Buckhead: Images of America (Arcadia Publishing)
Autor Susan Kessler Barnarden Limba Engleză Paperback – 30 apr 2009
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780738567549
ISBN-10: 073856754X
Pagini: 128
Dimensiuni: 165 x 235 x 9 mm
Greutate: 0.32 kg
Editura: Arcadia Publishing (SC)
Seria Images of America (Arcadia Publishing)
ISBN-10: 073856754X
Pagini: 128
Dimensiuni: 165 x 235 x 9 mm
Greutate: 0.32 kg
Editura: Arcadia Publishing (SC)
Seria Images of America (Arcadia Publishing)
Descriere
Buckhead, a community four miles from downtown Atlanta, began approximately 6,000 years ago when the Paleo-Indians lived along the Chattahoochee River. By the mid-1700s, the Muscogee (Creek) Indians lived there in the village of Standing Peach Tree. They ceded a major portion of their land to Georgia in 1821, and from that cession came Atlanta and Buckhead. Settlers arrived and operated river ferries, mills, and farms. When Henry Irby opened a tavern in 1838 and hung a buck's head--either over the door or on a yard post--the area became known as Buck's Head. After the Civil War, black neighborhoods, schools, and potteries were established. Around the turn of the century, some Atlanta residents bought land in Buckhead, built cottages, and operated small farms. The streetcar was extended to Buckhead in 1907, and friends followed friends to the community. Images of America: Buckhead is an album of this once quiet rural community before it was annexed to the City of Atlanta in 1952.
Recenzii
Title: Writer compiling pictorial history of Buckhead
Author: H.M. Cauley
Publisher: Journal-Constitution
Date: 12/27/2008
Susan Kessler Barnard didnat set out to be a historian, but curiosity got the better of her.
aI wasnat always taken with history, a admits the 71-year-old Atlanta native. aIn school, it was taught by dates and places, not people. It didnat come alive to me until the 1970s, when I started traveling. And since I didnat know about where I was going, I started studying.a
Though she was a trained surgical assistant, Barnardas volunteer efforts as an Atlanta History Center docent landed her a job in its library.
aI learned how to do research, what information the center had a basically, where all the bodies were buried, a she said with a laugh. aIt always amazed me how many people would come in from out of state or out of the country and ask, aWhat is Buckhead?a I thought, aTherein lies a book.a a
In her work at the History Center, Barnard ran across names such as Collier, Montgomery and Pace a names she knew from driving around the neighborhood. She realized no one had recorded the story of the community that these families built. So she took on the task of writing, aBuckhead: A Place for All Time, a first published in 1996.
She recently revised that book with new information and photos.
aI interviewed 125 people for the first book that was a genealogy of the people who settled in this area, a she said. aI knew there had to be descendants of all the street names a the Moores, the Howells, the DeFoors, the Irbys a so I started calling people. I found the families so forthcoming about giving me wonderful oldphotographs that, when I finished, I thought about doing something else on Buckhead.a
Barnard got the chance to follow up her book when representatives from a publishing firm contacted Buckhead Coalition president Sam Massell to find someone to work on a pictorial history of the area. Massell suggested Barnard, and the result is aImages of America: Buckhead, a that will debut next spring. Barnard describes the work as the visual companion to her first book, which puts faces and images with the names she mentioned before.
For the pictorial project, Barnard amassed more than 190 photos, some from founding families and some that she took herself of the areaas old homes, buildings and cemeteries. One of the most surprising structures she uncovered in her research was the Rosserville School, now part of St. Anneas Episcopal Church off Moores Mill Road.
aI only discovered it by doing research, a said Barnard. aSt. Anneas bought the property and renovated it and turned it into part of their church, but they had pictures of the way it looked originally.a
Barnardas own roots to the Buckhead community are deep. Her family moved from Midtown and built a house on a lot off Habersham Road in 1949, when the area was unincorporated county. She attended the then-Northside High, where she recalls children of wealthy families learning alongside children from outlying farms. After Barnard married, she lived on Mount Paran Road, and today she lives in a condominium on Peachtree Road.
aOnce I found Buckhead, I never left it, a she said. aIt really is a charming place.a
Author: H.M. Cauley
Publisher: Journal-Constitution
Date: 12/27/2008
Susan Kessler Barnard didnat set out to be a historian, but curiosity got the better of her.
aI wasnat always taken with history, a admits the 71-year-old Atlanta native. aIn school, it was taught by dates and places, not people. It didnat come alive to me until the 1970s, when I started traveling. And since I didnat know about where I was going, I started studying.a
Though she was a trained surgical assistant, Barnardas volunteer efforts as an Atlanta History Center docent landed her a job in its library.
aI learned how to do research, what information the center had a basically, where all the bodies were buried, a she said with a laugh. aIt always amazed me how many people would come in from out of state or out of the country and ask, aWhat is Buckhead?a I thought, aTherein lies a book.a a
In her work at the History Center, Barnard ran across names such as Collier, Montgomery and Pace a names she knew from driving around the neighborhood. She realized no one had recorded the story of the community that these families built. So she took on the task of writing, aBuckhead: A Place for All Time, a first published in 1996.
She recently revised that book with new information and photos.
aI interviewed 125 people for the first book that was a genealogy of the people who settled in this area, a she said. aI knew there had to be descendants of all the street names a the Moores, the Howells, the DeFoors, the Irbys a so I started calling people. I found the families so forthcoming about giving me wonderful oldphotographs that, when I finished, I thought about doing something else on Buckhead.a
Barnard got the chance to follow up her book when representatives from a publishing firm contacted Buckhead Coalition president Sam Massell to find someone to work on a pictorial history of the area. Massell suggested Barnard, and the result is aImages of America: Buckhead, a that will debut next spring. Barnard describes the work as the visual companion to her first book, which puts faces and images with the names she mentioned before.
For the pictorial project, Barnard amassed more than 190 photos, some from founding families and some that she took herself of the areaas old homes, buildings and cemeteries. One of the most surprising structures she uncovered in her research was the Rosserville School, now part of St. Anneas Episcopal Church off Moores Mill Road.
aI only discovered it by doing research, a said Barnard. aSt. Anneas bought the property and renovated it and turned it into part of their church, but they had pictures of the way it looked originally.a
Barnardas own roots to the Buckhead community are deep. Her family moved from Midtown and built a house on a lot off Habersham Road in 1949, when the area was unincorporated county. She attended the then-Northside High, where she recalls children of wealthy families learning alongside children from outlying farms. After Barnard married, she lived on Mount Paran Road, and today she lives in a condominium on Peachtree Road.
aOnce I found Buckhead, I never left it, a she said. aIt really is a charming place.a
Notă biografică
Susan Kessler Barnard's photographs came from private collections and from the archives at the Atlanta History Center, Georgia Archives, and the Bremen Museum. She is also the author of Buckhead: A Place for All Time.