How Dunwoody’s Cheek/Spruill House was saved
In 1994, the fate of the home and 2.5 acres were uncertain after the owner, Florence Warnock Spruill, passed away. Her husband Carey Spruill had died in 1983. The couple’s sons, Hugh and Edwin, inherited the property and were interested in saving the home. They worked along with Dunwoody Preservation Trust to come up with a solution.
Hightower Trail and other Native American trails of DeKalb County, a 1951 report by Carl T. Hudgins
Carl T. Hudgins completed a report on the history of Native American trails in DeKalb County on January 22, 1951 which is among the archives at DeKalb History Center in Decatur, Georgia. He begins his paper by explaining the problems of telling the history, calling it “fragmentary, obtainable a little here and a little there.” The written history of the trails came from people who lived long after the Native Americans were forcibly removed and long after the first white settlers had died.
Heath home place, Old Hickory House Restaurant, and now Sun Trust Bank
As a person who is always curious about “what was there before”, when Hickory House closed and the news came out that another bank would be built there, I decided to see what I could find out. Most folks wouldn’t remember the time before the Old Hickory House restaurant, but I went to someone who would remember, Ken Anderson. Anderson grew up in Dunwoody on the old Carpenter and Anderson farm at the intersection of Tilly Mill Road and Mount Vernon Road.
List of WWI draftees from Dunwoody, Sandy Springs, and Chamblee, Georgia 1917
A list of men from Dunwoody, Sandy Springs, and Chamblee who were drafted for World War I in 1917 was among the documents found in a box of Dunwoody postal records. The box of historic documents was donated for preservation by the granddaughter of Sentell Spruill. Spruill was postmaster of Dunwoody, Georgia from 1949 until 1969 and his home sat where Dunwoody Baptist Church is now located at the corner of Mount Vernon Road and Ashford Dunwoody Road.
Arthur Harris and paper innovation during World War II
This history came to my attention from Richard Adams, who shared his memories of working at Atlanta Paper Company and in particular, for Arthur L. Harris. The story includes an everyday item that we purchase at the grocery store and the history behind how it evolved, but it also involves WWII and art in Atlanta.
Sparks Grocery, Jett Ferry and Mt. Vernon Road
A small country store once sat at Jett Ferry Road and Mount Vernon Road. Later, the country store included a gas station, with the typical Coca-Cola sign painted on one side. It was built and run by Joe Kelly. Next owners of the store were Georgia Carpenter Anderson and husband Offalee Anderson. Georgia grew up at her family’s home just down Mount Vernon Road, built by her father, Cicero Carpenter.
History of the Dunwoody Nature Center
The property was on the verge of being developed as county tennis courts and the remaining property would be sold off and developed with houses. Kathy Hanna and Pat Adams did a survey of the area and determined there was no need for additional tennis courts. The two women, along with Marilyn Dalrymple, Eleanor Lehner, Rita Langley and Carolyn Jones are the founders of Dunwoody Nature Center.
Dunwoody and Doraville Community Baseball Began in 1940s
Ken Anderson was eleven years old when Bud Crews, who worked for DeKalb County, graded land along Mount Vernon Road and what is today’s Dunwoody Village Parkway for a baseball field. Crews built wooden bleachers for the field and was manager of the Dunwoody baseball team.
Rich's Pink Pig-An Atlanta Christmas Tradition
Before there was a Rich’s Pink Pig, the traditional “Lighting of the Great Tree” took place at the downtown Rich’s Department Store in Atlanta for the first time in 1948. A 70-foot live tree was placed on the roof of the store that year and the lighting took place on Thanksgiving night.