[3] The community was named after Farish Carter, who in 1833 had bought 15,000 acres of land, with the largest unit located in Murray County.
[3] In his youth, Carter had run away from home, made himself a substantial fortune, and was engaged in managing his numerous enterprises involving farms, steamboats, banks, ferries, factories, mills, and marble quarries, spread across the Southeastern United States and into the Midwest.
He owned property in Murray County that he used as a summer home, in what was then known as Carter's Quarter.
His farm grew wheat, rye, oats, corn, tobacco, peas, beans, potatoes, rice, and cotton, with the labor of his hundreds of slaves.
The plantation continued to sustain the family, and the 1860 census indicates that 355 slaves remained on the property.