The history of Atlanta dates
back to 1836, when Georgia decided
to build a railroad to the U.S.
Midwest and a location was chosen to
be the line's terminus. The stake marking the founding of "Terminus"
was driven into the ground in 1837 In
1839, homes and a store were built there and the settlement grew. Between 1845
and 1854, rail lines arrived from four different directions, and the rapidly
growing town quickly became the rail hub for the entire Southern United States.
During the American Civil War,
Atlanta, as a distribution hub, became the target of a major
Union campaign, and in 1864 Union William
Sherman's troops set on fire and destroyed
the city's assets and buildings, save churches and hospitals. After the war the
population grew rapidly, as did manufacturing, while the city retained its role
as a rail hub. Coca-Cola was launched here in 1886 and grew into an
Atlanta-based world empire.
Electric streetcars arrived in
1889, and the city added new "streetcar suburbs".
The city's elite black colleges were
founded between 1865 and 1885, and despite disenfranchisement and the later
imposition of Jim Crow laws
in the 1910s, a prosperous
black middle class and upper class emerged. By the early 20th century, "Sweet"
Auburn Avenue was called "the most
prosperous Negro street in the nation".
In the 1950s blacks started moving
into city neighborhoods that had previously kept them out, while Atlanta's
first freeways enabled large numbers of whites to move to, and commute from,
new suburbs.
Atlanta was home to Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., and a major center for the Civil Rights Movement. Resulting desegregation occurred in stages over the 1960s.
Slums were razed and the new Atlanta Housing Authority built public housing projects.
From the mid-60s to mid-70s, nine
suburban malls opened, and the downtown shopping district declined. But just
north of it, gleaming office towers and hotels rose, and in 1976 the new Georgia World Congress Center signaled Atlanta's rise as a major convention city. In
1973 the city elected its first black mayor, Maynard
Jackson, and in ensuing decades, black
political leaders worked successfully with the white business community to
promote business growth, while still empowering black businesses.
From the mid-70s to mid-80s most of
the MARTA rapid transit system was built. While the suburbs grew
rapidly, much of the city itself deteriorated and the city lost 21% of its
population between 1970 and 1990.
Hometown airline Delta continued to grow, and by 1998-9, Atlanta's
airport was the busiest in the world.
Since the mid-90s, gentrification has given new life to many of the city's in-town
neighborhoods. The 2010 census showed blacks
leaving the city, whites moving to the city, and a much more diverse metro area
with heaviest growth in the exurbs at its outer edges.
Native American civilization: before 1836
The region where Atlanta and its suburbs were built was
originally Creek and Cherokee Native American territory. In 1813, the Creeks, who had been recruited by
the British to assist them in the War
of 1812, attacked and burned Fort
Mims in southwestern Alabama. The conflict broadened and became known as the Creek
War.
In response, the United States built a string of forts along
the Ocmulgee and Chattahoochee Rivers,
including Fort Daniel on top of Hog Mountain near present-day Dacula,
Georgia, and Fort Gilmer. Fort Gilmer was situated next to an
important Indian site called Standing Peachtree,
named after a large tree which is believed to have been a pine tree (the name
referred to the pitch or sap that flowed from it). The word "pitch"
was misunderstood for "peach," thus the site's name. The site traditionally
marked a Native American meeting place at the boundary between Creek and
Cherokee lands, at the point where Peachtree
Creek flows into the Chattahoochee.
The fort was soon renamed Fort Peachtree. A road was built linking Fort
Peachtree and Fort Daniel following the route of existing trails.
As part of the systematic removal of
Native Americans from northern Georgia from 1802 to 1825, the Creek ceded
the area that is now Metro Atlanta in 1821.
Four months later, the Georgia Land
Lottery Act created five new counties in the area that would later become
Atlanta. Dekalb County was created in 1822, from portions of Henry,
Fayette, and Gwinnett Counties, and Decatur was created as its county seat the following
year. As part of the land lottery, Archibald Holland received a grant of
202.5 acres where downtown Atlanta would later be built. Holland farmed
the land and operated a blacksmith shop. However, the land was low-lying and
wet, so his cows often became mired in the mud. He left the area in 1833 to
farm in Paulding County.
In 1830 an inn was established which
would be known as Whitehall due to the then-unusual fact that it had a coat of
white paint when most other buildings were of washed or natural wood. Later,
Whitehall Street would be built as the road from Atlanta to Whitehall. The
Whitehall area would be renamed West End in
1867 and is the oldest intact Victorian neighborhood
of Atlanta.
In 1835, some leaders of the
Cherokee Nation ceded their territory to the United States without the consent
of the majority of the Cherokee people in exchange for land out west under
the Treaty of New Echota, an act that led to the Trail
of Tears.
From railroad terminus to Atlanta: 1836-1860
In 1836, the Georgia General Assembly voted to build the Western and Atlantic Railroad to provide a link between the port of Savannah and the Midwest. The initial route of that state-sponsored project was
to run from Chattanooga, Tennessee, to a spot east of the Chattahoochee River,
in present-day Fulton County. The
plan was to eventually link up with the Georgia Railroad from Augusta, and with the Macon and Western Railroad, which ran between
Macon and
Savannah. A U.S. Army engineer,
Colonel Stephen Harriman Long, was asked to recommend the location where the
Western and Atlantic line would terminate. He surveyed various possible routes,
then in the autumn of 1837 drove a stake into the ground between what are now
Forsyth Street and Andrew Young International Boulevard, about 3-4 blocks
northwest of today's Five Points. The
zero milepost was later placed to mark that spot.
