mardi 17 juillet 2018

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

By Sarah Brooks


If the history of the American South interests you, you should check out some of its most historic residences. Even though General Sherman pretty much burned the city to the ground toward the end of the Civil War, there are still some pre-war plantations and more recent residences made famous by their occupants. Any historic homes tour Atlanta visitors choose should include the following six.

Swan House, which today is part of the Atlanta History Center, is a magnificent example of the Second Renaissance style. Located in Inman Park, this house was built in 1928 by Edward and Emily Inman. Mr. Inman inherited a fortune built on cotton. He and his wife are on hand at the house to greet guests and reminisce about their lives in the stately mansion. You might even meet the architect, the designer, or Mr. Inman's personal chauffeur on your walk through the gracious rooms.

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 one of the most influential men who ever lived, and he was born and raised in this city. The house where he lived as a child is preserved and open to the public. It is located in the Sweet Auburn District. It is a fascinating look at where this great man grew up. Ebenezer Baptist, where Dr. King preached, Freedom Hall, and his grave site are all within walking distance.

The pre-Civil War home, called the Tully Smith House, is located on the Smith Family Farm. This house is the oldest farmhouse in Atlanta. When you visit, you will be taken back to the nineteenth century rural South. You will get a chance to see a blacksmith shop, slave garden, outhouse, and learn why the kitchen was never included in the main residence.

Just north of the city is the town of Roswell. Here you will find a number of pre-war estates in its historic district. Roswell was saved from burning by Sherman because the founder of this town, Roswell King, was a Northerner. Bulloch Hall is an opulent example of Greek Revival architecture. Theodore Roosevelt married Minnie Bulloch in the dining room of this house in 1853.

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 intrigued by the Deep South, you should consider visiting these residences. Each one is a piece of American history. They are a look back to a different time that reflects all the many varieties of southern culture.




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