30,950 white persons and 87,148 colored. (Table No. 7.)
The survey covered a minimum of 1,564,325 persons, (not including duplicate pages found and persons used in more than one table or classification) and it is also interesting to note that enumerators were not trained professiona census takers, but to quote the ENUMERATION OF SCHOOL CHILDREN1 ACT, "competent, reliable persons" receiving "as compensation a per diem not to exceed four dollars".
35

STATE OF GEORGIA SCHOOL CENSUS--1938

STATE SUMMARY

TABLE I

CHILDREN UNDER SIX YEARS OF AGE By School Systems and by Race

White.. Colored
Total

221,179 137,973
359,152

37

TABLE I

CHILDREN UNDER SIX YEARS OF AGE: GEORGIA, 1938 BY SCHOOL SYSTEMS AND BY RACE

SCHOOL SYSTEM

White Colored SCHOOL SYSTEM White Colored

STATE TOTAL..
APPLING Baxley
ATKINSON BACON BAKER
BALDWIN BANKS.... BARROW
Winder
BARTOW Adairsville Carters ville.
BEN HILL.. Fitzgerald
BERRIEN
BIBB BLECKLEY
Cochran BRANTLEY BROOKS
Quitman _.
BRYAN BTJLLOOH
Statesboro BURKE BUTTS. _
Jackson..
CALHOUN.. CAMDEN CANDLER.. CARROLL
Carroll ton
CATOOSA CHARLTON CHATHAM CHATTAHOOCHEE CHATTOOGA
Trion
CHEROKEE Canton. _ .
CLARKE... Athens... __
CLAY..
CLAYTON.. CLINCH... COBB....
Marietta...

221,179 137,973 COFFEE.

1,527 235 923
1,135 406
617 1,076
790 285
2,337 56
368 710 410 2,074
3,452 653 145 849
1,057 204
486 1,842
319 774 423 67
397 331 802 2,686 455
1,226 599
5,267 243
1,788 560
1,682 739 550
1,056 191
893 597 3,061 509

288 COLQUITT

110 Doerun

275 Moultrie

184

659 COLUMBIA

COOK

1,105 COWETA

134 Newnan

281 Senoia

75

CRAWFORD

390 CRISP...

Cordele ..

183 DADE

415 DAWSON...

266

302 DECATUR

Bainbridge

2,958 DeKALB

396 Decatur

79 Lithonia. ...

137

1,393 DODGE...

199 Eastman.

DOOLY

449 Vienna .

1,424

154 DOUGHERTY

2,658 Albany

581 DOUGLAS

94 EARLY

Blakely

1,111 ECHOLS

467

462 EFFINGHAM.

1,026 ELBERT....

137 Elberton ,

EMANUEL..

36 EVANS

222

5,150 FANNIN

265 MeCaysville

276 FAYETTE

._

19 FLOYD..

Rome

15

62 FORSYTH

434 FRANKLIN.

648 Royston

740 FULTON

_

Atlanta.

498

344 GILMER...

533 GLASCOCK

229 GLYNN..

GORDON-..

Calhoun.

38

1,796 333
2,580 38
614
430 1,183 1,351
382 30
397 788 330 725 669
1,182 321
3,074 888 231
1,526 154 659 78
442 657 999 1,134 145 322
664 932 398 1,921 592
1,977 178 688
3,340 2,039
1,614 1,642
152 8,773 10,060
1,382 517
1,426 1,815
394

561 201 657 57 289
882 389 1,220 276 28
670 734 394 33
1,328 271 724 322 185
968 163 1,110 100
460 765 341 1,315 109 123
631 856 252 1,175 362
5
470 459 517
6 302
59 2,094 5,309
7 229 761
87 64

TABLE I--CHILDREN UNDER SIX YEARS OF AGE: GEORGIA, 1938--Continued

SCHOOL SYSTEM

White Colored SCHOOL SYSTEM White Colored

GRADY.... GREENE
Greensboro GWINNETT
Buford Lawrence ville_
HABERSHAM.. Cornelia
HALL Gainesville Lula
HANCOCK... HARALSON.
Tallapoosa. HARRIS HART
Hartwell
HEARD HENRY HOUSTON. IRWIN
Ocilla
JACKSON Commerce.,.. Maysville
JASPER JEFF DAVIS.
Hazlehurst..
JEFFERSON. JENKINS JOHNSON.... JONES
LAMAR Barnesville.
LANIER LAURENS...
Dexter Dublin
LEE LIBERTY.. LINCOLN.. LONG LOWNDES.
Valdosta.
LUMPKIN MACON MADISON MARION
Buena Vista.
McDUFFIE McINTOSH MERIWETHER. MILLER

1,625 571 158
2,645 344 146
1,737 188
3,292 778 106
351 1,453
225 522 1,293 138
855 871 481 1,181 102
1,569 345 126 367
1,059 151
685 1,232
357
432 162 557 2,068
95 323
206 290 400 375 1,192 730
850 481 1,394 396
41
566 296 1,224 1,067

928 1,014
105 297 133
73

MITCHELL Pelham
MONROE
MONTGOMERY. MORGAN
Madison

48 32 194 199 16
1,708 145 53
1,063 526 69
432 1,320 1,272
636 165
426 77 30 757 192 41
1,737 1,112
771 775

MURRAY. MUSCOGEE
Columbus NEWTON (Mansfield
included) Covington
OCONEE OGLETHORPE. PAULDING PEACH.
PICKENS.... Nelson
PIERCE Blackshear.
PIKE
POLK Cedartown...
PULASKI Hawkins ville.
PUTNAM Eatonton
QUITMAN... RABUN RANDOLPH. RICHMOND. ROCKDALE.

535 138 246 1,761 57 322
852 681 657 215 1,236 743
31 1,730
413 613 70
777 504 1,848 584

SCHLEY.... SCREVEN.. SEMINOLE. SPALDING.
Griffin
STEPHENS. Martin Toccoa
STEWART. _ SUMTER...
Americus..
TALBOT TALIAFERRO. TATTNALL.-. TAYLOR TELFAIR
TERRELL Dawson
THOMAS Thomas ville.
TIFT Tifton

39

1,314 274 521 854 600 82
1,683 1,503 3,080
1,024 222
592 980 1,461 366
1,118 88
1,241 156 614
2,207 821 372 149 268 103
96 398 575 4,211 654
205 1,042
602 1,229
780
860 34 426 311 505 302
181 222 1,481 684 1,361
320 101 1,209 519 1,396 353

1,930 22
1,056 657 847 111
61 1,088 1,429
730 167
367 1,076
171 840
60 10 369 81 985
558 138 680 126 694 152
378 5
1,680 3,162
383
529 1,719
422 677 367
107 17 116
1,295 1,644
418
795 629 466 909 734
1,621 171
1,194 496 556 107

^ABLE:r-CHILDREN UNDER SIX YEARS 0F AGE: GEORGIA, 1938-Continued

SCHOOL SYSTEM

White Colored

SCHOOL SYSTEM

White Colored

TOOMBS__._ Vidalia...
TOWNS
TREUTLEN.

TROUP
Hogansville_ LaGrange_.,, West Point TURNER
Ashburn

TWIGGS

UNION

UPSON

Thomaston

WALKER

_'_

Chickamauga.

WALTON

Monroe

Social Circle

WARE

.

Waycross

1,314 275 683 791
827 280 1,646 121 769
376 1,188
675 1,451 2,945
179
1,341 301 107
1,314 945

528 WARREN 192 WASHINGTON.
Sandersville 307 WAYNE

1,047 132 627 139 477 124
949 1
710 252 220 20

WEBSTER WHEELER WHITE WHITFIELD...
Dalton.
WILCOX WILKES
Washington WILKINSON WORTH
STATE TOTAL.

803 128 70 253 534

386 1,091
134 1,507

978 1,826
233 331

194

486

828

456

905

73

2,040

45

824

94

1,096 524 106 656
1,623

822 1,142
228 768 1,434

221,179 137,973

40

STATE OF GEORGIA SCHOOL CENSUS--1938

STATE SUMMARY

TABLE II

PERSONS SIX TO EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE BY SCHOOL SYSTEMS AND BY SCHOOL ATTENDANCE

White Colored
Total

MALE

FEMALE

Attending Not Attending Attending Not Attending

.... ..

231,713 124,531

29,992 21,025

225,648 133,542

25,581 17,125

_

356,244

51,017

359,190

42,706

41

TABLE II- WHITE
CHILDREN 6-18 YEARS OP AGE 809,167
*Not Attending School includes H. S. graduates under 18 years of age who do not attend college. White--7,528; Colored--973. 42

TABLE II--WHITE

PERSONS SIX TO EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE: GEORGIA 1938 BY SCHOOL SYSTEMS AND BY SCHOOL ATTENDANCE

SCHOOL SYSTEM

ALL PERSONS

ATTENDING

NOT ATTENDING

Male Fern. Total Male Fern. Total Male Fern. Total

STATE TOTAL_

261705 251229 512934 231713 225648 457361 29992 25581 55573

APPLING... Baxley
ATKINSON BACON BAKER...
BALDWIN BANKS. BARROW..
Winder.,.
BARTOW Adairsville.. Cartersville.
BEN HILL.... Fitzgerald...
BERRIEN BIBB BLECKLEY.
Cochran... BRANTLEY.
BROOKS Quitman
BRYAN.. BULLOCH...
Statesboro.
BURKE. __ BUTTS
Jackson _ CALHOUN CAMDEN CANDLER
CARROLL Carrollton..
CATOOSA.. CHARLTON CHATHAM CHATTAHOOCHEE
CHATTOOGA. Trion
CHEROKEE. Canton
CLARKE Athens
CLAY.... CLAYTON. CLINCH COBB
Marietta..

1595 254 814 1117 471

1549 263 818 1045 432

3144 517
1632 2162
903

1538 238 717. 958 396

1515 233 756 935 397

3053 471
1473 1893
793

883 1279 1109 304

790 1302 1026 290

1673 2581 2135
594

845 1066
926 275

775 1118
894 264

1620 2184 1820
539

2364 59
433 685 535

2298 88
477 697 536

4662 147 910
1382 1071

1898 51
356 590 496

1850 68
383 631 500

3748 119 739
1221 996

2077 5020 816 164 890

1913 4944 791
177 807

3990 9964 1607
341 1697

1618 4578
717 147 831

1608 4459
719 161 765

3226 9037 1436
308 1596

1211 248 553 2081 327

1026 241 519 2006 328

2237 489
1072 4087
655

1062 216 483 1849 304

943 220 470 1876 298

2005 436 953
3725 602

871 910 1781 759 853 1612

554 464 1018 483 417 900

100

97 197 100

97

197

430 441 871 403 412 815

350 314 664 327 291 618

975 908 1883 847 842 1689

3111 462 1280 546 8459 427

2862 476 1103 573 8122 431

5973 938
2383 1119 16581
858

2832 396
1091 418 7670 400

2583 360 955 482
7417 417

5415 756
2046 900
15087 817

1913 499 2075 746 612 1207

1665 530 1834 749 593 1199

3578 1029 3909 1495 1205 2406

1648 429
1771 676 537
1123

1395 426
1552 668 537
1128

3043 855
3323 1344 1074 2251

256 1159 697 3404 604

291 996 600 3251 565

547 2155 1297 6655 1169

250 1020
476 2850
543

285 893 481 2726 487

535 1913
957 5576 1030

57 16 97 159 75
38 213 183
29
466 8
77 95 39
459 442
99 17 59
149 32 70
232 23
112 71
27 23 128
279 66-
189 128 789 27
265 70
304 70 75 84
6 139 221 554
61

34

91

30

46

62 159.

110 269

35 110

15

53

184 397

132 315

26

55

448 914

20

28

94 171

66 161

36

75

305 764

485 927

72 171

16

33

42 101

83 232

21

5a

49 119

130 362

30

53

57 169
47 na

29

56

23

46

66 194

279 558

116 182

148 337

91 219

705 1494

14

41

270 535 104 174 282 586 81 151 56 131 71 155

12 103 242 119 340 525 1079 78 139

43

TABLE II--SCHOOL ATTENDANCE: GEORGIA, 1938--Continued WHITE

SCHOOL SYSTEM

ALL PERSONS

ATTENDING

NOT ATTENDING

Male Fern. Total Male Fem. Total Male Fem. Total

OOFFEE Douglas...
OOLQUITT.. Doerun. Moultrie..

2043 1957 4000 1830 1809 3639 213 148 361

407 452 859 380 419 799

27

33

60

3193 2968 6161 2715 2608 5323 478 360 838

65

74 139

58

70 128

7

4

11

-- 674 729 1403 593 633 1226

81

96 177

COLUMBIA...
COOK OOWETA
Newnan Senoia.

559 552 1111 509 514 1023

50

38

88

1117 1136 2253 980 1057 2037 137

79 216

1424 1359 2783 1247 1206 2453 177 153 330

429 430 859 399 406 805

30

24

54

44

47

91

39

45

84

5

2

7

CRAWFORD...
ORISP Oordele..
DADE DAWSON

531 488 1019 459 450 909

72

38 110

869 732 1601 711 646 1357 158

86 244

430 432 862 405 407 812

25

25

50

- 759 747 1506 624 620 1244 135 127 262

623 573 1196 517 490 1007 106

83 189

DECATUR Bainbridge...
DeKALB. Decatur.... Lithonia

1518 1375 2893 1398 1301 2699 120

74 194

411 412 823 370 371 741

41

41

82

3754 3452 7206 3436 3126 6562 318 326 644

1110 1236 2346 1077 1190 2267

33

46

79

241 232 473 186 192 378

55

40

95

DODGE

Eastman

DOOLY

-

Vienna

1797 1787 3584 1636 1671 3307 161 116 277

182 193 375 176 183 359

6

10

16

734 721 1455 633 664 1297 101

57 158

105 133 238

94 125 219

11

8

19

DOUGHERTY Albany ..
DOUGLAS EARLY
Blakely

408 423 831 372 393 765

36

30

66

876 775 1651 834 733 1567

42

42

84

1145 1127 2272 952 935 1887 193 192 385

.- 1175 1140 2315 1025 1040 2065 150 100 250

139 190 329 139 190 329

ECHOLS EFFINGHAM....
ELBERT Elberton..
EMANUEL

286 261 547 206 198 404

80

63 143

959 858 1817 817 757 1574 142 101 243

1245 1093 2338 1092 996 2088 153

97 250

400 364 764 389 353 742

11

11

22

2310 2167 4477 2078 2026 4104 232 141 373

EVANS FANNIN
McCaysville.. FAYETTE FLOYD...
Rome .

701 673 1374 619 623 1242

82

50 132

2029 1826 3855 1782 1635 3417 247 191 438

219 242 461 207 222 429

12

20

32

913 926 1839 772 779 1551 141 147 288

3437 3269 6706 2764 2656 5420 673 613 1286

2236 2333 4569 1846 1919 3765 390 414 804

FORSYTH FRANKLIN
Royston FULTON
Atlanta

1607 1529 3136 1397 1323 2720 210 206 416

1864 1785 3649 1691 1606 3297 173 179 352

183 179 362 158 159 317

25

20

45

11034 10652 21686 9831 9496 19327 1203 1156 2359

18225 18314 36539 17070 17029 34099 1155 1285 2440

GILMER GLASCOCK... GLYNN GORDON
Calhoun.

1359 1245 2604 1213 1113 2326 146 132 278

516 504 1020 470 466 936

46

38

84

1476 1407 2883 1298 1276 2574 178 131 309

2179 2010 4189 1847 1694 3541 332 316 648

281 311 592 247 268 515

34

43

77

44

TABLE II--SCHOOL ATTENDANCE: GEORGIA, 1938--Continued WHITE

SCHOOL SYSTEM

ALL PERSONS

ATTENDING

NOT ATTENDING

Male Fem. Total Male Fem. Total Male Fem. Total

GRADY GREENE..
Greensboro.. GWINNETT ...
Buford Lawrenceville
HABERSHAM. Cornelia
HALL Gainesville... Lula
HANCOCK HARALSON... [ Tallapoosa... HARRIS
HART Hartwell
HEARD HENRY HOUSTON
IRWIN Ocilla
JACKSON Commerce Maysville
JASPER JEFF DAVIS..
Hazlehurst... JEFFERSON._ JENKINS
JOHNSON JONES LAMAR
Barnesville..LANIER
LAURENS Dexter Dublin
LEE LIBERTY
LINCOLN LONG LOWNDES
Valdosta LUMPKIN
MACON MADISON MARION...
Buena Vista. McDUFFIE....

1829 1785 3614 1620 1630 3250 209 155 364

686 600 1286 635 551 1186 51 49 100

150 138 288 147 137 284

3

1

4

3152 2832 5984 2794 2596 5390 358 236 594

383 324 707 324 293 617 59 31 90

179 237 416 153 210 363 26 27 53

1780 1839 3619 1543 1628 3171 237 211 448 248 226 474 219 209 428 29 17 46 3501 3298 6799 2988 2833 5821 513 465 978 871 877 1748 729 693 1422 142 184 326 102 105 207 89 85 174 13 20 33

478 432 910 432 409 841 46 23 69 1685 1559 3244 1431 1310 2741 254 249 503 277 275 552 245 250 495 32 25 57 662 593 1255 593 540 1133 69 53 122

1561 1431 2992 1324 1193 2517 237 238 475

171 218 389 149 195 344 22 23 45

1069 1033 2102 979 952 1931

90

81 171

1137 1020 2157 1003 895 1898 134 125 259

529 512 1041 474 479 953 55 33 88]

1124 1038 2162 1010 963 1973 114

75 189

122 104 226 111 98 209 11

6 17

2039 1859 3898 1715 1636 3351 324 223 547

265 303 568 225 269 494 40 34 74

22 21 43 20 19 39

2

2

4

448 471 919 398 414 812 50 57 107

1007 1011 2018 887 891 1778 120 120 240

151 156 307 143 154 297

8

2 10

1143 1121 2264 1032 1041 2073 111

80 191

848 719 1567 748 648 1396 100 71 171

1379 1253 2632 1301 1187 2488

78

66 144

470 386 856 419 357 776 51 29 80

455 480 935 337 380 717 118 100 218

221 236 457 185 211 396 36 25 61

522 508 1030 489 477 966 33 31 64

2336 2195 4531 2087 2060 4147 249 135 384

39 51 90 38 50 88

1

1

2

446 483 929 394 439 833 52 44 96

230 244 474 197 220 417 33 24 57

405 377 782 373 365 738 32 12 44

491 477 968 463 449 912 28 28 56

388 379 767 370 361 731 18 18 36

1270 1274 2544 1178 1195 2373

92

79 171

843 887 1730 791 840 1631 52 47 99

827 831 1658 743 738 1481 84 93 177

603 620 1223 531 584 1115 72 36 108

1717 1629 3346 1452 1411 2863 265 218 483

357 319 676 322 302 624 35 17 52

35 40 75 34 39 73

1

1

2

671 610 1281 580 540 1120

91

70 161

45

TABLE II--SCHOOL ATTENDANCE: GEORGIA, 1938--Continued WHITE

SCHOOL SYSTEM

ALL PERSONS

ATTENDING

NOT ATTENDING

Male Fem. Total Male Fem. Total Male Fem. Total

McINTOSH MERIWETHER MILLER MITCHELL
Pelham
MONROE MONTGOMERY MORGAN
Madison MURRAY
MUSCOGEE... Columbus _
NEWTON___ Covington Mansfield
OCONEE OGLETHORPE PAULDING PEACH PIOKENS
Nelson
PIERCE^. Blackshear.
PIKE POLK
Cedartown
PTJLASKI Hawkins vllle
PUTNAM Eatonton
QUITMAN
RABUN RANDOLPH RICHMOND ROCKDALE___ SCHLEY
SOREVEN.... SEMINOLE... SPALDING
Griffin
STEPHENS Martin.. Toccoa
STEWART
SUMTER Americus...
TALBOT TALIAFERRO... TATTNALL....

260 273 533 219 248 467

41

25

66

1485 1393 2878 1350 1291 2641 135 102 237

1018 992 2010 869 871 1740 149 121 270

1369 1265 2634 1277 1199 2476

92

66 158

199 213 412 178 190 368

21

23

44

575 535 1110 503 470 973

72

65 137

824 702 1526 736 649 1385

88

53 141

781 665 1446 616 607 1223 165

58 223

132 101 233 121

94 215

11

7

18

1505 1485 2990 1312 1273 2585 193 212 405

1432 1349 2781 1258 1188 2446 174 161 335

3735 3691 7426 3286 3179 6465 449 512 961

1233 1141 2374 1082 1026 2108 151 115 266

252 246 498 225 212 437

27

34

61

63

74 137

52

68 120

11

6

17

743 716 1459 671 659 1330

72

57 129

932 1017 1949 797 914 1711 135 103 238

1684 1631 3315 1519 1441 2960 165 190 355

438 437 875 403 402 805

35

35

70

1242 1142 2384 1088 959 2047 154 183 337

72

70 142

68

66 134

4

4

8

1401 1334 2735 1313 1247 2560

88

87 175

180 166 346 150 141 291

30

25

55

767 691 1458 619 600 1219 148

91 239

2406 2257 4663 2080 1950 4030 326 307 633

845 889 1734 742 .767 1509 103 122 225

379 390 769 327 343 670

52

47

99

184 188 372 172 178 350

12

10

22

341 310 651 300 287 587

41

23

64

121 121 242 113 113 226

8

8

16

157 165 322 137 146 283

20

19

39

1069 1062 2131 979 975 1954

90

87 177

662 614 1276 593 571 1164

69

43 112

5252 5206 10458 4717 4659 9376 535 547 1082

733 663 1396 607 566 1173 126

97 223

273 290 563 250 275 525

23

15

38

1278 1171 2449 1150 1090 2240 128

81 209

577 623 1200 488 575 1063

89

48 137

1504 1336 2840 1243 1112 2355 261 224 485

800 856 1656 765 804 1569

35

52

87

993 931 1924 921 855 1776

72

76 148

32

31

63

23

24

47

9

7

16

402 428 830 395 422 817

7

6

13

402 324 726 354 299 653

48

25

73

659 660 1319 593 607 1200

66

53 119

436 382 818 406 351 757

30

31

61

301 297 598 271 281 552

30

16

46

267 229 496 246 214 460

21

15

36

1691 1644 3335 1526 1506 3032 165 138 303

46

TABLE II--SCHOOL ATTENDANCE: GEORGIA, 1938--Continued WHITE

SCHOOL SYSTEM

ALL PERSONS

ATTENDING

NOT ATTENDING

Male Fem. Total Male Fem. Total Male Fem. Total

TAYLOR TELFAIR TERRELL
Dawson THOMAS
Thomas vllle
TIFT Tifton
TOOMBS Vidalia
TOWNS
TREUTLEN TROUP .
Hogansville LaGrange
TURNER Ashburn.
TWIGGS TJNION____ UPSON .
Thomaston
WALKER Chickamauga
WALTON Monroe. . . Social Circle
WARE Waycross
WARREN WASHINGTON
Sanders ville WAYNE .
WEBSTER. WHEELER WHITE WHITFIELD
Dalton
WILCOX WILKES
Washington WILKINSON WORTH

815 736 1551 714 675 1389 101

61 162

1590 1505 3095 1325 1341 2666 265 164 429

436 403 839 407 376 783

29

27

56

160 170 330 152 155 307

8

15

23

1466 1420 2886 1269 1306 2575 197 114 311

693 649 1342 628 588 1216

65

61 126

1334 1301 2635 1187 1189 2376 147 112 259

412 398 810 399 382 781

13

16

29

1436 1349 2785 1311 1254 2565 125

95 220

326 280 606 309 258 567

17

22

39

726 692 1418 639 605 1244

87

87 174

760 718 1478 634 636 1270 126

82 208

1089 954 2043 894 842 1736 195 112 307

334 369 703 283 305 588

51

64 115

1819 1736 3555 1742 1663 3405

77

73 150

171 159 330 171 159 330

850 836 1686 727 766 1493 123

70 193

184 157 341 155 134 289

29

23

52

465 433 898 381 382 763

84

51 135

1146 1068 2214 1008 939 1947 138 129 267

925 781 1706 833 709 1542

92

72 164

1230 1180 2410 1096 1059 2155 134 121 255

3443 3162 6605 3066 2786 5852 377 376 753

233 207 440 230 204 434

3

3

6

1441 1465 2906 1246 1284 2530 195 181 376

324 398 722 275 329 604

49

69 118

125 153 278 101 127 228

24

26

50

1409 1424 2833 1242 1329 2571 167

95 262

1218 1280 2498 1148 1208 2356

70

72 142

474 455 929 445 435 880

29

20

49

1181 1217 2398 1030 1118 2148 151

99 250

170 156 326 170 156 326

1748 1619 3367 1410 1408 2818 338 211 549

258 252 510 220 225 445

38

27

65

947 926 1873 843 834 1677 104

92 196

1009 898 1907 866 787 1653 143 111 254

2209 2065 4274 1956 1812 3768 253 253 506

992 1106 2098 989 1101 2090

3

5

8

1223 1072 2295 1051 976 2027 172

96 268

589 569 1158 514 529 1043

75

40 115

197 132 329 192 127 319

5

5

10

770 711 1481 686 658 1344

84

53 137

1721 1699 3420 1423 1472 2895 298 227 525

47

TABLE II--COLORED

PERSONS SIX TO EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE: GEORGIA, 1938 BY SCHOOL SYSTEMS AND BY SCHOOL ATTENDANCE

ALL PERSONS

ATTENDING

NOT ATTENDING

SCHOOL SYSTEM Male Fern. Total Male Fem. Total Male Fem. Total

STATE TOTAL_

145556 150667 296223 124531 133542 258073 21025 17125 38150

APPLING... Baxley
ATKINSONBACON BAKER
BALDWIN. BANKS .... BARROW_.
Winder.-.
BARTOW Adairsville.. Cartersville.
BEN HILL.-- Fitzgerald...
BERRIEN..BIBB BLECKLEY.
Cochran... BRANTLEY.
BROOKS Quitman---
BRYAN BULLOCH-.-
Statesboro-
BURKE-.BTJTTS
Jackson - _ CALHOUNCAMDEN.. CANDLER
CARROLL Carrollton
CATOOSA CHARLTON CHATHAM CHATTAHOOCHEE-
CHATTOOGATrion
CHEROKEE.. Canton
CLARKE Athens
CLAY CLAYTON_ CLINCH.-. COBB
Marietta.

406 384 790 382 361 743 163 190 353 153 172 325 239 257 496 197 219 416 189 198 387 149 164 313 614 626 1240 539 581 1120

1473 1540 3013 1371 1450 2821

93 141 234

79 123 202

253 261 514 235 238 473

54

140

45

71 116

405 418 823 304 335 639

178 210 388 140 163 303 386 404 790 323 362 685 308 336 644 291 322 613

313 307 620 235 244 479

4046 4418 8464 3297 3717 7014

473 447 920 450 434 884

112 115 227

95 104 199

95

99 194

91

87 178

1185 1260 2445 1047 1172 2219 241 295 536 195 245 440 383 339 722 386 305 631 1219 1285 2504 1056 1184 2240 158 223 381 113 183 296

2907 538 109 1258 459 426

2948 528 136 1304 440 517

5855 1066 245 2562
899 943

2383 477 109 1032 413 312

2659 490 136 1157 398 432

5042 967 245 2189
811 774

945 844 1789 829 747 1576

145 192 337

89 129 218

42

37

79

29

30

59

185 182 367

89 107 196

6876 7741 14617 5465 6298 11763

277 276 553 216 236 452

283 251 534 260 230 490

19 52

19

38

64 116

14 43

18 51

32 94

54

71 125

50

66 116

412 374 786 357 342 699

743 827 1570 634 728 1362

779 877 1656 734 826 1560 427 415 842 296 321 617 332 330 662 203 225 428 562 572 1134 461 482 943 270 294 564 208 235 443

24 10 42 40 75
102 14 18
101
38 63 17
78 749
23 17 4
138 46 57 163 45
524 61
226 46 84
116 56 13 96 1411 61
23 5 9 4 55
109
45 131 129 101
62

23

47

18

28

38

80

34

74

45 120

90 192

18

32

23

41

15

24

83 184

47

85

42 105

14

31

63 141

701 1450

13

36

11

28

12

16

226

50

96

34

91

101 264

40

85

289 813

38

99

147 373

42

88

85 169

97 213

63 119

7

20

75 171

1443 2854

40 101

21

44

1

6

13

22

5

9

32

87

208

51

96

94 225

105 234

90 191

59 121

49

TABLE H-SCHOOL ATTENDANCE: GEORGIA, 1938-Continued COLORED

SCHOOL SYSTEM

ALL PERSONS

ATTENDING

NOT ATTENDING

Male Fem. Total Male Fem. Total Male Fem. Total

COFFEE... Douglas
COLQUITT Doerun. Moultrie
COLUMBIA COOK.. COWETA
Newnan Senoia
CRAWFORD... CRISP
Cordele DADE--- DAWSON...
DEOATUR Bainbridge___
DeKALB .. Decatur Lithonia..
DODGE. Eastman. _
DOOLY Vienna
DOUGHERTY Albany
DOUGLAS EARLY...
Blakely
ECHOLS EFFINGHAM.. ELBERT..
Elberton. EMANUEL
EVANS. _. FANNIN
McCaysville..
FLOYD... Rome
FORSYTH FRANKLIN
Royston ... FULTON..
Atlanta ..
GILMER. GLASCOCK GLYNN. GORDON..
Calhoun .

