Soldiers inducted at Lexington, GA destined for Camp Gordon
I was recently told that Ed Labon of Woodville, Greene County, Georgia, a Black soldier who reported to Camp Gordon in 1917, is buried at Wilson Cemetery in Penfield, Georgia. He died April 13, 1940. Like many Black recruits, Labon was in the 157th Depot Brigade during World War I.
North DeKalb Mall will be Lulah Hills
The development will be called Lulah Hills, a name which was originally planned for a neighborhood north of Decatur decades ago. Decaturish.com says the name originally came from landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted.
Rehoboth School, Rehoboth and Pearidge community
According to documents in the DeKalb History Center archives, Pearidge refers to an area of Tucker between Lawrenceville Highway and North Druid Hills Road, Burnt Creek and north to the railroad. Several farms were in the area, including the 250-acre R. F. Sams Truck Farm and the Honea dairy farm on Montreal Road.
Road names from here and there
The Ashford in Ashford Dunwoody came from the W. T. Ashford family, who owned the home and land that is now part of Peachtree Golf Club as well as land extending across Peachtree Road. The Ashfords operated a nursery business on this land. The Ashford home was inherited by Mary Ashford who married Cobb Caldwell and led to another street name, Caldwell Road. The first owner of the home was Samuel House and Windsor Parkway was once known as House Road.
Frank A. Smith Memorial Garden at Atlanta History Center
Recently, while visiting Atlanta History Center, I noticed a plaque for the Frank A. Smith Memorial Garden. The plaque states “The Azalea Chapter, American Rhodendendron Society at the Atlanta Historical Society, designed by C. Gordon Tyrrell, AHRHS. Developed under the direction of Ben W. Sims, Chairman, Azalea Chapter Garden Committee, 1987.” Frank Smith died in 1985.
Dunwoody's Remaining Railroad Section House
There is a small, old home on Chamblee Dunwoody Road that was once one of three railroad section houses in Dunwoody. In 1994, two were demolished. It happened very suddenly and without warning. The houses were part of the Roswell Railroad line that ran from Roswell, through Dunwoody, to Chamblee from 1881 until 1921. They were built as housing for men who worked on the railroad line.
General Motors Assembly Plant of Doraville
The Buick, Oldsmobile, Pontiac Assembly Plant in Doraville was built on a former cow pasture. The site was initially 386 acres, but some of those acres were later sold for a housing development, Chevrolet parts warehouse, and other industrial development and highway and access road construction.
The groundbreaking took place in 1945 and in 1947 the first automobiles were produced and shipped from the plant. The assembly plant would later become the General Motors Assembly Plant. It was 980,000 square feet, eventually expanding to about 1.5 million square feet. By 1948, there were 1,363 employees. (“History of Doraville GM Plant”, DeKalb History Center archives)
Legendary pediatrician Dr. Denmark lived in Sandy Springs
Every now and then I open a book that once belonged to my mom and discover that she placed a note or a newspaper article inside. That was something she did whenever she read an article in the newspaper that related to one of her books. I love to find these hidden treasures.
I still purchase paper books occasionally, but I also have many books on my Kindle. How can I place a relevant newspaper article inside a Kindle book?
I opened mom’s copy of “Every Child Should Have a Chance” (1971), by Leila Daughtry-Denmark, M. D. and found a newspaper clipping. Mom spoke often of Dr. Denmark.
Chamblee's Camp Gordon carried on post-WWI
World War I ended on November 11, 1918, but Camp Gordon, a military training camp built in Chamblee, continued for almost three years. Today, much of that land is home to DeKalb Peachtree Airport.
In June of 1919, Camp Gordon was designated a permanent cantonment. The Atlanta Constitution announced, “Thousands of soldiers who were discharged have again re-enlisted in the army in order to continue in the work they like best.” This was good news for Chamblee and Atlanta, as Camp Gordon brought people and therefore additional business and money to the area.
Firefighters remember Doraville fire 1972
In 2022 I had the opportunity to speak directly with some of the firefighters who were at the Doraville Triangle fire in 1972. Lieutenant J. D. Boozer took a great deal of time to share his personal recollections and explain anything that I didn’t understand, and there was a lot that needed further explanation for me.
Lt. Boozer was working at DeKalb County fire station #1 in 1972 when the Doraville Triangle Refinery fire took place and had been with the department for ten years. He arrived on the first day of the fire and stayed through until the end of the fire, three days later.
Memories of the Doraville fire of 1972
The explosion shook nearby homes, including that of Hoss Warbington. He could see the flames from his home one mile from the fire. Some people experienced being knocked out of their beds from the explosion.
Doraville refinery fire of 1972
In 2022, I researched the Triangle Refinery fire in Doraville. The fire began with an overfilled storage tank. Vapors from the overfilled tank reached nearby homes on Doral Circle and ignited a pilot light at one of the homes causing an explosion. The explosion then set three storage tanks on fire. (Atlanta Constitution, April 7, 1972, “Killer gasoline fire rages into 2nd day”)
Wylie School near Embry Hills
In Vivian Price Saffold’s 1983 book, “A History of the Community and the City of Chamblee,” which celebrated 75 years of the city, there is a 1904 photo of children at Wylie School. The school was located near what is now Embry Hills. The children’s ages are described as from six years old to “as old as the teacher would keep them.”
Yolande Gwin in Brookhaven
Yolande Gwin was a popular reporter and columnist for the Atlanta Constitution and Atlanta Journal newspapers. She often wrote for the society pages, but also covered other stories and wrote advice columns. She started out writing for the Atlanta Georgian newspaper in 1927, then for the Atlanta Constitution from 1934 until 1961. It was interesting to me to discover that she lived in Brookhaven for many years.
Martin family farm became location of Dunwoody High School
Ken Anderson, a wonderful source for Dunwoody history, told me several years ago that the land where Dunwoody High School is located was once home to the Martin farm. He remembered they lived on the land in the 1940s and 1950s, but they owned that land at least as early as the 1920s.
Hilbert Margol speaks at Atlanta World War II Round Table
I first learned of Hilbert Margol during the pandemic. I attended a zoom presentation where he shared the story of himself and his twin brother Howard during WW2. The twin brothers, part of the 42nd Infantry, are Dachau liberators. Jan Slimming arranged for me to attend the presentation to the Atlanta Chapter of the Churchill Society. You can read this history on the Appen Media/Dunwoody Crier website here. It is also available in a Past Tense GA blog post from 2021.
Milk Jug stores, a classic from the 60s
You might recall the Milk Jug store if you lived in Atlanta in the 1960s. There is still a small store with the classic shape of a Milk Jug and the Milk Jug sign in Tucker at 3988 Lawrenceville Highway. My family always had Mathis Dairy milk delivery, but occasionally when we had an emergency milk shortage in the home, Milk Jug was an easy drive through store.
New Hope Cemetery
The name New Hope comes from the church that was once next door to this cemetery. The church was New Hope Presbyterian. It was the third church to be established in Dunwoody, after Ebenezer Primitive Baptist Church and Providence Baptist Church.