I first researched Glenridge Hall when I wrote about a 2011 Dunwoody Nature Center “Monarchs and Margueritas” fundraiser event. The article was for the Dunwoody Crier newspaper.
The historic home was designed by Samuel Inman Cooper for Thomas K. Glenn. He began his career as a clerk in Atlanta in 1887, later becoming executive secretary to Joel Hurt during the development of the Atlanta Electric Streetcar Company. That company eventually evolved into Georgia Power.
Read more
The sandy spring for which the city of Sandy Springs is named is located on land between the office building on Bluestone Drive, the Entertainment Lawn, and the Williams Payne House on Sandy Springs Circle. The property is also bordered by Sandy Springs Place and Hilderbrand Drive. A natural spring comes up through sand, protected by a cover and an overhead shelter. Carol Thompson told me five springs converge at this spot.
Read more
Prior to the Civil War, the owners of the Roswell Manufacturing Company determined that a railroad to carry goods produced in their mills to Atlanta would be great for business. Grading work began to prepare for tracks, but that work was halted with the onset of the war.
Read more
In Pat Conroy’s “My Reading Life,” he talks about his favorite books and the time in his life that he discovered them. Some of those books come from his association with Norman Berg. He tells the story of Norman Berg inviting him to stay at the cottage on his property, which Berg called Sellanraa.
Read more
Benjamin Franklin Burdett built a Colonial style, two story, red brick home in 1900 on the land where Mount Vernon Presbyterian School and Church are located today. The home had eleven rooms, four porches on the ground level, two porches on the second level, and white columns across the front. The bricks for the home were made on the property.
Read more
In the 1920s through 1940s, there were several summer homes in the Dunwoody and Sandy Springs area. These were homes, often with many acres and referred to as farms, of wealthy Atlanta families. This blog post will share history of three of these properties.
Read more
One of the summer homes along Spalding Drive was that of Judge Samuel D. Hewlett, Sr. Hewlett Road is named for him and the lodge he built on the Chattahoochee River is headquarters for the Chattahoochee River National Recreation Area, located within Island Ford Park.
Read more