558 204 852 45 351

579 1137

261 465

822 1674

35

80

374 725

492 148 668 33 320

525 1017

189 337

671 1339

24

57

345 665

66 56 184 12 31

54 72 151 11 29

120 128 335 23 60

913 887 1800

403 387 790

1137 1081 2218

293 320 613

37

53

90

813 313 984 251 27

803 1616

311 624

965 1949

296 547

50

77

100 90 153 42 10

84 76 116 24
3

184 166 269 66 13

658 639 503 38

651 1309

598 1237

554 1057

35

73

539 485 464 26

556 1095

498 983

533 997

29

55

119 154 39
12

95 100 21
6

214 254
60 18

1320 1308 2628 1209 1246 2455 328 421 749 285 377 662 838 781 1619 746 663 1409 342 400 742 260 286 546 170 194 364 132 156 288

111 43 92 82 38

62 44 118 114 38

173 87 210 196 76

957 128 869 104

968 1925
150 278 904 1773 141 245

867 119 743 78

904 1771 129 248 817 1560 119 197

90 9
126 26

64 154

21

30

87 213

22

48

649 710 1359 581 667 1248 892 997 1889 754 879 1633 370 385 755 304 319 623 1275 1274 2549 1084 1154 2238 110 100 210 110 100 210

68 138 66 191

43 118 66 120

111 256 132 311

111 767 909 254

80 191 795 1562 924 1833 261 515

68 591 830 254

44 112 657 1248 852 1682 261 515

43 176 79

36 138 72

79 314 151

1182 1196 2378 1061 1104 2165 121

92 213

358 382 740 288 347 635

11

12

23

10

9

19

70 1

35 105

3

4

441 643

512 1079 453 894 690 1333

477 367 498

431 908 377 744 524 1022

90 74 145

81 76 166

171 150 311

5 333 48 2643 8500

5 309 70 2515 9654

10 642 118 5158 18154

3 306 41 2196 7721

1 290
58 2079 8869

4 596
99 4275 16590

2 27
7 447 779

4

6

19

46

12

19

436 883

785 1564

1

8

9

1

8

9

242 200 442

904 1031 1935

100

93 193

65

54 119

205 782
83 60

184 389 901 1683 73 156 52 112

37 122
17 5

16 130 20
2

53 252
37 7

50

TABLE II--SCHOOL ATTENDANCE: GEORGIA, 1938--Continued COLORED

SCHOOL SYSTEM

ALL PERSONS

ATTENDING

NOT ATTENDING

Male Fern. Total Male Fem. Total Male Fem. Total

GRADY.... GREENE
Greensboro.. GWINNETT....
Buford Lawrenceville
HABERSHAM. Cornelia
HALL... Gainesville. _. Lula
HANCOCK HARALSON...
Tallapoosa HARRIS
HART Hart well
HEARD HENRY... HOUSTON
IRWIN Ocilla
JACKSON Commerce Maysville
JASPER JEFF DAVIS..
Hazlehurst... JEFFERSON._ JENKINS
JOHNSON JONES LAMAR
Barnesville... LANIER
LAURENS Dexter Dublin
LEE LIBERTY
LINCOLN LONG LOWNDES
Valdosta... LTJMPKIN
MACON... MADISON. MARION
Buena Vista.. McDUFFIE

917 899 114 317 122
57
55 34 219 337 24
1685 174 34
1199
448 107 442 1217 1026
540 179 462
85 13
790 243 54 1637 981
893 894 582 165 249
1646 48
275 849 783
571 222 1120 703 36
1454 390 535 55 673

962 908 118 325 132
59
51 37 199 356 16
1530 170 43
1113
444 102 476 1235 1037
552 155 435 85
10
722 199 47 1704 997
853 903 461 170 227
1594 43
330 831 825
575 216 1197 806 27
1491 350 517 51 646

1879 1807 232 642 254 116
106 71 418 693 40
3215 344
77 2312
892 209 918 2452 2063
1092 334 897 170
23
1512 442 101 3341 1978
1746 1797 1043 335 476
3240 91 605
1680 1608
1146 438 2317 1509 63
2945 740 1052 106 1319

812 853 107 269 106 46
45 28 167 264 23
1504 148 31 1016
395 80
403 989 891
478 156 402 70
4
612 204
54 1424 806
833 773 485 123 227
1642 48
216 587 703
523 201 1028 610 32
1279 305 465 46 535

863 874 113 289 110
38
43 35 156 287 14
1428 144 41 985
405 88
418 1060
501 144 380 67
6
584 185 46 1547 907
804 814 394 127 211
1588 43 271 623
780
540 205 1091 704 21
1369 287 486
51 547

800 168 821 2049 1857
1637 1587 879 250 438
1063 406 2119 1314 53

10
Ti~
470 125
99

51

TABLE II--SCHOOL ATTENDANCE: GEORGIA , 1938--Continued COLORED

SCHOOL SYSTEM

ALL PERSONS

ATTENDING

NOT ATTENDING

Male Fem. Total Male Fem. Total Male Fem. | Total

McINTOSH MERIWETHER MILLER MITCHELL
Pelham___
MONROE MONTGOMERY MORGAN
Madison MURRAY
MUSCOGEE Columbus
NEWTON Covington Mansfield
OCONEE OGLETHORPE PAULDING PEACH PICKENS
Nelson
PIERCE Blackshear
PIKE POLK
Cedartown
PULASKI Hawldnsville ..
PUTNAM Eatonton
QUITMAN
RABUN RANDOLPH RICHMOND ROCKDALE SCHLEY
SCREVEN, SEMINOLE SPALDING
Griffin
STEPHENS Martin . Toccoa
STEWART
SUMTER Americus, .
TALBOT TALIAFERRO TATTNALL

486 513 999 433 458 891 1824 1851 3675 1610 1705 3315 470 449 919 433 399 832 1664 1656 3320 1482 1511 2993
115 145 260 102 140 242

933 1030 1963 816 914 1730

540 517 1057 480 477 957

897 815 1712 778 746 1524

144 173 317 127 153 280

66

72 138

57

66 123

1040 1088 2128 857 898 1755

1746 2026 3772 1404 1642 3046

654 673 1327 548 601 1149

139 156 295 106 136 242

43

52

95

25

33

58

334 335 669 287 311 598

922 837 1759 814 758 1572

205 167 372 196 158 354

771 851 1622 565 698 1263

54

63 117

52

58 110

9

14

22

7

14

21

310 347 657 286 314 600

110 129 239

92 109 201

791 844 1635 654 723 1377

551 538 1089 470 466 936

219 206 425 194 169 363

612 669 1281 522 601 1123 120 131 251 113 126 239 645 616 1261 556 566 1122 127 139 266 107 133 240 389 397 786 334 354 688

9

9

18

5

6

11

1765 1835 3600 1526 1660 3186

3396 3758 7154 2961 3304 6265

377 381 758 297 307 604

478 509 987 426 454 880

1758 1713 3471 1598 1646 3244 451 480 931 423 466 889 673 741 1414 556 642 1198 452 486 938 422 433 855

109 128 237 105 127 232

16

31

47

16

30

46

88 113 201

88 112 200

1257 1255 2512 1075 1138 2213

1496 1556 3052 1156 1371 2527 529 600 1129 413 474 887 860 852 1712 686 725 1411 564 606 1170 492 565 1057
470 476 946 422 448 870

53 214
37 182
13
117 60 119 17
9
183 342 106
33 18
47 108
9 206
2 1
24 18 137 81 25
90 7 89 20 55
4 239 435
80 52
160 28 117 30
4
182
340 116 174
72 48

55 146 50 145
5
116 40 69 20
6
190 384
72 20 19
24 79
9 153
5
33 20 121 72 37
68 5 50 6 43
3 175 454 74
55
67 14 99 53
1 1 1 117
185 126 127 41
28

108 360
87 327
18
233 100 188 37
15
373 726 178
53 37
71 187
18 359
7 1
57 38 258 153 62
158 12 139 26 98
7 414 889 154 107
227 42
216 83
5 1 1 299
525 242 301 113
76

52

TABLE II--SCHOOL ATTENDANCE: GEORGIA, 1938--Continued COLORED

SCHOOL SYSTEM

ALL PERSONS

ATTENDING

NOT ATTENDING

Male Fern. Total Male Fern. Total Male Fern. Total

TAYLOR... TELFAIR TERRELL
Dawson THOMAS
Thomasville...
TIFT Tifton
TOOMBS Vidalia
TOWNS
TREUTLEN TROUP
Hogans ville LaGrange West Point..
TURNER Ashburn
TWIGGS UNION . UPSON__
Thomaston
WALKER Chickarnauga
WALTON Monroe. . __ Social Circle.
WARE Waycross
WARREN WASHINGTON
Sanders ville WAYNE
WEBSTER WHEELER WHITE WHITFIELD
Dalton
WILCOX WILKES
Washington. WILKINSON... WORTH

819 867 1686 745 825 1570

74

42 116

661 638 1299 560 561 1121 101

77 178

1668 1632 3300 1476 1517 2993 192 115 307

218 297 515 172 242 414

46

55 101

1309 1380 2689 1106 1205 2311 203 175 378

548 652 1200 427 537 964 121 115 236

558 627 1185 488 570 1058

70

57 127

103 112 215

93

96 189

10

16

26

403 426 829 350 389 739

53

37

90

198 202 400 187 186 373

11

16

27

307 285 592 264 257 521

43

28

71

1199 1206 2405 928 1058 1986 271 148 419

115 142 257

97 108 205

18

34

52

771 743 1514 688 664 1352

83

79 162

181 246 427 147 202 349

34

44

78

487 465 952 406 412 818

81

109 113 222

86 101 187

23

938 914 1852 803 838 1641 135

1

1

1

826 787 1613 793 755 1548

33

436 461 897 348 389 737

88

53 134

12

35

76 211

1

32

65

72 160

281 290 571 240 259 499

41

31

72

730 744 1474 617 675 1292 113

145 158 303 110 117 227

35

78

76 154

61

60 121

17

69 182

41

76

16

33

287 291 578 240 266 506

47

25

72

736 817 1553 677 761 1438

59

56 115

1079 1078 2157 957 1005 1962 122

73 195

1856 1782 3638 1604 1670 3274 252 112 364

252 243 495 252 243 495

473 461 934 387 364 751

86

97 183

475 499 974 384 424 808

91

75 166

438 462 900 392 433 825

46

29

75

72

55 127

65

51 116

7

4

11

37

31

68

31

29

60

6

2

8

134 163 297 134 163 297

691 735 1426 567 651 1218 124

84 208

1195 1118 2313 991 1008 1999 204 110 314

209 225 434 186 208 394

23

17

40

789 784 1573 687 693 1380 102

91 193

1360 1408 2768 1040 1214 2254 320 194 514

53

STATE OF GEORGIA SCHOOL CENSUS--1938

STATE SUMMARY

TABLE III

PERSONS SIX TO EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE NOT ATTENDING SCHOOL BY SCHOOL GRADES LAST COMPLETED

Grades Last Completed

All Persons

White

Colored

Grammar School
High School
High School Totals College or Vocational
Total College or Vocational Total All Grades
NOT Attending School

22,091 32,104 11,852

66,047

9,171 17,295 8,606

35,072

12,920 14,809 3,246

30,975

6,687 4,721 7,891
19,299

5,170 3,875 6,959

16,004

1,517 846 932

3,295

550 60
610
7,767

512 57
569
3,928

38 3
41
3,839

93,723

55,573

38,150

55

EDUCATION OF PERSONS 6-18 YEARS OF AGE NOT ATTENDING SCHOOL

WHITE AND COLORED

STATE OF GEORGIA 1938

56

TABLE III-PERSONS SIX TO EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE NOT ATTENDING SCHOOL: GEORGIA, 1938 BY SCHOOL SYSTEMS AND BY SCHOOL LAST ATTENDED

SCHOOL SYSTEM
STATE TOTAL
APPLING... Baxley
01 ATKINSON, "* BACON
BAKER
BALDWIN. BANKS_-_. BARROW..
Winder. _
BARTOW Adairsvllle-Cartersville-
BEN HILL.... Fitzgerald-..
BERRIEN
BIBB BLEOKLEY.
Cochran-.BRANTLEYBROOKS
Quitman.--

SCHOOL LAST ATTENDED

TOTAL

GRAMMAR SCHOOL

HIGH SCHOOL

White
55,573
91 46 159 269 110
53 397 315
55
914 28 171 161 75 764
927 171 33 101 232 53

Colored White

38,150 35,072

47

53

28

27

80

125

74

226

120

63

192

29

32

310

41

196

24

41

184

710

19

85

104

105

115

31

34

141

586

1,450

36

125

28

23

16

71

226

155

96

19

Colored White

30,975 16,004

47

13

25

17

74

31

55

24

72

29

175

23

27

58

38

104

23

9

163

95

7

60

47

97

44

24

35

116

112

1,134

412

36

45

28

10

16

29

154

59

79

30

Colored
3,295
3 5 4 9 16
21 2 5 8
266
13 14

COLLEGE OR VOCATIONAL

White Colored

569

41

1 1 1 5 2
15

NO SCHOOLING

White Colored

3,928

3,839

25

2

1

1

19

15

16

39

1

29

5

12

1

109

13

1

19

3

1

6

1

2

64

17

11

48

1

18

58

4

3

^^EaSONS^^

ATTENDING SCHOOL: GEORGIA, ^Continued

SCHOOL SYSTEM
BRYAN BULLOCH
Statesboro BURKE.... BUTTS..
Jackson
CALHOUN. CAMDEN . co CANDLER. CARROLL
Carrollton ...
CATOOSA.. CHARLTON.. CHATHAM. CHATTAHOOCHEE
CHATTOOGA.. Trion
CHEROKEE Canton
CLARKE Athens
CLAY.. CLAYTON.. CLINCH.

TOTAL

White Colored

119

91

362

264

53

85

169

813

118

99

56 46 194 558 182
337 219 1,494 41
535 174 586 151
131 155
12 242 340

373 88 169 213 119
20 171 2,854 101
44 6
22 9
87 208 96 225 234

GRAMMAR SCHOOL

White Colored

81

76

250

212

26

72

104

528

63

90

34

350

17

84

144

135

305

196

103

83

216

16

158

149

634

2,168

26

87

399

29

118

6

423

19

112

6

99

68

69

150

8

77

130

199

261

191

SCHOOL LAST ATTENDED

HIGH SCHOOL

COLLEGE OR VOCATIONAL

White Colored White Colored

29

1

3

70

4

3

25

5

1

56

19

8

50

9

3

22

19

29

4

30

2

3

150

1

9

43

5

102

28

1

754

399

1

1

11

3

79

1

51

132

3

37

3

2

22

3

2

64

40

4

11

8

1

100

16

2

50

9

4

NO SCHOOLING

White Colored

6

14

39

48

1

8

1

266

2

4

17

32

94

16

36

31

19

4

33

20

105

287

4

11

57

14

5

31

8

16

14

17

8

10

10

25

34

TABLE III--PERSONS SIX TO EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE NOT ATTENDING SCHOOL: GEORGIA, 1938--Continued

SCHOOL SYSTEM

COBB Marietta__ _
COFFEE Douglas

COLQUITT Doerun . _ Moultrie_-_ __
S COLUMBIA COOK

COWETA Newnan Senoia _
CRAWFORD CRISP
Cordele __

DADE

DAWSON

DECATUR

.

Bainbridge

DeKALB Decatur Lithonia ___
DODGE. Eastman .

TOTAL

GRAMMAR SCHOOL

SCHOOL LAST ATTENDED

HIGH SCHOOL

COLLEGE OR VOCATIONAL

NO SCHOOLING

White Colored White Colored White Colored White Colored White Colored

1,079

191

734

171

213

7

4

139

121

63

101

65

19

8

361

120-

308

110

52

1

60

128

26

106

33

14

838

335

581

308

234

21

1

11

23

6

18

5

177

60

76

56

71

4

2

88

184

58

174

29

10

1

216

166

150

152

60

7

2

330

269

233

212

63

6

2

54

66

30

58

17

5

7

13

3

12

3

110

214

58

133

48

2

1

244

254

158

238

69

2

50

60

31

46

17

9

1

262

18

168

10

40

2

189

151

16

194

173

125

"134"

40

15

29

82

87

40

66

25

17

1

739

286

390

229

285

26

9

79

196

15

150

58

42

6

(Include d in DeK alb Co.)

277

154

187

125

80

2

1

16

30

3

25

9

1

4

128

13

3

1

1

9

1

8

22

6

5

28

4

7

32

51

7

3

1

1

3

79

17

14

1

1

4

54

6

22

2

22

1

16

3

55

31

1

3

9

27

4

TABLE HI--PERSONS SIX TO EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE NOT ATTENDING SCHOOL: GEORGIA, 1938--Continued

SCHOOL SYSTEM
DOOLY. Vienna
DOUGHERTY Albany
DOUGLAS,. EARLY o5 Blakely EOHOLS. EFFINGHAM
ELBERT Elberton
EMANUEL EVANS FANNING
McCaysville
FAYETTE... FLOYD_
Rome __ FORSYTH
FRANKLIN Royston
FULTON Atlanta
GILMER

TOTAL

GRAMMAR SCHOOL

SCHOOL LAST ATTENDED

HIGH SCHOOL

COLLEGE OR VOCATIONAL

NO SCHOOLING

White Colored White Colored White Colored White Colored White Colored

158

213

88

197

61

12

3

19

48

6

36

12

6

66

111

40

100

22

6

1

84

256

21

217

61

38

2

385

132

249

125

105

3

250

311

173

285

60

13

4

143

79

122

74

14

1

243

314

84

307

158

2

250

151

149

142

79

4

4

22

3

16

1

373

213

271

176

69

2

4

132

105

94

86

35

3

438

4

337

3

40

32

24

8

288

171

169

157

110

2

1,286

150

975

131

175

4

1

804

311

545

242

250

63

416

6

335

6

64

1

352

46

247

36

60

1

3

45

19

32

14

7

4

4

2,359

883

1,377

665

840

150

21

2,440

1,564

769

992

1,583

562

278

221

28

6

4

1

6

3

5

1

31

4

13

13

7

4

1

5

18

5

2

29

35

3

16

61

1

9

12

135

15

9

6

16

42

9

1

2

121

68

1

88

9

29

TABLE III--PERSONS SIX TO EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE NOT ATTENDING SCHOOL: GEORGIA, 1938--Continued

SCHOOL SYSTEM

GLASOOCK GLYNN GORDON
Calhoun GRADY
GREENE
" GWINNETT Buford

HABERSHAM Cornelia-. .. .
HALL Gainesville Lula

HANCOCK HARALSON
Tallapoosa HARRIS

HART

Hartwell

HEARD

HENRY

HOUSTON .

.

TOTAL

GRAMMAR SCHOOL

SCHOOL LAST ATTENDED

HIGH SCHOOL

COLLEGE OR VOCATIONAL

NO SCHOOLING

White Colored White Colored White Colored White Colored White Colored

84

53

59

46

24

2

1

309

252

156

206

144

33

1

648

37

441

33

150

2

5

77

7

59

7

8

364

204

250

192

89

11

10

100

80

44

66

36

7

13

4

12

3

10

1

2

594

84

382

71

136

1

1

90

38

62

14

19

14

1

53

32

32

30

17

1

494

26

375

23

67

3

2

(Include d in Habe rsham Co )

978

95

676

75

220

3

8

326

142

177

100

107

41

5

33

3

19

2

5

69

283

53

250

10

29

503

52

298

41

125

4

3

57

5

31

4

26

1

122

311

67

279

53

5

475

92

208

66

227

5

10

45

41

22

33

23

4

171

97

110

71

46

2

5

259

403

153

342

93

20

4

88

206

58

199

27

4

1

5

8

13

52

2

10

15

1

7

7

75

12

8

10

3

2

50

74

17

37

1

9

1

6

4

77

7

2

27

30

21

4

10

24

9

41

2

3

TABLE III--PERSONS SIX TO EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE NOT ATTENDING SCHOOL: GEORGIA, 1938--Continued

SCHOOL SYSTEM
IRWIN,. Ocilla__-
JACKSON Commerce Maysville... .
JASPER JEFF DAVIS
Hazlehurst JEFFERSON JENKINS
JOHNSON JONES LAMAR
Barnes ville_ LANIER...
LAUREN S_ Dexter Dublin
LEE___
LIBERTY LINCOLN. LONG, LOWNDES
Valdosta...

TOTAL

GRAMMAR SCHOOL

SCHOOL LAST ATTENDED

HIGH SCHOOL

COLLEGE OR VOCATIONAL

NO SCHOOLING

White Colored White Colored White Colored White Colored White Colored

189

113

127

97

41

5

2

17

34

6

28

10

547

115

442

100

71

3

1

74

33

50

27

21

6

3

4

13

3

13

1

107

316

45

251

25

15

24

240

53

186

44

35

1

1

10

1

5

4

1

191

370

112

297

61

15

3

171

265

130

214

29

7

3

144

109

74

44

12

1

80

210

49

191

28

8

3

218

164

158

135

34

8

2

61

85

38

54

17

24

64

38

37

29

21

2

1

384

10

235

1

75

2

2

96

118

32

91

46

13

2

57

470

45

392

10

3

1

44

125

28

110

16

4

56

83

33

67

22

3

36

32

23

29

11

1

171

198

85

140

61

6

3

99

195

59

158

35

13

19

11

1

6

33

12

1

13

49

18

8

1

15

58

9

44

58

64

11

24

21

6

7

5

7

72

9

2

2

16

12

1

75

11

1

13

2

2

22

52

5

24

-*-

TABLE III--PERSONS SIX TO EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE NOT ATTENDING SCHOOL: GEORGIA, 1938--Continued

SCHOOL SYSTEM
LUMPKIN. MACON MADISON MARION
Buena Vista
McDUFFIE McINTOSH w MERIWETHER MILLER
MITCHELL Pelham
MONROE MONTGOMERY
MORGAN Madison. ...
MURRAY MUSCOGEE
Columbus
NEWTON Covington
OCONEE OGLETHORPE PAULDING

TOTAL

GRAMMAR SCHOOL

SCHOOL LAST ATTENDED

HIGH SCHOOL

COLLEGE OR VOCATIONAL

NO SCHOOLING

White Colored White Colored White Colored White Colored White Colored

- 177

10

149

10

6

108

297

60

275

33

16

13

483

148

327

129

104

1

1

52

101

35

89

14

8

2

2

9

1

9

1

161

237

91

224

48

5

5

66

108

34

93

20

7

1

237

360

122

300

105

12

5

270

87

209

80

57

2

1

158

327

104

298

46

13

2

44

18

25

15

19

3

137

233

86

203

33

9

12

141

100

94

82

39

14

2

-. 223

188

157

167

47

9

4

18

37

5

27

11

7

405

15

300

13

78

1

1

335

373

202

337

100

19

20

961

726

527

579

394

100

7

283

215

197

194

72

8

61

53

27

44

27

7

1

129

71

72

59

42

4

1

238

187

152

150

71

4

355

18

224

15

121

1

22

1

2

5

51

18

1

4

17

8

1

11

7

1

5

47

3

5

6

16

3

6

19

6

4

15

12

2

3

26

1

13

17

5

33

42

14

13

6

2

14

8

15

33

9

3

M

TABLE III--PERSONS SIX TO EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE NOT ATTENDING SCHOOL: GEORGIA, 1938--Continued

SCHOOL SYSTEM
PEACH. _. PICKENS
Nelson, PIERCE
Blackshear... ....
PIKE POLK
Cedartown. _ 2 PULASKI
Hawkinsville
PUTNAM Eatonton
QUITMAN RABUN RANDOLPH .
RICHMOND,. ROCKDALE... SCHLEY____ SCREVEN SEMINOLE___
SPALDING._ Griffin
STEPHENS Martin Toccoa

TOTAL

GRAMMAR SCHOOL

SCHOOL LAST ATTENDED

HIGH SCHOOL

COLLEGE OR VOCATIONAL

NO SCHOOLING

White Colored White Colored White Colored White Colored White Colored

70

359

35

341

33

16

337

7

276

5

38

2

8

8

1

5

1

3

175

57

98

43

54

3

55

38

27

28

19

10

5

239

258

146

191

71

13

2

633

153

450

110

137

20

1

225

62

161

49

52

9

99

158

61

147

33

5

1

22

12

9

10

13

1

64

139

34

116

26

8

1

16

26

5

23

9

39

98

20

85

17

2

2

177

7

128

7

26

112

414

74

376

36

32

2

1,082

889

595

655

374

161

22

223

154

172

140

46

7

1

38

107

16

99

20

8

2

209

227

150

222

51

2

2

137

42

111

41

22

485

216

302

165

147

11

1

87

83

55

65

32

18

148

5

109

5

33

4

16

1

6

1

3

13

1

11

1

1

2

2

15

23

11

4

20

54

45

23

12

4

1

4

5

1

3

15

2

3

11

23

3

3

5

91

68

4

7

6

3

4

1

35

40

2 7 1

TABLE III--PERSONS SIX TO EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE NOT ATTENDING SCHOOL: GEORGIA, 1938--Continued

SCHOOL SYSTEM

STEWART STJMTER
TALBOT TALIAFERRO
TATTNALL TAYLOR =o TELFAIR 01 TERRELL

THOMAS

TTFT Tifton

TOOMBS

Vidalia

.

TOWNS

TREUTLEN

TROUP Hogansvllle

West Point TURNER
Ashburn

TOTAL

GRAMMAR SCHOOL

SCHOOL LAST ATTENDED

HIGH SCHOOL

COLLEGE OR VOCATIONAL

NO SCHOOLING

White Colored White Colored White Colored White Colored White Colored

73

299

29

253

44

25

119

525

62

430

47

16

3

61

242

20

188

20

35

20

46

301

18

139

19

4

36

113

14

99

21

3

303

76

175

61

108

4

4

162

116

118

97

32

8

4

429

178

293

161

109

5

5

56

307

33

258

21

7

23

101

8

71

14

8

1

311

378

186

316

87

21

5

126

236

3

5

259

127

148

108

91

9

1

29

26

18

22

10

2

259

117

139

97

73

(Include d in Toom bs Co.)

174

137

21

208

71

151

62

31

5

11

2

5

4

307

419

227

366

76

10

115

52

85

39

26

5

1

150

162

117

143

27

11

78

70

7

193

134

137

127

51

1

1

52

35

17

33

35

2

1

20

7

79

1

19

9

158

1

11

16

11

1

8

10

22

12

2

42

22

1

33

40

118

236

19

10

1

2

36

15

14

22

4

4

43

3

8

6

8

1

4

6

TABLE III--PERSONS SIX TO EIGHTEEN YEARS OP AGE NOT ATTENDING SCHOOL: GEORGIA, 1938--Continued

SCHOOL SYSTEM
TWIGGS UNION UP SON
Thomaston WALKER...
Chlckamauga
WALTON Monroe Social Circle
WARE
WARREN WASHINGTON
WAYNE WEBSTER
WHEELER WHITE WHITFIELD
WILCOX
WILKES
WILKINSON WORTH

TOTAL

GRAMMAR SCHOOL

SCHOOL LAST ATTENDED

HIGH SCHOOL

COLLEGE OR VOCATIONAL

NO SCHOOLING

White Colored White Colored White Colored White Colored White Colored

135

211

89

153

38

7

267

1

242

22

164

65

118

61

34

2

255

160

162

130

70

7

4

753

72

535

61

168

8

5

6

6

8

51

3

1

12

2

19

23

45

3

376

182

234

163

110

5

1

118

76

72

55

41

12

50

33

30

29

19

1

262

72

167

55

62

4

142

115

34

74

106

39

31

14

5

9

1

3

33

13

2

2

49

195

27

166

19

3

250

364

157

346

66

5

4

3

26

23

13

549

183

421

170

100

6

8

1

20

6

65

166

25

148

36

4

3

1

14

196

75

133

73

46

2

254

11

198

10

44

1

2

506

8

366

7

88

8

268

208

187

194

71

8

5

17

10

52

1

8

5

6

115

314

64

245

35

21

5

10

40

1

36

9

3

137

193

98

159

34

6

525

514

353

452

135

26

6

11

48

1

5

28

31

36

STATE OF GEORGIA SCHOOL CENSUS--1938
'<-

STATE SUMMARY

TABLE IV

PERSONS SIX TO EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE ATTENDING SCHOOL BY NUMBER OF RULES FROM SCHOOL*

Miles From School

All Persons

White

Colored

Under 2.0 Miles
2.0 to 2.9 Miles 3.0 to 3.9 Miles 4.0 to 4.9 Miles
Total 2 to 5 Miles
5.0 to 5.9 Miles 6.0 to 6.9 Miles 7.0 to 7.9 Miles 8.0 to 8.9 Miles 9.0 to 9.9 Miles...
Total 5 to 10 Miles
10 Miles and Over .
Unknown

286,397

168,675

117,722

106,644 68,111 35,666

59,570 42,895 26,978

47,074 25,216
8,688

210,421

129,443

80,978

21,421 13,536 8,373 5,350 2,688

17,965 12,090 7,504 4,811 2,489

3,456 1,446
869 539 199

51,368

44,859

6,509

7,894

7,019

875

13,274

9,654

3,620

State Total

569,354

359,650

*Does not include persons residing in cities with Independent Systems. For complete totals school age persons attending school see Table VIII.

209,704


67

TABLE IV PERSONS 6-18 YEARS OF AGE ATTENDING SCHOOL BY NUMBER
OF MILES FROM SCHOOL
68

TABLE IV--WHITE

PERSONS SIX TO EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE ATTENDING SCHOOL: GEORGIA, 1938 BY COUNTIES AND BY NUMBER OF MILES FROM SCHOOL
(Does not include persons residing in cities with independent systems)

COUNTY
STATE TOTAL
APPLING ATKINSON BACON. a BAKER < BALDWIN
BARTOW BEN HILL BERRIEN
BIBB BLECKLEY BRANTLEY BROOKS BRYAN
RTTT.T.OOH BURKE BUTTS OALHOUN OAMDEN.

NUMBER OF MILES FROM SCHOOL

Total Under 2 2-2.9 3-3.9 4-4.9 5-5.9 6-6.9 7-7.9 8-8.9 9-9.9 10-Over Unknown

359,650 168,675

- 3,053 1,473 1,893 793
1,620

1,015 505 502 270 974

2,184 1,820 3,748 1,221 3,226

1,158 910
1,517 205
1,043

9,037 1,436 1,596 2,005
953

7,416 419 726 384 223

3,725

717

1,612

683

900

304

815

360

618

125

59,570
708 213 310 148 144
557 454 678 156 440
588 363 305 297
82
595 105 133 42 31

42,895
514 302 319 144 111
186 279 404 162 511
419 289 127 344
92
795 124 164 61 48

26,978
408 165 194 96 108
143 134 296 106 436
205 137 137 291
88
487 192 91 89 52

17,965
168 80 141 69 51
78 40 124 66 289
147 73 59 209 90
415 80 90 54 45

12,090
153 92 67 26 57
48 3
128 90 245
121 70 55 188 60
341 74 38 27 10

7,504
32 87 71 12 14
14
70 54 81
33 15 63 113 86
193 65 15 42 10

4,811
23 22 15
8 21
26 43 71
40 25 41 63 79
122 75 48 4 28

2,489
8 2 18 3 22
9 10 10
11 5 3 39 68
28 35
8 25
7

7,019
4 5 13 6 24
10 174
13
51 31 4 28 68
32 179
6 38 87

9,654
20
243 11 94
486 155 87
6 9 76 49 17
3 73 175

TABLE IV--PERSONS SIX TO EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE ATTENDING SCHOOL: GEORGIA, 1938-- Continued WHITE

COUNTY
OANDLER CARROLL CATOOSA CHARLTON CHATHAM
OHATTAHOOCHEE CHATTOOGA CHEROKEE g CLARKE CLAY
CLAYTON CLINCH COBB COFFEE COLQUITT
COLUMBIA COOK COWETA CRAWFORD CRISP
DADE DAWSON DECATUR DeKALB DODGE

NUMBER OF MILES FROM SCHOOL

Total Under 2 2 2.9 3-3.9 4-4.9 5-5.9 6-6.9 7-7.9 8-8.9 9-9.9 10-Over Unknown

1,689

753

281

269

162

147

5,415 2,926 1,184

711

287

200

2,046 1,251

407

164

94

87

900

341

82

23

35

64

15,087 9,652 1,294

781

386

173

55

13

8

63

27

13

27

11

4

34

46

20

96

207

154

817

399

50

35

14

31

18

24

7

3,043 1,634

748

321

146

69

44

20

38

3,323 2,375

669

191

29

3

2

1

1,074

515

143

194

97

60

33

14

10

535

175

49

23

73

59

50

7

4

1,913 1,478

301

72

27

35

957

499

73

55

69

51

37

42

12

5,576 3,041 1,237

593

340

118

129

85

12

3,639 1,003

700

723

486

292

244

118

46

5,323 1,579 1,002 1,067

613

541

290

162

50

1,023

309

117

123

151

121

38

32

33

2,037

851

598

459

90

28

8

2

2,453

356

252

232

141

111

72

69

34

909

207

74

97

76

68

65

12

17

1,357

533

359

282

110

39

13

7

1,244

497

236

262

85

98

41

15

10

1,007

543

237

106

73

40

5

2

2,699

799

315

445

414

254

143

60

37

6,562 3,998 1,116

620

549

209

65

1

2

3,307 1,027

513

622

362

277

188

73

55

1

4

1

26

168

61

21

291

2,032

29

208

2

1

22

10

43

5

3

14

80

1

20

99

10

11

18

9

11

8

36

44

19

1

18

68

1,100

8

285

14

1

6

226

2

16

174

TABLE IV--PERSONS SIX TO EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE ATTENDING SCHOOL: GEORGIA, 1938--Continued WHITE

COUNTY

Total Under 2 2 2.9

NUMBER OF MILES FROM SCHOOL 3-3.9 4-4.9 5 5.9 6-6.9 7-7.9 8-8.9

9 9.9 10-Over Unknown

DOOLY

DOUGHERTY

DOUGLAS

.

