Moving to Atlanta: The Un-Tourist Guide
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About this ebook
Because of all that Atlanta offers, it’s hard to know where to make yourself at home unless you have Moving To Atlanta: The Un-Tourist Guide, which tells you everything you need to know to help you settle smoothly in the ATL.
Featuring interviews with residents and a number of experts in real estate, media, business, academia and neighborhood development, Moving To Atlanta: The Un-Tourist Guide will help you:
• Choose where to live
• Select the best schools for your children
• Discover how to connect in your community
• Enjoy great dining and nightlife
• Learn all about the strong Atlanta economy
• Experience Atlanta’s many outdoor activities
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Moving to Atlanta - Anne Wainscott-Sargent
strengths.
INTRODUCTION
ATLANTA—THE SOUTH’S CITY
If you are energized by modern metropolises and traditional Southern charm, then Atlanta fits the bill. The South’s capital city, metro Atlanta is home to more than 5.6 million people and nearly 150,000 businesses. The city offers a mix of antebellum architecture and modern glass high-rises, countless parks and rivers, and a vibrant arts, music and dining scene—not to mention having the largest aquarium in the western hemisphere and the busiest airport.
Building on its origins as a transportation crossroads, Atlanta has become a vibrant and growing community, the nation’s ninth-largest metro area and home to entertainers and entrepreneurs, Fortune 500 CEOs and physicians, academics and artists.
A city of neighborhoods, Atlanta loves its festivals and historical home tours, and offers new residents many housing options from intown lofts and updated apartments to spacious homes in the burbs.
The city’s turn as host to the 1996 Olympics put it on the map as a cultural and international destination, helping fuel its growth over the last two decades. But unlike other major urban centers on either U.S. coast, Atlanta offers an affordable cost of living. Your money goes further here.
In the past two decades, metro Atlanta has experienced unprecedented growth—between 2000 and 2010, it was one of only three major metros in the nation to add more than a million people (the other two cities were Houston and Dallas). Low cost of living, favorable climate, and job opportunities are all factors that spurred this growth.
The metro population grew dramatically over the last decade to 5.6 million people as of 2014. The constantly evolving downtown skyline, along with skyscrapers constructed in the Midtown, Buckhead and Perimeter (fringing I-285) business districts, reflect this growth, while the growing popularity of intown living, spurred by construction of a new transit greenway known as the Atlanta Beltline, means that Atlanta will continue to be a desirable destination for people attracted to the Southeast’s fastest-growing city.
CHAPTER 1
A BRIEF HISTORY
I have a dream that one day on the red hills of Georgia, the sons of former slaves and the sons of former slave owners will be able to sit together at the table of brotherhood.
– Martin Luther King, Jr.
A view of Grady Hospital and a horse-drawn carriage, circa 1896.
Atlanta is located in North-central Georgia at the southern tip of the Appalachians. The city’s origins trace 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 (called the Zero Mile Post).
The city’s birth was set in motion seven years earlier, with the government’s forced resettlement of Native Americans west. The area’s predominant Native American population, Cherokee and Creek, were clustered mainly in northwest Georgia. Many died on their journey on the famed Trail of Tears. Standing Peachtree, a Creek village, is now the closest Indian settlement to Atlanta.
Transportation Hub Origins
The city, which now has the world’s busiest airport, has been a vital logistics and transportation center since the Civil War—its railroads made it a hub for distributing military supplies. The Union Army moved southward and invaded north Georgia in 1860. Union General William Tecumseh Sherman ordered Atlanta evacuated and burned after capturing the city on September 2, 1864. The fleeing Confederates blew up a munitions depot and set a large part of the city on fire. The fall of Atlanta was a critical point in the war between the states.
In the aftermath of Atlanta’s destruction, the city was slowly rebuilt. It helped ensure the re-election of President Abraham Lincoln and the eventual surrender of the Confederacy. By 1880, it surpassed Savannah as the state’s largest city and continued to grow rapidly during the early 20th century.
Epicenter of the Civil Rights Movement
Atlanta was the focal point of the civil rights movement for four decades, and today is the fourth-largest majority black city in the country. It’s a black-run city and probably one of the best run mediumsized cities in the nation,
says veteran Atlanta restauranteur Dante Stephensen, who moved to Atlanta to be near Martin Luther King, Jr. at a time when King and other leaders envisioned a new South, laying the foundation for what Atlanta has become. King, along with President Jimmy Carter, received the Nobel Peace Prize, making Atlanta one of only two cities worldwide to lay claim to two Nobel laureates.
