Georgetown is located along Tennessee State Route 60, along what was part of the main Northern Route of the Trail of Tears in 1838.[5] According to tradition, the village was named for Cherokee trader George Fields, who owned a two-story log home and operated a trading post at the intersection of Georgetown Road and Francisco Road in the early 1800s. "An affluent merchant who operated a flatboat on the Hiwassee and Tennessee Rivers, he was also an enslaver and leader in tribal politics. His two-story log dwelling, known as the George House, bears the date of 1812."[6] The "George House" burned and was dismantled in 2014. It is believed that George Fields was buried just east of where his home once stood.
In the late 1800s, Georgetown was an active trading center featuring several gristmills, tanneries, and sawmills. Goods arrived in nearby Cleveland via the Tennessee, Virginia, and Georgia Railroad and were transported by wagon to the village. The main items produced for the market during this time were corn, wheat, and bacon.[6]
Georgetown's first post office was established as "Limestone" on March 9, 1837, and was changed to "Georgetown" in 1867. It has since been located in four different counties, including James County, "The Lost County of Tennessee", which dissolved in 1919.[6] It currently operates in Meigs County.
The Georgetown Academy, founded in 1847 by the Cumberland Presbyterian Church, is Georgetown's earliest school of record. Located about a quarter mile southwest of the intersection of TN SR 60 and Ooltewah-Georgetown Road, it is believed to have been operated until around the time of the Civil War. The school's second floor was the location of the Limestone Lodge No. 176 F. & A.M., chartered in 1849.
Notable people
Greg Vital - American conservationist, businessman, and District 29 Tennessee State Representative.
Wilburn Cartwright – lawyer, educator, U.S. Representative from Oklahoma, and United States Army officer in World War II was born here.