EARLY

ECHOLS

1,297

453

192

240

154

104

63

40

27

3

21

765

99

284

96

1,887 1,113

359

176

42 97

41 60

34 21

56 22

26 15

10 4

77 20

2,065

425

281

463

267

172

69

46

39

21

105

177

404

75

29

20

17

20

28

27

32

17

124

15

EFFINGHAM

ELBERT

EMANUEL

,EVANS

.

>- FANNTN"

1,574

331

257

208

115

147

60

94

56

5

23

278

2,088

865

378

324

211

145

82

37

26

17

3

4,104

941

527

720

464

379

271

186

79

8

15

514

1,242

559

192

166

111

67

55

7

16

34

35

3,417 2,218

850

217

113

7

12

FAYETTE FLOYD FORSYTH FT! ANTCT.TN
FULTON

1,551

745

409

253

36

33

23

5

11

7

29

5,420 2,641

719

501

396

300

232

145

78

85

316

7

2,720 1,518

632

330

144

53

26

3

5

2

7

3,297 1,934

715

462

119

46

7

8

6

19,327 13,344 2,314 1,329

806

394

382

292

234

58

83

91

GTT.MKR

2,326 1,412

487

231

103

51

29

9

4

GLASCOCK

.. ....

936

225

245

213

122

65

28

3

4

2

5

24

GLYNN

2,574 1,745

148

145

47

57

34

41

28

129

200

GORDON. _ .

3,541 1,747

828

397

199

114

124

29

4

11

5

83

GRADY

3,250 1,288

685

491

404

212

92

11

15

17

35

GREENE GWINNETT HABERSHAM HALL HANCOCK

1,186

510

129

122

118

91

79

64

20

20

33

5,390 3,259 1,126

558

235

106

10

96

3,171 2,155

668

135

44

105

9

11

19

23

2

5,821 2,411 1,065

866

500

259

159

100

21

.6

434

841

250

120

75

82

61

55

18

43

26

54

57

TABLE IV--PERSONS SIX TO EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE ATTENDING SCHOOL: GEORGIA , 1938--Continued WHITE

COUNTY
HARALSON... HARRIS HART HEARD HENRY
HOUSTON IRWIN _3 JACKSON M JASPER JEFF DAVIS
JEFFERSON JENKINS JOHNSON JONES LAMAR
LANIER... LAURENS LEE LIBERTY... LINCOLN...
LONG LOWNDES LUMPKIN MACON MA TIT SON

NUMBER OF MILES FROM SCHOOL

Total Under 2 2-2.9 3-3.9 4-4.9 5-6.9 6-6.9 7-7.9 8-8.9 9-9.9 10-Over Unknown

2,741 1,241

494

298

205

273

125

63

14

16

12

1,133

344

121

114

129

115

94

63

50

12

35

56

2,517

728

739

541

287

141

64

14

1

2

1,931

754

577

203

157

49

16

18

33

21

103

1,898

711

361

263

257

119

58

71

34

13

11

953

288

87

132

82

88

109

25

57

13

44

28

1,973

441

368

323

302

147

112

95

66

35

84

3,351 1,690

794

473

280

94

11

2

1

6

812

252

84

88

75

67

38

34

25

8

9

132

1,778

622

298

228

237

197

104

62

27

3

2,073

757

237

374

205

154

139

98

65

15

15

14

1,396

549

145

156

197

145

77

52

24

18

33

2,488 1,067

550

327

183

168

50

60

66

9

8

776

217

70

66

70

71

83

46

21

25

107

717

181

260

109

76

37

8

15

8

9

14

966

291

98

95

97

110

74

62

41

22

11

65

4,147 1,045

884

933

495

287

202

130

46

23

102

417

194

33

44

33

9

12

11

8

25

48

738

227

58

65

41

98

48

24

26

26

49

76

-.

912

432

166

89

47

75

37

12

11

16

26

1

731

169

84

106

105

91

55

36

38

12

35

-. 2,373

784

408

355

227

205

177

75

58

15

20

49

1,481 1,118

269

18

28

15

18

4

11

1,115

279

92

99

93

107

69

74

36

35

38

193

2,863 1,641

638

338

99

62

25

30

13

13

4

TABLE IV--PERSONS SIX TO EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE ATTENDING SCHOOL: GEORGIA, 1938-- Continued WHITE

COUNTY
MARION. McDUFFIE McINTOSH MERIWETHER. MILLER
MITCHELL MONROE MONTGOMERY^ MORGAN_. MURRAY
MUSCOGEE NEWTON... OCONEE OGLETHORPE. PAULDING
PEACH.... PICKENS. PIERCE... PIKE POLK
PULASKI.... PUTNAM QUITMAN... RABUN RANDOLPH.

NUMBER OF MILES FROM SCHOOL

Total Under 2 2-2.9 3-3.9 4-4.9 5-5.9 6-6.9 7-7.9 8-8.9 9-9.9 10-Over Unknown

624

145

106

56

62

55

36

45

16

13

90

1,120

485

98

138

67

40

82

96

62

467

161

18

25

53

8

33

20

24

2,641 1,226

495

311

160

182

92

45

32

9

43

6

115

6

92

1,740

355

204

246

201

321

173

104

63

7

66

2,476

872

442

324

252

179

76

77

52

50

95

57

973

499

105

67

69

48

16

25

19

16

60

1,385

492

216

211

72

24

23

7

2

49 338

1,223

345

178

189

145

126

71

57

59

23

30

2,585 1,516

550

276

123

27

5

5

7

7

12

57

2,446 1,542

277

233

150

82

63

22

44

21

2,108

261

157

173

212

128

150

91

77

40

36

4 783

1,330

455

319

208

167

123

50

5

3

1,711

517

226

220

109

103

85

90

74

47

240

2,960 1,665

659

278

160

100

48

32

11

1

6

805

450

70

97

54

40

28

50

12

2,047 1,498

411

102

19

7

6

2,560 1,314

692

405

81

32

21

15

1,219

442

261

227

133

77

73

2

3

4,030 1,979

698

556

300

224

157

98

13

670

115

161

130

72

37

75

20

46

11

587

253

109

59

30

32

8

8

25

13

50

283

93

16

15

24

17

7

21

20

35

30

5

1,954 1,130

394

141

73

62

48

33

10

15

21

27

1,164

551

99

129

101

74

46

42

35

22

65

TABLE IV--PERSONS SIX TO EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE ATTENDING SCHOOL: GEORGIA, 1938--Continued WHITE

COUNTY
RICHMOND ROCKDALE SCHLEY SCREVEN SEMINOLE
SPALDING STEPHENS <i STEWART * SUMTER TALBOT
TALIAFERRO TATTNALL TAYLOR TELFAIR TERRELL
THOMAS_ __ TIFT TOOMBS TOWNS TREUTLEN
TROUP TURNER TWIGGS,,._ UNION UPSON

NUMBER OF MILES FROM SCHOOL

Total Under 2 2-2.9 3-3.9 4-4.9 5-5.9 6-6.9 7-7.9 8-8.9 9-9.9 10-Over Unknown

9,376 7,422

623

485

307

178

111

94

45

60

44

7

1,173

515

129

182

85

57

75

57

42

25

6

525

249

70

90

42

10

9

16

14

15

6

4

2,240

785

192

260

293

205

138

103

47

30

139

48

1,063

219

110

141

133

82

87

73

72

51

95

2,355 1,233

419

177

121

116

110

62

45

11

61

1,776

949

495

214

77

25

11

5

653

290

56

52

43

57

41

9

10

18

77

1,200

368

224

177

165

83

36

47

20

3

24

53

552

158

49

96

55

43

55

28

5

27

36

460

163

29

41

33

26

91

31

12

16

18

3,032 1,355

692

446

257

182

90

8

1

1

1,389

513

247

256

105

88

76

41

4

8

51

2,666 1,275

479

372

195

85

114

84

35

6

21

783

204

78

168

108

106

55

28

14

4

18

2,575

487

393

400

315

269

135

64

29

10

114

359

2,376

767

486

549

311

102

74

2

7

78

2,565

991

629

329

222

169

88

46

20

15

9

47

1,244

966

226

46

4

2

1,270

344

242

180

152

76

107

66

32

28

38

5

1,736

294

261

306

189

134

168

134

95

76

79

1,493

408

248

250

254

127

91

76

27

5

7

763

136

86

53

42

94

109

28

47

52

116

1,947 1,407

426

100

12

1

1

1,542 1,007

250

120

72

44

12

15

12

6

4

TABLE IV--PERSONS SIX TO EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE ATTENDING SCHOOL: GEORGIA, 1938--Continued WHITE

COUNTY
WALKER WALTON WARE WARREN WASHINGTON
WAYNE WEBSTER WHEELER. _. WHITE WHITFIELD
WILCOX WILKES WILKINSON... WORTH

NUMBER OF MILES FROM SCHOOL

Total Under 2 2 2.9 3-3.9 4-4.9 6 5.9 6-6.9 7-7.9 8-8.9 9-9.9 10 Over Unknown

5,852 3,419 1,306

533

271

173

38

47

36

8

21

2,530

715

551

416

267

201

165

69

89

6

51

2,571 1,018

579

317

220

150

61

64

42

11

109

880

300

97

146

57

60

33

15

57

49

66

2,148

581

253

350

228

180

162

141

84

45

124

2,818 1,201

549

448

217

157

141

84

13

3

5

445

123

38

64

41

37

52

40

12

10

28

1,677

795

370

286

124

32

9

2

1,653 1,160

251

113

50

46

3

25

5

59

3,768 1,292

459

577

646

345

242

97

35

17

58

2,027

679

362

266

215

157

129

69

52

21

4

1,043

267

161

169

114

1,344

401

63

147

132

64

54

83

104

59 57

48 73

33

74

36

248

73

2,895 1,376

491

317

198

216

112

68

31

24

62

V

TABLE IV--COLORED

PERSONS SIX TO EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE ATTENDING SCHOOL: GEORGIA, 1938 BY COUNTIES AND BY NUMBER OP MILES FROM SCHOOL
(Does not include persons residing in cities with independent systems)

COUNTY

NUMBER OF MILES FROM SCHOOL Total Under 2 2-2.9 3-3.9 4-4.9 5-5.9 6-6.9 7-7.9 8-8.9 9-9.9 10-Over Unknown

STATE TOTAL-

209,704 117,722 47,074 25,216 8,688 3,456 1,446

869

539

199

875

3,620

APPLING ATKINSON BACON : BAKER BALDWIN

-

743

318

300

81

22

13

9

416

323

56

28

9

313

96

45

33

13

8

12

7

19

2

8

70

1,120

608

296

128

42

6

8

3

11

2

4

12

2,821 2,076

463

154

50

15

63

BANKS BARROW BARTOW... BEN HILL BERRIEN...

202

99

37

52

9

3

2

473

248

106

81

27

11

639

320

140

75

52

14

1

8

6

11

12

685

214

69

89

89

32

44

32

56

6

45

9

479

310

27

44

20

26

27

5

8

12

BIBB BLECKLEY BRANTLEY BROOKS BRYAN_._.

7,014 6,320

341

188

102

48

10

1

1

884

422

290

101

29

4

178

126

22

1

6

2,219 1,022

578

402

162

41

5

6

3

631

390

92

81

27

6

2

1

38

23

35

BULLOOH BURKE... BUTTS.. OALHOUN__ CAMDEN

2,240

959

637

397

161

67

9

8

1

1

5,042 3,135 1,323

458

97

15

10

3

1

967

406

236

167

84

40

18

7

9

,.., 2,189 1,351

392

296

50

10

90

811

208

118

98

55

72

10

10

65

34

38

103

TABLE IV--PERSONS SIX TO EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE ATTENDING SCHOOL: GEORGIA, 1938--Continued COLORED

COUNTY
CANDLER CARROLL CATOOSA CHARLTON CHATHAM
CHATTAHOOCHEE CHATTOOGA CHEROKEE -q CLARKE 00 CLAY
CLAYTON CLINCH COBB COFFEE COLQUITT
COLUMBIA COOK COWETA CRAWFORD CRISP
DADE
DECATUR DeKALB DODGE

NUMBER OF MILES FROM SCHOOL

Total Under 2 2 2.9 3-3.9 4-4.9 5-5.9 6 6.9 7-7.9 8-8.9 9-9.9 10-Over Unknown

774

328

157

172

61

38

13

5

1,576

824

412

212

76

38

7

7

59

48

3

"3

5

196

159

12

3

1

9

3

9

11,763 8,743

868

536

577

443

167

200

63

10

47

109

452

272

92

63

19

2

1

2

1

490

222

110

85

41

22

1

9

94

55

17

18

4

699

320

231

126

7

4

5

3

3

1,560

952

452

116

25

10

1

4

617

273

206

117

12

9

428

341

67

16

1

1

1

1

943

563

228

96

45

7

1

3

1,017

512

257

145

35

34

34

1,339

549

354

203

69

52

30

44

23

15

1,616

865

373

217

62

31

13

3

624

348

134

82

39

10

7

4

1,949

738

439

217

84

10

3

2

1,095

685

223

129

43

12

983

486

311

157

27

2

52

1

4

451

3

55

32

23

2,455

873

693

437

111

113

47

30

25

3

9

114

1,409

920

314

99

49

27

1,771

709

433

352

102

73

51

25

26

TABLE IV--PERSONS SIX TO EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE ATTENDING SCHOOL: GEORGIA, 1938--Continued COLORED

COUNTY
DOOLY DOUGHERTY DOUGLAS EARLY ECHOES
EFFINGHAM ELBERT EMANUEL EVANS FANNIN
FAYETTE FLOYD FORSYTH FRANKLIN FULTON
GILMER GLASCOCK GLYNN GORDON GRADY
GREENE GWINNETT HABERSHAM HALL HANCOCK

NUMBER OF MILES FROM SCHOOL

Total Under 2 2 2.9 3-3.9 4-4.9 5-5.9 6-6.9 7-7.9 8-8.9 9-9.9 10-Over Unknown

1,560

901

391

200

29

22

12

1

1

3

1,248

945

225

47

5

22

3

1

623

363

128

46

28

21

12

10

9

2

4

2,238 1,143

565

242

76

19

4

15

112

56

1

8

7

9

2

3

171

7

22

1,248

685

321

101

20

2

1,682

845

478

280

46

32

2,165

916

657

362

134

37

11

1

635

400

130

86

16

3

19

15

4

2

117

1

47

908

521

242

111

26

8

744

436

113

97

72

22

3

1

4

1

3

596

264

218

80

31

3

4,275 3,168

540

295

94

63

18

13

25

11

48

9

9

389

149

118

74

34

11

1,683 1,108

126

18

6

21

12

13

156

66

18

19

10

5

10

1,675 1,101

265

173

75

32

20

1

2 3 5

2

264

4

3

3 111 21

1,727

664

488

332

129

30

36

25

14

558

287

153

82

25

11

3

6

88

63

10

5

323

166

81

52

16

7

1

4

6

2,932 1,344 1,072

392

74

25

3

22

TABLE IV--PERSONS SIX TO EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE ATTENDING SCHOOL: GEORGIA, 1938--Continued COLORED

COUNTY
HARALSON. HARRIS HART HEARD HENRY.
HOUSTON. IRWIN JACKSON. JASPER... JEFF DAVIS.
JEFFERSON. JENKINS JOHNSON JONES LAMAR
LANIER... LAURENS_ LEE LIBERTY. _ LINCOLN.,
LONG.... LOWNDES... LUMPKIN... MACON MADISON...

NUMBER OF MILES FROM SCHOOL

Total Under 2 2-2.9 3-3.9 4-4.9 5-5.9 6-6.9 7-7.9 8-8.9 9-9.9 10-Over Unknown

292

177

83

19

10

3

2,001 1,022

549

280

83

58

800

257

248

146

115

24

821

431

219

105

50

13

2,049

976

637

343

44

7

1,857 1,090

412

241

78

979

405

190

165

115

782

479

128

148

20

1,196

653

234

105

46

389

232

93

39

16

16

45

29

18

7

51

~~7

"*6

9

2,971 1,523

691

451

221

49

21

1,713

838

358

273

137

39

21

30

17

1,637

678

606

231

65

25

20

11

1

1,587

810

473

186

79

30

9

879

423

257

169

23

3

438

220

67

29

24

24

17

3,230 1,776

888

469

70

12

12

1,210

648

327

155

65

8

6

1,483

696

324

188

41

24

12

1,063

482

369

154

40

8

406

168

103

119

2,119

869

630

389

144

31

53

44

2

7

2,648 1,376

701

315

49

T6

592

254

173

113

48

2 33 20
94
6
55 "l" 190 3
43 196

TABLE IV--PERSONS SIX TO EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE ATTENDING SCHOOL: GEORGIA, 1938--Continued COLORED

COUNTY
MARION McDUFFIE McINTOSH MERIWETHER___. MILLER
MITCHELL. MONROE MONTGOMERY oo MORGAN M MURRAY.__.
MUSOOGEE NEWTON OCONEE_.__ OGLETHORPE PAULDING
PEACH.. PICKENS PIERCE PIKE... POLK...
PULASKI PUTNAM QUITMAN RABUN RANDOLPH

NUMBER OF MILES FROM SCHOOL

Total Under 2 2-2.9 3-3.9 4-4.9 6-5.9 6-6.9 7-7.9 8-8.9 9-9.9 10-Over Unknown

951

405

327

126

55

22

9

7

1,082

595

239

134

70

42

2

891

623

205

38

8

3

3

4

1

1

5

3,315 1,687 1,018

442

102

49

11

2

1

3

832

284

70

131

104

71

70

24

1

2

75

2,993 1,541

896

360

101

29

22

5

1,730

885

452

296

89

8

957

485

232

58

14

4

3

1,524

780

365

210

58

28

61

16

4

123

64

39

16

4

39
161 2

1,755 1,190

347

171

27

17

1,149

541

306

189

42

12

1

598

243

171

114

32

38

1,572

763

503

225

67

6

7

354

201

52

71

4

26

3

6

52

1

1,263

755

290

160

55

3

110

108

2

600

406

127

43

5

15

4

1,377

871

303

112

87

3

1

936

511

230

108

42

18

6

16

5

1,123

583

352

144

21

4

3

1,122

468

364

203

60

19

8

688

342

217

76

38

11

4

11

2

3,186 2,226

440

345

106

51

6

2

16

g

5

5

-

TABLE IV--PERSONS SIX TO EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGI1 ATTENDING SCHOOL: GEORGIA, 1938--Continued COLORE D

COUNTY
RICHMOND ROCKDALE SCHLEY SCREVEN SEMINOLE
SPALDING STEPHENS STEWART oo SUMTER M TALBOT
TALIAFERRO TATTNALL TAYLOR TELFAIR TERRELL
THOMAS TIFT TOOMBS TOWNS TREUTLEN
TROXJP TURNER TWIGGS UNION UP SON..

NUMBER OF MILES FROM SCHOOL

Total Under 2 2-2.9 3-3.9 4-4.9 5-5.9 6-6.9 7-7.9 8-8.9 9-9.9 10-Over Unknown

6,265 5,386

407

255

85

62

7

4

1

5

53

604

325

190

54

32

3

880

642

135

82

21

3,244 1,652

829

353

76

64

18

4

1

1

16

230

889

455

256

113

41

9

7

5

2

1

1,198

721

249

149

56

5

2

1

15

232

131

70

18

7

6

2,213 1,314

487

270

109

30

2

1

2,527 1,233

664

321

96

13

7

193

1,411

640

290

227

130

73

18

9

16

6

2

1,057

474

326

176

31

35

9

5

1

870

423

288

118

36

5

1,570

867

522

118

40

20

2

1

1,121

761

230

95

26

6

3

2,993 1,110 1,003

726

137

8

9

2,311

901

522

298

117

44

12

31

10

18

1

357

1,058

653

144

85

112

7

57

739

384

216

102

21

1

15

521

227

170

89

32

3

1,986

906

503

329

119

51

49

16

10

3

818

289

148

140

123

21

39

4

4

50

1,641

714

403

301

136

21

5

9

5

47

1,548 1,312

200

35

1

TABLE IV--PERSONS SIX TO EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE ATTENDING SCHOOL: GEORGIA, 1938--Continued COLORED

COUNTY
WALKER WALTON WARE oo WARREN " WASHINGTON
WAYNE WEBSTER WHEELER WHITE WHITEIELD
WILCOX WILKES WILKINSON WORTH

NUMBER OF MILES FROM SCHOOL

Total Under 2 2-2.9 3-3.9 4-4.9 5-5.9 6-6.9 7-7.9 8-8.9 9-9.9 10-Over Unknown

499

329

66

80

22

1

1

1,292

538

398

264

55

35

2

506

361

42

34

34

6

20

1

8

1,962

874

520

435

75

55

2

1

3,274 1,517

980

532

168

31

17

3

2

5

19

751

536

68

32

13

25

35

18

24

808

430

190

106

48

19

15

825

466

197

64

29

16

53

116

87

8

12

9

60

25

11

3

5

1

15

1,218

631

213

132

87

36

25

32

26

10

1

25

1,999

980

645

285

76

8

4

1

1,380

712

212

250

102

15

38

19

14

3

5

10

2,254 1,262

631

273

58

25

4

1

STATE OF GEORGIA SCHOOL CENSUS--1938

STATE SUMMARY

TABLE V

RATIO OF TEACHERS TO
PERSONS SIX TO EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE

White Colored
Total___.

Number of
Teachers

15,782 6,520

...

22,302

Number of
Persons
512,934 296,223
809,157

Persons Per
Teacher 32.50 45.43 36.28

85

1

TABLE V-RATIO OF TEACHERS TO TOTAL PERSONS SIX TO EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE: GEORGIA, 1938 BY SCHOOL SYSTEMS AND BY RACE

'
SCHOOL SYSTEM
STATE TOTAL ....
APPLING Baxley
ATKINSON.... g BACON.._
BAKER
BALDWIN BANKS... BARROW
Winder
BARTOW Cartersville...
BEN HILL Fitzgerald
BERRIEN BIBB
BLECKLEY Cochran
BRANTLEY BROOKS
Quitman.. BRYAN..

ALL PERSONS

WHITE

Number of
Teachers

Number of
Persons

Persons Per
Teacher

Number of
Teachers

Number of
Persons

22,302

809,157

36.28

15,782

512,934

134 22 71 71 77
129 97 * 68 30
138 38 59 48 135 382
68 19 87 155 33 64

3,934 870
2,128 2,549 2,143
4,686 2,815 2,649
734
5,632 1,298 2,172 1,715 4,610 18,428
2,527 568
1,891 4,682 1,025 1,794

29.36 39.55 29.97 35.90 27.83
36.33 29.02 38.96 24.47
40.81 34.16 36.81 35.73 34.15 48.24
37.16 29.89 21.74 30.21 31.06 28.03

105

3,144

18

517

54

1,632

60

2,162

45

903

73

1,673

88

2,581

53

2,135

26

594

118

4,809

29

910

41

1,382

38

1,071

115

3,990

256

9,964

51

1,607

15

341

76

1,697

82

2,237

21

489

45

1,072

COLORED

Persons Per
Teacher

Number of
Teachers

Number of
Persons

Persons Per
Teacher

32.50

6,520

296,223

45.43

29.94 28.72 30.22 36.03 20.07
22.92 29.33 40.28 22.85
40.75 31.38 33.71 28.18 34.70 38.92
31.51 22.73 22.33 27.28 23.29 23.82

29

790

27.24

4

353

88.25

17

496

29.18

11

387

35.18

32

1,240

38.75

56

3,013

53.80

9

234

26.00

15

514

34.27

4

140

35.00

20

823

41.15

9

388

43.11

18

790

43.89

10

644

64.40

20

620

31.00

126

8,464

67.17

17

920

54.12

4

227

56.75

11

194

17.64

73

2,445

33.49

12

536

44.67

19

722

38.00

SCHOOL SYSTEM
BULLOCH Statesboro
BURKE BXJTTS
Jackson. .
CALHOTJN CAMDEN CANDLER oo CARROLL "^ Carrollton _
CATOOSA CHARLTON.CHATHAM CHATTAHOOCHEE
CHATTOOGA Trion __
CHEROKEE Canton
CLARKE Athens .
CLAY CLAYTON CLINCH

TABLE V--RATIO OF TEACHERS: GEORGIA, 1938--Continued

ALL PERSONS

WHITE

COLORED

Number of
Teachers

Number of
Persons

Persons Per
Teacher

Number of
Teachers

Number of
Persons

Persons Per
Teacher

Number of
Teachers

Number of
Persons

Persons Per
Teacher

191

6,591

35

1,036

198

7,636

48

2,084

20

442

99

3,433

65

1,563

84

2,826

211

7,762

33

1,275

63

2,462

54

1,486

453

31,198

51

1,411

101

4,112

29

1,067

141

4,025

30

1,620

66

1,991

119

3,976

67

2,203

82

2,997

68

1,959

34.51 29.60 38.57 43.42 22.10
34.68 24.05 33.64 36.79 38.64
39.08 27.52 68.87 27.67
40.71 36.79 28.55 54.00
30.17 33.41 33.88 36.55 28.81

134

4,087

24

655

83

1,781

32

1,018

15

197

43

871

33

664

63

1,883

169

5,973

26

938

60

2,383

43

1,119

287

16,581

34

858

87

3,578

28

1,029

137

3,909

28

1,495

43

1,205

87

2,406

23

547

61

2,155

45

1,297

30.50 27.29 21.46 31.81 13.13
20.26 20.12 29.89 35.34 36.08
39.72 26.02 57.77 25.24
41.13 36.75 28.53 53.39
28.02 27.66 23.78 35.33 28.82

57

2,504

11

381

115

5,855

16

1,066

5

245

56

2,562

32

899

21

943

42

1,789

7

337

3

79

11

367

166

14,617

17

553

14

534

1

38

4

116

2

125

23

786

32

1,570

44

1,656

21

842

23

662

43.93 34.64 50.91 66.63 49.00
45.75 28.09 44.90 42.60 48.14
26.33 33.36 88.05 32.53
38.14 38.00 29.00 62.50
34.17 49.06 37.64 40.10 28.78

SCHOOL SYSTEM
COBB Marietta
COFFEE Douglas
COLQUITT. Doerun
oo Moultrie... 00 COLUMBIA.
COOK
COWETA.... Newnan... Senoia
CRAWFORD
CRISP Cordele
DADE.. DAWSON.... DECATUR..
Bainbridge
DeKALB Decatur
DODGE Eastman...

TABLE V--RATIO OF TEACHERS: GEORGIA, 1938--Continued

ALL PERSONS

WHITE

COLORED

Number of
Teachers

Number of
Persons

Persons Per
Teacher

Number of
Teachers

Number of
Persons

Persons Per
Teacher

Number of
Teachers

Number of
Persons

Persons Per
Teacher

199

7,789

39.14

55

1,733

31.51

133

5,137

38.62

33

1,324

40.12

159

7,835

49.28

21

219

10.43

72

2,128

29.56

89

2,911

32.71

94

3,043

32.37

149

5,001

33.56

50

1,472

29.44

10

181

18.10

55

2,328

42.33

70

2,838

40.54

49

1,919

39.16

39

1,579

40.49

42

1,196

28.48

174

5,521

31.73

39

1,572

40.31

259

9,662

37.31

81

3,088

38.12

172

5,509

32.03

20

653

32.65

174

6,655

38.25

39

1,169

29.97

106

4,000

37.74

26

859

33.04

133

6,161

46.32

17

139

8.17

54

1,403

25.98

49

1,111

22.67

75

2,253

30.04

85

2,783

32.74

35

859

24.54

8

91

11.38

30

1,019

33.97

49

1,601

32.67

34

862

25.35

38

1,506

39.63

42

1,196

28.48

103

2,893

28.09

24

823

34.29

222

7,679

34.59

67

2,346

35.01

117

3,584

30.63

16

375

23.44

25

1,134

45.36

16

564

35.25

27

1,137

42.11

7

465

66.43

26

1,674

64.38

4

80

20.00

18

725

40.28

40

1,800

45.00

19

790

41.58

64

2,218

34.66

15

613

40.87

2

90

45.00

25

1,309

52.36

21

1,237

58.90

15

1,057

70.47

1

73

73.00

71

2,628

37.01

15

749

49.93

37

1,983

53.59

14

742

53.00

55

1,925

35.00

4

278

69.50

TABLE V--RATIO OF TEACHERS: GEORGIA, 1938--Continued

ALL PERSONS

WHITE

SCHOOL SYSTEM

Number of
Teachers

Number of
Persons

Persons Per
Teacher

Number of
Teachers

Number of
Persons

DOOLY Vienna
DOUGHERTY Albany
DOUGLAS
EARLY.. ECHOLS____ m EFFINGHAM.. ELBERT
Elberton..
EMANUEL. EVANS FANNIN_._
FAYETTE
FLOYD__ Rome
FORSYTH FRANKLIN
FULTON Atlanta _.
GILMER GLASOOCK... GLYNN

__ _
-. _.

127 25 45 109 80
156 28 . 91 129 42
228 61 116 8 84
192 123 98 140
645 1,437
81 48 115

3,228 483
2,190 3,540 3,027
5,403 738
3,379 4,171 1,279
6,855 2,114 3,878
461 2,918
7,600 5,902 3,146 4,771
26,844 54,693 2,613
1,462 4,818

25.42 19.32 48.67 32.48 37.84
34.63 26.36 37.13 32.33 30.45
30.07 34.66 33.43 57.63 34.74
39.58 47.98 32.10 34.08
41.62 38.06 32.26 30.46 41.90

73 15 5 72 65
94 22 60 83 30
153 42 115
8 59
170 97 98 122
553 1,160
80 38 73

1,455 238 831
1,651 2,272
2,644 547
1,817 2,338
764
4,477 1,374 3,855
461 1,839
6,706 4,569 3,136 4,011
21,686 36,539 2,604
1,020 2,883

COLORED

Persons Per
Teacher

Number of
Teachers

Number of
Persons

Persons Per
Teacher

19.93 15.87 166.20 22.93 34.95
28.13 24.86 30.28 28.17 25.47
29.26 32.71 33.52 57.63 31.17
39.45 47.10 32.00 32.88
39.22 31.50 32.55 26.84 39.49

54

1,773

10

245

40

1,359

37

1,889

15

755

62

2,759

6

191

31

1,562

46

1,833

12

515

75

2,378

19

740

1

23

25

1,079

22

894

26

1,333

10

18

760

92

5,158

277

18,154

1

9

10

442

42

1,935

32.83 24.50 33.97 51.05 50.33
44.50 31.83 50.39 39.85 42.92
31.71 38.95 23.00
43.16
40.64 51.27
42.22
56.07 65.54
9.00 44.20 46.07

SCHOOL SYSTEM
GORDON_ Calhoun ...
GRADY.. GREENE
Greensboro.
GWINNETT Buford Lawrenceville
HABERSHAM
HALL Gainesville.. _ Lula
HANCOCK... HARALSON...
Tallapoosa ._ _ ...
HARRIS HART
Hartwell . HEARD HENRY
HOUSTON IRWIN
Ocilla

TABLE V--RATIO OF TEACHERS: GEORGIA, 1938-Continued

ALL PERSONS

WHITE

Number of
Teachers

Number of
Persons

Persons Per
Teacher

Number of
Teachers

Number of
Persons

120

4,382

36.52

22

711

32.32

162

5,493

33.91

97

3,093

31.89

20

520

26.00

187

6,626

35.43

26

961

36.96

17

532

31.29

140

4,270

30.50

154

7,217

46.86

51

2,441

47.86

11

247

22.45

115

4,125

35.87

99

3,588

36.24

21

629

29.95

107

3,567

33.34

115

3,884

33.77

27

598

22.15

94

3,020

32.13

115

4,609

40.08

94

3,104

33.02

89

3,254

36.56

27

560

20.74

115

4,189

18

592

114

3,614

47

1,286

15

288

171

5,984

21

707

15

416

134

4,093

146

6,799

40

1,748

10

207

36

910

88

3,244

19

552

57

1,255

91

2,992

19

389

71

2,102

66

2,157

40

1,041

61

2,162

19

226

COLORED

Persons Per
Teacher

Number of
Teachers

Number of
Persons

Persons Per
Teacher

36.43 32.89 31.70 27.36 19.20
34.99 33.67 27.73 30.54
46.57 43.70 30.70 25.26 36.85 29.05
22.02 32.88 22.47 29.61 32.68
26.03 35.44 11.89

5

193

38.60

4

119

29.75

48

1,879

39.15

5J

1,807

36.14

5

232

46.40

16

642

40.13

5

254

50.80

2

116

58.00

6

177

29.50

8

418

52.25

11

693

63.00

1

40

40.00

79

3,215

40.70

11

344

31.27

2

77

38.50

50

2,312

46.24

24

892

37.17

8

209

26.13

23

918

39.91

49

2,452

50.04

54

2,063

38.20

28

1,092

39.00

8

334

41.75

SCHOOL SYSTEM

JACKSON Commerce
JASPER JEFF DAVI3.
Hazlehurst .