In 1839, John
Thrasher built homes and a general
store in this vicinity and the
settlement was nicknamed Thrasherville. A marker identifies the location of
Thrasherville at 104 Marietta
Street, N.W., in front of the State Bar of Georgia Building, between Spring and Cone Streets.
It was at this point that Thrasher
built the Monroe
Embankment, an earthen embankment that was to
carry the Monroe Railway to meet the W&A at the terminus. This is the
oldest existing man-made structure in Downtown
Atlanta.
In 1842, the planned terminus
location was moved, four blocks southeast (2-3 blocks southeast of Five
Points), to what would become State
Square, on Wall Street between Central
Avenue and Pryor Street. It is at this location that the zero
milepost can now be found, adjacent to
the southern entrance of Underground Atlanta. As
the settlement grew, it became known as "Terminus," literally meaning
"end of the line". By 1842, the settlement at Terminus had six
buildings and 30 residents.
Meanwhile, settlement began at what
would become the Buckhead section
of Atlanta, several miles north of today's downtown. In 1838, Henry Irby
started a tavern and grocery at what would become the intersection of Paces
Ferry and Roswell Roads.
In 1842, when a two-story brick
depot was built, the locals asked that the settlement of Terminus be called
Lumpkin, after Governor Wilson
Lumpkin. Gov. Lumpkin asked them to name it
after his young daughter instead, and Terminus became Marthasville. In
1845, the chief engineer of the Georgia Railroad, J.
Edgar Thomson suggested that Marthasville be
renamed "Atlantica-Pacifica", which was quickly shortened to
"Atlanta." The residents approved, apparently undaunted by the fact
that not a single train had yet visited. The town of Atlanta was incorporated
in 1847.
Growth and development into a regional rail hub
The first Georgia Railroad freight and passenger trains from Augusta (to the east of Atlanta), arrived in September 1845
and in that year the first hotel, the Atlanta
Hotel, was opened.
In 1846, a second railroad company,
the Macon & Western (orig. "Monroe Railroad"), completed tracks
to Terminus/Atlanta, connecting the little settlement with Macon to the south and Savannah to the southeast. The town then began to boom. In late
1846, the Washington Hall hotel
was opened.
By 1847, the population had reached 2,500.
In 1848, the town elected its first mayor and appointed its first town marshal,
German M. Lester, coinciding with the first homicide and the first jail
built. A new city council approved the building of wooden sidewalks and banned
conducting business on Sundays. In 1849, Atlanta's third and largest antebellum
hotel was built, the Trout
House, and the Daily Intelligencer became the town's first successful daily newspaper. In
1850 Oakland Cemetery was founded southeast of town, where it remains today
within the city limits.
In 1851 a third rail line, the Western and Atlantic Railroad - for which the site of Atlanta had been identified as
a terminus finally arrived, connecting Atlanta to Chattanooga in the northwest and opening up Georgia to trade with
the Tennessee and Ohio
River Valleys, and the American
Midwest. The union depot was completed in 1853 on State
Square. That year, the depot's
architect Edward A. Vincent also
delivered Atlanta's first official map to the city council.
Fulton County was
established in 1853 from the western section of DeKalb, and
in 1854 a combination Fulton County Court House and Atlanta City Hall was
built, which would be razed thirty years later to make way for today's State Capitol building.
After the Civil War, the Georgia General Assembly decided to move the state
capital from Milledgeville to
Atlanta.
In 1854, a fourth rail line, the
Atlanta and LaGrange Rail Road (later Atlanta & West
Point Railroad) arrived, connecting Atlanta with LaGrange,
Georgia to the southwest, sealing
Atlanta's role as a rail hub for the entire South, with lines to the northwest,
east, southeast, and southwest.
By 1855, the town had grown to 6,025
residents and had a bank, a daily newspaper, a factory to build freight
cars, a new brick depot, property taxes, a gasworks, gas street lights, a
theater, a medical college, and juvenile delinquency.
Manufacturing and commerce
The first true manufacturing
establishment was opened in 1844, when Jonathan
Norcross, who would later become mayor of
Atlanta, arrived in Marthasville and built a saw mill. Richard Peters, Lemuel
Grant, John
Mimsbuilt a three-story flour mill,
which was used as a pistol factory during the Civil War. In 1848, Austin
Leyden started the town's first
foundry and machine shop, which would later become the Atlanta Machine Works.
The Atlanta Rolling Mill (later the "Confederate" Rolling Mill) was
built in 1858 near Oakland Cemetery. It soon became the South's second most productive rolling
mill. During the American Civil War it
rolled out cannon, iron rail, and 2-inch-thick (51 mm) sheets of iron to
clad the CSS Virginia for the Confederate
navy. The mill was destroyed by
the Union Army in
1864.
The city became a busy center
for cotton distribution. As an example, in 1859 the Georgia
Railroad alone sent 3,000 empty rail
cars to the city to be loaded with cotton.
By 1860 the city had four large
machine shops, two planing mills, three tanneries, two shoe factories, a soap
factory, and clothing factories employing 75 people.
Slavery in antebellum Atlanta
In 1850, out of 2,572 people, 493
were enslaved African
Americans, and 18 were free
blacks, for a total black population of
20%. The black proportion of Atlanta's population would become much higher
after the Civil War, when freed slaves would come to Atlanta in search of
opportunity.
