Explore Oglethorpe County, Georgia with this interactive street and satellite map. Browse all 6 cities and towns in Oglethorpe County below.
| County | Oglethorpe |
| State | Georgia (GA) |
| County Seat | Lexington |
| Country | United States of America |
| Latitude | 33.822388 |
| Longitude | -83.134921 |
| Cities & Towns | 6 |
| Area Codes | 678, 770 |
Oglethorpe County spreads across Georgia's Piedmont, a land of subtle gradients where the red clay soil, rich and yielding, hints at the deeper, darker earth of the coastal plain to the south. Here, the landscape is defined not by dramatic peaks, but by the patient work of water and time. The Broad River, a significant artery, carves its way through the county, its tributaries and creeks threading the land like veins, feeding forests of longleaf pine and the encroaching green tide of kudzu that claims the edges of fields and forgotten homesteads. To the north, the county shares a border with Elbert County, a neighbor whose own distinct character arises from similar geological foundations, while the south eventually gives way to the gentler, flatter terrain that presages the coastal regions. The air, especially in the languid afternoons of late spring, carries the scent of damp earth and blooming honeysuckle, a quiet perfume that clings to the senses.
The county's story began to unfold in earnest in the late 18th century, a period when settlers, drawn by the promise of fertile land, began to push westward from the established coastal settlements. Oglethorpe County itself was formally established in 1796, carved from land that had previously been part of Wilkes County, one of Georgia's earliest and largest territorial divisions. The county seat, Lexington, emerged as a natural gathering point, its central location making it a convenient hub for commerce and governance. Like many such county seats across the South, its early development was intrinsically tied to the courthouse square, a place where legal matters were settled, goods were traded, and the social pulse of the community beat strongest. The echoes of those early days, of horse-drawn wagons and the earnest debates of nascent democracy, seem to linger in the quiet streets, a subtle resonance beneath the hum of modern life.
Life in Oglethorpe County today is a study in measured continuity, an economy still deeply rooted in the land. Peach orchards, their blossoms a fleeting spectacle in spring, give way to the steady production of pecans, their husks littering the ground in autumn. The county's character is one of quiet resilience, a place where the pace of life feels attuned to the seasons rather than the clock. Lexington, with its historic courthouse and surrounding businesses, remains the heart of the county, a place where neighbors recognize each other on the street and the conversations often turn to the weather and the crops. Beyond Lexington, smaller communities like Arnoldsville and Comer offer their own distinct flavors, each a unique constellation of homes, churches, and businesses that form the fabric of rural Georgia. The light here, particularly as dusk settles, casts long, soft shadows across the fields, lending a contemplative beauty to the everyday.
This page provides an interactive map of Oglethorpe County, Georgia alongside links to detailed street maps for 6 cities and towns. The county seat is Lexington. Each city and town map page includes live weather, local news and precise GPS coordinates.
Location data is sourced from the USGS GNIS database and verified by coordinates, not name matching alone.
| Page generated | June 2026 |
| Location data | USGS GNIS database; coordinates matched to 2020 US Census records |