JEFFERSON - JENKINS <- JOHNSON
JONES

LAMAR



Barnesville

LANIER

LAURENS

Dublin

LEE LIBERTY LINCOLN LONG

_ ..

LOWNDES Valdosta
LUMPKIN MACON MADISON

TABLE V--RATIO OF TEACHERS: GEORGIA, 1938--Continued

ALL PERSONS

WHITE

Number of
Teachers

Number of
Persons

Persons Per
Teacher

Number of
Teachers

Number of
Persons

125

4,861

38.89

29

738

25.45

78

2,431

31.17

5

2,460

45.56

18

408

22.67

163

5,605

34.39

102

3,545

34.75

135

4,378

32.43

87

2,653

30.49

50

1,978

39.56

33

792

24.00

48

1,506

31.38

266

7,952

29.90

52

1,534

29.50

65

2,154

33.14

80

2,390

29.88

65

2,114

32.52

45

1,205

26.78

141

4,861

34.48

91

3,239

35.59

45

1,721

38.24

108

4,168

38.59

122

4,086

33.49

102

3,941

25

568

3

919

46

2,018

16

307

88

2,264

50

1,567

85

2,632

36

856

31

935

27

457

37

1,030

165

4,621

38

929

23

474

39

782

4)

968

32

767

77

2,544

62

1,730

43

1,658

50

1,223

101

3,316

COLORED

Persons Per
Teacher

Number of
Teachers

Number of
Persons

Persons Per
Teacher

?8.64 22.72 27.85 43.87 19.19
25.73 31.34 30.96 23.78
30.16 16.93 27.84 28.01 24.45
fO.61 20.05 24.20 23.97
33.04 27.90 38.56 24.46 33.13

21

920

40.00

4

170

42.50

45

1,512

33.60

8

442

55.25

2

101

50.50

75

3,341

44.55

52

1,978

38.04

50

1,746

34.92

51

1,797

35.24

, 19

1,043

54.89

6

335

55.83

11

476

43.27

101

3,331

32.98

14

605

43.21

42

1,680

40.00

41

1,608

39.22

25

1,146

45.84

13

438

33.69

64

2,317

36.20

29

1,509

52.03

2

63

31.50

58

2,945

50.78

21

740

35.24

SCHOOL SYSTEM
MARION Buena Vista
McDUFFIE McINTOSH MERIWETHER.
MILLER MITCHELL to Pelham M MONROE
MONTGOMERY.
MORGAN..... Madison
MURRAY MUSCOGEE.
Columbus.
NEWTON. __ Covington
OCONEE OGLETHORPE. PAULDING
PEACH.... PICKENS.
Nelson... PIERCE. __

TABLE V RATIO OF TEACHERS: GEORGIA, 1938--Continued

ALL PERSONS

WHITE

Number of
Teachers

Number of
Persons

Persons Per
Teacher

Number of
Teachers

Number of
Persons

44

1,728

16

181

75

2,600

57

1,532

173

6,553

80

2,929

143

5,954

27

672

98

3,073

82

2,583

73

3,158

24

550

86

3,128

102

4,909

252

11,198

101

3,933

24

793

64

2,128

106

3,708

105

3,687

85

2,497

89

2,501

11

164

110

3,977

39.27 11.31 34.67 26.88 37.88
36.61 41.64 24.89 31.36 31.50
43.26 22.92 36.37 48.13 44.44
38.94 33.04 33.5 34.98 35.11
29.38 23.10 14.91 36.15

18

676

12

75

44

1,281

24

533

90

2,878

57

2,010

79

2,634

19

412

51

1,110

55

1,526

35

1,446

18

233

81

2,990

68

2,781

190

7,426

72

2,511

15

498

48

1,459

61

1,949

94

3,315

36

875

82

2,384

10

142

84

3,081

COLORED

Persons Per
Teacher

Number
of Teachers

Number
of Persons

Persons Per
Teacher

37.56 6.25
29.11 22.21 31.98
35.26 33.34 21.68 21.76 27.75
41.31 12.94 36.91 40.90 39.08
34.88 33.20 30.40 31.95 35.27
24.31 29.07 14.20 36.68

26

1,052

40.46

4

103

26.50

31

1,319

42.55

33

999

30.27

83

3,675

44.28

23

919

39.96

64

3,320

51.88

8

260

32.50

47

1,963

41.77

27

1,057

39.15

38

1,712

45.05

6

317

52.83

5

138

27.60

34

2,128

62.59

62

3,772

60.84

29

1,422

49.03

9

295

32.78

16

669

41.81

45

1,759

39.09

11

372

33.84

49

1,622

33.10

7

117

16.71

1

22

22.00

26

896

34.46

SCHOOL SYSTEM
PIKE POLK
Cedartown__ PULASKI
Hawkinsville
PUTNAM Eatonton
" QUITMAN RABTJN RANDOLPH. _.
RICHMOND. _. ROCKDALE__ SCHLEY SCREVEN SEMINOLE
SPALDING-.-Griffin
STEPHENS___. Martin Toccoa
STEWART SUMTER
Americus__-

TABLE V--RATIO OF TEACHERS: GEORGIA, 1938--Continued

ALL PERSONS

WHITE

COLORED

Number of
Teachers

Number of
Persons

Persons Per
Teacher

Number of
Teachers

Number of
Persons

Persons Per
Teacher

Number of
Teachers

Number of
Persons

Persons Per
Teacher

81

3,093

144

5,752

54

2,159

58

2,050

20

623

52

1,912

25

503

31

1,108

85

2,149

139

4,876

445

17,612

57

2,154

51

1,550

162

5,920

72

2,131

96

4,254

70

2,594

73

2,161

3

110

37

1,031

103

3,238

132

4,371

52

1,947

38.19 39.94 39.98 35.34 31.15
36.77 23.32 35.74 25.28 35.08
39.58 37.79 30.39 36.54 29.60
44.31 37.03 29.60 36.67 27.66
31.44 25.54 37.44

50

1,458

115

4,663

45

1,734

24

769

13

372

21

651

15

242

13

322

84

2,131

55

1,276

316

10,458

42

1,396

23

563

88

2,449

43

1,200

70

2,840

52

656

65

,924

2

63

30

830

29

726

66

,319

29

818

29.16 40.55 38.53 32.04 28.62
31.00 16.13 24.77 25.37 23.20
33.09 33.24 24.48 27.83 27.91
40.57 31.85 29.60 31.50 27.67
25.03 19.98 28.21

31

1,635

52.74

29

1,089

37.35

9

425

47.22

34

1,281

37.68

7

251

35.86

31

1,261

40.68

10

266

26.60

18

786

43.67

1

18

18.00

84

3,600

42.86

129

7,154

55.45

15

758

50.53

28

987

35.25

74

3,471

46.91

29

931

32.10

26

1,414

54.38

18

938

52.11

8

237

29.63

1

47

47.00

7

201

28.71

74

2,512

33.95

66

3,052

46.24

23

1,129

49.09

SCHOOL SYSTEM
TALBOT TALIAFERRO... TATTNALL. TAYLOR TELFAIR
TERRELL to Dawson _ >* THOMAS
Thomasville TIFT
Tifton
TOOMBS Vldalia
TOWNS TREUTLEN
TROUP Hogansville LaGrange West Point
TURNER Ashburn..
TWIGGS UNION

TABLE V--RATIO OF TEACHERS: GEORGIA, 1938--Continued

ALL PERSONS

WHITE

COLORED

Number of
Teachers

Number of
Persons

Persons Per
Teacher

Number of
Teachers

Number of
Persons

Persons Per
Teacher

Number of
Teachers

Number
of Persons

Persons Per
Teacher

66

2,310

35.00

53

1,665

31.43

138

4,281

31.02

101

3,237

32.05

142

4,394

30.94

103

4,139

40.18

22

845

38.41

171

5,575

32.6 0

77

2,542

33.01

81

3,820

47.16

53

1,025

19.34

114

3,614

31.70

41

1,006

24.34

45

1,418

31.51

71

2,070

29.15

106

4,448

41.96

30

960

32.00

130

5,069 38.99

20

757

37.85

79

2,638

33.39

18

563

31.28

67

2,750

41.04

63

2,215

35.16

32

598

18.69

21

496

23.62

113

3,335

29.51

60

1,551

25.85

98

3,095

31.58

45

839

18.64

14

330

23.57

100

2,886

28.86

53

1,342

25.32

(6

2,635

39.92

40

810

20.25

88

2,785

31.65

28

606

21.64

45

1,418

31.41

52

1,478

28.42

60

2,043

34.05

25

703

28.12

98

3,555

36.28

12

330

27.50

57

1,686

29.58

14

341

24.36

30

898

29.93

63

2,214

35.14

3

1,712

50.35

32

1,170

36.56

25

946

37.84

41

1,686

41.12

44

1,299

29.52

58

3,300

56.90

8

515

64.38

71

2,689

37.87

24

1,200

50.00

15

1,185

79.00

13

215

16.54

26

829

31.88

13

400

30.77

19

592

31.16

46

2,405

52.28

5

257

51.40

E2

1,514

47.31

8

427

53.38

22

952

43.27

4

222

55.50

37

1,852

50.05

1

TABLE V RATIO OF TEACHERS: GEORGIA, 1938--Continued

ALL PERSONS

WHITE

COLORED

SCHOOL SYSTEM

Number
of Teachers

Number of
Persons

Persons Per
Teacher

Number of
Teachers

Number of
Persons

Persons Per
Teacher

Number of
Teachers

Number of
Persons

Persons Per
Teacher

TJPSON Thomaston
WALKER

WALTON

Social Circle

^ WARE

--.-

WARREN WASHINGTON
WAYNE

WEBSTER

WHEELER

WHITE

.--.

WHITFIELD

WILCOX WILKES
Washington WILKINSON
WORTH

80

95

172

18

---

121

37

16

107 108 80 181 119

51 86 62 106 57

145

98

---

28

96

162

3,319 3,307 7,176
440 4,380 1,025
432
3,411 4,051 3,0S6 6,857 4,301
1,484 2,773 2,034 4,342 2,395
3,721 3,471
763 3,054 6,188

41.49 34.81 41.72 24.44 36.20 27.70 27.00
31.88 37.51 38.58 37.88 36.14
29.10 32.24 32.81 40.96 42.02
25.66 35.42 27.25 31.81 38.20

49

1,706

34.82

81

2,410

29.75

156

6,605

42.34

18

440

24.44

89

2,906

32.65

31

722

23.29

12

278

23.17

89

2,833

31.83

73

2,498

34.22

40

929

23.23

88

2,724

30.95

97

3,367

34.71

27

510

18.89

63

1,873

29.73

59

1,907

32.32

103

4,274

41.50

50

2,098

41.96

103

2,295

22.28

47

1,158

24.64

17

329

19.35

53

1,481

27.94

107

3,420

31.96

31

1,613

52.03

14

897

64.07

16

571

35.69

32

1,474

46.06

6

303

50.50

4

154

38.50

18

578

32.11

35

1,553

44.37

40

2,157

53.93

93

4,133

44.44

22

934

42.45

24

974

40.58

23

900

39.13

3

127

42.33

3

68

22.67

7

297

42.43

42

1,426

33.95

51

2,313

45.35

11

434

39.45

43

1,573

36.58

55

2,768

50.33

STATE OF GEORGIA SCHOOL CENSUS--1938

White Colored
Total--

STATE SUMMARY
TABLE VI
PERSONS SIX TO EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE BY DENSITY OF POPULATION

Area in Sq. Miles

Number of Persons

Persons Per Sq. Miles

58,725 58,725

512,934 296,223

8.735 5.044

--

58,725

809,157

13.779

97

COUNTY

STATE TOTAL

APPLING... ATKINSON BACON co BAKER 00 BALDWIN

BANKS BARROW BARTOW BEN HILL BERRIEN

BIBB
BLECKLEY BRANTLEY BROOKS BRYAN

BULLOCH

BURKE.__

BUTTS

.

CALHOUN

CAMDEN___

TABLE VI--PERSONS SIX TO EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE: GEORGIA, 1938 BY DENSITY OF POPULATION

Area in
Square Miles
58,725
454 330 271 357 307
222 168 471 256 455
277 205 434 514 431
668 956 203 284 711

ALL PERSONS

Number of
Persons

Persons Per
Sq. Mile

809,157

13.78

4,804 2,128 2,549 2,143 4,686
2,815 3,383 6,930 3,887 4,610
18,428 3,095 1,891 5,707 1,794
7,627 7,636 2,526 3,433 1,563

10.58 6.45 9.41 6.00 15.26
12.68 20.14 14.71 15.18 10.13
66.53 15.10 4.36 11.10 4.16
11.42 7.99 12.44 12.09 2.20

WHITE

Number of
Persons

Persons Per
Sq. Mile

512,934

8.74

3,661 1,632 2,162
903 1,673
2,581 2,729 5,719 2,453 3,990
9,964 1,948 1,697 2,726 1,072
4,742 1,781 1,215
871 664

8.06 4.95 7.98 2.53 5.45
11.63 16.24 12.14 9.58 8.77
35.97 9.50 3.91 5.30 2.49
7.10 1.86 5.99 3.07
.93

COLORED

Number of
Persons

Persons Per
Sq. Mile

296,223

5.04

1,143 496 387
1,240 3,013
234 654 1,211 1,434 620
8,464 1,147
194 2,981
722
2,885 5,855 1,311 2,562
899

2.52 1.50 1.43 3.47 9.81
1.05 3.89 2.57 5.60 1.36
30.56 5.60
.45 5.80 1.68
4.32 6.12 6.46 9.02 1.26

COUNTY
CANDLER CARROLL CATOOSA CHARLTON CHATHAM
CHATTAHOOCHEE CHATTOOGA CHEROKEE CLARKE g CLAY
CLAYTON CLINCH COBB COFFEE COLQUITT
COLUMBIA COOK COWETA CRAWFORD CRISP.
DADE DAWSON___ DECATUR DeKALB DODGE

TABLE VI--DENSITY OF POPULATION: GEORGIA, 1938--Continued

Area in
Square Miles
228 492 169 792 370
218 328 429 114 203
142 747 353 632 529
350 241 443 319 277
186 216 583 272 431

ALL PERSONS

Number of
Persons

Persons Per
Sq. Mile

2,826 9,037 2,462 1,486 31,198
1,411 5,179 5,645 5,967 2,203
2,997 1,959 9,522 6,461 10,182
2,911 3,043 6,654 2,328 4,757
1,579 1 196 7,093 12,750 6,162

12.39 18.37 14.57 1.88 84.32
6.47 15.79 13.16 52.34 10.85
21.11 2.62 26.97 10.22 19.25
8.32 12.63 15.02 7.30 17.17
8.49 5 54 12.17 46.88 14.30

WHITE

Number
of Persons

Persons Per
Sq. Mile

1,883 6,911 2,383 1,119 16,581
858 4,607 5,404 3,611
547
2,155 1,297 7,824 4,859 7,703
1,111 2,253 3,733 1,019 2,463
1,506 1,196 3,716 10,025 3,959

8.26 14.05 14.10 1.41 44.81
3.94 14.05 12.60 31.68 2.69
15.18 1.74 22.16 7.69 14.56
3.17 9.35 8.43 3.19 8.89
8.10 5.54 6.37 36.86 9.19

COLORED

Number of
Persons

Persons Per
Sq. Mile

943 2,126
79 367 14,617
553 572 241 2,356 1,656
842 662 1,698 1,602 2,479
1,800 790
2,921 1,309 2,294
73
3,377 2,725 2,203

4.14 4.32
.47 .46 39.51
2.54 1.74
.56 20.67
8.16
5.93 .89
4.81 2.53 4.69
5.14 3.28 6.59 4.10 8.28
.39
5.79 10.02 5.11

COUNTY
DOOLY DOUGHERTY DOUGLAS. _ __ EARLY__. ECHOLS
EFFINGHAM_ ELBERT EMANUEL I EVANS ' FANNIN
FAYETTE FLOYD FORSYTH FRANKLIN.... FULTON
GILMER GLASCOCK... GLYNN.. GORDON GRADY
GREENE GWINNETT_._. HABERSHAM. HALL HANCOCK

TABLE VL-DENSITY OF POPULATION: GEORGIA, 1938-Continued

Area in
Square Miles
397 342 208 524 362
448 361 764 287 401
234 502 247 279 541
440 170 439 375 444
416 440 290 437 530

ALL PERSONS

Number of
Persons

Persons Per
Sq. Mile

3,711 5,730 3,027 5,403
738
3,379 5,450 6,855 2,114 4,339
2,918 13,502 3,146 4,771 81,537
2,613 1,462 4,818 5,093 5,493
3,613 8,119 4,270 9,905 4,125

9.35 16.75 14.55 10.31 2.04
7.54 15.10 8.97 7.37 10.82
12.47 26.90 12.74 17.10 150.72
5.94 8.60 10.97 13.58 12.37
18.45 14.72 22.67 7.78

WHITE

Number of
Persons

Persons Per
Sq. Mile

1,693 2,482 2,272 2,644
547
1,817 3,102 4,477 1,374 4,316
1,839 11,275 3,136 4,011 58,225
2,604 1,020 2,883 4,781 3,614
1,574 7,107 4,093 8,754
910

4.26 7.26 10.92 5.05 1.51
4.06 8.59 5.86 4.79 10.76
7.86 22.46 12.70 14.38 107.62
5.92 6.00 6.57 12.75 8.14
3.78 16.15 14.11 20.03 1.72

COLORED

Number of
Persons

Persons Per
Sq. Mile

2,018 3,248
755 2,759
191
1,562 2,348 2,378
740 23
1,079 2,227
10 760 23,312
9 442 1,935 312 1,879
2,039 1,012
177 1,151 3,215

5.08 9.50 3.63 5.27
.53
3.49 6.50 3.11 2.58
.06
4.61 4.44
.04 2.72 43.09
02 60 41 83 23
4.90 '2.30
.61 2.63 6.07

COUNTY

HARALSON.. HARRIS HART HEARD HENRY

HOUSTON

IRWIN

JACKSON-

3>

~ 2

JASPER JEFF DAVIS

JEFFERSON
JENKINS___JOHNSON JONES LAMAR

LANIER LAURENS LEE _,, LIBERTY LINCOLN

LONG...LOWNDES LUMPKIN MACON MADISON

TABLE VI--DENSITY OF POPULATION: GEORGIA, 1938 Continued

Area in
Square Miles

...

284

501

261

285

324

443 378 355 321 300

646

342

-.

292

377

184

191 806 326 543 291

393 483 280 332 284

ALL PERSONS

Number of
Persons

Persons Per
Sq. Mile

4,217 3,567 4,482 3,020 4,609
3,104 3,814 5,599 2,431 2,868
5,605 3,545 4,378 2,653 2,770
1,506 9,486 2,154 2,390 2,114
1,205 8,100 1,721 4,168 4,086

14.85 7.12 17.17 10.60 14.23
7.01 10.09 15.77 7.57 9.56
8.68 10.37 14.99 7.04 15.05
7.88 11.77 6.61 4.40 7.26
3.07 16.77 6.15 12.55 14.39

WHITE

Number of
Persons

Persons Per
Sq. Mile

3,796 1,255 3,381 2,102 2,157
1,041 2,388 4,509
919 2,325
2,264 1,567 2,632
856 1,392
1,030 5,550
474 782 968
767 4,274 1,658 1,223 3,346

13.37 2.50 12.95 7.38 6.66
2.35 6.32 12.70 2.86 7.75
3.50 4.58 9.01 2.27 7.57
5.39 6.89 1.45 1.44 3.33
1.95 8.85 5.92 3.68 11.78

COLORED

Number of
Persons

Persons Per
Sq. Mile

421 2,312 1,101
918 2,452
2,063 1,426 1,090 1,512
543
3,341 1,978 1,746 1,797 1,378
476 3,936 1,680 1,608 1,146
438 3,826
63 2,945
740

1.48 4.61 4.22 3.22 7.57
4.66 3.77 3.07 4.71 1.81
5.17 5.78 5.98 4.77 7.49
2.49 4.88 5.15 2.96 3.94
1.11 7.92
.23 8.87 2.61

COUNTY
MARION McDUFFIE McINTOSH MERTWETHER. MILLER
MITCHELL MONROE MONTGOMERY MORGAN MURRAY....
MUSCOGEE NEWTON OCONEE OGLETHORPE. PAULDING
PEACH__ PICKENS PIERCE PIKE POLK
PULASKI PUTNAM QUITMAN__ RABUN RANDOLPH

TABLE VI--DENSITY OF POPULATION: GEORGIA, 1938--Continued

Area in
Square Miles
360 287 470 496 253
548 470 190 390 342
235 262 172 504 324
179 231 345 237 317
258 361 144 377 412

ALL PERSONS

Number of
Persons

Persons Per
Sq. Mile

1,909 2,600 1,532 6,553 2,929
6,626 3,073 2,583 3,708 3,128
16,107 4,726 2,128 3,708 3,687
2,497 2,665 3,977 3,093 7,911
2,673 2,420 1,108 2,149 4,876

5.30 9.06 3.26 13.21 11.58
12.09 6.54 13.59 9.51 9.15
68.54 18.04 12.37 7.36 11.38
13.95 11.54 11.53 13.05 24.96
10.36 6.70 7.69 5.70 11.83

WHITE

Number of
Persons

Persons Per
Sq. Mile

751 1,281
533 2,878 2,010
3,046 1,110 1,526 1,679 2,990
10,207 3,009 1,459 1,949 3,315
875 2,526 3,081 1,458 6,397
1,141 893 322
2,131 1,276

2.09 4.46 1.13 5.80 7.94
5.56 2.36 8.03 4.31 8.74
43.43 11.48 8.48 3.87 10.23
4.89 10.94 8.93 6.15 20.18
4.42 2.47 2.24 5.65 3.10

COLORED

Number of
Persons

Persons Per
Sq. Mile

1,158 1,319
999 3,675
919
3,580 1,963 1,057 2,029
138
5,900 1,717
669 1,759
372
1,622 139 896
1,635 1,514
1,532 1,527
786 18
3,600

3.22 4.60 2.13 7.41 3.63
6.53 4.18 5.56 5.20
.40
25.11 6.55 3.89 3.49 1.15
9.06 .60
2.60 6.90 4.78
5.94 4.23 5.46
.05 8.74

COUNTY
RICHMOND ROCKDALE SCHLEY SCREVEN SEMINOLE
SPALDING.. STEPHENS STEWART o SUMTER " TALBOT
TALIAFERRO TATTNALL... TAYLOR TELFAIR TERRELL
THOMAS TIFT TOOMBS TOWNS TREUTLEN
TROUP TURNER TWIGGS UNION UPSON..

TABLE VI --DENSITY OF POPULATION GEORGIA, 1938--Continued

Area in
Square Miles

319 119 154 794 240

209 166 411 456 312

212 466 340 373 322

530 243 393 181 262

435

231

314

324

-

317

ALL PERSONS

Number of
Persons

Persons Per
Sq. Mile

17,612 2,154 1,550 5,920 2,131
6,848 3,302 3,238 6,318 2,310
1,666 4,281 3,237 4,394 4,984
8,117 4,845 4,620 1,418 2,070
11,234 3,201 2,750 2,215 6,626

55.21 18.10 10.06 ' 7.46 8.88
32.77 19.89 7.88 13.86 7.40
7.86 9.19 9.52 11.78 15.48
15.32 19.94 11.76 7.83 7.90
25.83 13.86 8.76 6.84 20.90

WHITE

Number
of Persons

Persons Per
Sq. Mile

10,458 1,396 563 2,449 1,200
4,496 2,817
726 2,137
598
496 3,335 1,551 3,095 1,169
4,228 3,445 3,391 1,418 1,478
6,631 2,027
898 2,214 4,116

32.78 11.73 3.66 3.08
5.00
21.51 16.97
1.77 4.69 1.92
2.34 7.16 4.56 8.30 3.63
7.98 14.18 8.63 7.83
5.64
15.24 8.77 2.86 6.83 12.98

COLORED

Number
of Persons

Persons Per
Sq. Mile

7,154 758 987
3,471 931
2,352 485
2,512 4,181 1,712
1,170 946
1,686 1,299 3,815
3,889 1,400 1,229
592
4,603 1,174 1,852
1 2,510

22.43 6.37 6.41 4.37 3.88
11.25 2.92 6.11 9.17 5.49
5.52 2.03 4.96 3.48 11.85
7.34 5.76 3.13
2.26
10.58 5.08 5.90
7.92

^^^^^"I^""

COUNTY

WALKER S WALTON * WARE
WARREN WASHINGTON

WAYNE WEBSTER WHEELER WHITE WHITFIELD

WILCOX

WILKES

-

WILKINSON

WORTH .

TABLE VI-DENSITY OF POPULATION: GEORGIA, 1938-Continued

Area in
Square Miles
432 331 771 404 669
615 302 264 245 283
403 458 472 651

ALL PERSONS

Number of
Persons

Persons Per
Sq. Mile

7,616 5,837 7,462 3,086 6,857
4,301 1,484 2,773 2,034 6,737
3,721 4,234 3.054 6.188

17.63 17.63 9.68 7.64 10.25
6.99 4.91 10.50 8.30 23.81
9.23 9.24 6.47 9.51

WHITE

Number of
Persons

Persons Per
Sq. Mile

7,045 3,906 5,331
929 2,724
3,367 510
1,873 1,907 6,372
2,295 1,487 1,481 3,420

16.31 11.80 6.91 2.30 4.07
5.47 1.69 7.09 7.78 22.52
5.69 3.25 3.14 5.25

COLORED

Number of
Persons

Persons Per
Sq. Mile

571 1,931 2,131 2,157 4,133
934 974 900 127 365
1,426 2,747 1,573 2,768

1.32 5.83 2.76 5.34 6.18
1.52 3.23 3.41
.52 1.29
3.54 6.00 3.33 4.25

STATE OF GEORGIA SCHOOL CENSUS--1938

STATE SUMMARY
TABLE VII
ILLITERATES TEN YEARS OF AGE AND OVER BY AGE GROUPS AND RACE

Age Groups

All Illiterates

White

Colored

10-14 Years 15-18 Years

Total 10 to 18 Years. __

19-24 Years

25-29 Years 30-34 Years

Total 25 to 34 Years

35-44 Years 45-54 Years

Total 35 to 54 Years-

55-64 Years

65-74 Years

.

Total 55 to 74 Years

75 Years and Over

Age Unknown

Total All Ages

5,410 5,531
10,958 9,032
19,294 17,610
12,949 14,208

10,941 16,545
19,990
36,904
27,157 6,004 557

2,039 2,002
2,520 2,417
4,859 4,455
3,585 3,392

4,041 4,009
4,937
9,314
6,977 1,521
151

3,371 3,529
8,438 6,615
14,435 13,155
9,364 10,816

6,900 12,536
15,053
27,590
20,180 4,483 406

118,098

30,950

87,148

105

ILLITERACY--1938 WHITE

COLORED

TOTAL WHITE--30,950

TOTAL COLORED--87,148 106

COUNTY

STATE TOTAL

,_ Baxley -.

BACON

.

BAKER

BARROW

"RFN" HTTX BIBB

TABLE VII--ILLITERATES TEN YEARS OF AGE AND OVER: GEORGIA, 1S38 BY COUNTIES, BY AGE GROUPS AND BY RACE

ALL PERSONS

10-14 Years

15-18 Years

AGE GROUPS

19-24 Years

25 Years & Over

Unknown

White Colored White Colored White Colored White Colored White Colored White Colored

30,950 87,148 2,039 3,371 2,002 3,529 4,009 12,536 22,749 67,306

151

406

151

36

25

75

145

125

281

145

90

726

21
2 27
6

1 2 3 10 13

20 3 1
24 6

2 15 28

30

13

79

22

7

65

22

24

120

96

40

26

190

94

6

140

72

545

1 22

1

82

734

2

3

5

14

16

102

59

584

31

342

80

21

19

3

33

10

269

67

102

55

8

1

19

3

7

13

68

38

36

29

4

2

1

1

35

22

760

279

67

11

46

8

92

36

554

224

1

6

2

1

3

57

24

9

2

3

3

15

2

30

17

86

118

3

4

3

8

15

23

64

83

1

3

61

1

4

3

56

450

247

20

11

21

9

54

43

355

184

---

86

466

77

213

1

23

2

4

5

49

11

41

69

351

4

5

5

41

66

163

2

10

188

1

10

9

178

157

84

4

2

7

2

36

10

110

70

TABLE VII ILLITERATES TEN YEARS OF AGE AND OVER: GEORGIA, 1938--Continued

COUNTY
BROOKS Quitman
BRYAN BTJLLOCH
Statesboro
BURKE BUTTS o Jackson._ 00 CALHOUN
CAMDEN CANDLER. CARROLL.
Carrollton.-. CATOOSA_
CHARLTON.. CHATHAM CHATTAHOOCHEE CHATTOOGA
Trion
CHEROKEE CANTON CLARKE
Athens CLAY.,..