There were several slave auction houses in the town, which advertised in the newspapers and
many of which also traded in manufactured goods.
Civil War and Reconstruction: 1861-1871
Sherman's army destroying rail
infrastructure in Atlanta, 1864
Civil War: 1861-1865
During the American Civil War,
Atlanta served as an important railroad and military supply hub. (See
also: Atlanta in the Civil War.) In 1864, the city became the target of a major
Union invasion (the setting for the 1939
film Gone with the Wind). The area now covered by Atlanta was the scene of several
battles, including the Battle of Peachtree Creek, the Battle
of Atlanta, and the Battle of Ezra Church.
General Sherman cut the last supply
line to Atlanta at the Battle of Jonesboro fought
on August 31-September 1. With all of his supply lines cut, Confederate General John
Bell Hood was forced to abandon Atlanta.
On the night of September 1, his troops marched out of the city to Lovejoy,
Georgia. General Hood ordered that the 81
rail cars filled with ammunition and other military supplies be destroyed. The
resulting fire and explosions were heard for miles. The next day, Mayor James
Calhoun surrendered the city, and
on September 7 Sherman ordered the civilian population to evacuate. He
then ordered Atlanta burned to the ground on November 11 in preparation for his
punitive march south.
After a plea by Father Thomas
O'Reilly of Immaculate Conception Catholic Church, Sherman did not burn the
city's churches or hospitals. The remaining war resources were then destroyed
in the aftermath, and in Sherman's March to the Sea. The fall of Atlanta was a critical point in the Civil War.
Its much publicized fall gave confidence to the Northerners. Together with
the Battle of Mobile Bay, the fall of Atlanta led to the re-election of Abraham
Lincoln and the eventual surrender of
the Confederacy.
Reconstruction: 1865-1871
The city emerged from the ashes –
hence the city's symbol, the phoenix –
and was gradually rebuilt, as its population increased rapidly after the war.
Atlanta received migrants from surrounding counties and states: from 1860 to 1870
Fulton County more than doubled in population, from 14,427 to 33,446. In a
pattern seen across the South after the Civil War, many freedmen moved from
plantations to towns or cities for work, including Atlanta; Fulton County went
from 20.5% black in 1860 to 45.7% black in 1870.
Food supplies were erratic due to
poor harvests, which were a result of the turmoil in the agricultural labor
supply after emancipation of the slaves. Many refugees were destitute without
even proper clothing or shoes; the AMA helped fill the gap with food, shelter, and clothing,
and the federally-sponsored Freedmen's Bureau
also offered much help, though erratically.
The destruction of the housing stock
by the Union army, together with the massive influx of refugees, resulted in a
severe housing shortage. 1⁄8-acre to 1⁄4-acre
lots with a small house rented for $5 per month, while those with a glass pane
rented for $20. High rents rather than laws led to de facto segregation, with most blacks settling in three shantytown areas at the city's
edge. There, housing was substandard;
an AMA missionary remarked that many houses were
"rickety shacks" rented at inflated rates. Two of the three
shantytowns sat in low-lying areas, prone to flooding and sewage overflows,
which resulted in outbreaks of disease in the late 19th century. A
shantytown named Tight
Squeeze developed at Peachtree at what
is now 10th Street in Midtown
Atlanta. It was infamous for vagrancy,
desperation, robberies of merchants transiting the settlement.
A smallpox epidemic hit Atlanta in
December 1865 and there were not enough doctors or hospital facilities. Another
epidemic hit in Fall, 1866; hundreds died.[28]
Construction created many new jobs,
employment boomed. Atlanta soon became the industrial and commercial center of
the South. From 1867 until 1888, U.S. Army soldiers occupied McPherson Barracks
(later renamed Fort
McPherson) in southwest Atlanta to
ensure Reconstruction era reforms. In 1868, Atlanta became the Georgia state
capital, taking over from Milledgeville.
Center of black education
Atlanta quickly became a center of
black education. Atlanta University was established in 1865, the forerunner of Morehouse
College in 1867, Clark University in 1869, what is now Spelman
College in 1881, and Morris Brown College in 1885. This would be one of several factors aiding
the establishment of one of the nation's oldest and best-established African American elite in Atlanta.
Gate City of the New South: 1872-1905
Henry W. Grady, the
editor of the Atlanta Constitution, promoted the city to investors as a city of the "New
South," by which he meant a
diversification of the economy away from agriculture, and a shift from the
"Old
South" attitudes of slavery and
rebellion. As part of the effort to modernize the South, Grady and many others
also supported the creation of the Georgia School of Technology (now the Georgia Institute of Technology), which was
founded on the city's northern outskirts in 1885. See also: History of Georgia Tech
With Grady's support, the Confederate Soldiers' Home was built in 1889. In 1880, Sister Cecilia Carroll,
RSM, and three companions traveled from Savannah, Georgia to Atlanta to
minister to the sick. With just 50 cents in their collective purse, the sisters
opened the Atlanta Hospital, the first medical facility in the city after the
Civil War. This later became known as Saint Joseph's Hospital.
Expansion and the first planned suburbs
Inman Park, one
of Atlanta's first planned garden suburbs
Starting in 1871 horse-drawn, and later, starting in 1888, electric
streetcars fueled real estate development
and the city's expansion. Washington
Street south of downtown, and Peachtree
Street north of the central business
district, became wealthy residential areas.
