- Budapest, Georgia
Budapest is a small unincorporated community of seven buildings in Haralson County in the
U.S. state of Georgia. It is located at coord|33|42|54|N|85|13|4|W|, at an elevation of convert|1340|ft|m on the USGS Bremen Quadrangle. Budapest is located onU.S. Route 78 , about five miles (8 km) southeast of Tallapoosa. However, there are no highway signs for Budapest because it is too small.Budapest is named after the capital city of
Hungary .In 1893, real-estate developer Ralph L. Spencer of Essex, Connecticut , invited 200 Hungarian wine-making families then employed in the mining industry in Pennsylvania to settle on convert|2000|acre|km2 of land at this site. Many accepted this offer. They named their largest community Budapest in honor of the capital of Hungary. A nearby village was named Tokaj in honor of a wine-producing region in Hungary. Tokaj was founded to satisfy the desire of brothers Jacob and Paul Estavanko for lots larger than ten acres. Under the guidance of a Catholic priest, Father Janisek, they established a the Budapest. Various groups from Ohio and other parts of the United States were attracted to the area and the new industry. Among them was a group of Slovakians who formed a second town site named Nitra. The colony quickly flourished into a town with sixty buildings including a Catholic Church, stores and a post office. Soon the sloping hills were garlanded with grape vines. Storage vats were prepared and wineries were planned. It looked as though a new industry had succeeded in the South, but with passage of the Georgia Prohibition Act of 1907 the wine industry fell into ruins. One by one the families were forced to go elsewhere for their livelihood until today there are only one or two of the original families remaining.The wine produced in and around Tallapoosa was sold in the North. The last of the descendents of the Budapest settlers still living there died in 1964. All that today remains of the Hungarian colonies is a well constructed Catholic Rectory in Nitra owned by a local family and the Budapest and Estavanko cemeteries. The Estavanko family remained in Haralson County after the demise of the wine industry.
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