Dr. John Henry Jordan (1870-1912)

Image credit: Breana James

Year Erected: 2026

Marker Text: Born in Troup County, Dr. John Henry Jordan earned his medical degree in 1896 from Meharry Medical College in Nashville, Tennessee. Like many late-nineteenth-century southern Black doctors, Jordan returned home and opened a general medical practice. By 1898 Jordan moved to Newnan, becoming a pioneer of African-American medicine in Coweta County. In 1908 Jordan built his home in Chalk Level, a historically African-American residential district. Barred from practicing in or sending his patients to White hospitals, Jordan opened Coweta County’s first known private hospital for African Americans at this site, next door to his two-story Queen Anne-style home. Jordan died in 1912 of injuries from a gasoline explosion and is buried in Eastview Cemetery. Coweta County opened the first public hospital serving Black patients in the 1940s. The county’s hospitals remained segregated until the 1960s.

Erected by the Georgia Historical Society and the Coweta County African American Heritage Museum

Tips for Finding This Marker: At the former site of Dr. Jordan's hospital, 59 Pinson Street, in Newnan.

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