In the 1890s, West End became
the suburb of choice for the city's elite, but Inman
Park, planned as a harmonious whole,
soon overtook it in prestige. Peachtree
Street's mansions reached ever further
north into what is now Midtown
Atlanta, including Amos
G. Rhodes' (founder of the Rhodes
Furniture Company in 1875)
mansion, Rhodes Hall,
which can still be visited.
Atlanta surpassed Savannah as
Georgia's largest city by 1880.
Disenfranchisement of blacks
As Atlanta grew, ethnic and racial
tensions mounted. Late 19th and early 20th-century immigration added a very
small number of new Europeans to the mix. After Reconstruction, whites had used
a variety of tactics, including militias and legislation, to re-establish
political and social supremacy throughout the South. Starting with a poll tax
in 1877, by the turn of the century, Georgia passed a variety of legislation
that completed the disfranchisement of blacks. Not even college-educated men
could vote. Nonetheless, African Americans in Atlanta had been developing their
own businesses, institutions, churches, and a strong, educated middle class.
Coca-Cola
The identities of Atlanta and Coca-Cola have been intertwined since 1886, when John
Pemberton developed the soft drink in
response to Atlanta and Fulton County going
"dry". The first sales were at Jacob's Pharmacy in Atlanta. Asa Griggs Candler acquired
a stake in Pemberton's company in 1887 and incorporated it as the Coca Cola Company in
1888. In 1892 Candler incorporated a second company, The Coca-Cola
Company, the current corporation. By the
time of its 50th anniversary, the drink had reached the status of a national
icon in the USA. Coca-Cola's world headquarters have remained in Atlanta ever
since. In 1991 the company opened the World of Coca-Cola,
which has remained one of the city's top visitor attractions.
Cotton States Expo and Booker T. Washington Speech
In 1895 the Cotton States and
International Exposition was held at
what is now Piedmont Park.
Nearly 800,000 visitors attended the event. The exposition was designed to
promote the region to the world and showcase products and new technologies as
well as to encourage trade with Latin America. The exposition featured exhibits
from several states including various innovations in agriculture and
technology. President Grover
Cleveland presided over the opening of
the exposition. But the event is best remembered for the both hailed and
criticized "Atlanta Compromise" speech given by Booker T. Washington in which Southern blacks would work meekly and submit
to white political rule, while Southern whites guaranteed that blacks would
receive basic education and due process in law.
Streetcar suburbs and World War II: 1906-1945
1906 Race Riot and results
Competition between working-class
whites and black for jobs and housing gave rise to fears and tensions. In 1906,
print media fueled these tensions with hearsay about alleged sexual assaults on
white women by black men, triggering the Atlanta
Race Riot, which left at least 27 people
dead (25 of them black) and over 70 injured.
Rise of Sweet Auburn
Black businesses started to move
from previously integrated business district downtown to the relative safety of
the area around the Atlanta University Center west of downtown, and to Auburn Avenue in the Fourth
Ward east of downtown.
"Sweet" Auburn Avenue became home to Alonzo
Herndon's Atlanta Mutual, the city's first black-owned life insurance company, and
to a celebrated concentration of black businesses, newspapers, churches, and
nightclubs. In 1956, Fortune magazine called Sweet Auburn
"the richest Negro street in the world", a phrase originally coined
by civil rights leader John
Wesley Dobbs. Sweet Auburn and
Atlanta's elite black colleges formed the nexus of a prosperous black middle class and upper class which arose despite enormous social and legal
obstacles.
Jim Crow laws were
passed in swift succession in the years after the riot. The result was in some
cases segregated facilities, with nearly always inferior conditions for black
customers, but in many cases it resulted in no facilities at all available to
blacks, e.g. all parks were designated whites-only (although a private
park, Joyland, did open in 1921). In 1910, the city
council passed an ordinance requiring that restaurants be designated for one
race only, hobbling black restaurant owners who had been attracting both black
and white customers. In the same year, Atlanta's streetcars were segregated, with black patrons required to sit in
the rear. If not enough seats were available for all white riders, the blacks
sitting furthest forward in the trolley were required to stand and give their
seats to whites. In 1913, the city created official boundaries for white and
black residential areas. And in 1920, the city prohibited black-owned salons
from serving white women and children.
Beyond this, blacks were subject to
the South's racial protocol,
whereby, according to the New Georgia Encyclopedia: "all
blacks were required to pay obeisance to all whites, even those whites of low
social standing. And although they were required to address whites by the title
"sir," blacks rarely received the same courtesy themselves. Because
even minor breaches of racial etiquette often resulted in violent reprisals,
the region's codes of deference transformed daily life into a theater of
ritual, where every encounter, exchange, and gesture reinforced black
inferiority."
In 1913, Leo
Frank, a Jewish supervisor at a factory
in Atlanta, was put on trial for raping and murdering a thirteen-year-old white
employee from Marietta, a suburb of Atlanta. After doubts about Frank's guilt
led his death sentence to be commuted in 1915, riots broke out in Atlanta among
whites. They kidnapped Frank from the State Prison Farm in the city of
Milledgeville, with the collusion of prison guards, and took him to Marietta,
where he was lynched. Later that year the Klan was reborn in Atlanta.
Country music scene
Many Appalachian people came to Atlanta to work in the cotton mills and
brought their music with them. Starting with a 1913 fiddler's convention,
Atlanta was to become the center of a thriving country music scene. Atlanta would become an important center for country music
recording and talent recruiting in the 1920s and 1930s, and live music center
for an additional two decades after that.
