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April 30, 1980 (875 W. Peachtree St., NE. Atlanta: 6: Adair Park Historic District: Adair Park Historic District: June 2, 2000 (Bounded by Metropolitan Parkway ...
Veiled Visions: The 1906 Atlanta Race Riot and the Reshaping of American Race Relations (2006). Harvey, Bruce, and Lynn Watson-Powers. "The eyes of the world are upon us: A look at the Cotton States and International Exposition of 1895." Atlanta History 39#1 (1995): 5-11. Hanley, John. The Archdiocese of Atlanta. A History (2006), The Roman ...
The school originated as the boys' military school Marist College High School, and was located in a three-story schoolhouse on Ivy Street, now called Peachtree Center Avenue, in downtown Atlanta. In the 1940s, while it was a military school, the boys wore a blue military uniform with a soft cap, and performed a marching drill routine on the ...
Nehl Horton of the Atlanta Journal-Constitution wrote that North Fulton High "draws heavily from" the 287-unit Piedmont Court and East Wesley Apartments, known for hosting various waves of refugees, including from the Cuban Revolution, the Vietnam War, and the Soviet–Afghan War; accordingly it at the time had "a well-developed and successful program for international students."
1882 Joel Hurt Cottage – 117 Elizabeth Ave. NE near Euclid Ave. in Inman Park; 1882 Block Building – 90 Pryor St. SW; 1883 Edward C. Peters House – 179 Ponce de Leon Ave. NE, Old Fourth Ward; 1883 Capital City Club - 7 John Portman Blvd NW, Atlanta, GA 30303; 1884 Central Presbyterian Church – 201 Washington St. SW
227 Courtland Street NE 9 floors 1985 [23] Westin Peachtree Plaza Hotel 210 Peachtree Street NW 220.5 m (723 ft) 73 floors 1976 Atlanta Marriott Marquis 265 Peachtree Center Avenue NE 169 m (554 ft) 52 floors 1985 AmericasMart Various Addresses Various Heights 1961, 1979, 1992, 2008 Truist Plaza 303 Peachtree Street NE 265 m (869 ft) 60 floors
The Art Deco style building was designed by architect Francis Palmer Smith of the firm of Pringle and Smith. [1] While the firm had designed many Beaux-Arts buildings in Atlanta, the Orr Building was one of the first two buildings designed by Pringle and Smith in the Art Deco style (alongside the William–Oliver Building, finished the same year).
E.R. Carter (1894), The black side: a partial history of the business, religious and educational side of the Negro in Atlanta, Ga., Atlanta {}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher ; Atlanta City Directory for 1896. Franklin Printing and Publishing Co. 1896. Atlanta City Directory for 1898. Bullock and Saunders. 1898.