How Atlanta Celebrated the end of WWI

“Germans Sign Armistice, World War Comes to End.” This was the Atlanta Constitution headline on November 11, 1918 and the good news was celebrated all over Atlanta and in the surrounding communities.

Teachers led school children in patriotic songs and then dismissed them early. Boys from Tech High School marched through town as they celebrated and cheered. Atlanta city offices were ordered closed by Mayor Asa Candler. Students of the Southern Shorthand and Business School on Whitehall Street in downtown Atlanta gathered in the street and sang “America.”

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Wilma Paris recalls Dunwoody's Chesnut Elementary 1969-1989

In 2011, I had the pleasure of speaking with Wilma Paris about her career as a Chesnut Elementary teacher. I had recently written about the school and stated the age as fifty years. Wilma Paris called the Dunwoody Crier newspaper to let them know that was incorrect. She was there for the first day of classes at Chesnut was December 10, 1969, as a first grade teacher and remembered the day well. At that point, the school was 42 years old and 2019 marked the 50th anniversary.

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Next post coming soon

Sometimes life throws you for a loop and some things have to be put on hold. This week is one of those times for me.

I have many subjects I want to pursue. See if one catches your eye and send me a message.

Frances Virginia Tearoom: I don’t remember if I went there or not. It is possible I did as a little girl with my mother or grandmother. I have my mom’s Frances Virginia Tearoom cookbook and treasure it greatly.

Who remembers the putt putt course that was on Shallowford Road between Chamblee Tucker Road and Buford Highway? I went there quite a few times as a teenager, because it was close to our house. I don’t remember it as the type of course that had animals, clown heads, and other unusual designs for putt putt play.

I’ve heard about a drive-in movie theater on Peachtree Industrial Boulevard, near Chamblee Plaza or across the road? I don’t think I ever went there, but would love to hear some memories, such as what movies did you see there. The main drive-in theatre I remember in north DeKalb county was the North I-85 drive-in.

I’ll be back soon with one of these stories or another local history story. Write me to me through the Contact Us button or email pasttensega@gmail.com.

Thanks for reading Past Tense GA! Valerie

Remembering the old Brookhaven business district

Mims recalls, “Brookhaven Supply at intersection of North Druid Hills and Peachtree Road, Buice Sinclair was next, Bagley Electric, laundry, Brookhaven Pharmacy, gasoline station with fire station behind it, and the A&P just to start. The Brookhaven Picture Show was across from the Drug store and was run by Mr and Mrs Tittle.” He remembers there were many more stores along Peachtree Road.

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Drummond family narrowly escapes Doraville Triangle Refinery fire of 1972

When I first wrote about the Doraville Triangle Refinery fire that began on April 6, 1972 for the Dunwoody Crier newspaper, I received an email from Todd Drummond of Dunwoody. He shared the story of living on Doral Circle, the street adjacent to the refinery, when the tragic fire took place. The family home was closest house to the fire, but miraculously did not burn. He was five years old at the time.

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Georgia peaches are a tradition of summer

Since I grew up in Georgia, finding and enjoying Georgia peaches is a tradition in my family which I am happy to continue. When I was young, one of my aunts lived off Highway 155 in Stockbridge, Georgia and had a peach orchard behind their house. My mom, grandmother, aunts, cousins and I would make a day of going to their farm to pick peaches. Following this outing, Mom and my grandmother would freeze peaches so we could continue to enjoy them well after summer.

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Air-Line Belle from Toccoa to Atlanta

The Air-Line Belle was a commuter train that ran from Atlanta to Toccoa from 1879 until 1931. It began because the people of Norcross wanted a commuter train between their town and Atlanta. The engine was named for Belle Foreacre, wife of G. J. Foreacre, head of Piedmont Airline Railroad. Piedmont Airline Railroad was the predecessor of Southern Railway. (Atlanta and Environs II, Franklin Garrett)

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Camp Gordon continues after WWI ends

About a month ago, I wrote an article for the Dunwoody Crier about Camp Gordon in the years after World War I ended. You can read the article here.

Since that time, Clint Daniel, grandson of Edward Clinton Daniel, Sr. shared the document below. His grandfather worked as a watchman at Camp Gordon, guarding warehouses near the railroad, beginning in 1920. The letter was sent by Quartermaster T. C. Locke and indicates that Daniel will receive $100 per month for the job. Thank you to Clint Daniel for sharing this historic document.

Dunwoody Methodist Church and the historic chapel

In 1933, the building committee of the Dunwoody Methodist Church was authorized to begin plans for a new chapel. The decision was made to build the chapel on one acre at the site of the old parsonage, across Mount Vernon Road from the original 1903 chapel. $450 was collected from members to begin construction.

The community came together to help accomplish their goal of a new Methodist chapel. In 1935, Euil Spruill donated the use of his two mules to excavate the land.

Fred and brother Fletcher Donaldson drove to Stone Mountain to pick up granite for the basement, walkway and steps of the church. Their father Will did the stonework around the new building. The old four-square wooden building that sat across the street still held Sunday School and preaching during the construction.

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Early Days of Dunwoody School

The first Dunwoody School sat along Chamblee Dunwoody Road where the Dunwoody Library and Spruill Center for the Arts are located today. The land for the first school in Dunwoody was donated by Zachariah Eidson. The earliest school dates to the 1890s and was a plain wood building. The next school, built in the 1920s was a painted white building with a front porch and a small bell tower. Then, in the 1930s a brick building was constructed.

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Narvie Jordan Harris, DeKalb County Jeanes Supervisor

Narvie Jordan Harris supervised all Black schools in DeKalb County beginning in 1944 as Jeanes Supervisor for the county. She continued in this role until desegregation in 1968. The Jeanes Supervisor program was initially funded by a one-million-dollar donation of Philadelphia Quaker Anna Jeanes in 1907. Jeanes Supervisors were Black educators hired to oversee Black schools across the United States.

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Brookhaven Pharmacy, Peachtree Road

In 1989, as Brookhaven Pharmacy on Peachtree Road was closing, Vivian Price wrote an article for the DeKalb New Era titled, “Cherry Cokes and Chicken Pox-Closing of Brookhaven Pharmacy Marks End of Era.” She begins with, “It was a sad day recently when employees and customers gathered to bid fond farewell to a north DeKalb institution-the Brookhaven Pharmacy.”

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Theodore Roosevelt visits his mother's childhood home in Roswell 1905

Theodore Roosevelt’s mother was Martha (Mittie) Bulloch of Roswell, and his father was Theodore Roosevelt, Sr. of New York. They married at Roswell Presbyterian Church in 1853. The President heard his mother tell stories of the place she grew up and in 1901 began thinking of a visit. Bulloch Hall still stands today, owned by the City of Roswell and supported by Friends of Bulloch, Inc.

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Murphey Candler Park Caretaker's Cottage

When I first wrote about the small old home at Murphey Candler Park in 2011, I knew the home as the Sea Scout Hut. Later, I learned it was used as a caretaker’s cottage for the park prior to the Sea Scouts. I went to Murphey Candler Park recently to see if the home still standing and it was. I have heard the city of Brookhaven plans to demolish the old home and it looks quite neglected at this point.

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Children's Healthcare of Atlanta-Scottish Rite dates to 1915

The story of Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta-Scottish Rite begins in 1915. According to Franklin Garrett’s “Atlanta and Environs,” the Scottish Rite Masons were the founders of Scottish Rite Hospital in 1915. The initial name was Scottish Rite Convalescent Home for Crippled Children. They started the hospital to serve the needs of families who could not pay. Two cottages on East Lake Drive were the first home of the hospital.

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