Growth
In 1907, Peachtree Street, the main
street of Atlanta, was busy with streetcars and automobiles
In 1914, Asa Griggs Candler,
the founder of The Coca-Cola Company and brother to former Emory President Warren
Candler, persuaded the Methodist Episcopal
Church South to build the new campus
of Emory University in
the emerging affluent suburb of Druid Hills,
which borders northeastern Atlanta.
Great Atlanta Fire of 1917
On May 21, 1917, the Great Atlanta Fire destroyed 1,938 buildings, mostly wooden, in what is
now the Old Fourth Ward.
The fire resulted in 10,000 people becoming homeless. Only one person died, a
woman who died of a heart attack when seeing her home in ashes.
In the 1930s, the Great
Depression hit Atlanta. With the city
government nearing bankruptcy, the Coca-Cola Company had
to help bail out the city's deficit. The federal government stepped in to help
Atlantans by establishing Techwood
Homes, the nation's first federal housing
project in 1935.
Gone with the Wind premiere
On December 15, 1939 Atlanta hosted
the premiere of Gone with the Wind, the movie based on Atlanta resident Margaret
Mitchell's best-selling novel. Stars Clark
Gable, Vivien
Leigh, and Olivia de Havilland were
in attendance. The premiere was held at Loew's Grand Theatre, at Peachtree and Forsyth Streets, current site of
the Georgia-Pacific building.
An enormous crowd, numbering 300,000 people according to the Atlanta Constitution, filled the streets on this ice-cold night in Atlanta. A
rousing ovation greeted a group of Confederate veterans who were guests of honor.
Absence of film's black stars at event
Noticeably
absent was Hattie McDaniel,
who would win the Academy Award for
Best Supporting Actress for her
role as Mammy, as well as Butterfly
McQueen (Prissy). The black actors
were barred from attending the premiere, from appearing in the souvenir
program, and from all the film's
advertising in the South. Director David
Selznick had attempted to bring
McDaniel to the premiere, but MGM advised him not to. Clark Gable angrily threatened to
boycott the premiere, but McDaniel convinced him to attend
anyway. McDaniel did attend the Hollywood debut thirteen days later, and
was featured prominently in the program.
Controversial participation of Martin Luther King
Martin Luther King, Jr. sang at the gala as part of a children's choir of his
father's church, Ebenezer Baptist. The boys dressed as pickaninnies and
the girls wore "Aunt Jemima"-style
bandanas, dress seen by many blacks as humiliating. John
Wesley Dobbs tried to dissuade Rev. King, Sr. from
participating at the whites-only event, and Rev. King, Sr. was harshly
criticized in the black community.
Transportation Hub
In 1941, Delta Air Lines moved its headquarters to Atlanta. Delta would become
the world's largest airline in 2008 after acquiring Northwest Airlines.
World War II
With the entry of the United States
into World War II,
soldiers from around the Southeastern United States went through Atlanta to train and later be discharged
at Fort McPherson. War-related manufacturing such as the Bell
Aircraft factory in the suburb of Marietta helped boost the city's population and economy.
Shortly after the war in 1946, the Communicable Disease Center, later called
the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention (CDC) was
founded in Atlanta from the old Malaria Control in War Areas offices and staff.
Suburbanization and Civil Rights: 1946-1989
In 1951, the city received the All-America City Award, due to its rapid growth and high standard of living in the
southern U.S.
Annexation was the central strategy
for growth. In 1952, Atlanta annexed Buckhead, as well as vast areas of what are now northwest, southwest
and south Atlanta, adding 82 square miles and tripling its area. By doing so,
100,000 new affluent white residents were added, preserving white political
power as well as expanding the city's property tax base and enlarging the
traditional leadership upper-middle-class white class. That class now had to
room to expand inside the city limits.
Federal court decisions in 1962-63
ended the county-unit system thus greatly reducing rural Georgia control over
the state legislature, enabling Atlanta, and other cities, to gain proportional
political power. The Federal courts opened the Democratic Party primary to
black voters, who surged in numbers and became increasingly well-organized
through the Atlanta Negro Voters League.
Blockbusting and racial transition in neighborhoods
In the late 1950s, after forced-housing
patterns were outlawed, violence, intimidation and organized political pressure
was used in some white neighborhoods to discourage blacks from buying homes
there. However, by the late 1950s, such efforts proved futile as blockbusting drove whites to sell their homes in neighborhoods such
as Adamsville, Center Hill, Grove Park in
northwest Atlanta, and white sections of Edgewood and Kirkwood on
the east side. In 1961, the city attempted to thwart blockbusting by erecting
road barriers in Cascade
Heights, countering the efforts of civic
and business leaders to foster Atlanta as the "city too busy to
hate." But efforts to stop transition in Cascade failed too.
Neighborhoods of new black homeowners took root, helping alleviate the enormous
strain of the lack of housing available to African Americans. Atlanta's western
and southern neighborhoods transitioned to majority black — between 1960 and
1970 the number of census tracts that were at least 90% black, tripled. East Lake, Kirkwood, Watts Road, Reynoldstown, Almond Park, Mozley Park, Center Hill and Cascade
Heights underwent an almost total
transition from white to black. The black proportion of the city's population
rose from 38 to 51%. Meanwhile, during the same decade, the city lost 60,000
white residents, a 20% decline.
White flight and
the building of malls in the suburbs triggered a slow decline of the central
business district. Meanwhile, conservatism grew rapidly in the suburbs, and
white Georgians were increasingly willing to vote for Republicans, most
notably Newt Gingrich.