A former marcher, Stephensen recalled when Dr. King was killed. Most U.S. cities had riots. In Atlanta, the blacks and whites walked arm in arm down Peachtree Street, mourning his death. Atlanta was the only major U.S. city that did not have riots.
For forty-three years, Stephensen owned and operated Dante’s Down the Hatch, a fondue restaurant and the country’s longest-running live-jazz supper club (the restaurant closed in 2013). He lives in a railway car built in 1926 and once owned by the Woolworth family.
Rev. Martin Luther King, Jr.
A City Full of Energetic People with Vision
Atlanta is a city of serendipity—people come up with ideas and do them. The city attracts a certain type of person—a person with vision,
said Stephensen, pointing to the grassroots efforts of residents to save The Fox Theatre in 1974 when declining ticket sales prompted a move to close the landmark theater. A campaign, Save the Fox, started by high school students, led to 150,000 signatures and the decision to place the Fox on the National Register of Historical Places.
Long-time resident Dante Stephensen with his Samoyed, Rika
The Fabulous Fox Theatre
Another powerful example of this grassroots activism occurred when intown communities staged demonstrations and rallies to save their neighborhoods from being decimated by plans to create overpasses and ramps to support multi-lane highways downtown. Residents opposed the Georgia Department of Transportation’s move to build I-485, the Stone Mountain Freeway and Presidential Parkway through intown Atlanta.
It was a long, protracted fight,
said Dennis Mobley, president of the Inman Park Neighborhood Association. A number of Inman Parkers and folks from other neighborhoods banded together, creating an alliance called CAUTION Inc.
he added. CAUTION was formed to fight the Presidential Parkway as a result of former President Carter’s decision to build his presidential library on the abandoned land where I-485 and the Stone Mountain Freeway intersected.
Don Bender was one of the intown activists. A Candler Park resident since 1972, Bender was living in Old Fourth Ward when the DoT tore down the house next door to him to make way for the road. During the second phase of the construction of Presidential Parkway, Bender got arrested after sitting down in front of a truck that was bringing in a crane to build a bridge over a creek near South Ponce de Leon Road.
I have not a single regret. It was actually kind of fun,
he said of his civil disobedience.
The fight extended in phases for more than thirty years, from the early 1960s until the final construction of Freedom Parkway on a small portion of the contested routes in 1994. In the process, hundreds of properties were bought by the State and torn down. Granite columns along Virginia Avenue, showing addresses of properties demolished to pave the way for the highway, are a reminder of what almost happened.
In recalling the struggle, Bender said that it went to the heart of Atlantans embracing their rights as citizens and upholding democratic ideals. For us, it meant that we don’t let the state or the city run over the neighborhoods—that the neighborhoods are going to have a strong voice in determining their future.
"Had residents not banded together, these neighborhoods would be dramatically different than they are today, and I don’t think we’d have seen the Beltline come to fruition. A lot of things would be different today for intown Atlanta," added John Becker, former board member of the Virginia-Highland Civic Association.
Mobley said that the activism forged during the ‘road fight’ continues today in how active residents volunteer and serve their intown neighborhoods.
Atlanta’s Olympic Dream
Another example of Atlanta’s visionary spirit was when the city was selected to host the 1996 Olympic Games—an event that ushered in a business and population boom that continues to this day. Atlanta, the host city underdog, won out over Athens, Greece. Former Atlanta Mayor Andrew Young, who served as co-chair of the Atlanta Committee for the 1996 Olympic Games, wrote recently in a Boston Globe op-ed piece that having Atlanta as an Olympic host city was a dream I have never regretted chasing.
Young added that he saw it as an opportunity to extend Atlanta’s civil rights legacy. There are clearly parallel values at the heart of Coubertin’s Olympic Movement—uniting the world in friendship and peace with respect for the full diversity of humanity—and the goals of the civil rights movement: to overcome discrimination through social integration and to give every human being an equal opportunity to achieve academically and economically.
Centennial Olympic Park
Longtime writer Michelle Hiskey, in a piece in Atlanta Magazine, recalled how an old Southern icon, a quilt, was the symbol of the 1996 Summer Games, adorning billboards, banners, tickets—even the medals.
It inspired the design of Centennial Olympic Park and underpinned the city’s reputation for uniting across barriers of race, religion, and politics. This emblem suggested that Atlanta had connected its mishmash of ragged pieces for strength,