ALL PERSONS

10-14 Years

15-18 Years

AGE GROUPS

19-24 Years

25 Years & Over

Unknown

White Colored White Colored White Colored White Colored White Colored White Colored

78

364

33

214

6

44

1

6

8

25

10

62

54

232

2

3

1

13

29

192

1

93

185

3

6

4

7

11

31

75

141

154

490

25

37

28

38

29

153

72

262

2

15

1

11

1

3

1

160 3,930

15

224

10

182

15

468

120 3,038

18

34

484

1

7

7

2

57

31

413

78

6

72

44 1,418

1

78

59

13

209

30 1,072

54

274

2

1

3

3

3

29

46

240

_.. 251

521

25

51

14

32

30

93

182

345

1

473

496

53

49

40

45

82

84

294

318

4

57

117

3

8

6

11

6

15

42

83

69

11

4

1

9

5

51

10

35

44

2

5

3

6

4

9

26

24

203 4,160

10

99

13

114

26

399

154 3,544

4

42

169

1

11

2

8

4

22

35

113

15

379

111

26

6

23

5

54

13

276

86

1

87

3

2

7

75

329

13

17

1

18

5

37

1

254

5

3

1

61

32

1

2

56

32

2

105

303

3

9

3

6

13

50

86

238

55

203

6

26

49

177

14

536

4

6

4

76

10

450

COUNTY

TABLE VII--ILLITERATES TEN YEARS OF AGE AND OVER: GEORGIA, 1938--Continued


ALL PERSONS

10-14 Years

15-18 Years

AGE GROUPS

19-24 Years

25 Years & Over

Unknown

White Colored White Colored White Colored White Colored White Colored White Colored

58

220

4

14

3

21

8

' 41

43

144

105

308

1

6

10

9

12

43

82

250

482

245

44

18

38

16

55

35

343

176

16

41

1

3

6

12

35

382

290

7

10

308

486

4

35

30

27

3

5

5

2

49

42

325

241

1

5

2

5

4

9

30

25

29

50

90

224

337

4

2

2

4

27

1

1

3

15

11

96

565

13

26

14

41

15

89

54

409

168

356

2

18

8

13

20

60

135

264

156

496

12

12

55

17

73

115

364

27

163

3

11

24

152

8

32

1

1

7

31

59

346

4

6

2

9

7

26

46

304

150

697

10

35

7

32

29

138

104

492

14

387

1

5

2

47

11

335

125

9

16

2

15

1

9

85

6

154

8

7

15

122

221

992

8

50

6

35

19

118

187

789

15

264

3

1

5

3

10

11

246

164

283

17

16

17

12

23

39

107

216

242

1

2

30

209

40

166

7

11

2

19

7

32

24

104

2

26

3

1

4

1

2 1

^^MHB^H^^BBBBI

TABLE VII-ILLITERATES TEN YEARS OF AGE AND OVER: GEORGIA, 1938-Continued

COUNTY
DODGE.... Eastman.
DOOLY Vienna
DOUGHERTY Albany..
DOUGLAS E EARLY.. Blakely...
ECHOLS.. EFFINGHAM.. ELBERT
Elberton EMANUEL
EVANS FANNIN
McCaysville. FAYETTE
FLOYD __ Rome.
FORSYTH . FRANKLIN.
Royston

ALL PERSONS

10-14 Years

16-18 Years

AGE GROUPS

19 24 Years

25 Years & Over

Unknown

White Colored White Colored White Colored White Colored White Colored White Colored

383

602

16

61

108 1,016

7

126

9

27

12

24

43

113

317

438

1

4

4

12

12

44

9

28

6

38

12

175

81

773

7

4

1

12

6

103

2

2

44

425

9

777

195

124

236

928

2

86

1
14 24

6 3 13 22

3 1 12 18

15 4 9 30

2

23

38

381

3

43

5

726

23

15

139

86

25

141

169

735

12

2

74

7

1 1

48

246

4

22

2

14

42

582

3

2

5

182

459

17

13

14

12

1

1

3

50

39

160

1

56

39

518

8

47

143

387

224

429

17

20

15

24

37

77

153

308

2

58

259

314

1

39

19 1

5 24

20

18 38

42

35

177

213

1

1

136

239

7

10

9

1

7

20

39

100

179

4

529

200

278

331

312

4

628

282

40

31

57 15 38 28

7 7 2 20

43 12 25 20

2 8 1 10

73
46 48 79
9

48

353

142

29

205

287

201

1

57

501

195

1

31

30

3

1

TABLE VII ILLITERATES TEN YEARS OF AGE AND OVER: GEORGIA, 1938--Continued

COUNTY
FULTON Atlanta
GILMER GLASCOOK GLYNN GORDON GRADY GREENE
GWINNETT
HABERSHAM
HALL
HANCOCK HARALSON HARRIS HART

ALL PERSONS

10-14 Years

15 18 Years

AGE GROUPS

19-24 Years

25 Years & Over

Unknown

White Colored White Colored White Colored White Colored White Colored White Colored

634

955

49

33

33

25

74

63

475

833

3

1

416 1,467

2

2

6

2

19

56

385 1,399

4

8

235

3

18

22

25

170

3

137

204

8

7

10

11

21

47

98

139

164

710

3

6

7

8

20

45

133

645

1

6

295

20

53

5

36

3

25

3

181

9

20

1

7

4

9

1

280

637

9

22

10

29

42

81

217

503

2

2

55

826

4

3

7

2

96

50

719

19

96

7

19

83

6

472

191

41

7

40

4

47

27

343

153

1

4

12

1

1

2

3

1

8

45

32

3

1

5

8

8

6

29

17

283

13

20

25

36

2

199

11

3

15

20

3

2

1

6

1

4

18

---- 641

128

32

12

28

7

62

15

517

94

2

81

126

10

12

10

10

12

6

49

98

28

12

1

2

25

12

162 1,873

6

44

15

70

33

334

108 1,425

384

53

31

4

29

5

53

8

271

35

1

6

5

1

1

3

2

4

----

26

461

6

21

2

26

4

67

14

347

-- 446

338

20

11

30

12

49

54

344

260

3

1

6

23

3

13

6

7

1

TABLE VII ILLITERATES TEN YEARS OF AGE AND OVER: GEORGIA, 1938--Continued

COUNTY
HEARD . HENRY HOUSTON.. IRWIN..
Ocilla. _.
JACKSON Commerce
JS Maysville.. M JASPER
JEFF DAVIS.... Hazlehurst
JEFFERSON JENKINS... JOHNSON
JONES. LAMAR
Barnesville. LANIER
LAURENS Dexter_ Dublin.
LEE LIBERTY..., LINCOLN

ALL PERSONS

10-14 Years

15-18 Years

AGE GROUPS 19-24 Years 25 Years & Over

Unknown

White Colored White Colored White Colored White Colored White Colored White Colored



133

132

10

15

9

12

19

16

94

89

1

116

777

6

25

7

31

19

94

84

625

2

12 1,013

14

27

1

147

11

825

134

241

3

2

6

6

18

51

104

182

3

4

87

3

1

11

2

3

71

382

198

33

10

30

12

74

42

245

134

119

58

5

5

3

16

5

93

50

4

1

3

63

948

4

17

6

26

10

127

43

778

145

78

5

3

16

13

29

15

95

47

17

21

5

5

2

11

14

1

189 1,121

1

73

6

81

19

167

162

799

1

1

104

504

12

38

16

63

39

276

37

127

117

295

19

26

19

19

17

93

62

156

1

19

160

5

1

9

3

49

15

97

53

333

9

7

3

11

6

26

35

287

2

4

109

1

10

3

99

94

168

3

10

2

6

11

18

78

134

545 1,558

49

41

9

94

276

361 1,271

2

24

38

2

3

6

19

32

12

460

8

1

11

2

35

9

404

2

38 1,201

2

75

3

91

6

205

27

830

34

299

8

1

12

6

53

27

224

2

38

437

3

2

6

3

59

33

369

TABLE VII ILLITERATES TEN YEARS OF AGE AND OVER: GEORGIA, 1938 Continued

COUNTY
LONG LOWNDES LUMPKIN MACON MADISON MARION McDUFFIE McINTOSH MERIWETHER MILLER MITCHELL MONROE MONTGOMERY MORGAN MURRAY MUSCOGEE NEWTON

ALL PERSONS

10-14 Years

15-18 Years

AGE GROUPS

19-24 Years

25 Years & Over

Unknown

White Colored White Colored White Colored White Colored White Colored White Colored

43

136

163

740

19

208

174

13

64 1,249

3

4

6

18

1

6

1

11

4

4

5

25

30

103

5

26

24

128

128

568

3

1

27

17

168

4

18

146

13

3

30

6

163

54 1,044

1 10 1

363

332

26

34

27

17

40

54

270

227

69

346

1

27

4

21

7

31

57

267

35

2

33

110

648

6

31

7

33

6

53

91

530

1

60

286

1

15

2

3

6

31

51

237

123 1,034

1

30

3

34

12

90

107

874

6

98

241

3

30

2

16

35

84

58

111

270 1,578

3

14

5

26

39

294

222 1,242

1

2

45

143

5

22

40

121

72

676

3

12

1

12

2

80

65

564

1

8

117

270

2

2

4

2

12

35

80

231

19

72

504

1

9

6

14

8

67

57

414

13

112

1

2

2

4

3

8

7

98

422

31

12

8

58

2

342

29

2

71

284

5

12

3

9

5

41

58

222

319

642

10

12

8

14

13

100

288

514

2

81

275

3

26

7

20

15

50

56

179

1

12

1

4

3

5

3

18

10

1

5

1

3

1

TABLE VII ILLITERATES TEN YEARS OF AGE AND OVER: GEORGIA, 1938--Cntinued

COUNTY

OCONEE CGLETHORPE... PAULDING PEACH

PICKENS Nelson
PIERCE E Blackshear *" PIKE

POLK ____ Cedartown
PULASKI Hawkinsville

PUTNAM

Eatonton.

QUITMAN

..

RABUN

RANDOLPH...

.

RICHMOND ROCKDALE SCHLEY SCREVEN SEMINOLE

ALL PERSONS

10-14 Years

15-18 Years

AGE GROUPS

19-24 Years

25 Years & Over

Unknown

White Colored White Colored White Colored White Colored White Colored White Colored

142

305

8

20

6

15

13

41

115

229

265 1,019

6

31

5

40

20

147

234

801

380

53

32

5

24

3

35

7

286

38

21

860

2

48

1

47

2

129

16

636

233

13

26

10

33

164

13

1

1

112

77

4

4

18

18

86

59

11

30

3

3

8

27

113

433

8

30

12

30

20

83

73

290

415

264

13

10

13

15

44

28

339

211

133

68

4

2

4

2

7

5

118

59

68

576

21

3

17

3

59

62

478

19

148

1

4

11

15

136

35

399

2

9

27

296

206

12

48

959

2

12

2

2

1

22

7

2

61

2

17

5

39

26

331

4

3

27

5

46

21

198

8

12

176

12

2

20

9

130

32

646

445 1,201

57

33

80

56

61

171

247

934

124

366

19

30

11

37

8

38

86

260

25

175

2

6

7

2

30

21

131

191 1,773

12

83

18

88

31

316

128 1,285

131

315

2

10

6

15

11

39

112

251

3

6 I

3

3

3

102

7 1

1

2

1

TABLE VII ILLITERATES TEN YEARS OF AGE AND OVER: GEORGIA, 1938--Continued

COUNTY
SPALDING Griffin
STEPHENS
STEWART SXJMTER 01 TALBOT
TATTNALL TAYLOR TELFAIR TERRELL
TFOMAS Thomasville
TIFT
TOOMBS TOWNS TREUTLEN

ALL PERSONS

10-14 Years

15-18 Years

AGE GROUPS

19-24 Years

25 Years & Over

Unknown

White Colored White Colored White Colored White Colored White Colored White Colored

.-- 190

566

25

18

221

53

7

17

101

69

12 2 1

43 1

15 5

31 2

21

131

142

361

1

4

24

14

24

13

179

37

7

17

39

19

61

46

11

4

31

652

69 1,419

6

203

23

404

11

349

3

25

1

66

1

20

3

88

1

13

34

4

50

24

543

2

48

10

231

56 1,073

1

12

2

10

2

159

4

27

2

38

14

251

1

13

49

9

274

1 2

140

171

118

443

301

415

15 1,096

6

286

7 4 10

5 2 9 36 7

10 10 16
1

8 5 14 33 12

19

27

104

117

16

68

87

365

63

82

211

310

1

165

13

862

1

32

5

235

14

1

3

1

93

691

10

25

---

11

451

1

2

147

364

10

8

46

108

2

5

48'

16

72

62

546

3

2

18

8

423

5

7

18

44

113

294

4

15

42

91

5

1

11

286

234

16

26

71

7

30

11

53

28

187

188

2

6

8

20

61

109

260

314

9 19

20

3 23

16

13 45

84

58

173

219

1

TABLE VII-ILLITERATES TEN YEARS OF AGE AND OVER: GEORGIA, 1938-Continued

COUNTY

TROUP..

LaGrange . West Point... TURNER. Ashburn

TWIGGS C UNION. "> UPSON..
Thomaston

__ ...

WALKER... WALTON
Monroe. Social Circle

WARE... Waycross _.
WARREN WASHINGZON
Sandersville.. _

WAYNE....

WEBSTER

WHEELER

.

WHITE

.

ALL PERSONS

10-14 Years

15-18 Years

AGE GROUPS

19-24 Years

25 Years & Over

Unknown

White Colored White Colored White Colored White Colored White Colored White Colored

151

949

56

132

87

363

121

77

163

3

95

2

26

1

3

5

3

13

6

41

19

133

124

749

2

5

2

11

51

113

3

8

121

78

238

3

37

76

3

16

13

39

58

92

2

8

1

87

72

466

151

1

7

203

23

196

1 32

40
2 8

28 1 4

31
1 4

11 15 3 6

41
33 27

59

354

76

1

3

167

13

157

281

20

329

544

17

108

7

25

45 15 4

2 18 10 6

25 28 5

21 16 2

32

2

178

16

43

104

242

400

5

15

3

67

1

5

6

12

211

176

16

39

42

642

93

862

124

13 3 2 6

6 5 18 83 2

23 5
8

11 8 17 68 7

30

24

145

106

7

16

1

10

12

148

25

451

13

132

59

562

15

100

490

305

31

415

79

131

253

19

65 1 5 7

58 13 2

53
5 7

42 9 14

61 5 17
26

23

311

182

74

25

319

28

52

87

1

213

18

1

1

3

1

1

1

1

29

3

8

7

17

TABLE VII--ILLITERATES TEN YEARS OF AGE AND OVER: GEORGIA, 1938--Continued

COUNTY

WILCOX

-

WILKES

WILKINSON. . WORTH

ALL PERSONS

10-14 Years

15-18 Years

AGE GROUPS

19-24 Years

25 Years & Over

Unknown

White Colored White Colored White Colored White Colored White Colored White Colored

300

1

8

101

298

36 1,109

76

53 1 11 3

1
26 31
1

38 1 8 2

32 43
1

29

180

6

35

121

47

119

2

137

29

897

5

69

1

86

396

192 1,444

6

9

17

111

5

6

26

112

3

59

72

319

25

267

123

953

1

3 1

9M

STATE OF GEORGIA SCHOOL CENSUS--1938

6-9 Years 10-14 Years 15-16 Years 17-18 Years
TOTAL

STATE SUMMARY TABLE VIII
PERSONS SIX TO EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE BY AGE AND SCHOOL ATTENDANCE WHITE

MALE

FEMALE

Attending Not Attending Attending Not Attending

77,107 100,930 32,700 20,976

2,087 4,914 8,381 14,610

74,433 98,570 33,150 19,495

1,873 3,721 7,205 12,782

231,713

29,992

225,648

25,581

119

-*.

STATE OF GEORGIA 1938
PERSONS 6-18 YEARS OF AGE ATTENDING SCHOOL

SEX AND NUMBER

PER CENT

40

50

70

80

90 100

10 Years 11 Years 12 Years
16 Years

Male

17,520

Female 17,079

w//)///////h////}^

Male

19,989

Female 19,327

\//////////;/)/////)/^^

Male 19,572
Female 18,862

Male

20,026

Female 19,165

///////////////?/>.

Male

20,665

Female 19,786

/////)/////W///)/////)/////////^

Male
20,161 Female
19,703

Male

20,776

Female 20,054

W////////////////>///^

Male
20,173 Female
20,058

Male
19,155 Female
18,969

Male

17,047

Female 17,333

'////////////////////////^

Male 15,653
^/^/j%^/^ Female 15,817

Male

12,660

Female, 11,930

w//>/////)/////)/////)/////?m^

Male
8,316 Female
7,565

120

1 V/////////A
W//////A

TABLE VIII--WHITE PERSONS SIX TO EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE: GEORGIA, 1938 BY SCHOOL SYSTEMS, BY AGE AND SCHOOL ATTENDANCE

COUNTY

ALL. PERSONS

6--9 YEARS

Male

Female

10--14 YEARS

Male

Female

15--16 YEARS

Male

Female

17--18 YEARS

Male

Female

Attend- Not ing Attend-
School ing A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A.

STATE TOTAL, _. 457361 55573 77107 2087 74433 1873 100930 4914 98570 3721 32700 8381 33150 7205 20976 14610 19495 12782

,_ APPLING 2 Baxley
ATKINSON . BACON BAKER
BALDWIN BANKS.... BARROW
Winder
BARTOW Adairsvilie Cartersville
BEN HIIL Fitzgerald _
BERRIEN BIBB BLECKIEY
Cochran

3053

91 501 15 518

9 663 14 641

9 234 13 217

7 140 15 139

9

471

46 60

1 77

2 120

100

4 32

4 37

6 26 11 19 18

1473

159 269

3 268

299 12 317

9 102 24 112 22 47 58 59 31

1893

269 357

3 317

3 426 37 427 37 112 52 115 36 63 67 76 34

793

110 127

151

1 185 12 161 10 49 26 63

6 35 37 22 18

1620

53 227

213

361

4 319

2 149 13 136

3 108 21 107 10

2184

397 362 21 365 21 489 35 496 30 124 57 161 47 91 100 96 86

1820

315 322

7 305

2 386 17 381 16 131 52 134 42 87 107 74 72

539

55 78

3 93

2 130

6 113

7 38

7 39 10 29 13 19

7

3748

914 669 50 660 64 840 107 822 97 250 126 249 128 139 183 119 159

119

28 16

24

1 18 . 1 28

3

7

3 10

5 10

4

6 11

739

171 128

8 134 11 146 18 168 20 46 20 53 26 36 31 28 37

1221

161 215

5 234

7 263 14 279 18 70 30 76 23 42 46 42 18

996

75 129

148

3 253

9 234

4 70

9 85

9 44 21 33 20

3226

764 616 42 603 27 700 127 694 66 209 142 204 88 93 148 107 124

S037

927 1418

8 1357

6 2082 36 2006 29 658 124 685 143 420 274 411 307

1436

171 283

1 279

303 15 291 10 85 38 104 24 46 45 45 38

308

33 51

1 59

60

8 55

4 19

4 21

6 17

4 26

6

TABLE VIII--PERSONS SIX TO EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE, BY AGE AND SCHOOL ATTENDANCE: GEORGIA. 1938--Continued WHITE

COUNTY

ALL PERSONS

6 9 YEARS

Male

Female

10--14 YEARS

Male

Female

15--16 YEARS

Male

Female

17--18 YEARS

Male

Female

Attend- Not ing Attend-
School ing A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A.

BRANTLEY BROOKS
Quitman. .. BRYAN ,_, BULLOCH ^ Statesboro

- ...

BURKE BUTTS
Jackson CALHOUN CAMDEN

CANDLER CARROLL
Carrollton CATOOSA CHARLTON

CHATHAM

:

CHATTAHOOCHEE...

CHATTOOGA

Trion

CHEROKEE

Canton

1596 2005 436 953 3725
602
1612 900 197 815 618
1689 5415
756 2046 900
15087 817
3043 855
3323 1344

101 295 232 345
53 79 119 160 362 613 53 92
169 244 118 136
31 56 127 46 124
194 276 558 916 182 126 337 382 219 177
1494 2441 41 150 535 598 174 161 586 640 151 255

1 267 11 320
1 56 5 158 13 555 2 90
4 246 1 142
27 1 135
97
6 232 38 856 13 136 10 352 29 176
89 2292 1 160
17 534 159
17 561 2 240

367 7 489 1 91 3 212 4 830 1 114
1 350 3 230
44 2 .179
129
5 349 39 1175 23 192 12 488 23 187
67 3260 168
32 721 186
16 746 1 301

10 329 33 416 5 116 10 194 42 863 4 124
19 385 5 188
38 5 169
139
30 368 45 1114
8 151 22 458 37 239
87 3188 4 167 68 598 3 180 44 710 7 307

3 Ill 16 120 12 58 32 49 27

18 147 43 126 30 81 62 81 28

1 30

3 38

4 16 23 10 15

7 73 21 74 17 38 34 44 22

26 264 71 316 41 142 106 142 59

3 49

5 48 10 49 12 36 16

9 101 32 137 15 64 57 85 32

4 83 20 62 14 34 45 25 26

20

19

5

13

6 64

8 74

5 33 13 34 16

2 47

5 39

8 27 18 16 13

15 126 46 426 10 47 25 157 23 31

37 140 65 404 17 41
59 105 28 51

17 96 55 102 29 66 315 131 209 128 28 31- 28 32 55 40 64 98 40 71 18 23 34 16 27

72 1180 184 1150 166 789 429 787 400

52

6 66

4 30 16 24 10

46 217 73 171 74 112 107 92 118

3 48 20 60 24 34 47 27 77

42 242 106 190 100 143 137 91 124

12 85 24 80 31 35 37 41 37

TABLE VIII--PERSONS SIX TO EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE, BY AGE AND SCHOOL ATTENDANCE: GEORGIA, 1938--Continued WHITE

COUNTY
CLARKE.. Athens.__
CLAY CLAYTCN CLINCH
COBB... Marietta... _
COFFEE Douglas.
COLQUITT Doerun. Moultrie
COLUMBIA
COOK COWETA..
Newnan _ Senoia
CRAWFORD CRISP
Cordele. _ DADE

ALL PERSONS

6--9 YEARS

Male

Female

10--14 YEARS

Male

Female

15--16 YEARS

Male

Female

17--18 YEARS

Male

Female

Attend- Not ing Attend-
Schao" ing AS. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.S. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A.

1074

131 173

2 183

4 237 14 239

8 76 27 77 21 51 32 38 23

2251

155 345 12 341

3 481

6 477

5 180 20 189 19 117 46 121 44

535

12 67

90

98

126

52

3 37

33

3 32

6

1913

242 361

9 307

1 445 19 364 18 132 44 145 32 82 67 77 52

857

340 192 17 154 10 208 50 232 25 45 39 60 27 31 115 35 57

5576 1079 934 63 936 67 1290 74 1252 83 407 152 357 146 219 265 181 229

1030

139 201

2 168

2 236

9 225

9 74 14 60 21 32 36 34 46

3639

361 639 30 650 22 820 45 757 25 228 60 256 48 143 78 146 53

799

60 126

1 138

174

2 164

1 49

7 59

9 31 17 58 23

5323

838 970 12 816 17 1208 78 1204 33 327 153 398 133 210 235 190 177

128

11 24

18

23

2 33

8

1

8

1

3

4 11

3

1226

177 201 10 199 16 248

7 283

5 92 16 105 18 52 48 46 57

1023

88 154

2 157

2 228

8 225

3 73 11 85

9 54 29 47 24

2037

216 330

4 374

3 437 14 451 10 126 43 159 24 87 76 73 42

2453

330 404 13 386 18 562 34 571 25 184 53 148 42 97 77 101 68

805

54 124

4 115

3 177

3 176

3 65

2 77

7 33 21 38 11

84

7

9

15

14

14

10

2 10

6

3

6

2

909

110 129

1 138

1 232 10 210

1 65 13 72 16 33 48 30 20

1357

244 239 14 210 11 330 33 320 16 100 45 81 24 42 66 35 35

812

50 128

126

2 193

2 179

3 59 12 56

4 25 11 46 16

1244

262 234 22 218 31 258 31 271 24 91 35 85 22 41 47 46 50

r^ ,,,,,,. T0 ,,N YMRS or AOE sy AOE AND SOHOOL MD4KOE _ ^^
WHITE

DAWSON
DECATUR Bain bridge
DeKALB Decatur
Lithonia

DODGE...
Eastman DOOLY...
Vienna, _

DOUGHERTY Albany
Douglas... EARLY
Blakely

ECHOES

EFFINGHAM.....v.".".";" 1574

ELBERT

2088

Elberton.

742

EMANUEL EVANS

4io4 .:::;;; 124|

TABLE VIII--PERSONS SIX TO EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE, BY AGE AND SCHOOL ATTENDANCE: GEORGIA, 1938--Continued WHITE

COUNTY

ALL PERSONS

6--9 YEARS

Male

Female

10--14 YEARS

Male

Female

15--16 YEARS

Male

Female

17--18 YEARS

Male

Female

Attend- Not
ing AttendSchool ing A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.S. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A.

TANNIN McCaysville
FAYETTE FLOYD ,_, Rome__ . to 01 FORSYTH FRANKLIN
Royston FULTON
Atlanta . ..

3417 429 1551
- 5420 3765

.. ..-

2720 3297
317 19327 34099

GILMER GLASCOCK GLYNN GORDON
Oalhoun_-

2326 936 2574 3541 515

GRADY

3250

GREENE

1186

Greensboro .. -- 284

GWINNETT

5390

Buford

-.

617

Lawrence ville

363

438 652 32 90 288 264
1286 1016 804 692
416 471 352 503 45 54 2359 3135 2440 5498
278 460 84 157
309 457 648 678 77 81
364 596 100 209
4 40 594 934
90 102 53 37

17 574 85
7 253 76 965 25 696
22 503 27 562 2 40 82 3071 22 5511
392 165 6 439 34 631 4 86
18 520 5 167
34 15 908 5 114 2 68

7 771 73 741 46 235 68 204 62 124 89 116 76

1 81

2 95

3 24

3 27

7 12

7 15

9

5 332 23 331 16 109 41 118 33 67 70 77 93

83 1228 156 1207 132 353 169 314 168 167 272 170 230

16 826 63 840 65 219 118 253 118 109 184 130 215

27 589 46 553 44 200 50 174 57 137 92 93 78

32 723 41 668 25 263 30 220 44 202 75 156 78

1 65

4 82

6 32

9 27

2

7 10 10 11

91 4214 132 3955 161 1423 353 1433 351 1059 636 1037 553

17 7186 91 7262 103 2516 335 2619 389 1870 707 1637 776

5 513 1 201 2 612 22 798 6 113

18 519 6 202 17 550 64 776 10 116

17 160 2 73 13 137 59 227 17 34

43 130 13 64 38 174
98 186
9 37

47 80 85 72 63 8 39 27 35 27
46 92 117 113 70 87 144 136 101 148
9 19 11 29 11

9 687 2 267
58 10 1229 2 154
79

36 723 7 224
67 54 1073 10 127
6 88

19 212 1 87
33 39 372
3 51 7 24

70 242 13 96
1 19 89 391 15 34 5 26

48 125 85 145 79

10 72 26 64 36

16

2 17

1

74 259 200 224 113

10 17 29 18 16

10 13 13 28 10

TABLE VIII-PERSONS SIX TO EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE, BY AGE AND SCHOOL ATTENDANCE: GEORGIA, 1938--Continued WHITE

COUNTY

ALL PERSONS

6--9 YEARS

Male

Female

10--14 YEARS

Male

Female

15--16 YEARS

Male

Female

17--18 YEARS

Male

Female

Attend- Not ing Attend-
School ing A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A.

HABERSHAM. Cornelia . _.
HALL
Gainesville . Lula

| HANCOCK

...

HARALSON.

Tallapcosa ._

HARRIS

HART..

Hartwell

..

HEAED HENRY HOUSTON IRWIN
Ocilla

JACKSON... Commerce . Maysville.
JASPER . JEFF DAVIS
Hazlehurst...

3171 428 5821 1422 174
841 2741 495 1133 2517 344
1931 1898 953 1973 209
3351 494
39 812 1778 297

448 541 46 74 978 1074
326 252 33 34

69 126 503 507
57 90 122 181 475 428 45 50

171 296 259 334
88 167 189 366
17 30

547 570

74 81

4

4

107 126

240 312

10 56

24 538 9 71 51 1002 17 243 4 26
1 123 35 475
1 80 5 182 9 420 1 48
2 294 13 269 5 169 1 345 4 36
46 535 97 5
2 124 3 329 1 55

28 698 2 99 37 1300 29 315 5 36

2 177 15 624
107 2 255 9 621 1 61

10 402 10 441 2 198 2 456
1 54

25 755

93

1

7

3 175

2 393

54

56 722 4 86 106 1291 28 286 3 33

8 167 60 591
2 120 15 233 31 580 3 84

15 398 19 390 7 193 15 409
39

57 742

8 117

2

9

7 173

17 391

62

27 193 64 244 66 Ill 93 124 90

1 36

6 32

2 10 10 20 12

80 407 126 358 125 207 230 182 223

21 101 31 108 44 61 66 56 90

6 11

4 16

1

8

2 10

8

3 61 43 193 3 32
9 104 29 177 2 22

20 70 57 171 12 36 17 87 78 135 7 43

5 68 17 61 107 102
5 16 17 19 53 32 82 98 119 8 16 11

49 13 73 130 14 17 38 23 58 118 20 12

11 155 28 156

8 126 45 104 52

19 152 39 151 28 76 63 85 68

2 66 20 71 11 43 23 46 18

7 120 39 139 30 68 59 70 36

16

3 20

2 11

4

3

3

61 245 93 217 63 145 128 142 74

3 32 12 38 10 19 20 17 21

6

3

3

2

1

7 64

9 82

5 33 32 35 42

14 117 39 108 35 65 61 63 69

22

3 21

1 11

4 16

1

TABLE VIII^PERSONS SIX TO EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE, BY AGE AND SCHOOL ATTENDANCE: GEORGIA, 1938-Continued WHITE
COUNTY
JEFFERSON JENKINS JOHNSON ,- JONES E3 LAMAR
Barnesville
LANIER LAUF.ENS
Dexter Dublin LEE
LIBERTY LINCOIN LONG LOWNDES
Valdosta
LTJMPKIN MACON... MADISON MARION-_
Buera Vista McDTIFFIE
I

TABLE VIII--PERSONS SIX TO EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE, BY AGE AND SCHOOL ATTENDANCE: GEORGIA, 1938--Continued WHITE

ALL

6--9 YEARS

10--14 YEARS

15--16 YEARS

17--18 YEARS

PERSONS

COUNTY

Male

Female

Male

Female

Male

Female

Male

Female

,

Attend- Not ing Attend-
School ing A.S. N.A. AS. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A.

McINTOSH MERIWETHER MILLER. _. MITCHELL M Pelham
CO
30 MONROE MONTGOMERY MORGAN Madison _ .. MURRAY. .
MUSCOGEE Columbus..
NEWTON. Covington... Mansfield
OCONEE.. OGLETHORPE PAULDING PEACH PICKENS
Nelson

467 2641 1740 2476 368
973 1385 1223 215 2585
2446 6465 2108 437 120
1330 1711 2960 805 2047 134

66 94 237 444 270 299 158 383 44 54
137 162 141 245 223 194 18 33 405 498
335 435 961 1138 266 390 61 66 17 11
129 233 238 276 355 459 70 134 337 396
8 23

1 88 3 372 5 288 2 386
61
7 135 5 220 3 200
22 15 512
11 435 9 1038 8 367 5 61 1 20
3 204 14 312 47 500
130 19 333
19

4 92 4 585 9 311 5 573
88
4 219 1 336 7 256 1 47 28 583
6 575 10 1484 8 518 2 98
25
3 268 16 347 56 594
178 21 484
31

7 112 8 588 40 326 13 504 1 80
11 220 16 281 20 272 1 37 31 553
18 549 47 1546 31 455 2 95 2 24
11 302 23 396 60 522
5 176 33 433
27

7 26 15 36

4

7 18 12 10

10 201 47 221 18 120 77 110 70

17 132 53 135 46 127 51 122 49

10 203 29 198 25 118 48 111 26

22

7 29

6 14 13 20 17

7 82 21 86 15 40 33 29 39

7 99 29 94 19 56 38 54 26

6 102 30 92 16 64 112 43 29

1 22

3 17

19

7 18

5

31 151 54 142 61 80 93 66 92

17 166 53 137 53 82 92 67 85

40 431 11 113

151 39

399 139

169 26

233 61

242 73

196 65

293 70

3 41

8 37

7 20 12 19 22

11

1 18

2

5

7

6

4

10 96 16 102 19 74 42 51 25

22 117 37 133 22 57 61 73 43

52 218 22 223 31 248 36 196 51

6 59 11 67

7 32 19 29 22

38 128 34 139 61 80 68 54 63

8

4 17

3

6

3

1

TABLE VIII--PERSONS SIX TO EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE, BY AGE AND SCHOOL ATTENDANCE: GEORGIA, 1938-- Continued WHITE

COUNTY

ALL PERSONS

6--9 YEARS

Male

Female

10--14 YEARS

Male

Female

15^16 YEARS

Male

Female

17--18 YEARS

Male

Female

Attend- Not
ing AttendSchool ing A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A.