Civil Rights Movement
In the wake of the landmark U.S. Supreme Court decision Brown v. Board of
Education, which helped usher in the Civil Rights Movement, racial tensions in Atlanta erupted in acts of violence.
For example, on October 12, 1958, a
Reform Jewish temple on Peachtree Street was bombed. The "Confederate Underground" claimed responsibility.
Many believed that Jews, especially those from the northeast, were advocates of
the Civil Rights Movement.
In the 1960s, Atlanta was a major
organizing center of the Civil Rights Movement, with Dr. Martin Luther King and students from Atlanta's historically black colleges and
universities playing major roles in the movement's leadership. On October 19,
1960, a sit-in at the lunch counters of several Atlanta department stores led
to the arrest of Dr. King and several students. This drew attention from the
national media and from presidential candidate John
F. Kennedy.
Despite this incident, Atlanta's
political and business leaders fostered Atlanta's image as "the city too
busy to hate." While the city mostly avoided confrontation, minor race
riots did occur in 1965 and in 1968.
Desegregation
Desegregation of the public sphere came
in stages, with buses and trolleybuses desegregated
in 1959, restaurants at Rich's department store in 1961, (though Lester
Maddox's Pickrick restaurant famously
remained segregated through 1964), and movie theaters in 1962-3. While
in 1961, Mayor Ivan
Allen Jr. became one of the few Southern
white mayors to support desegregation of his city's public schools, initial
compliance was token, and in reality desegregation occurred in stages from 1961
to 1973.
1962 air crash and influence on art scene
In 1962, Atlanta in general and its
arts community in particular were shaken by the deaths of 106 people on Air
France charter flight 007,
which crashed. The Atlanta Art Association had sponsored a month-long tour of the art treasures
of Europe. 106 of the tour members were heading home to Atlanta on the
flight. The group included many of Atlanta's cultural and civic leaders.
Atlanta mayor Ivan Allen Jr. went
to Orly, France to inspect the crash site where so many important Atlantans
perished. The loss was a catalyst for the arts in Atlanta and helped
create the Woodruff Arts Center, originally called the Memorial Arts Center, as a tribute
to the victims, and led to the creation of the Atlanta Arts Alliance. The
French government donated a Rodin sculpture, The Shade, to the High in
memory of the victims of the crash.[55]
The crash occurred during the Civil Rights Movement and affected it as well. Martin Luther King, Jr. and Harry
Belafonte announced cancellation of
a sit-in in downtown Atlanta as a conciliatory gesture to the
grieving city, while Nation
of Islam leader Malcolm
X gained widespread national
attention for the first time by expressing joy over the deaths of the all-white
group.
Freeway construction and revolts
Atlanta's freeway system was completed
in the 1950s and 1960s, with the Perimeter completed in 1969. Historic neighborhoods such
as Washington-Rawson and
Copenhill were
damaged or destroyed in the process.
Additional proposed freeways were
never built due to the protests of city residents. The opposition lasted three decades, with
then-governor Jimmy Carter playing
a key role in stopping I-485 through Morningside and Virginia
Highland to Inman
Park in 1973, but pushing hard in
the 1980s for a "Presidential Parkway" between Downtown, the new Carter
Center and Druid Hills/Emory.
Urban renewal
In the 1960s slums such as Buttermilk
Bottom near today's Civic Center were
razed, in principle to build better housing, but much of the land would remain
empty until the 1980s when mixed-income communities were built in what was
renamed Bedford Pine. The
African-American community east of downtown suffered as the center of the black
economy moved squarely to southwestern Atlanta. During the 1960s
African-American citizens rights groups such as U-Rescue emerged to address the lack of housing for poor
blacks.
Shoppers move to new malls as Downtown gains new
roles The first major mall built in
Atlanta was Lenox Square in Buckhead,
opening in August 1959. From 1964 until 1973, nine major malls opened, most at
the Perimeter freeway: Cobb
Center in 1963, Columbia
Mall in 1964, North
DeKalb and Greenbriar malls
in 1965, South DeKalb Mall in
1968,
Phipps Plaza (near
Lenox Square) in 1969, Perimeter and Northlake malls in 1971, and Cumberland
Mall in 1973.
Downtown
Atlanta became less and less a
shopping destination for the area's shoppers. Rich's closed its flagship store downtown in 1991, leaving
government offices the major presence in the South
Downtown area around it. On the north side of Five Points,
Downtown continued as the largest concentration of office space in Metro Atlanta, though it began to compete with
Midtown, Buckhead, and the suburbs. The first 4 towers of Peachtree
Center were built in 1965-1967,
including the Hyatt Regency Atlanta, designed by John
Portman, with its 22-story atrium. In
total, seventeen buildings of more than fifteen floors were built in the
1960s. The center of gravity of Downtown Atlanta correspondingly moved
north from the Five Points area
towards Peachtree Center.
Atlanta's convention and hotel
facilities would also grow immensely. John C. Portman, Jr. designed and opened what is now the Americas
Mart merchandise mart in 1958; the
Sheraton Atlanta, the city's first convention hotel, was built in the 1960s;
the Atlanta Hilton opened in 1971; as did two Portman-designed hotels: the
Peachtree Plaza Hotel now owned by Westin in 1976, and the Marriott in 1985.
The Omni
Coliseum opened in 1976, as did
the Georgia World Congress Center (GWCC).
