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Johns Creek, GA : ウィキペディア英語版
Johns Creek, Georgia

Johns Creek is a city located in Fulton County in the U.S. state of Georgia. According to the 2010 U.S. Census, the population was 76,728.〔 The city is a northeastern suburb of Atlanta.〔http://www.northfulton.com/Articles-c-2009-05-14-177756.114126-sub24321.114126_Johns_Creek_is_states_wealthiest_city.html〕 According to Money Magazine, Johns Creek is the 13th highest-earning city in the United States.〔http://money.cnn.com/gallery/real_estate/2012/08/20/best-places-top-earning-towns.moneymag/13.html〕
==History==
In the early 19th century, the Johns Creek area was dotted with trading posts along the Chattahoochee River in what was then Cherokee Indian territory. The Cherokee nation was a confederacy of agrarian villages led by a chief. After Europeans colonized the area, the Cherokee developed an alphabet, and a legislature and judiciary system patterned after the American model.
Some trading posts gradually became crossroads communities where pioneer families – Rogers, McGinnis, Findley, Buice, Cowart, Medlock and others – gathered to visit and sell their crops.
By 1820, the community of Sheltonville (now known as Shakerag) was a ferry crossing site, with the McGinnis Ferry and Rogers Ferry carrying people and livestock across the river for a small fee. Further south, the Nesbit Ferry did the same near another crossroads community known as Newtown.
In the 1820s, the discovery of gold in the foothills of Northeast Georgia within the Cherokee Nation – approximately north of today's Johns Creek – led to America's first Gold Rush, the eventual takeover of the Cherokee Nation by the U.S. Government in 1830, and the subsequent forced exile ("The Trail of Tears") of Cherokee Indians to Oklahoma and other areas of the American West.
A few Cherokees remained, the most famous being Sarah Cordery (1785–1842), the half-blood Cherokee wife of pioneer John Rogers (1774–1851), and their 12 children. Rogers was a respected, influential plantation owner and colleague of President Andrew Jackson. Rogers's 1828 home – today, a private residence in Johns Creek – was an overnight stop-over for Jackson. Much later, the home was also visited by famed humorist Will Rogers, the great, great-nephew of John Rogers. Johns Creek's name comes from John Rogers's son, Johnson K. Rogers. A local tributary was named after him, and the name "Johns Creek" eventually came to be the name of the area.
In 1831, much of the land in the former Cherokee Nation north of the Chattahoochee was combined into the massive Cherokee County. When Milton County was formed in 1858, the Johns Creek area was folded into it.
In the 1930s, during the Great Depression, Milton County was dissolved and all of its land was then absorbed into Fulton County.
The four main crossroad communities — Ocee, Newtown, Shakerag and Warsaw — remained the social, educational and business centers of rural, unincorporated northeast Fulton County. For the next 50 years, these communities helped bring a sense of identity to this largely undeveloped and underpopulated area, as the nearby cities of Roswell, Alpharetta, Duluth and Suwanee and adjoining Forsyth and Gwinnett counties continued to grow and develop.
In 1981, a group of Georgia Institute of Technology graduates bought of farm land and woods near McGinnis Ferry and Medlock Bridge Roads for a high-tech office park. The new office park was to mirror one built in 1970 in nearby Peachtree Corners, known as Technology Park/Atlanta. Spotting tiny Johns Creek on an old map, they named their mixed-use, master-planned community ''Technology Park/Johns Creek''. This is the first reference to Johns Creek as a place. The area grew over the years to become the home of 200 companies – many of them Fortune 500 firms – with nearly 11,000 people spread over of office, retail and industrial space. With the jobs came houses and shopping centers, and the population increased to about 60,000.
By 2000, a grassroots movement to incorporate the Johns Creek area into a city was slowly developing. Residents wanted more control over issues such as traffic, growth, development and their quality of life. They also sought a level of service that was a challenge for the sprawling Fulton County to provide. Following the nearby city of Sandy Springs’ successful incorporation in 2005, a legislative campaign was started to incorporate the Johns Creek community. House Bill 1321 was passed by the state legislature, signed by Gov. Sonny Perdue in March 2006, and approved by the residents of northeast Fulton County in a July 18, 2006 voter referendum.〔http://johnscreek.georgia.gov/05/home/0,2230,70163884,00.html;jsessionid=8CBA440694CD6F6179CD803E9382F99B〕 In November 2006, the city's first elected officials were voted into office, with the City of Johns Creek becoming official December 1, 2006.
On November 16, 2015, with little warning and no public comment, the Johns Creek City Council unanimously passed a resolution opposing the expansion of a MARTA rail line into north Fulton County.〔http://politics.blog.ajc.com/2015/11/19/johns-creek-council-votes-full-and-complete-opposition-to-marta-rail-expansion/〕 Some residents of Johns Creek have voiced concerns around the lack public engagement on behalf of the council members.〔https://johnscreekwantsmarta.wordpress.com〕 During an Atlanta Millennial Revolution event on November 19, 2015, North American Properties' Mark Toro has claimed that suburban counties' resistance to MARTA's expansion has everything to do with racism.〔https://www.bisnow.com/atlanta/news/commercial-real-estate/martas-uphill-expansion-battle-because-ofracism-52733〕 Despite these issues, MARTA's Connect 400 project continues to move forward in an attempt to connect the City of Atlanta with the 400 corridor as it is the transportation spine of northern Fulton County and one of the fastest growing sub-regions in the metropolitan Atlanta region.〔http://www.itsmarta.com/north-line-400-corr.aspx〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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