PIERCE Blackshear .
PIKE POLK ,_, Cedartown to
PTJLASKI HawMnsville
PUTNAM Eatonton
QUITMAN
RABUN RANDOLPH RICHMOND ROOKDALE SOHLEY
SCREVEN SEMINOLE SPALDING.
Griffin STEPHENS
Martin

2560 291 1219 4030
.-. 1509
670 350 587 226 283
1954 1164 9376 1173 525
2240 1063 2355 1569 1776
47 817

175 453 55 65 239 189 633 765 225 278

99 104 22 57 64 95 16 35 39 37

177 330 112 204 1082 1529 223 216
38 80

209 349

137 170

485 410

87 273

148 305

16

4

13 123

10 421 1 48 4 158 16 683 5 229

4 118 49
1 83 29
1 47

8 319 2 174 13 1491 7 195
65

5 355

6 215

19 386

278

3 269

4

3

2 132

9 563 7 55 3 303 11 893 4 317

2 160
70 1 131
47 61

11 381 4 254 9 2119 2 276
108

5 494

3 215

11 583

1 351

2 378

3

8

178

4 527 6 64 23 302 61 866 14 379
6 149 1 84 7 121 2 43 5 55
10 399 17 229 33 2121 24 255
1 132
23 463 19 232 31 520
1 365 8 351 3 11
200

4 165 3 16 9 83 46 263 24 91

10 192 5 19 50 107 87 247 31 111

18 132 64 107 56 2 14 18 10 13 26 44 71 33 53 88 159 162 154 162 33 56 53 48 61

4 45 11 44 17 18 31 32 24

27

2 31

1 18

9 14

9

3 47

8 48

3 27 25 35 16

15

1 26

2 16

5 15

6

2 28

4 28

2 11 10 16 15

18 135 26 132 23 133 46 125 35

3 84 19 100 10 51 31 68 26

39 666 159 666 152 403 330 381 347

18 86 37 75 35 29 58 41 42

29

5 51

3 33 17 27 12

19 187 9 70 22 172 1 94 10 103
4 1 58

36 167 29 80 67 140 11 104 25 130
5 3 61

11 120 64 105 46

26 33 35 48 10

73 78 144 66 118

21 47 23 57 29

29 135 36 105 35

3

7

2

5

1

2 36

2 29

3

TABLE VIII-PERSONS SIX TO EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE, BY AGE AND SCHOOL ATTENDANCE: GEORGIA, 1938-Continued WHITE

COUNTY
STEWART. 5 STJMTER Americus ..
TALBOT^ . . TALIAFERRO
TATTNALL . TAYLOR TELFAIR. TERRELL
Dawson
THOMAS Thomasville.
TIFT Tifton
TOOMBS Vidalla

ALL PERSONS

6--9 YEARS

Male

Female

10--14 YEARS

Male

Female

15--16 YEARS

Male

Female

17--18 YEARS

Male

Female

Attend Not ing Attend-
School ing A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A.

653 1200 757 552 460
3032 1389 2666 783 307
2575 1216 2376 781 2565 567

73 109 119 183 61 129 46 76 36 66

85

156

7 149

178 10 265 15 281

99

178

5 155

87

95

9 108

61

113

4 93

3 47 13 47

2 42 26 18 20

9 95 15 100 13 50 33 48 21

1 63

7 70

6 36 17 27 24

2 55

42

7 45

7 44

7

1 46

42

2 21 11 18 10

303 542 162 215 429 391 56 113 23 44

530 193 12 389 97 47

599 17 590 25 202 47 210 44 183 99 176 63

327 18 305 12 107 34 122 17 65 41 55 28

481 52 466 19 199 82 223 52 254 119 263 84

187

7 182

1 60

6 64

5 47 16 33 18

63

1 70

26

3 22

1 19

4 16 14

311 407 13 414

9 523 32 559 22 199 61 212 28 140 91 121 55

126 196 14 162 10 257 11 256 10 109 16 86

8 66 24 84 33

259 392

8 372

6 481 22 498 13 173 44 192 34 141 73 127 59

29 125

2 109

2 151

1 178

65

2 47

2 58

8 48 12

220 431

4 397

4 556 24 541 24 170 43 210 22 154 54 106 45

39 89

82

124

122

1 59

4 32

2 37 13 22 19

TABLE VIII--PERSONS SIX TO EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE, BY AGE AND SCHOOL ATTENDANCE: GEORGIA, 1938--Continued WHITE

COUNTY

ALL PERSONS

6--9 YEARS

Male

Female

10--14 YEARS

Male

Female

15--16 YEARS

Male

Female

17--18 YEARS

Male

Female

Attend- Not ing Attend-
School ing A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A.

_ TOWNS

w TREUTLEN

TROXJP

.

Hogansville _

LaGrange _

West Point ..

TURNER Ashburn
TWIGGS UNION UPSON
Thomaston

.. ... . ...

WALKER Ohickamauga
WALTON Monroe Social Circle _

1244 1270 17S6 588 3405 330
1493 289 763 1947 1542 2155
5852 434 2530 604 228

174 237 208 215 307 311 115 104 150 622
43
193 245 52 41 135 69 267 378 164 313 255 394
753 1072 6 81
376 418 118 103 50 40

9 211 5 219 13 275
122 2 555
48
6 261 39
4 76 1 356 19 278 13 401
20 954 55
3 447 122 33

10 272 1 292 6 400 1 129 1 718
79
7 320 1 68 5 146 1 456 7 398 7 435
18 1371 88
21 592 2 113 43

26 274 30 281 32 391 5 143 4 724
68
32 335 3 57 12 118 13 408
29 319 10 402
87 1306 107
27 534 6 140 2 64

20 96 19 86 24 110 6 33 2 247
34
15 104 1 24 7 81
16 126 24 85
8 147
77 410 1 35
37 153 9 42 2 13

20 74 29 34 32 46 28

29 89 24 41 62 47 38

64 117 25 73 86 59 57

12 26 17 17 34 14 40

27 242 22 155 44 142 48

25

15

18

45 121 16 58 40 49 32

6 29

1 22 20

9 20

26 92 12 85 42 96 27

40 117 46 48 84 58 66

26 93 20 37 18 19 21

28 145 38 120 83 111 68

97 370 126 213 173 156 155

1 28

1 26

2 14

1

56 215 45 83 109 88 78

10 50 19 17 33 17 39

7 17

8

5 15 13 16

TABLE VIII-PERSONS SIX TO EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE, BY AGE AND SCHOOL ATTENDANCE: GEORGIA, 1938-Continued WHITE

COUNTY
WARE Waycross
5 WARREN M WASHINGTON
Sanders vi lie
WAYNE WEBSTER WHEELER WHITE WHITFIELD
Dalton__
WILCOX WILKES
Washington.-. WILKINSON WORTH

ALL PERSONS

6--9 YEARS

Male

Female

Jiiiena- JNOt
ing AttendSchool ing A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A.

10--14 YEARS

Male

Female

A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A.

15--16 YEARS

Male

Female

A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A.

17--18 YEARS

Male

Female

A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A.

2571 2356 880 2148 326
2818 445 1677 1653 3768 2090
2027 1043 319 1344 2895

262 393 142 377 49 133 250 338
48
549 302 65 68 196 270
254 306 506 711
8 345
268 386 115 174
10 62 141 163 521 499

14 481 376
1 124 8 353
41
20 309 1 71 7 263
13 281 18 727
315
1 360 8 158
36 8 169 10 513

7 570 504
3 203 10 457
60
18 572 1 96 8 381 8 387 9 877 347
3 474 3 229
91 5 269 10 634

17 589 1 584 5 174
32 519 64
63 589 2 104 27 371 22 347 49 810
407
28 420 6 225 57
15 244 46 659

13 178 3 178 1 60 15 153
34

51 180 16 177 7 81 44 154
28

25 256 115 253

34

8 37

12 110 22 136

24 113 50 112

38 259 72 203

1 146

2 165

9 114 6 77
28 6 127 15 187

46 126 24 94
24 25 128 82 209

27 101 85 79 48

24 89 53 71 45

7 49 16 56

9

15 82 67 92 59

28

23

60 280 140 257 108

4 22 27 13 22

29 82 48 64 43

28 60 58 47 51

89 109 114 72 117

3 151

1 214

1

29 77 97 70 55

9 34 37 52 22

2 11

5 10

3

14 127 40 117 28

84 103 156 91 118

STATE OF GEORGIA SCHOOL CENSUS--1938

Ml

6-9 Years 10-14 Years 15-16 Years. 17-18 Years
TOTAL

STATE SUMMARY TABLE VIII
PERSONS SIX TO EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE BY AGE AND BY SCHOOL ATTENDANCE COLORED

MALE

FEMALE

Attending Not Attending Attending Not Attending

45,968 55,616 14,622
8,325

1,473 4,971 6,158 8,423

47,140 58,091 18,064 10,247

1,307 3,350 5,042 7,426

124,531

21,025

133,54

17,125

133

EBM

COLORED AGE

PERSONS 6-18 YEARS OF AGE ATTENDING SCHOOL STATE OF GEORGIA 1938

SEX AND NUMBER

PER CENT

40

60

60

70

80

90 100

Male 11,158

I

I

Female 11,475 //////////III/////////////////////

Male 11,978

I

I

Female 18,383 ///i///f/ffJ///f//f//////fJSJ///i

Male 11,578
! Years Female 11,953 //////J//f//f//f//SfSJJffl/ffJJA

Male 11,254
Female 11,329 f///////////////////////////S/S//

Male 11,989

I

I

I

I

i

r

Female 12,103 ///////////////////////////f//

Male 10,660 Female 10,938

////i /xxxx/xxxi ^x,xxx/xxxxxxyy

Male 12,116
Female 12,589 T7Z//V///J//J///*///////////*>

///Z/f/f///f////S//////YJft Male 10,935
r Female 11,595

fcJBBH-- i

r

I

I

I

Male 9,:
Female 10, J ///fff//J/////f//fff /////

Male 7,938
Female 9,624 ////////////////ff/////

Male 6,684

Female 8,440 //////l//f//ffffJJi

I

I

Male 5,060

Female 6,228 //rs///jjff/ffjj

Male 3,265 Female 4,019
134

e-^j mmm h^ mj.m

TABLE VIII--COLORED PERSONS SIX TO EIGETEEN YEARS OF AGE: GEORGIA, 1938 BY SCHOOL SYSTEMS, BY AGE AND SCHOOL ATTENDANCE

COUNTY

ALL PERSONS

6--9 YEARS

Male

Female

10--14 YEARS

Male

Female

15--16 YEARS

Male

Female

17--18 YEARS

Male

Female

Attend- Not

ing AttendSchool ing A.S.

N.A.

A.S.

N.A.

A.S.

N.A.

A.S.

N.A.

A.S.

N.A.

A.S.

N.A.

A.S.

N.A.

A.S.

N.A.

STATE TOTAL.__ 258073 38150 45968 1473 47140 1307 55616 4971 58091 3350 14622 6158 18064 5042 8325 8423 10247 7426

APPLING Baxley
i- ATKINSON cS BACON
BAKER
BAIDWIN BANKS BARROW
Winder
BARTOW
Cartersville BEN HILL
Fitzgerald
BEERIEN BIBB BLECKLEY
Cochran-_

743 325 416 313 1120
2821 202 473 116
639
303 685 613
479 7014
884 199

47 130 28 62 80 81 74 53 120 212
192 509 32 32 41 84 24 16
184 92
85 59 105 117 31 114
141 95 1450 1361
36 172 28 26

113 50
1 103 2 65
195

166 58 1 87 1 79 238

12 150 3 85 7 94
11 70 15 265

9 42 10 61 10 44

2 37

4

18

3 23

7 15

4 14 11

4 26

8 17

9

3 26

5 24

4

4

6 17

6 13 21 12 23

9 53 27 73 14 36 33 48 22

524
1 56 94
1 29

615 4 36
110 2 22

14 633 2 49 3 96
4 26

7 172 33 201 30 75 55 92 53

4

7

3

9

4

4

8

9

6

2 30

7 28

8 11

8 20 13

3

6

3 11

5

1

1

5

5

15 115 6 162 22 158 20 41 24 44 19

9 40 18 38

3 54 7 134
118

2 62

1 77

8 12

9 24 19

7 25

8

5 145 26 135 12 40 19 55 12 21 11 38 13

138

4 132

3 28

7 51

5 11 6

21

6

8 87 44 1424
1 190 35

10 94 29 116 21 33 25 28 16 13 16 13 16

26 1508 127 1636 105 296 260 455 221 132 318 202 349

203

4 187

1 48

9 43

5 27

9 14

7

45

1 46

2 17

3 18

5

7 13

5

4

TABLE VIII-PERSONS SIX TO EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE, BY AGE AND SCHOOL ATTENDANCE: GEORGIA, 1938-Continued COLORED

COUNTY

10--14 YEARS

Male

Female

BRANTLEY BROOKS...
Quitman.. BRYAN _ BULLOCH^. TM Statesboro

BURKE
BUTTS Jackson...
CALHOUN . CAMDEN...

CANDLER..... CARROLL
Carrollton... CATOOSA... CHARLTON..

CHATHAM

.

CHATTAHOOCHEE

CHATTOOGA

Trion

CHEROKEE

Canton

N.A. A.S.
1 45 41 491 7 117 15 145 44 532 10 77
189 1178 7 197 56 34 462 13 189
26 186 24 325 18 57 5 18 37 55
378 2954 19 96 6 102 10 23 30

TABLE VIII--PERSONS SIX TO EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE, BY AGE AND SCHOOL ATTENDANCE: GEORGIA, 1938--Continued COLORED

COUNTY
CLARKE Athens ...
CLAY CLAYTON CLINCH
% COBB Marietta _
COFFEE Douglas
COLQUITT Doerun. Moultrie
COLUMBIA
COOK COWETA
Newnan Senoia
CRAWFORD . CRISP
Cordele DADE

ALL PERSONS

6--9 YEARS

Male

Female

10--14 YEARS

Male

Female

15--16 YEARS

Male

Female

17--18 YEARS

Male

Female

Attend- Not ing Attend-
School ing A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A.

699 1362 1560 617 428
943 443 1017 337
1339 57 665
1616
624 1949 547
77
1095 983 997
55

87 137

1 113

4 149 14 161

6 42 11 45

8 29 29 23 14

208 228 17 228 16 293 21 343 14 79 31 97 28 34 40 60 41

96 266

279

1 326

6 366

3 91 13 120 13 51 26 61 34

225 120 13 104

9 131 34 156 21 33 40 46 28 12 44 15 36

234 88 14 81 13 106 46 105 23

8 39 26 24

1 30 13 45

191 172 121 95 120 174 128 59

8 182 11 203 22 226 21 60 27 54 26 26 44 20 32

1 82

1 89 12 116 13 18 22 23 14

6 27 14 31

7 198 10 223 18 239 16 65 20 54 10 30 21 34 18

76

1 76 16 93

7

9 15 14 20

4 25

6 44

335 254 23 21 60 118 184 291

5 249 13
1 121 2 265

8 283 33 294 28 88 64 80 53 43 82 48 62

10

5 11

4

2

3

3

4

4

3 133 11 156

4 47 11 45 14 22

8 23

8

3 358 14 342

7 106 29 128 31 58 55 68 43

166 117 269 334 66 83
13 11

4 125 11 127 31 134 15 49 24 35 25 20 31 17 25

9 336

5 436 40 406 28 130 40 133 34 84 64 90 49

1 96

122 11 123

1 28 12 44

8 18 18 33 15

1 16

8

1 26

1

7

4

8

2

1

4

214 211 254 199
60 154 18 11

4 203 14 168 4 180
11

8 234 39 275 16 61 36 55 37 33 40 23 34

8 227 48 236 24 42 48 61 29 17 44 33 39

215

5 259

8 57 16 59

9 38 14 35

4

3 13

2 13

1

1

7

5

1

1

3

1

TABLE VIII PERSONS EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE, BY AGE AND SCHOOL ATTENDANCE: GEORGIA, 1938--Continued COLORED

COUNTY
DAWSON_._ DECATUR
Bainbridge_. DeKALB
Decatur 2 Lithonia. oo
DODGE Eastman
DOOLY_ Vienna
DOUGHERTY_. Albany Douglas.,.
EARLY Blakely .
ECHOLS EFFINGHAM ELBERT
Elberton . EMANUEL EVANS

ALL PERSONS

6 9 YEARS

Male

Female

10--14 YEARS

Male

Female

16--16 YEARS

Male

Female

17--18 YEARS

Male

Female

Attend- Not ing Attend-
School ing N.A. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A.

2455 662
1409 546 288
1771 248 1560 197
1248 1633 623 2238 210
112 1248 1682 515 2165 635

173 464 12 456

7 486 31 533 10 173 32 140 16 86 36 117 29

87 123

2 130

4 112 14 154

8 31 13 54 12 19 14 39 20

210 289 13 245 10 334 26 309 34 82 19 75 33 41 34 34 41

196 105

3 115

126 12 132 20 22 29 29 39

7 38 10 55

76 57

3 57

4 64

5 84

9 10 12 11

9

1 18

4 16

154 322 30 42 213 283 48 29

2 339 58
7 309 2 46

1 361 30 374 12 108 27 110 18 76 31

81 33

59

3 46

4 13

1 17

9

5

5

8

8

4 341 17 319

9 79 40 134 26 40 62 55 48

1 36 10 49

2

7

9 15

5

6

5

9 14

111 266 256 303 132 119 311 416
39

3 254

4 260 10 312

8 38 20 74 15 17 35 27 16

8 295

8 347 29 397 18 73 47 110 38 31 54 77 54

4 120

5 129 15 128 14 42 17 50 13 14 30 21 34

1 461 11 475 47 458 15 134 51 148 27 59 92 87 67

27

43

50

17

14

11

9

79 21

6 22

5 30 27 16 19 11

3

4

5

6

7

2

7

314 225

4 262

274 14 279

4 62 51 72 40 30 107 44 94

151 284

4 256

5 355 13 405 18 128 24 131 13 63 38 60 36

83

72

111

104

34

61

26

24

213 363 14 387 13 467 26 474 18 140 30 161 21 91 51 82 40

105 108

2 108

129 19 149 13 34 27 65 10 17 22 25 12

TABLE VIII--PERSONS SIX TO EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE, BY AGE AND SCHOOL ATTENDANCE: GEORGIA, 1938--Continued COLORED

COUNTY

ALL PERSONS

6--9 YEARS

Male

Female

10--14 YEARS

Male

Female

15--13 YEARS

Male

Female

17--18 YEARS

Male

Female

Attend- Not ing Attend-
School ing A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A.

FANNIN

19

FAYETTE

908

FLOYD

744

Rome. ...

1022

FOR RYTH
FRANKLIN.^ Royston
FULTON Atlanta .. .

4 596
99 4275 16590

GTT.MER

9

GLASGOCK

389

GLYNN

1683

GORDON

156

Calhoun

112

GRADY

1675

GREENE

1727

Greensboro __ _

220

GWINNETT

.... 558

Buford

216

Lawrence vllle

84

4

2

171 173 150 137 311 199

6

2

46 109

19 13

883 780

1564 2707

53 65 252 300
37 27 7 19
204 310 80 268 12 37 84 92 38 38 32 16

1
6 171 11 146 9 195
1 3 79 1 20 42 796 28 2905
7 68 7 343 5 24 18
3 327 1 325
33 7 99 4 40 1 20

6

7

1

2

1

1

1

1

6 225 16 166 11 46 23 61 23 33 45 33 41 6 159 18 159 21 49 14 43 18 22 31 29 31 10 233 27 231 45 42 51 61 51 24 58 37 60

2

1

1

1

1

1

5 135

7 134

2 38

8 41

3 24

9 36

9

19

1 27

1

6

2

7

4

3

3

4

7

40 1044 104 933 87 274 128 243 125 98 173 107 184

24 3512 151 3893 125 927 248 1201 239 575 352 870 397

1

1

96

6 64

4 33

8 37

1 11 23 15 11

12 366 23 395 22 71 46 94 54 45 46 69 42

4 35

3 36

7 14

5

7

5

7

4

6

4

28

1 19

9

1 11

1

4

3

4

1

3 368 21 362 17 79 35 122 37 55 46 52 52

384

9 338

3 117 16 135 13 84 20 76 18

42

44

1 20

2 20

1

8

5 16

3

3 122 12 128

9 30 11 44 10 25 18 18 14

3 52

1 53

3 13

2 11 10

3

9

6

6

24

1 14

3

3

5

8

3

4

4 10

TABLE VIII--PERSONS SIX TO EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE, BY AGE AND SCHOOL ATTENDANCE: GEORGIA, 1938--Continued COLORED

COUNTY
HABERSHAM Cornelia
HALL Gainesville
= HANCOCK HARALSON Tallapoosa HARRIS HART Hartwell
HEARD^ HENRY HOUSTON IRWIN...
Ocilla
JACKSON Cnmrnprrp. Maysvllle
JASPER JEFF DAVIS
Hazlehurst

ALL PERSONS

6--9 YEARS

Male

Female

10--14 YEARS

Male

Female

15--16 YEARS

Male

Female

17--18 YEARS

Male

Female

Attend- Not
ing AttendSchool ing A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A.

88 63 323 551 37
2932 292 72
2001 800 168
821 2049 1857
979 300
782 137 10 1196 389 100

18

8

13

8 12

9

95 62 15 59

142 93

1 80

3

9

1

6

1 23

3 17

11

1

7

1

3

6

6

6

11

16

4

1

5

1

5

5

2

8 76 22 63 13 18

8 25 11 11

7

9 11

2 123 12 144 11 28 20 36 17 20 40 27 39

10

7

1

4

1

1

283 558 52 46 5 12
311 369 92 133 41 31

8 515 3 43
17 3 371 1 138 1 25

2 671 43 594 16 175 65 209 31 100 65 110 53

6 59

7 70

7 29

6 21

6 14 10 10

7

15

17

2

1

6

2

2

1

2

1 486 34 414 14 116 54 149 32 45 92 51 81

6 153 16 175 10 56 15 55 11 53 21 37 12

1 34

9 38

2

7

6 16

3

8 11

9

8

97 128

2 147

6 178 18 155 13 51

5 69 17 46 14 47 22

403 350 20 369 20 466 46 455 38 109 70 158 52 64 92 78 65

206 341

8 344

4 415 26 478 17 98 39 99 21 37 62 45 29

113 165

1 172

3 215

9 228

6 61 22 61 14 37 30 40 28

34 56

1 48

1 70

8 60

3 19

4 20

3 11 10 16

4

115 151 13 120

3 178 17 181 19 50

9 55 16 23 21 24 17

33 29

28

30

4 30

2

8

3

5

6

3

8

4 10

13

2

1

2

1

1

3

3

1

1

1

2

4

1

316 220 18 206 15 286 33 253 24 67 51 78 36 39 76 47 63

53 76

2 62

1 85

8

72 1 24 13 32

4 19 16 19

8

1 14

11

30

25

5

10

5

1

TABLE VIII-PERSONS SIX TO EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE, BY AGE AND SCHOOL ATTENDANCE: GEORGIA, 1938-Continued COLORED

COUNTY
JEFFERSON JENKINS JOHNSON JONES ^ LAMAR ft Bamesville
LANIER LAURENS
Dexter Dublin LEE
LIBERTY LINCOLN LONG LOWNDES
Valdosta
LUMPKIN.-MACON MADISON MARION
MoDUFFIE

ALL PERSONS

6--9 YEARS

Male

Female

10--14 YEARS

Male

Female

15--16 YEARS

Male

Female

17--18 YEARS

Male

Female

Attend- Not

ing AttendSchool ing A.S.

N.A.

A.S.

N.A. A.S.

N.A.

A.S.

N.A.

A.S.

N.A.

A.S.

N.A.

A.S.

N.A.

A.S.

N.A.

2971 1713 1637 1587 879 250
438 3230
91 487 1210
1483 1063 406 2119 1314
53 2648
592 951
97 1082

370 546 265 298 109 296
210 293 164 183

17 505 7 321 7 301
263 6 145

11 639. 45 719 6 363 49 411
5 366 29 343 348 14 374
5 216 16 186

24 164 12 103 20 99 3 101 8 55

67 220 64 133 13 100 43 122 33 46

60 29 14 26 19

75 42 72 31 31

84 103 55 42 11 60 64 55 42 17

62
43 10 60 35

85 54

7 40

3 46

7 61 12 16 10 20

9

7 18

6 19

38 74 10 558
26 118 58 470 286

4 65 536 19
4 82 6 264

1 102

8 101

6 31

5 25

5 20

5 20

4

688

643

217

3 256

3 179

1 153

3

14

19

6

2

2

3

1 108 10 113

9 28

9 41 18 22 36 35 31

5 253 98 263 70 33

80 69 60 15 78 27 73

125 231

4 294

2 334 21 314 11 78 24 110 16 60 31 62 16

83 191

170

3 248

7 239

6 55 16 86 16 29 25 45 10

32 71

1 62

93

7 103

4 27

9 29

1 10

4 11

6

198 375

2 403

5 425 23 454 23 145 27 145 33 83 40 89 45

195 197 13 216 13 287 35 309 16 81 25 116 26 45 20 63 47

10 11

2

6

3 13

2

9

2

5

5

3

1

1

297 511

475

571 25 602

6 144 63 193 52 53 87 99 64

148 107 17 88 11 129 22 142 16 41 18 38 14 28 28 19 22

101 178

4 191

4 221 18 194

9 51 22 78

9 15 26 23

9

9 14

1 16

24

3 24

6

4

6

2

1

5

237 187 10 175 14 245 40 274 21 66 42 59 38 37 46 39 26

TABLE VIII PERSONS SIX TO EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE, BY AGE AND SCHOOL ATTENDANCE: GEORGIA, 1938--Continued COLORED

COUNTY
McINTOSH MERIWETHER MILLER MITCHELL
Pelham _.
S MONROE___ MONTGOMERY MORGAN MadisonMURRAY- -
MUSCOGEE Columbus
NEWTON Covington Mansfield ...
OCONEE OGLETHORPE PAULDING PEACH PICKENS
Nelson-

ALL PERSONS

6--9 YEARS

Male

Female

10--14 YEARS

Male

Female

15--16 YEARS

Male

Female

17--18 YEARS

Male

Female

Attend- Not

ing AttendSchool ing A.S.

N.A.

A.S.

N.A.

A.S.

N.A.

A.S.

N.A.

A.S.

N.A.

A.S.

N.A.

A.S.

N.A.

A.S.

N.A.

891 3315 832 2993 242

108 183 360 588
87 171 327 515
18 35

165
7 584 5 164
26 498 1 53

195
5 745 6 188 20 674 1 43

14 220 11 35

53 747 17 191

16 152 18 50

46 672 37 180

2 48

14

19 47 58 244
6 52 50 232
6 23

25 20 47 86 13 24 37 113
1 10

20 26 96 130 10 31 60 109
4 16

19 77 13 51
3

1730 957 1524 280 123

233 326 100 170 188 286 37 47
15 19

4 331
3 172 4 233
41

11 363 224
7 T346 49

32 405 9 198
22 330 1 65

19 79 6 52 11 103 5 18

38 127 20 74 30 129
2 26

41 15 20 4

48 34 43 13

43 28 63 14

51 33 54
21

45 19 31 11

33

1 27-

24

8

1

7

3

3

8

2

2

1755 3046 1149 242
58

373 340

726 544

178 195

53 41

37

6

3 360 20 589 10 213
45 1 14

4 420 21 640
5 249 1 47
3 16

33 399 82 744 25 262 10 61
8 15

32 70 60 109 65

64 143 104 213 127

11 70 29 90 19

3 12

12 18 10

6

2

4

3

8

27 87

77 136

34 42

6 11

1

5

30 89

96 172

36 37

12

6

1

2

598 1572 354 1263
110 21

71 92

187 283

18 65

359 228

7 17

1

2

4 102 11 266 6 48 12 244
24
5

1 136 11 137

8 32 12 50 10 27 20 22

5

8 370 32 310 17 97 26 125 21 64 39 57 33

3 84

1 66

3 22

19

25

2 25

3

7 255 61 332 39 53 56 87 61 29 77 35 46

1 26

2 23

2

7

7

1

2

4

1

4

6

1

1

2

1

TABLE VIII--PERSONS SIX TO EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE, BY AGE AND SCHOOL ATTENDANCE: GEORGIA, 1938--Continued COLORED

COUNTY

ALL PERSONS

6--9 YEARS

Male

Female

10--14 YEARS

Male

Female

16--16 YEARS

Male

Female

17--18 YEARS

Male

Female

Attend- Not

ing AttendSchool ing A.S.

N.A.

A.S.

N.A.

A.S.

N.A.

A.S.

N.A.

A.S.

N.A.

A.S.

N.A.

A.S.

N.A.

A.S.

N.A.

PIERCE Blackshear
PIKE POLK
Cedartown
PULASKI Haw kirs ville
PUTNAM Eatonton_ _
QUITMAN -
RABUN RANDOLPH RICHMOND . ROCKDALE SCHLEY
SCREVEN SEMINOLE SPALDING
Griffin STEPHENS
Martin Toccoa

600 201 1377 936 363
1123 239 1122 240 688
11 3186 6265
604 880
3244 889 1198 855 232 46
-- 200

57 92 38 34 258 254 153 170 62 76

158 211 12 31 139 213 26 39 98 120

7

4

414 584

889 1245

154 106

107 129

227 579

42 161

216 191

83 145

5 28

1

5

1 28

1 108 3 30 2 254 5 158 4 57
3 218 34
1 189 1 52 4 136
3 7 612 36 1265 8 108
152
10 560 2 161 7 254
136 37 11 33

8 129 3 33 4 292 5 196
98
3 234 56 218 51
1 122
1 7 677 22 1274 8 146 2 156
3 602 172
11 273 188 47 8 37

4 140 5 39 31 328 19 194 8 73

26 259 1 65 17 254 2 52
9 132

2

2

35 664

76 1452

17 145

10 172

34 640 4 189 23 285 1 200 2 61
13
48

1 40

4 40

8 25 15 26 16

2

6

6 21

2 19

4 19 13

23 75 44 99 32 33 60 42 62

16 67 25 66 13 37 32 48 38

6 17

5 17 12

3

8 22 19

17 46 31 86 14 31 30 38 34

16

1 18

3 10

5

9

2

11 85 25 77 10 40 46 46 29

1

9

5 13

2

8 12 16

3

5 48 18 41 15 44 24 45 22

1

1

2

1

1

33 177 69 257 57 88 128 127 78

74 281 115 392 129 161 208 195 229

17 35 22 42 13 10 33 12 36

13 71 17 67 17 70 25 63 23

10 218 47 251 21 199 69 195 33

5 40

8 73

2 50 14 43

7

9 70 35 68 27 22 52 35 52

2 54

8 60 20 35 21 37 31

18

16

1 12

2 13

2

4

1

2

1

18

23

5

8

1

TABLE Vni--PERSONS SIX TO EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE, BY AGE AND SCHOOL ATTENDANCE: GEORGIA, 1938-Continued COLORED

COUNTY
i- STEWART.. SUMTER
Americus. TALBOT TALIAFERRO
TATTNALL... TAYLOR TELFAIR TERRELL
Dawson
THOMAS Thomasvllle.
TIFT Tifton
TOOMBS Vidalia

ALL PERSONS

6--9 YEARS

Male

Female

10--14 YEARS

Male

Female

16--16 YEARS

Male

Female

17--18 YEARS

Male

Female

Attend- Not ing Attend-
School ing A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A.