The GWCC expanded multiple times in succeeding decades and helped make Atlanta
one of the country's top convention cities.
Black political power and Mayor Jackson[edit]
In 1960, whites comprised 61.7% of
the city's population. African Americans became a majority in the city by
1970, and exercised new-found political influence by electing Atlanta's first
black mayor, Maynard Jackson,
in 1973.
During Jackson's first term as the Mayor,
much progress was made in improving race relations in and around Atlanta, and
Atlanta acquired the motto "A City Too Busy to Hate." As mayor, he
led the beginnings and much of the progress on several huge public-works
projects in Atlanta and its region. He helped arrange for the rebuilding of the
airport's huge terminal to modern standards, and this airport was renamed
the Hartsfield-Jackson
Atlanta International Airport in
his honor shortly after his death, also named after him is the new Maynard
Holbrook Jackson, Jr. International Terminal which
opened in May 2012. He also fought against the construction of freeways through
in-town neighborhoods.
Construction of MARTA rail system
In 1965, an act of the Georgia General Assembly created the Metropolitan Atlanta
Rapid Transit Authority, or MARTA. MARTA was to provide rapid
transit for the five largest metro counties: DeKalb, Fulton, Clayton, Gwinnett, and Cobb, but
a referendum authorizing participation in the system failed in Cobb County. A
1968 referendum to fund MARTA failed, but in 1971, Fulton and DeKalb Counties
passed a 1% sales tax increase to pay for operations, while Clayton and
Gwinnett counties overwhelmingly rejected the tax in referendum, fearing the
introduction of crime and "undesirable elements". In 1972, the
agency bought the existing, bus-only Atlanta Transit Company. Construction began on the new rail system in 1975,
and service commenced on June 30, 1979, running east-west from Georgia State University downtown to Avondale. The Five Points downtown hub opened later that year. A short north-south
line opened in 1981, which by 1984 had been extended to reach from Brookhaven to Lakewood/Fort
McPherson. In 1988 the line was extended to
a station inside the airport terminal.[60] A line originally envisioned to run to Emory
University is still
under consideration.
Child murders
Atlanta was rocked by a series of murders of children from the summer of 1979 until the spring of 1981. Over
the two-year period, at least 18 children, adolescents and adults were killed, all of them black. Atlanta
native Wayne Williams,
also black and 23 years old at the time of the last murder, was convicted of
two of the murders and sent to prison for life.
Mayor Andrew Young
In 1981, after being urged by a
number of people, including Coretta Scott King,
the widow of Martin Luther King Jr., Democratic Congressman Andrew
Young ran for mayor of Atlanta. He was elected later that year with 55% of the vote,
succeeding Maynard Jackson.
As mayor of Atlanta, he brought in $70 billion of new private
investment. He continued and expanded Maynard Jackson's programs for
including minority and female-owned businesses in all city contracts. The
Mayor's Task Force on Education established the Dream Jamboree College Fair
that tripled the college scholarships given to Atlanta public school graduates.
In 1985, he was involved in privatizing the Atlanta Zoo, which was
renamed Zoo Atlanta. The
then-moribund zoo was overhauled, making ecological habitats specific to
different animals.
Young was re-elected as Mayor in
1985 with more than 80% of the vote. Atlanta hosted the 1988 Democratic
National Convention during Young's tenure. He was
prohibited by term limits from
running for a third term. He was succeeded by Maynard Jackson who returned as
mayor from 1990 to 1994. Bill Campbell succeeded
Jackson as mayor in 1994 and served through 2002.
Campbell mayorship and failure of Atlanta
Empowerment Zone
In November 1994, the Atlanta
Empowerment Zone was established, a 10-year, $250 million federal program to
revitalize Atlanta's 34 poorest neighborhoods including The Bluff.
Scathing reports from both the U.S. Department of
Housing and Urban Development and
the Georgia Department of Community Affairs revealed corruption, waste,
bureaucratic incompetence, and specifically called out interference by
mayor Bill Campbell.
In 1993-1996 about 250,000 people
attended Freaknik,
an annual Spring Break gathering for African Americans which was not centrally
organized and which resulted in much traffic gridlock and increased crime.
After a 1996 crackdown annual attendance dissipated and the event moved to
other cities.
1996 Summer Olympics
In 1990, the International
Olympic Committee selected Atlanta as the site
for the Centennial Olympic Games 1996 Summer Olympics. Following the announcement, Atlanta undertook several
major construction projects to improve the city's parks, sports facilities, and
transportation, including the completion of long-contested Freedom
Parkway. Former Mayor Bill Campbell allowed
many "tent cities" to be built, creating a carnival atmosphere around
the games. Atlanta became the third American city to host the Summer Olympics,
after St. Louis (1904 Summer Olympics) and Los
Angeles (1932 and 1984).
The games themselves were notable in the realm of sporting events, but they
were marred by numerous organizational inefficiencies. A dramatic event was
the Centennial Olympic
Park bombing, in which two people died, one from
a heart attack, and several others were injured. Eric Robert Rudolph was
later convicted of the bombing as an anti-government and pro-life protest.
