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mardi 17 juillet 2018

Any Historic Homes Tour Atlanta Guests Consider Would Be Incomplete Without These 6

By Sarah Brooks


If you are fascinated by the history of the Deep South, you need to visit some of its most historic residences. Although a lot of this city was burned by Sherman during the Civil War, there are still some architectural remnants left to observe. There are also more recent residences of equal interest. Six homes come to mind especially, and any historic homes tour Atlanta natives or visitors consider should include them.

Swan House, which is included in the Atlanta History Center, is a magnificent Second Renaissance estate. It is located in Inman Park and was built by Edward Inman and his wife, Emily, in 1928. You may even encounter Edward and Emily Inman while touring the rooms of this stately home. The designer and architect, as well as the Inman chauffeur, are usually around somewhere. They all have stories to tell about the era in which they lived.

Margaret Mitchell, who wrote the quintessential Southern novel, Gone With the Wind, lived in a ground floor apartment she lovingly referred to as The Dump. Everyone called her Peggy, and she was apparently a free spirit. Debutantes of that time tended to avoid her and her antics. Today you can see where she wrote, hear about her charity work, and learn about the hit and run controversy surrounding her death.

Martin Luther King, Jr. Is arguably Atlanta's most famous citizen. He was born here, and his childhood home is open to visitors. This humble home is located in the Sweet Auburn District of this city. You can tour the entire two story house where all of its furniture is of the period. In addition to his home, you must visit his grave site, Freedom Hall, and Ebenezer Baptist Church.

The Tully Smith House at the Smith Family Farm is pre-Civil War. Today it is the oldest farmhouse in Georgia's capital. This is a great opportunity to learn what it was like to live on the farm in the mid-nineteenth century. There is a kitchen away from the house, a smokehouse, blacksmith shop, slave garden, and an outhouse.

The town of Roswell is located just north of Atlanta. This is where you can see several pre-war estates. Sherman left much of Roswell as it was because the town was founded by a Northerner. Sherman also gave instructions to his men to leave the residences belonging to Masons alone. Bulloch Hall was the site of Mittie Bulloch's 1853 marriage to President Theodore Roosevelt.

Any home tour of Georgia must include the Little White House, President Franklin Roosevelt's home in Warm Springs. It's just an hour south of Georgia's capital. He came to Warm Springs frequently and was here when he died of a stroke. His unfinished portrait, which he was posing for when he died, still hangs here.

If you are interested in American history at all, the Deep South is teeming with it. There are residences that reflect all the many facets of this complicated region of the country. You can learn a lot by stepping back into the past.




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