2213 2527
887 1411 1057
870 1570 1121 2993 414
2311 964 1058 189 739 373

299 387

8 427

458 56 451 17 133 84 153 25 97 34 107 66

525 504 25 512

510 95 604 46 101 111 178 42 41 109 77 89

242 172

5 163

4 183 30 212 16 37 33 58 38 21 48 41 68

301 271 32 288 31 307 66 319 53 66 40 76 28 42 36 42 15

113 181

6 188

9 214 16 245

3 59 21

12 38 29 46 17

76 145 116 269 178 131 307 587 101 56

159

1 188

5 183

4 60 19 67

7 29 24 39 16

331

7 328 15 333

4 96 22 106 13 52 35 55 18

110 11 197 22 223 18 107 44 104 24 125 30 124 24

527

1 630 48 639 30 166 57 208 32 93 81 143 52

72

5 91

9 106

9 16 13 36 12

9 21 28 29

378 427 17 435 18 494 46 504 35 123 50 169 51 62 90 97 71

236 138 21 152 15 206 32 240 28 50 26 84 32 33 42 61 40

127 184

3 222

4 206 22 235 10 62 15 74 17 36 30 39 26

26 36

28

1 43

3 43

6

7

3 12

4

7

4 13

5

90 138

147

6 144 23 148 12 39 12 55 10 29 15 39

9

27 66

67

71

5 55

2 29

1 27

4 21

5 37 10

TABLE VIII--PERSONS SIX TO EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE BY AGE AND SCHOOL ATTENDANCE: GEORGIA, 1938-- Continued COLORED

COUNTY

ALLy PERSONS

6--9 YEARS

male

Female

10--14 YEARS

Male

Fpmale

15--16 YEARS

Male

Female

17--18 YEARS

Male

Female

Attend- Not
ing AttendSchool ing A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A.

TOWNS TREUTLEN TROTJP 01 Hogansville
LaGrange West Point
TURNER Ashburn
TWIGGS UNION UPSON
Thomaston .
WALKER Chickamauga
WALTON Monroe Social Circle .

521

71 104

1 98

1 113 10 99

6 33 10 37

8 14 22 23 13

1986

419 346 10 412

8 423 60 446 33 117 79 131 41 42 122 69 66

205

52 33

3 46

1 49

3 47

5 13

2 13

9

2 10

2 19

1352

162 253

1 236

4 320

5 285

3 85 13 108 17 30 64 35 55

349

78 51

5 72

4 70

9 85 14 19 10 18 14

7 10 27 12

818

134 170

9 146

4 163 32 181 21 47 15 55 12 26 25 30 16

187

35 46

1 40

32

6 49

1

7

7

7

6

1

9

5

5

1641

211 104

2 122

1 293 39 249 18 189 41 219 19 217 53 248 38

1

1

1548

65 332

1 299

2 352

4 327 10 82 14 94 12 27 14 35

8

737

160 139 11 159

8 149 17 173 15 40 30 33 28 20 30 24 21

499

72 85

5 85

5 109

4 122

4 28 14 34 11 18 18 18 11

1292

182 225

2 260

3 252 22 283 12 90 33 84 17 50 56 48 37

227

76 45

4 35

3 53

7 67 11

8

9 12 12

4 15

3 15

121

33 13

21

28

6 26

3 12

4

6

5

8

7

7

8

TABLE VIII--PERSONS SIX TO EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE, BY AGE AND SCHOOL ATTENDANCE : GEORGIA, 1938--Continued COLORED

COUNTY

ALL PERSONS

6--9 YEARS

Male

Female

10--14 YEARS

Male

Female

15--16 YEARS

Male

Female

17--18 YEARS

Male

Female

Attend- Not ing Attend-
School ing A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A. A.S. N.A.

WARE Waycross03 WARREN...
WASHINGTON .. ... Sandersville __.

WAYNE... WEBSTER WHEELER WHITE VvHITFIELD
Daltcn.

.. .. .

WILCOX WILKES
Washington WILKINSON. WORTH

506 1438 1962 3274 495
751 808 825 116 60 297
1218 1999 394 1380 2254

72 84 115 227 195 336 364 566
75
183 55 166 157 75 158
11 17 8 11
38
208 210 314 381 40 75 193 180 514 445

2 100 1 219 2 346 5 605
65
9 50 3 160 1 171 1 19
11 48
7 232 10 320 3 72 18 217 18 495

122 2 316 4 421 6 761
104
6 133 6 175 2 167 1 33
15 51
4 262 5 441 2 66 18 264 7 464

8 125 6 364 31 425 62 721
105
29 134 16 177 6 167
24 2 14
68
33 295 40 457 5 85 20 261 73 519

4 18 3 83 12 134
21 193
41

27 73

3 33

2 40

9

1

4

27

6 56 22 117
32 16 110 32 96

19 29 11 101 32 144 82 227
38

25 75

36 59

17 64

1

6

3

24

37 76 70 153
9 27 27 106 93 130

9 16 18 12 12

11 51 41 77 40

16 66 57 90 41

33 84 103 117 52

32

35

32 126 23 105 32

28 19 36 28 38

12 27 22 31 13

6

5

2

3

1

1

4

1

18

23

33 39 47 48 41

43 52 84 78 40

12 13

6 24

3

21 133 37 109 36

53 35 136 70 102

-
AGE
TOTAL
6 7
t--'
8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18

STATE OF GEORGIA SCHOOL CENSUS--1938
TABLE IX-NUMBER OF PERSONS SIX TO EIGHTEEN YEARS OF AGE BY AGE LEVELS, RACE, SEX AND SCHOOL ATTENDANCE

TOTAL

WHITE

ATTENDING SCHOOL
Male Female

NOT ATTENDING
Male Female

% NOT ATTENDING

TOTAL

COLORED

ATTENDING SCHOOL
Male Female

NOT ATTENDING
Male Female

% NOT ATTENDING

512,934 231,713 225,648 29,992 25,581 10.830

296,223 124,531 133,542 21,025 17,125 12.880

35,980 40,204 39,266 40,050 41,451 40,933 42,201 42,164 41,386 40,149 41,287 38,260 29,603

17,520 19,989 19,572 20,026 20,665 20,161 20,776 20,173 19,155 17,047 15,653 12,660
8,316

17,079 19,327 18,862 19,165 19,786 19,703 20,054 20,058 18,969 17,333 15,817 11,930
7,565

709 477 430 471 565 583 792 1,142 1,832 3,107 5,274 7,294 7,316

672 411 402 388 435 486 579 791 1,430 2,662 4,543 6,376 6,406

3.838 2.209 2.119 2.145 2.412 2.612 3.249 4.584 7.882 14.369 23.777 35.729 46.353

23,420 25,074 24,218 23,176 25,088 22,588 26,073 24,404 23,875 22,077 21,809 19,537 14,884

11,158 11,978 11,578 11,254 11,989 10,660 12,116 10,935
9,916 7,938 6,684 5,060 3,265

11,475 12,383 11,953 11,329 12,103 10,938 12,589 11,595 10,866
9,624 8,440 6,228 4,019

417 368 367 321 532 610 793 1,162 1,874 2,541 3,617 4,487 3,936

370 345 320 272 464 380 575 712 1,219 1,974 3,068 3,762 3,664

3.360 2.844 2.837 2.559 3.970 4.383 5.247 7.680 12.950 20.450 30.650 42.220 51.060

H

STATE OF GEORGIA SCHOOL CENSUS--1938

STATE SUMMARY TABLE X
EMPLOYMENT STATUS OF PERSONS NINETEEN TO TWENTY-FIVE YEARS OF AGE
BY SCHOOL GRADES COMPLETED White and Colored

Unem- Employed Otherwise
ployed On Farm Employed Students

Total

Grammar School 1-3 Years. 4-6 Years 7-8 Years

3,747 13,593 7,359

Total
High School 1-Year 2-Years 3-4 Years

24,699
5,286 4,517 _ 15,824

Total College

-_ 25,627 3,882 890

Total All Grades

55,098

12,611 31,448 12,841
56,900
7,182 5,228 9,161
21,571 631
1,942
81,044

7,217 25,754 13,943
46,914
9,983 8,739 33,116
51,838 9,323 869
108,944

131 259 128
518
168 241 1,826
2,235 5,120
7,873

23,706 71,054 34,271
129,031
22,619 18,725 59,927
101,271 18,956 3,701
252,959

149

EMPLOYMENT STATUS OF PERSONS 19-25 YEARS OF AGE

STATE OF GEORGIA

RACE AND OCCUPATIONS NUMBER

1938

PER CENT

20

30

40

50

UNEMPLOYED

White 38,570
Colored 16,528

EMPLOYED ON FARM

White
46,258 Colored
34,786

OTHERWISE EMPLOYED

White 77,624
Colored 31,320

STUDENTS

White
6,828 Colored
1,045

Total White Total Colored

169,280 83,679

150

JUatittiaMtftfhUfiaBititifa
STATE OF GEORGIA SCHOOL CENSUS-1938
STATE SUMMARY TABLE X
EMPLOYMENT STATUS OF PERSONS NINETEEN TO TWENTY-FIVE YEARS OF AGE BY SCHOOL GRADE LAST ATTENDED

MALE
Unemployed Employed on Farm Otherwise Employed
Total
FEMALE
Employed on Farm Otherwise EmployedStudents
Total
MALE^FEMALE
Employed on Farm Otherwise Employed..
Total

GRAMMAR SCHOOL

1-3

4-6

7

Grade Grade Grade Total

479 2,537 1,408
19
4,443

1,988 9,903 7,243
55
19,189

1,267 5,888 5,230
48
12,523

3,734 18,328 13,971
122
36,155

HIGH SCHOOL

8

9

10-11

Grade Grade Grade

Total

COLLEGE
or VOCATIONAL

NO SCHOOL-
ING

993 3,895
4,199 59

810 2,959 3,811
107

3,217 5,089 14,265
762

5,020 11,943 22,275
928

1,258 399
3,388 2,497

250 450 209

9,146 7,687 23,333 40,166

7,542

909

GRAND TOTAL
10,262 31,120 39,843
3,547 84,772

895 822 801
9
2,527

4,885 4,019 5,518
39
14,461

3,894 3,080 4,475
33
11,482

9,674 7,921 10,794
81
28,470

2,900 1,965 3,419
52
8,336

2,712 1,631 3,271
67
7,681

10,577 3,321 15,150
820
29,868

16,189 6,917 21,840
939
45,885

2,186 176
5,003 2,261
9,626

259

28,308

124

15,138

144

37,781

3,281

527

84,508

1,374 3,359 2,209
28
6,970

6,873 13,922 12,761
94
33,650

5,161 8,968 9,795
81
24,005

13,408 26,249 24,765
203
64,625

3,893 5,860 7,618
111
17,482

3,522 4,590 7,082
174
15,368

13,794 8,410 29,415 1,582
53,201

21,209 18,860 44,115
1,867
86,051

3,444 575
8,391 4,758
17,168

509 574 353
1,436

38,570 46,258 77,624
6,828
169,280

EDUCATION OF PERSONS 19-26 YEARS OF AGE-UNEMPLOYED

WHITE

STATE OF GEORGIA . 1938

EDUCATION

SEX AND NUMBER

PER CENT

10

16

20

26

30

35

40

1-3 Years
4-6 Years 7 Years 8 Years 9 Years
10-11 Year College or
Vocational No Schooling

Male 479
Female 895
Male 1988
Female 4885
Male 1267
Femaie 3894
Male 993
Female 2900
Male 810
Female 2712
Male 3217
Female 10577
Male 1258
Female 2186
Male 250
Female 259

WL
;////}/////)/////>m
/////////////////%

152

EDUCATION OF PERSONS 19-26 YEARS OF AGE-EMPLOYED ON THE FARM STATE OF GEORGIA 1938

EDUCATION OF PERSONS 19-25 YEARS OF AGE--OTHERWISE EMPLOYED STATE OF GEORGIA

1938 WHITE

EDUCATION

SEX AND NUMBER

PER CENT

10

15

20

26

30

35

40

1-3 Years

Male 1408 Female 801
ffl

4-6 Years

Male 7243
Female 5518 V///////////)/////A

7 Years

Male 5320
Female 4475 W///)/////)//A

8 Years

Male 4199 Female 3419

9 Years

Male 3811 Female 3271

Male 14265
10-11 Year Female 15150 V///?/////}////?////////^

College or Vocational

Male 3388
Female 5003 V/////////////A

No Schooling

Male 209 Female 144

154

(as J

TABLE X--WHITE EMPLOYMENT STATUS OF PERSONS NINETEEN TO TWENTY-FIVE YEARS OF AGE: GEORGIA, 1938

COUNTY

MALE

FEMALE

TOTAL

Unemployed

On Farm

Other- Stuwise dent

Total Male

Unemployed

On Farm

Other- Stuwise dent

Total UnemFern. ployed

On Farm

Other- Stu- Total wise dent M--F

STATE TOTAL... 10262 31120 39843 3547 84772 28308 15138 37781 3281 84508 38570 46258 77624 6828 169280

APPLING
ATKINSON BACON t- BAKER

24

309

225

558

7

2

61 16

86

5

164

55

224

35

310

106

7

458

13

101

24

1

139

42

136

132

1

311

18

105

6

129

25

58

125

208

28

220

200 12

460

50

68

28

1

147

66

445

357

1

869

25

2

166 22

215

30

222

180

432

63

530

306 19

918

63

169

52

2

286

" BALDWIN BANKS BARROW Winder

34

54

209 26

323

93

23

236 32

384

127

77

445 58

707

44

235

67 10

356

172

101

54

8

335

216

336

121 18

691

26

204

83

313

20

109

105

234

46

313

188

547

42

5

58

1

106

70

66

136

112

5

124

1

242

BARTOW Adairsville

110

449

330 15

904

333

260

258

6

857

443

709

588 21 1761

5

1

35

41

11

42

53

16

1

77

94

Carters ville.. . --

21

BEN HILL

4

3

155

6

185

138

59

76

3

142

44

116

7

261

159

21

33

98

48

3

271 13

446

80

109

3

240

Fitzgerald

55

2

100

9

166

49

126

8

183

104

2

226 17

349

BERRIEN

17

613

107 11

748

68

87

593

5

753

85

700

700 16 1501

BIBB BLECKLEY
Cochran . .. BRANTLEY
BROOKS Quitman

159

29

926 186 1300

612

10

133

22

2

167

89

4

3

72 12

91

40

26

134

102

3

265

33

12

214

29 26

281

33

14

1

65 14

94

74

7

592 261 1472

771

36 1518 447 2772

51

36

1

177

99

184

58

3

344

107 12

159

44

3

179 24

250

66

139

6

244

59

200

241

9

509

87

104 26

250

45

301

133 52

531

37 10

121

88

1

102 24

215

TABLE X-EMPLOYMENT STATUS OF PERSONS NINETEEN TO TWENTY-FIVE YEARS OF AGE: GEORGIA, 1938-Continued WHITE

COUNTY
BRYAN BULLOCH...
Statesboro _ BURKE BUTTS
Jackson
CAXHOUN 5 CAMDEN 05 CANDLER
CARROLL.. Oarrollton.
CATOOSA CHARLTON CHATHAM CHATTAHobOHEE
CHATTOOGA Trion..
CHEROKEE. Canton
CLARKE... Athens
CLAY CLAYTON CLINCH.

MALE

FEMALE

TOTAL

Unem- On ployed Farm

Other- Stuwise dent

Total UnemMale ployed

On Farm

Other- Stuwise dent

Total UnemFern. ployed

On Farm

Other- Stu- Total wise dent M--F

20 46
9 62 3 10

68 505
2 113 87

93 14

82 14

99 50

176

6

95

1

27

195 647 160 357 186 37

51 109 12 129 37 11

17 266
17 31

96

7

177 17

124 112

171

4

121

2

14

1

171 569 248 321 191 26

71 155 21 191 40 21

85 771
2 130 118

189 21

366

259 31 1216

223 162

408

347 10

678

216

3

377

41

1

63

13 21 14 84 16

90 4 226 794 2

84 13

200

86

111

88

5

333

398 41 1317

177 30

225

45 49 171 241 35

12 1 93 479

151 12

220

68

118

101

3

368

432 40 1192

248 16

299

58

102

70

5

185

319

325 1273

51

2

235 25

420

154

229

189

701

830 81 2509

425 46

524

48

119

116

5

288

60

22

44

65

7

138

50

331

55 2456 402 3244 1627

6

23

20

5

54

23

39

113

2

214

108

15

39

2

106

72

6 1154 348 3135 1958

2-

22

3

50

29

158

229

7

502

59

104

9

244

61 3610 750 6379

25

42

8

104

26 796
19

225 11
484 15

306 10

262 10

187 27

172

7

627 309 777 213

232 153 265 75

37
296 6

392 23

239

6

221 34

133

9

684 398 816 223

318 179 344 94

262 11
780 21

698 33 1311

501 16

707

408 61 1593

305

16

436

19 93 6 51

130

226

31

4 387 115 599 225

71

29

106

17

91

210 11

363

136

41

352 33

435

192

28

127 14

200

50

97

257 22

426

395 89

709

318

4

782 204 1308

36

33

1

87

23

107

62

1

193

19

167 11

333

187

110

377 22

696

29 11

232

201

41

381 44

667

TABLE X--EMPLOYMENT STATUS OF PERSONS NINETEEN TO TWENTY-FIVE YEARS OF AGE: GEORGIA, 1938--Continued WHITE

COUNTY

OOBB COFFEE

COLQUITT

S COLUMBIA "* COOK

OOWETA

Senoia

CRAWFORD

CRISP

--

Cordele

DADE DAWSON .-
DECATUR -

DeKALB...

DODGE Eastman

MALE

FEMALE

TOTAL

Unem- On Other- Stu- Total Unem- On Other- Stu- Total Unem- On Other- Stu- Total ployed Farm wise dent Male ployed Farm wise dent Fein. ployed Farm wise dent M--F

154

429

571 40 1194

560

134

498 26 1218

714

563 1069 66 2412

45

1

132 21

199

100

127

8

235

145

1

259 29

434

35

553

137 12

737

80

317

208

4

609

115

870

345 16 1346

16

99 22

137

96

1

69 15

181

112

1

168 37

318

60

789

135 15

999

276

273

295

9

853

336 1062

430 24 1852

8

21

29

13

14

27

21

35

56

14

276 40

330

62

362 35

459

76

638 75

789

8

69

73 *9

159

23

25

105 13

166

31

94

178 22

325

10

289

108

8

415

39

140

275

5

459

49

429

383 13

874

44

153

271

4

472

146

42

248

2

438

190

195

519

6

910

31

183

1

215

62

263

1

326

93

446

2

541

1

9

1

11

15

9

1

25

16

18

2

36

12

68

27

2

109

63

20

25

5

113

75

88

52

7

222

--

9

227

32

1

269

71

21

1

124 31

177

118

91

65

3

230

80

318

97

4

499

54 15

187

139

1

178 46

364

53

88

93 11

245

39

48

98

28

3

177

56

42

234

110 12

398

171

12

2

88 17

119

111

2

178

1

220

92

90

271 12

465

70

29

2

157

104

168

57

5

334

82

156 12

421

213

316

266 24

819

61 15

187

123

2

149 32

306

125

129

757 162 1173

456

39

463 140 1098

581

168 1220 302 2271

91

286 89

466

234

1

232 63

530

325

1

518 152

996

10

5

66

4

85

55

23

8

86

65

5

89 12

171

66

461

104

7

638

176

248

90

7

521

242

709

194 14 1159

17

3

29

8

57

34

2

38

6

80

51

5

67 14

137

TABLE X--EMPLOYMENT STATUS OF PERSONS NINETEEN TO TWENTY-FIVE YEARS OF AGE: GEORGIA, 1938--Continued WHITE

COUNTY

MALE

FEMALE

TOTAL

Unem- On Other- Stu- Total Unem- On Other- Stu- Total Unem- On Other- Stu- Total ployed Farm wise dent Male ployed Farm wise dent Fern. ployed Farm wise dent M--F

DOOLY Vienna
DOUGHERTY Albany. __

DOUGLAS.. EARLY
_. Blakely 5 ECHOLS 00 EFFINGHAM....

ELBERT Elberton
EMANUEL EVANS. FANNIN..
McCaysville

.. ...

FAYETTE FLOYD.
Rome.
FORSYTH..

FRANKLIN.... Royston
FULTON.... Atlanta
GILMER

11 4 10 29
40 8 11 5
18
38 3 64 21 133 24
19 155 122 18
52 13 558 1376 48

220

74

305

35

4

23 13

44

16

21

89

7

127

85

2

228 36

295

72

159

165

7

371

184

264

60

8

340

18

4

26

41

30

70

64

139

28

146

125 *9

298

193

216

101 15

370

81

176 18

197

5

437

128

8

637

123

114

63 13

211

42

239

131

3

506

188

1

31

56

16

163

71 11

264

54

427

559 19 1160

380

2

772 35

931

385

414

52

4

488

63

383

110 29

574

141

7

25

45

26

353 2507 149 3567 1369

6 3029 168 4579 2729

217

155

420

43

162

84

281

46

24

7

47

20

89

4

178

95

234 32

338

101

55

132 14

385

224

167

103

6

294

26

11

41

41

38

38

104

33

10

96

2

301

211

149

98 17

345

119

224 19

248

8

219

205

6

553

187

64

61 10

177

63

133

83

7

411

321

26

42

40

102

76 12

244

73

229

582

7 1198

535

2

777 36 1200

507

365

76

8

512

81

337

106 24

608

193

19

45

39

125 1784 81 3359 1927

1 2201 104 5035 4105

111

191

345

91

382

158

586

4

47 20

91

21

178 11

305

2

462 68

633

214

297 21

756

431

163 14

634

4

37

82

108

102

243

156

221 11

599

365

199 32

715

400 37

445

656

333 14 1190

178

124 23

388

372

214 10

917

1

57

98

265

147 23

508

656 1141 26 2358

4 1549 71 2131

779

128 12 1000

720

216 53 1182

7

44

90

478 4291 230 6926

7 5230 272 9614

328

346

765

V

;

TABLE X-EMPLOYMENT STATUS OF PERSONS NINETEEN TO TWENTY-FIVE YEARS OF AGE: GEORGIA, 1938-Continued WHITE

COUNTY

GLASCOCK.
GLYNN GOE,DON___.
Calhoun--. GRADY

GREENEGreensboro --
GWINNETT
< Buford Lawrence ville.

HABERSHAM_

Cornelia

HALL Gainesville..

Lula

--

HANCOCK-- HARALSON-
Tallapoosa.
HARRIS

HART HartwelL.
HEARD HENRY HOUSTON-

MALE

FEMALE

TOTAL

Unemployed

On Farm

Other- Stuwise dent

Total UnemMale ployed

On Farm

Other- Stuwise dent

Total Fern.

Unemployed

On Farm

Other- Stuwise dent

Total
M--F

19 68 54 42 50

124
11 549
1 311

56

2

525 35

210

6

71

134

4

201 639 819 114 499

38 69 224
60 258

1 204
138

59

1

481 30

301

9

97

124 17

178 581 738 157 537

57 137 278 102 308

204

115

3

379

12 1006 65 1220

753

511 15 1557

1

168

271

449

258 21 1036

35 30 64 18 20

125 2
699

117

5

282

38

70

395 24 1182

58

76

32

63

82 42 100 19 30

36 575

150 12 18
271 17 20 38

280 60 963 39 73

117

161

72

2

164 1274

37

50

267 17

562

56

130

666 41 2145

78

115

70 13

136

91 14
97
42 6

212 3
378 1 7

249 38

43 10

426 25

247 17

14

3

590 70 926 307 30

160 13
216 47
28

1 248

273 37 64 12 453 20 301 23 5

550 90 937 371 36

251 27 313
89 34

292 4
626 1 10

522 75 1140

107 22

160

879 45 1863

548 40

678

19

3

11 57
18 37

102 243
5 36

39

127

2

52 10

78

152 429
85 159

46 111 61
34

34 184
12

39

168

4

29 10

87

4

119 467 100 137

57 168 79
71

136 427
5 48

78

295

6

81 20

165 12

271 896 185 296

36 8 24 40 14

416 2
198 160 95

70 15

41

7

72 10

154

9

83 13

537 58 304 363 205

123 7 49
133 134

246
137 64 6

62

54

51 12

131

4

56

435 69 249 332 205

159 15
73 173 148

662 2
335 224 101

132 19 95 15 123 22 285 13 139 22

972 127 553 695 410

TABLE X-EMPLOYMENT STATUS OF PERSONS NINETEEN TO TWENTY-FIVE YEARS OF AGE: GEORGIA, 193a-Continued WHITE

COUNTY
IRWIN Ocilla
JACKSON... Commerce.. Ma.ysville.__
JASPER JEFF DAVIS Hazlehurst. => JEFFERSON. JENKINS
JOHNSON.. JONES LAMAR
Barnesville. LANIER
LAURENS.... Dexter Dublin
LEE
LIBERTY.. LINCOLN LONG LOWNDES....
Valdosta

MALE

FEMALE

TOTAL

Unemployed

On Farm

Other- Stuwise dent

Total UnemMale ployed

On Farm

Other- Stu- Total Unemwise dent Fem. ployed

On Farm

Other- Stuwise dent

Total M--F

34 6 36 21 4

262
333 1
49

32

7

19

120 19

90

14

335 25 508 120 67

61

6

122

169

104

2 "87

120 12 107 13 94 12 19

287 18
411 210
58

133 12 158 125

323
502 1 86

152 14 31
227 32 184 30 33

622 43 919 330 125

10 20 3 33 46

54

87 10

236

99

3

1

. 38

3

163

140

5

178

80

0

161 358 45 341 310

71
32 33 63 146

37 19 2 60 118

71

293

11

1

189

9

68 11

186 344 47 321 343

81 52 36 96 192

91 255
3 223 296

158 17

392

3

49

4

329 14

148 17

347 702 92 662 653

29

220

4

73

11

51

5

2

10

106

83

332

75 17

169

69 12

143

67 12

86

52

4

172

52

177

38

5

21

5

14

51

85

1

315

87 16

146

94 15

135

83

6

103

40

5

156

81

397

168

1

647

42

78

162 33

315

32

56

163 27

278

19

2

150 18

189

61

166

92

9

328

24 5
31 4

590 51 1 27

115 12

19

1

186 24

41

741 76 242 72

84 24 160 46

264 32

102 11

461

12
123 "ii

68 297

43

96

108 29 191 50

854 83 1 34

217 23 1202

31

1

144

309 38

539

84

168

12 29 14 17 59

37 60 66 309

76

7

40

2

38

4

93 11

207 22

132 131 122 430 288

15 41 29 94 170

3 25 42 142

94 12

37

1

21

3

126 13

152 22

124 104 95 375 344

27 70 43 111 229

40 85 108
451

170 19

77

3

59

7

219 24

359 44

256 235 217 805 632

TABLE X-EMPLOYMENT STATUS OF PERSONS NINETEEN TO TWENTY-FIVE YEAES OF AGE: GEORGIA, 1938^Continued WHITE

COUNTY
LUMPKIN MACON MADISON MARION_ -.
Buena Vista.
McDUFFIE McINTOSH a, MERIWETHER. w MILLER
MITCHELL Pelham
MONROE
MONTGOMERY.
MORGAN..-- Madison
MURRAY MUSCOGEE.
Columbus .
NEWTON Covington Mansfield.
OCONEE OGLETHORPE^ PAULDING

MALE

FEMALE

TOTAL

Unemployed

On Farm

Other- Stuwise dent

Total Male

Unemployed

On Farm

Other- Stuwise dent

Total Fern.

Unemployed

On Farm

Other- Stuwise dent

Total M--F

38 116

87

1

242

54

64

19

90

69 57

235

80

10

48

312

112 17

489

149

229

7

81

37

1

126

55

43

5

5

3

55 68 82 94 15 26
4

173 240 487 124
7

92 99 197 62
3

180 100 541 124

142

1

137 139

206 32

63

1

9

415 475 976 250
12

12 6 99 17

106 5
144 275

112 14 112 22 293 17
79

244 145 553 371

64 15 293 100

57
16 125

110 13 53 16 213 26 73

244 84 548 298

76 21 392 117

163 5
160 400

222 27

488

165 38

229

506 43 1101

152

669

29 11 27 19

340 2 64
150

64 24

63

6

130

9

96

6

457 82
230 271

105 73 126 55

238 1 8 61

74 26 38 4 106 8 120 8

443 116 248 244

134 84 153 74

578 3 72
211

138 50 101 10 236 17 216 14

900 198 478 515

22 10 68 67 195

134

196

353

1

29

40

258

149

4

479

18

361

5

451

3 1126 63 1387

46 21 112 243 520

76

53

6

181

1

22

44

142

244

9

507

4

348

4

599

1 1332 89 1942

68
31 180 310 715

210

249

534

2

51

84

400

393 13

986

22

709

9 1050

4 2458 152 3329

39 11 7 16 81 36

138 3 8
150 214
310

172

2

74

4

17

50

86

150 21

351 92 32 225 389 517

107 16 15 91 171 170

41
4 68 124 214

145 3 85 6 17 82 4 108 2 105 19

296 107 36 245 405 508

146 27 22 107 252 206

179 3 12
218 338 524

317

5

647

159 10

199

34

68

132 13

470

194 10

794

255 40 1025

-

TABLE X-EMPLOYMENT STATUS OF PERSONS NINETEEN TO TWENTY-FIVE YEARS OF AGE: GEORGIA, 1938-Continued WHITE

COUNTY
PEACH PICKENS
Nelson PIERCE
Blackshear
PIKE_. POLK S Cedartown M PULASKI
Hawkinsville
PUTNAM Eatonton.
QUITMAN RABUN RANDOLPH
RICHMOND ROCKDALE SCHLEY SCREVEN SEMINOLE
SPALDING Griffin
STEPHENS Toccoa.

MALE

FEMALE

TOTAL

Unem- On ployed Farm

Other- Stu- Total Unem- On wise dent Male ployed Farm

Other- Stu- Total Unem- On wise dent Fern. ployed Farm

Other- Stuwise dent

Total M--F

29

36

47

189

1

7

364

3

6

79

144

67

10

97

9

342

118

84

1

3

77

448

14

301

43

4

56

10

1

58

135

96

46

137

279

90

4

296

165

273

187 13

638

3

4

4

54

369

21

665

131

817

58

8

77

13

7

101 12

133

20 167 79
7 7

104 337
91 1

83

9

216

479 18 1001

189

9

277

12

1

111

36

4

48

53 402 148
53 6

29 225
60

89 21

364

8

209

2

29

43

2

192 999 359 142
51

73 569 227
60 13

133 562
151 1

172 30

408

843 26 2000

398 11

636

41

1

253

79

6

99

7

31

66

3

107

7

46

8

61

9

19

14

42

41

92

135 17

285

18

110

119 17

264

57

20

42

2

121

45

37

3

85

8

2

22

32

44

109

64 10

227

63

27

186 24

300

64

51

108

5

228

52

83 11

146

17

21

36

74

85

201

199 27

512

81

137

305 41

564

294

57

938 89 1378

773

27

123

101

251

114

5

56

33

3

97

48

50

283

124 10

467

165

21

159

50

6

236

49

11

739 117 1640 1067

68 1677 206 3018

56

86

3

259

141

179

187

3

510

3

34

85

53

59

67

3

182

94

120

6

385

215

377

244 16

852

73

89 16

227

70

232

139 22

463

85 35 44
42

58
152 4

438 11

86

83 22

89

1

592 121 301 136

241 63 106 45

11 106

388

7

104

73 25

71

647 167 310 116

326 98 150 87

69
258 4

826 18 1239

190

288

156 47

611

160

1

252

r

:

1

"

111



...