Shirley Franklin mayorship
Shirley
Franklin's 2001 run for mayor was her first
run for public office. She won, succeeding Mayor Bill Campbell after
winning 50 percent of the vote. Facing a massive and unexpected budget deficit,
Franklin slashed the number of government employees and increased taxes to
balance the budget as quickly as possible. Franklin made repairing the Atlanta sewer system a main focus of her office. Prior to Franklin's
term, Atlanta's combined
sewer system violated the
federal Clean Water Act and
burdened the city government with fines from the Environmental
Protection Agency. In 2002, Franklin announced an
initiative called "Clean Water Atlanta" to address the problem and
begin improving the city's sewer system. She has been lauded for efforts to make the
City of Atlanta "green." Under Franklin's leadership Atlanta has gone from
having one of the lowest percentages of LEED certified buildings to one of the highest. In
2005, TIME Magazine named
Franklin of the five best big-city American mayors. In October of that
same year, she was included in the U.S. News & World Report "Best Leaders of 2005" issue. With
solid popular support and strong backing from the business sector, Franklin was
reelected Atlanta Mayor in 2005, garnering more than 90 percent of the vote.
2008 tornado
On March 14, 2008, a tornado ripped through downtown Atlanta, the first since
weather has been recorded in 1880. There was minor damage to many downtown
skyscrapers. However, two holes were torn into the roof of the Georgia
Dome, tearing down catwalks and the
scoreboard as debris rained onto the court in the middle of an SEC game.
The Omni Hotel suffered
major damage, along with Centennial Olympic Park and the Georgia World Congress Center. Fulton Bag and Cotton Mills and Oakland Cemetery were also damaged.
BeltLine
In 2005, the $2.8 billion BeltLine project
was adopted, with the stated goals of converting a disused 22-mile freight
railroad loop that surrounds the central city into an art-filled multi-use
trail and increasing the city's park space by 40%.
Gentrification
Since 2000, Atlanta has undergone a
profound transformation culturally, demographically, and physically. Much of
the city's change during the decade was driven by young, college-educated
professionals: from 2000 to 2009, the three-mile
radius surrounding Downtown
Atlanta gained 9,722 residents aged 25
to 34 holding at least a four-year degree, an increase of 61%. Meanwhile,
as gentrification spread throughout the city, Atlanta's cultural offerings
expanded: the High Museum of Art doubled
in size; the Alliance
Theatre won a Tony
Award; and numerous art galleries were
established on the once-industrial Westside.
Racial transition
The black population in the Atlanta
area rapidly suburbanized in the 1990s and 2000s. From 2000 to 2010, the city
of Atlanta's black population shrunk by 31,678 people, dropping from 61.4% to
54.0% of the population. While blacks exited the city and DeKalb County,
the black population increased sharply in other areas of Metro Atlanta by
93.1%. During the same period, the proportion of whites in the city's
population grew dramatically faster than that of any other major U.S. city
between 2000-2006. Between 2000 and 2010, Atlanta added 22,763 whites, and the
white proportion of the population increased from 31% to 38%.
By 2009, a white mayoral
candidate, Mary Norwood,
lost by just 714 votes (out of over 84,000 cast) to Kasim Reed.
This represented a historic change from the perception until that time that
Atlanta was "guaranteed" to elect a black mayor.
Comments
I first
saw Atlanta in 1968, when I flew from St. Louis to Atlanta to catch the
Southeast Airline Superball to Greenwood SC. My arriving flight stacked up and
my connecting flight took off. I turned in my ticket and headed to the car
rental desk. I got a rental car and
navigated my way on to I-85 North by crossing 5 oncoming lanes as fast as I
could. I beat the Superball to
Greenwood.
I worked
for Monsanto in St. Louis and we had plants in Florida, Alabama and South
Carolina. I discovered that everyone Monsanto had tried to transfer out of
Atlanta quit and took another job to stay in Atlanta.
I spent
some time in downtown Atlanta in the 1960s and visited the original Underground
Atlanta. It was a very authentic depiction of a circa 1900, brick, gaslight lit
entertainment area and it was underground.
We moved
to Atlanta Metro in 1983 and we saw the sights. The population was 3 million
then and there was no gridlock. Our 6 kids were ages 10 to 18 and they loved
it. We had lunch in the rotating restaurant downtown, tubed down the
Chattahoochee one Sunday with 10,000 drunks, wore Halloween costumes to work,
ate at Hedgerows Heights, Bones and The Abby, listened to Jazz at Dante’s Down
the Hatch, were entertained by Elgin Wells at Rays on the River and had a very
good time.
I was
stuck by the fact that all of the tourist sites were scattered all over town,
streets would abruptly change names, end and resume a few blocks down, the town
was not laid out in a grid except for downtown, destinations often had 5 names,
but no street addresses, the main interstate highways went through the middle
of town, water distribution pipes were always leaking and creating sink holes
in the middle of the roads and we heard that the sewer system was always
breaking. It became clear that this was not a well-planned or well-maintained town.
But it had lots of interesting venues and eventually we found and enjoyed most
of them.
The
History of Atlanta I pulled from wiki in the post paints a picture of
limitations, failure, problems and was a little sad. It had a lot of detail
that might make sense if you grew up in Atlanta, some of which I edited out. It
does answer some of my questions about why Atlanta has failed to make its
infrastructure work, but I suspect that the town leaders failed to come
together on the big things over the years. I can see how the South got a bad
rap.
Segregation in the South was more pronounced than in the North and
Southern Whites may never shake the stereotype that they were slow to accept
outsiders and had developed a bit of a subculture all their own that seems to
revolve around barbeque. The town was not laid out to make it easy for visitors
to get around and I got the sense that they were happier with their own
kind. I would get a cleaner look at
Atlanta history if I focused more on their role in the Southern economy.
Norb
Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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