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Gwinnett County Homes

Gwinnett County has been one of America's fastest-growing counties for the past 20 years and boasts excellent schools and easy access to Atlanta.

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Gwinnett County Neighborhoods


Berkeley Lake

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Buford

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Dacula

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Duluth

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Grayson

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Lawrenceville

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Lilburn

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Loganville

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Norcross

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Snellville

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Sugar Hill

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Suwanee

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More Information on Gwinnett County

According to the U.S. Census Bureau, Gwinnett County’s population has nearly doubled each decade, from 43,541 people in 1960 to 588,448 in 2000. Gwinnett County's close proximity to downtown Atlanta, along with its commitment to expansion of both economic and civic infrastructures, has contributed to its rapid growth. Interstates 85 and 985 go through the county, as do numerous highways. Major financial service companies, including Primerica and CheckFree Corporation, are nearby.

Gwinnett County has numerous parks and libraries, and the Gwinnett County Public Library was named Library of the Year in 2000 by Library Journal/Gale Group. Manufacturing and high-tech companies from around the country and the world are relocating to Gwinnett.

Created from land ceded by the Cherokee and Creek Indians, Gwinnett County was established on December 15, 1818. By 1820 Georgia's forty-fourth county had a population of 4,589. Lawrenceville, the county seat, was incorporated on December 15, 1821, and it is the second-oldest city in the Atlanta area.

In 1957 the Buford Dam was completed. It blocks the Chattahoochee River (which forms the northwest border of the county) to form Lake Lanier, thereby occasioning the rise in tourism as a significant industry for Gwinnett County. Today the largest industries in Gwinnett County are service and retail, which are necessary to support the large population, most of whom both live and work within the county.

Gwinnett County boasts numerous recreational opportunities. Outdoor options include the Chattahoochee River National Recreation Area, Vines Botanical Gardens in Loganville, the Yellow River Game Ranch in Lilburn (home of General Beauregard Lee, the groundhog prognosticator of spring for the South), and Stone Mountain Park, on Gwinnett's border with DeKalb County. Sporting venues include the Road Atlanta raceway and the Ice Forum, where spectators can watch the Atlanta Thrashers ice hockey team practice. Museums are as diverse as the Lanier Museum of Natural History in Buford, the Southeastern Railway Museum in Duluth, and the Gwinnett History Museum in Lawrenceville, housed in the circa 1855 Lawrenceville Female Seminary. The Gwinnett Civic and Cultural Center in Duluth is a convenient venue for exhibits and performances in the Arena and the Performing Arts Center. The county also includes three sizable indoor malls, including the Mall of Georgia in Buford (the largest in the state).

Gwinnett County is home to several institutions of higher learning. Gwinnett Technical College, one of the largest technical schools in the state, opened in Lawrenceville as Gwinnett Area Technical School in 1984. In the fall of 1987 DeKalb College (later Georgia Perimeter College) began offering college courses in the county, and the University of Georgia began offering graduate courses in 1990 at a site in Lawrenceville. In late 2001 the campus was relocated to a new site and named the Gwinnett University Center (GUC). In 2003 both Southern Polytechnic State University and the Medical College of Georgia also joined the GUC. There were more than 7,000 students enrolled in 2003, with more than 400 faculty and staff. In 2005 the Board of Regents of the University System of Georgia approved the transition of the GUC to Georgia Gwinnett College, the first new university system member to be named since 1970. Another college, a branch of the Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine, based in Pennsylvania, is located in Suwanee.

Sources: www.georgiaencyclopedia.org


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