'

111 .--J..II.I i.n ii..-II..I

.,

i

. . ... .

1

--

TABLE X-EMPLOYMENT STATUS OF PERSONS NINETEEN TO TWENTY-FIVE YEARS OF AGE: GEORGIA, 1938-Continued WHITE

COUNTY
STEWART SUMTER
Americus TALBOT TAIIAFERRO.
TATTNALL. TAYLOB,.__ . M TELFAIR... S TERRELL..
Dawson...
THOMAS Thomasville.
TIFT Tifton
TOOMBS Vidalia
TOWNS TREUTLEN
TROUP Hogansville. LaGrange... West Point..
TURNER Ashburn

MALE

FEMALE

TOTAL

Unemployed

On Farm

Other- Stu- Total Unemwise dent Male ployed

On Farm

Other- Stuwise dent

Total UnemFem. ployed

On Farm

Other- Stuwise dent

Total M--F

15

47

24

124

29

13

26

13

28

6

128

71

7

226

88 22

139

50

4

93

37

4

82

71 36 72 51 26

3 50
4 17

72

2

109

5

79 23

30

6

20

148 200 174
91 63

86 60 101 64 39

50 174
30 45

132

180 12

167 45

80 10

57

4

276 426 313 184 145

22 46 46 16 10

319 133 271 93
1

130 11

78

2

180

5

31 10

50

482 259 502 150
61

96 78 298 29 27

182 55 26 15

159 89 80 107 59

444 223 408 160
86

118 124 344
45 37

501 188 297 108
1

289 18

167

3

260

9

138 19

109

926 482 910 310 147

56 23 35 49

211 1
406 2

99 11 196 20
123 141

377 240 564 193

171 58 24 135

87
277 7

103

7

226 22

235

1

111

368 306 537
253

227 81 59 184

298 1
683

202 18

745

422 42

546

358

1 1101

252

1

446

17 4 58 22

269
59 179

104 105 57
74

7 1 7 1

397 110 181 276

57 3
162 98

157
12 130

143 139
12 60

361

74

426

247 11

758

143

7

244

2

253

194

220

71

69 15

375

291

120

309

134

4

567

44

90

198

9

341

101

9

3

119

4

135

87

28

605

3

636

25

16

30 19

65

12

7

225

33

9

274

104

6

16

22

12

33 60

187

9

106

4

642

3

16

9

46 12

16

330 197 670
37 222
28

145 96 53 28 111 18

123

385 18

671

3

225

8

332

1247

6 1306

46 28

102

285

79 21

496

32

50

TABLE X-EMPLOYMENT STATUS OF PERSONS NINETEEN TO TWENTY-FIVE YEARS OF AGE: GEORGIA, 1938-Continued WHITE

COUNTY
TWIGGS.. UNION UPSON._
Thomaston . WALKER
Chickamauga
WALTON S Monroe * Social Circle
WARE Way cross
WARREN WASHINGTON
Sandersville WAYNE WEBSTER.
WHEELER WHITE WHITFIELD
Dalton . WILCOX.
WILKES. Washington
WILKINSON WORTH

MALE

FEMALE

TOTAL

Unem- On ployed Farm

Other- Stuwise dent

Total Unem- On Male ployed Farm

Other- Stuwise dent

Total Unem- On Fern. ployed Farm

Other- Stu- Total wise dent M--F

17 39 19 53 183 29

68 188 48
1 284

49

6

140

74

301

89

156

488

8

550

600 47 1114

6

1

36

50 67 59 207 427 27

18 145
6
138

45

9

87

1

62

542 21

390 18

12

1

122 300 127 770 973 40

67 106 78 260 610 56

86

94 15

262

333

161

1

601

54

151

283

1 1030 29 1320

422

990 65 2087

18

2

76

18 15 15 27 42

378 3
20 186
4

90

5

119 24

53

196 11

164 12

491 161 88 420 222

55 25 11 103 77

249
4 23

155

7

140 11

68

347

8

133 13

466 176 83 481 223

73 40 26 130 119

627 3
24 209
4

245 12 259 35 121 543 19 297 25

957 337 171 901 445

7

55

33

9

104

40

31

182

120' 2

335

75

3

5

42

50

12

111

236

372

4

723

198

9

65

27

101

68

20 94

30 19

87

2

109 258

47 106

75 276

63 28

207

4

213 593

40 9

47 329 14
19

59 581
96

15 309
77

5 276
74

89

109

701 18 1304

46

197

29 16 86 42 25

199 191 291
3 277

65

2

103

184

9

107

1

101 10

295 310 570 153 413

72 13 129 37 86

101 131
89 1
174

92 177 283 131
173

Z 2 4
6

265 323 503 173 439

101 29 215 79 111

300 322
380 4
451

157

2

560

280

2

633

467 11 1073

238

5

326

274 16

852

15

108

48

9

180

45

43

70 18

176

60

151

118 27

356

25

28

362

88 18

496

142

27 198

106 163

1

224~

8 1 511

115 170

123 560

232

1

471

251 | 26 1007

r. >

, .--,--;

*,

i

*.

'

STATE OF GEORGIA SCHOOL CENSUS--1938
STATE SUMMARY TABLE X
EMPLOYMENT STATUS OF PERSONS NINETEEN TO TWENTY-FIVE YEARS OF AGE BY SCHOOL GRADE LAST ATTENDED COLORED

MALE

GRAMMAR SCHOOL

1-3

4-6

7

Grade Grade Grade Total

HIGH SCHOOL

8

9

10-11

Grade Grade Grade

Total

COLLEGE or
VOCATIONAL

NO SCHOOL-
ING

GRAND TOTAL

Unemployed- . Employed on Farm Otherwise Employed
_, Students

"

Total

-. --

794 6,410 2,957
67

10,228

1,616 9,115 6,172
58
16,961

451 1,500 1,618
21
3,590

2,861 17,025 10,747
146
30,779

290 458 910
19
1,677

204 232 668
25
1,129

397 283 1,245
94
2,019

891 973 2,823 138
4,825

133

154

4,039

25

933

18,956

235

307

14,112

136

420

529

1,394

37,527

FEMALE
Unemployed- -Employed on Farm Otherwise Employed
Total

1,579 2,842 2,051
36
6,508

5,104 8,411 6,821
107
20,443

1,747 2,373 2,530
26
6,676

8,430 13,626 11,402
169
33,627

1,103 864
1,455 38
3,460

791 406 989
42
2,228

1,633 468
2,456 150
4,707

3,527 1,738 4,900
230
10,395

305 31 697 226
1,259

227

12,489

435

15,830

209

17,208

625

871

46,152

MALE--FEMALE

Unemployed- _

Employed on Farm _ -

Otherwise Employed ._

Students

--

Total

2,373 9,252 5,008
103
16,736

6,720 17,526 12,993
165
37,404

2,198 3,873 4,148
47
10,266

11,291 30,651 22,149
315
64,406

1,393 1,322 2,365
57
5,137

995 638 1,657
67
3,357

2,030 751
3,701 244
6,726

4,418 2,711 7,723
368
15,220

438 56 932 362
1,788

381 1,368
516
2,265

16,528 34,786 31,320
1,045
83,679

COLORED EDUCATION

EDUCATION OF PERSONS 19-25 YEARS OF AGE--UNEMPLOYED
STATE OF GEORGIA 1938

SEX AND NUMBER

PER CENT

10

15

20

26

1-3 Years

Male 794

T

Female 1579 /////!//*

4-6 Years

Male 1616 Female 5104

\r

Years Years

Male 451
Female 1747 //////////
Male 290 Female 1103

Male 204 Female 791

10-11 Years-

Male 397
f/J///// Female 1633

College or Vocational

Male 133
Z Female 305

to Schooling

Male 154 Female 227

ir

166

^^HiHBH

EDUCATION

EDUCATION OF PERSONS 19-25 YEARS OF AGE-EMPLOYED ON THE FARM STATE OF GEORGIA 1938

SEX AND NUMBER

PER CENT

10

15

20

26

30

35

40

45

60 55

Male 6410
Female 2842 /yyyyyyyyxx

Male 9115 Female 8411

i

i

Male 1500

3

Female 2373 /////fff-A

3 Male 453

Female 864

a

3 Male 232
Female 406
5 Male 283
Female 468

College or Vocational

1 Male 25 1 Female 31

No Schooling

Male 933
22 Female 435

i1r

-
167

EDUCATION OF PERSONS 19-26 YEARS OF AGE--OTHERWISE EMPLOYED

COLORED

EDUCATION

SEX AND NUMBER

STATE OF GEORGIA 1938

PER CENT

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40 45

1-3 Years

Male 2957
Female 2051 ////////Am

4-6 Years 7 Years

Male 6172
Female 6821 ////////////////////////////\
Male 161S
Female 2530 /////////A

8 Years 9 Years

Male 910
Female 1455 mfZ^Zr^Zlr-ZE
Male 668
\?zk Female 989

10-11 Years

Male 1245
Female 2456 ///SS/S/A

College or Vocational

Male 235 Female 697

3 771

No Schooling

3 Male 307
2 Female 209

168

TABLE X--COLORED EMPLOYMENT STATUS OF PERSONS NINETEEN TO TWENTY-FIVE YEARS OF AGE: GEORGIA, 1938

COUNTY

MALE

FEMALE

TOTAL

Unem- On ployed Farm

Other- Stuwise dent

Total Unem- On Male ployed Farm

Other- Stu- Total Unem- On wise dent Fern. ployed Farm

Other- Stu- Total wise dent M--F

STATE TOTAL. __ 4039 18956 14112 420 37527 12489 15830 17208 625 46152 16528 34786 31320 1045 83679

APPLING
ATKINSON BACON S BAKER
CO
BALDWIN BANKS BARROW
Winder
BARTOW
BEN HILL Fitzgerald
BERRIEN
BIBB BLECKLEY
Cochran BRANTLEY BROOKS
Quitman .

68

7

1

12

2

17

5

111

76

144

34

1

42

23

36

34

53

19

1

136

20

125

1

146

12

45

2

59

3

19

31

53

9

17

38

1

65

32

145

18

195

88

201

1

290

19

79

3

101

4

31

54

89

11

34

72

1

118

37

256

37

1

331

31

161

172

3

33

6

1

42

7

3

1

8

364

81

130

199

5

415

112

291

371

5

779

42

13

24

3

40

16

57

9

82

50

1

41

9

51

2

83

16

101

12

6

2

15

23

9

3

23

35

20

91

56

167

64

33

38

135

84

124

94

302

12

52

64

43

49

1

93

55

101

1

157

20

8

2

30

2

20

4

26

2

40

12

2

56

16

16

1

33

11

1

19

1

32

27

1

35

2

65

3

46

55

3

107

12

18

103

2

135

15

64

158

5

242

169

36

441 19

665

448

13

434 21

916

617

49

875 40 1581

27

1

28

9

37

1

47

9

64

2

75

3

4

26

33

6

1

49

56

9

5

75

89

1

28

29

6

2

34

42

7

2

62

71

6

137

19

8

170

7

122

41 12

182

13

259

60 20

352

10

2

65

3

80

47

1

62

5

115

57

3

127

8

195

TABLE X--EMPLOYMENT STATUS OF PERSONS NINETEEN TO TWENTY-FIVE YEARS OF AGE: GEORGIA, 1938-- Continued COLORED

COUNTY

MALE

FEMALE

TOTAL

Unem- On Other- Stu- Total Unem- On Other- Stu- Total Unem- On Other- Stu- Total ployed Farm wise dent Male ployed Farm wise dent Fern. ployed Farm wise dent M--F

BRYAN BULIOCH
Statesboro ._ BURE E
BUTTS,. Jackson_.

5

48

47

2

102

12

275

53

3

343

3

77

8

88

19

638

129

9

795

8

138

30

176

3

1

6

10

23

38

46

107

28

86

93

2

209

27

169

100

2

298

39

444

153

5

641

1

2

138 11

152

4

2

215 19

240

84

681

182

8

955

103 1319

311 17 1750

14

95

71

1

181

22

233

101

1

357

26

9

35

29

1

15

45

CALHCUN
M CAMDEN g CANDIER
CARROLL
Carrollton ...

12

253

110

1

376

13

4

125

142

5

99

26

4

134

7

262

84

353

6

5

67

4

82

45

279

76

2

44

77

67

180

7

95

9

428

31

2

111

39

8

168

73

2

322

93

2

102

57

532

205 10

804

89

6

156

2

253

49

176

65 12

302

74

442

157

2

675

13

5

160

6

184

CATOOSA

6

5

11

3

CHARLTCN

3

1

25

29

32

CHATHAM

:..

350

120 1044 54 1568 1397

CHATTAHOOCHEE.

1

22

11

34

7

2

5

10

3

8

10

21

16

48

35

1

41

77

10

896 74 2377 1747

130 1940 128 3945

36

9

1

53

8

58

20

1

87

CHATTOOGA Trion
CHEROKEE Canton

16

59

20

95

38

25

24

1

7

8

2

1

14

4

10

3

1

18

2

7

10

3

10

13

5

11

87

54

84

44

182

17

2

2

21

25

19

6

17

13

1

37

16

5

3

21

29

CLARKE Athens
CLAY CLAYTON CLINCH

1

104

21

1

127

5

77

32

2

116

6

181

53

3

243

33

243 12

288

132

352 10

494

165

595 22

782

5

125

45

175

15

190

51

256

20

315

96

431

13

102

34

1

150

23

45

74

1

143

36

147

108

2

293

1

97

2

100

106

3

53

2

164

106

4

150

4

264

, != . >

t

>

TABLE X--EMPLOYMENT STATUS OF PERSONS NINETEEN TO TWENTY-FIVE YEARS OF AGE: GEORGIA, 1938--Continued COLORED

COUNTY

MALE

FEMALE

TOTAL

Unem- On ployed Farm

Other- Stu- Total Unem- On wise dent Male ployed Farm

Other- Stu- Total Unemwise dent Fern. ployed

On Farm

Other- Stuwise dent

Total M--F

COBB Marietta..
COFFEE

COLQUITT Doerun __ Moultrie..
COLUMBIA COOK

COWETA Newnan...
Senoia .. CRAWFORD
CRISP Cordele. . _

DADE

......

DECATUR Bainbridge

DeKALB Decatur lithonia _ .
DODGE Eastman.

23

100

17

3

5

123

16

52

1

176

43

1

64

66

194

52

68

46

45

38

29

109

59

79

170

52

1

91

73

211

50

109

69

145

131

1

346

55

3

95

2

155

34

232

139

405

75

102

177

5

149

4

2

23

3

14

192

13

68

39

193

8

14

74

2

102

64

1

271

29

110

17

104

60

1

182

6

1

9

16

68

1

110

1

180

50

143

104

4

301

11

53

71

135

22

253

99

1

375

10

3

17

30

91

4

184

3

282

64

335

168

5

572

24

121

100

245

15

216

28

1

3

10

101

2

161

12

3

41

272

89

117

7

11

41

152

10

173

40

1

56

68

168

49

1

286

70

144

214

9

4

13

36

79

17

132

15

158

24

3

200

33

40

3

76

83

384

90

1

558

98

233

331

10

3

11

24

46

180

58

284

17

319

34

3

373

45

3

80

4

132

4

2

6

1

6

7

5

8

13

20 24

207

117 74

2

346 98

122 75

219

125 68

2

468 143

142 99

426

242 142

4

814 241

26

66

110

3

205

24

1

127

152

6

3

44

53

10

204

57

271

5

4

1

10

69

37

100

1

207

95

103

210

4

412

74

150

2

226

98

1

277

2

378

55

27

1

83

61

3

71

1

136

60

156

40

256

70

360

97

527

15

17

32

20

21

1

42

1

TABLE X--EMPLOYMENT STATUS OF PERSONS NINETEEN TO TWENTY-FIVE YEARS OF AGE: GEORGIA, 1938--Continued COLORED

COUNTY

MALE

FEMALE

TOTAL

Unem- On Other- Stu- 1 Total Unem- On Other- Stu- Total Unem- On Other- Stu- Total ployed Farm wise dent Male ployed Farm wise dent Fern. ployed Farm wise dent M--F

DOOLY

2

Vienna,

4

DOUGHERTY ....

5

Albany..

36

DOUGLAS

6

EARLY

2

^ Blakely

2

S ECHOLS

1

EFFINGHAM

9

ELBERT

13

Elberton

EMANUEL

8

EVANS

6

FANNIN...-

McCaysville,

FAYETTE

1

FLOYD

5

Rome _

42

FORSYTH

FRANKLIN..

14

Royston

1

FULTON

129

Atlanta

696

GILMER.___

231

19

252

5

1

24

4

33

23

41

36

1

83

10

1

146

6

189

115

57

28

2

93

45

251

19

1

273

7

5

27

34

21

1

60

62

29

89

104

202

102

185

68

1

267

45

109

109

145

60

213

30

50

23

4

83

7

1

1

114

9

124

26

96

29

1

131

49

1

220

2

265

100

4

4

72

5

91

37

1

5

7

1

96

414 16

655

302

21 1192

8 1917 1898

289

26

320

7

6

18

6

53

27

23

78

5

116

15

208 13

336

151

15

51

7

118

51

271

45

3

326

9

3

36

60

23

1

39

69

30

33

90

225

111

163

51

5

264

58

170

170

114

100

244

38

42

35

2

86

13

87

24

137

27

47

46

1

143

54

285

8

393

142

1

1

51

16

1

105

51

3

7

11

2

44

475 16

837

431

15 1423 10 3346 2594

1

1

520

45

572

7

42 10

86

64

114

6

199

1

354 19

525

72

79

9

211

522

64

4

599

8

63

94

2

99

131

122

194

427

348

119

6

531

279

279

259

160

457

92

58

6

169

1

1

201

33

261

143

75

2

274

1

505 10

658

5

5

123

21

1

196

4

12

18

140

889 32 1492

36 2615 18 5263

1

1

w

TABLE X--EMPLOYMENT STATUS OF PERSONS NINETEEN TO TWENTY-FIVE YEARS OF AGE: GEORGIA, 1938--Continued COLORED

COUNTY
GLASCOCK GLYNN GORDON
Calhoun GRADY
GREENE
GWINNETT Buford Lawrenceville
HABERSHAM Cornelia_
HALL Gainesville
HANCOCK HARALSON
Tallapoosa .. HARRIS
HART Hartwell
HEARD HENRY HOUSTON

MALE

FEMALE

TOTAL

Unem- On ployed Farm

Other- Stuwise dent

Total Unem- On Male ployed Farm

Other- Stu- Total wise dent Fem.

Unemployed

On Farm

Other- Stuwise dent

Total M--F

2

64

22

88

6

54

24

84

8

118

46

172

70

6

211

4

291

116

1

309

6

432

186

7

520 10

723

37

6

43

6

15

16

37

6

52

22

80

8

10

18

9

13

22

17

23

40

15

110

58

183

62

109

87

2

260

77

219

145

2

443

10

194

3

4

2

82

5

4

74

2

280

18

25

14

98

15*

20

17

21

51

240

23

3

56

7

6

69

1

361

27

50

22

81

6

13

17

23

61

434

143

3

641

26

4

45

75

5

138

36

179

12

21

33

10

34

44

2

5

3

10

1

5

12

18

3

10

15

28

2

3

5

2

15

17

4

18

22

4

23

7

34

5

18

8

31

9

41

15

65

11

29

2

42

21

44

3

68

32

73

5

110

5

3

8

4

3

7

9

6

15

22

366

99

487

116

329

109

554

138

695

208

1041

7

17

4

5

33

11

18

16

4

49

18

35

20

9

82

4

1

4

9

5

8

13

9

1

12

22

._

15

175

114

304

34

123

99

3

259

49

298

213

3

563

3

124

1

3

93

7

285

13

238

8

135

8

112

7

3

11

6

9

105

13

84

59

2

353

29

283

77

328

126

187

21

141

11

236

29

276

15 10

31

7

22 13

42

9

106

16

177

18

211

89 11

412

36

568

148 13 765

72

385

139

425

149

713

TABLE X EMPLOYMENT STATUS OF PERSONS NINETEEN TO TWENTY-FIVE YEARS OF AGE: GEORGIA, 1938-Continued COLORED

COUNTY
IRWIN_ Ocilla^_
JACKSON_ Commerce . Mavsville
JASPER JEFF DAVIS
Hazlehurst JEFFERSON JENKINS
JOHNSON JONES_^_ LAMAR
Barnes ville LANIER. __
LAURENS Dexter Dublin _ ..
IEE ..
LIBERTY LINCOLN LONG LOWNDES
Valdosta ..

MALE

FEMALE

TOTAL

Unem- On ployed Farm

Other- Stu- Total Unemwise dent Male ployed

On Farm

Other- Stuwise dent

Total Unem- On Fem. ployed Farm

Other- Stu- Total wise dent M--F

8

103

12

6

2

83

2

1

1

5

116

56

2

76

11

1

97

14

17

3

4

44 53 11 6 2

49 53

26

1

120

34

1

88

23

1

88

31

37

3

5

52

152

65

6

13

136

8

1

2

1

31

1

236

90

3

164

34

2

185

45

54

6

9

10

174

199

2

385

2

32

41

75

5

5

17

344

5

217

62

2

44.

1

425 267

16

134

79

1

230

6

6

75

87

8

6

14

33

293

107

5

438

45

287

58

1

391

26

308

278

3

615

8

38

116

162

8

11

19

50

637

169

7

863

50

504

102

2

658

10

98

3

216

1

123

6

4

6

37

37

2

147

17

6

242

10

1

135

45

55

40

83

17 52 32 27 37

89 60 72
22

19

125

95

5

212

58

162

51

1

79

23

1

83

27

187

56

2

272

55

276

112 11

454

33

195

68

1

297

33

4

96

1

134

43

59

63

1

166

3

278

40

4

325

15

15

9

1

133

1

144

7

219

15

241

28

232

78

4

342

21

21

79

2

156

3

240

17

228

25

270

31

510

118

8

667

36

36

88

3

289

4

384

24

447

40

511

66 27 4 3 36

40 69 6 263

117 25 29 48 128

2 1
1
2

225 122 39 315 166

68 27 17 21 111

26 64 11
189

100 11 21 86
163

7
4 1

201

134

102

54

49

21

300

24

275 - 147

66

217

133

36

17

50

452

134

| 291

9 1
5 3

426 224
88 615 441

TABLE X--EMPLOYMENT STATUS OF PERSONS NINETEEN TO TWENTY-FIVE YEARS OF AGE: GEORGIA, 1938--Continued COLORED

COUNTY
LUMPKIN MACON.. MADISON MARION..
Buena Vista
McDUFFIE McINTOSH MERIWETHER i- MILLER
-3
MITCHELL Pelham .
MONROE MONTGOMERY
MORGAN,. . . Madison
MURRAY. MUSCOGEE
Columbus
NEWTON. ... Covington... .. Mansfield
OCONEE OGLETHORPE PAULDING

MALE

FEMALE

TOTAL

Unem- On Other- Stu- Total Unem- On Other- Stu- Total Unem- On Other- Stu- Total ployed Farm wise dent Male ployed Farm wise dent Fem. ployed Farm wise dent M--F

1

2

17

269

6

109

4

138

2

1

6

30 90

406

22

137

19

161

10

10

4

2

43

270

14

67

26

106

5

6

12

44 109

466

30

2

113

30

162

3

8

5

4

60

539

20

176

30

244

5

8

1

18

74 199

872

52

2

250

49

323

13

18

3

120

48

171

22

103

55

180

25

223

103

351

26

4

94

7

131

31

2

112

4

149

57

6

206 11

280

41

319

117

1

478

164 199

109

1

473

205

518

226

2

951

3

80

22

105

21

68

24

113

24

148

46

218

14

271

49

5

339

47

307

51

3

408

61

578

100

8

747

10

33

43

31

1

45

77

41

1

78

120

9

178

102

1

290

140

78

134

3

355

149

256

236

4

645

10

110

56

1

177

34

65

67

3

169

44

175

123

4

346

15

183

10

1

209

14

140

27

2

183

29

323

37

3

392

1

1

30

32

12

1

43

56

13

2

73

88

16

2

18

2

8

12

22

2

24

14

40

61

91

152

304

148

63

182

393

209

154

334

697

130

1

359

8

498

367

3

545 29

944

497

4

904 37 1442

8

129

8

1

16

83

17

283

2

25

44

181

26

35

1

17

7

90

56

356

6 ........ 33

31

109

16

7

24

59

46

234

3

28

39

179

51

1

68

2

9

20

1

104

63

1

344

20

3

54

39

238

83

360

24

1

77

1

103

23

3

26

24

142

27

1

194

63

517

119

1

700

5

53

26

3

87

TABLE X-EMPLOYMENT STATUS OF PERSONS NINETEEN TO TWENTY-FIVE YEARS OF AGE: GEORGIA, 1938-Continued COLORED

COUNTY
PEACH PICKENS
Nelson PIERCE
Blackshear
^ PIKE 3 POLK
Cedartown _ PULASKI
Hawkinsville
PUTNAM Eatonton
QUITMAN RABUN RANDOLPH
RICHMOND ROCKDALE SCHLEY : SCREVEN SEMINOLE
SPALDING Griffin
STEPHENS Toccoa

MALE

FEMALE

TOTAL

Unem- On Other- Stu- Total Unem- On Other- Stu- Total Unem- On Other- Stu- Total ployed Farm wise dent Male ployed Farm wise dent Fem. ployed Farm wise dent M--F

12

187

76

275

36

207

99

342

48

394

175

617

1

1

2

4

9

2

11

10

1

4

15

2

65

3

1

8

75

8

1

13

5

47

15

67

1

14

1

16

7

112

4

1

23

142

22

2

29

7

132

37

82

18

6

142

2

21

160

73

1

193

33

1

52

4

152

10

12

34

90

90

60

18

33

149

24

41

1

166

41

222

62

1

326

62

212

127

142

135

1

405

63

81

36

96

1

133

17

1

200

39

291

21

1

352

21

5

50

26

31

5

62

5

158

38

201

4

15

19

12

80

20

112

2

1

4

7

17

416

144

5

582

26

134

26

186

31

292

64

387

32

27

59

36

42

78

12

86

26

124

24

166

46

236 '

10

1

11

2

11

5

18

89

422

218

8

737

106

838

362 13 1319

191

89

318

2

600

448

49

426

3

926

639

138

744 5 1526

13

76

30

119

26

63

49

138

39

139

79

257

3

79

41

2

125

61

23

44

128

64

102

85

2

253

10

324

84

1

419

80

302

110

4

496

90

626

194

5

915

16

66

52

1

135

51

22

48

1

122

67

88

100

2

257

26

164

73

263

59

157

116

332

85

321

189

595

8

17

25

43

44

87

51

61

112

2

33

3

2

40

1

25

5

3

34

3

58

8

5

74

.

13

2

21

36

10

14

24

23

2

35

60

-:

.' -v

TABLE X--EMPLOYMENT STATUS OF PERSONS NINETEEN TO TWENTY-FIVE YEARS OF AGE: GEORGIA, 1938--Continued COLORED

COUNTY

r
MALE

FEMALE

TOTAL

Unem- On Other- Stu- Total Unem- On Other- Stu- Total Unem- On Other- Stu- Total ployed Farm wise dent Male ployed Farm wise dent Fem. ployed Farm wise dent M--F

STEWART SUMTER
Americus TALBOT
TALIAFERRO..

TATTNALL TAYLOR 3 TELEAIR . TERRELL
Dawson .

THOMAS.
Thomas ville TTET .
Tifton

....

TOOMBS Vidalia
TOWNS. TREUTLEN

TROUP
Hogansville .. LaGrange ... West Point TURNER.
Ashburn __ .

12

268

75

355

8

448

31

487

35

1

130

1

167

11

102

82

195

8

82

20

110

67

270

59

4

400

79

538

134

4

755

23

406

99

528

31

854

130

1015

94

154

3

251

129

1

284

4

418

66

93

58

1

218

77

195

140

1

413

36

84

28

2

150

44

166

48

2

260

6

82

10

132

16

68

5

488

30

2

35

123

19

55

48

190

21

108

91

1

176

122

12

15

508

3

454

46

78

68

59

133

25

137

94

256

68

197

31

240

116

387

50

184

138

80

141

1

360

94

2

553

8

942

109

2 1061

69

137

98

2

115

215

12

119

42

1

174

67

73

65

2

207

79

192

107

3

381

50

2

151

8

211

89

249 12

350

139

2

400 20

561

7

95

78

180

20

82

126

228

27

177

204

408

13

1

30

44

50

1

33

84

63

2

63

128

3

62

35

2

102

4

65

48

1

118

7

127

83

3

220

10

1

52

63

23

4

89

116

33

5

141

179

14

54

42

110

57

27

43

127

71

81

85

237

21

278

101

400

3

39

1

43

46

226

4

276

7

50

1

58

4

53

17

1

75

3

2

47

52

51

239

150

1

441

72

517

251

1

841

42

49

1

92

45

88

2

135

55

230 12

297

101

456 16

573

33

50

83

40

100

1

141

23

32

8

3

66

27

85

25

4

141

20

1

48

69

23

3

95

121

TABLE X EMPLOYMENT STATUS OF PERSONS NINETEEN TO TWENTY-FIVE YEARS OF AGE: GEORGIA, 1938--Continued COLORED

COUNTY

MALE

FEMALE

TOTAL

Unem- On Other- Stu- Total Unem- On Other- Stu- Total Unem- On Other- Stu- Total ployed Farm wise dent Male ployed Farm wise dent Fern. ployed Farm wise dent M--F

TWIGGS UNION UPSON
Thomaston WALKER
Cliickamauga

11

143

8

86

28

8

8

30

37

191

49

143

85

1

122

61

99

WALTON

...

M Monroe

g Social Circle

WARE

Waycross ...

1

190

6

2

1

22

3

11

16

1

10

201

32

1

41

12

35

66

2

82

82 14

113

WARREN WASHINGTON
Sanders ville WAYNE WEBSTER

4

125

25

260

4

21

14

14

2

101

18

147

74

359

33

58

88

116

18

3

124

WHEELER..

WHITE

WHITFIELD

Dalton

WILCOX

....

8

59

2

4

2

5

6

125

17

84

6

12

1

8

1

1

34

2

167

WILKES

...

183

285

43

511

Washington

9

9

WILKINSON

10

74

175

1

260

WORTH

217

48

265

77

81

31

189

88

224

68

380

44

42

30

116

52

128

79

259

91

163

254

119

8

248

1

376

31

23

31

1

86

39

53

92

1

185

3

164

21

188

9

59

1

69

23

28

51

18

4

62

1

85

43

100 21

164

4

354

31

389

15

2

91

2

110

1

45

40

86

21

15

128

3

167

59

1

182 35

277

16

137

15

89

225

54

13

20

93

32

7

97

37

93

6

168

20

262

33

315

368

114

485

128

727

126

17

41

126

184

136

46

21

185

252

136

39

194

24

3

260

12

39

1

4

5

1

24

117

44

95

21

26

5

10

1

2

85

3

229

20

98

61

179

3

8

27

38

7

5

6

18

1

2

3

30

242

119

5

396

42

269

48

2

361

225

554

91

2

872

9

9

98

48

163

2

311

108

122

338

3

571

19

244

101

2

366

19

461

149

2

631

I



UNIVERSI [Y OF GEORGIA LIBRARIES

3 2106 D5L42M M2M2

i

1

\ GAYLAMOUNT i
{ PAMPHLET BINDER '
[
I Manufactured by \ AYLORD BROS. Inc.
Syracuse, N. V. Stockton, Calif.