What Happened to Millionaires' Row in Atlanta?

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  • čas přidán 6. 07. 2024
  • Before Atlanta’s Midtown became the South’s “Heart of the Arts,” it was once home to some of the largest, most lavish mansions the city had ever seen. But what happened to Atlanta’s Millionaires' Row?
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    Location: Atlanta, GA
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Komentáře • 158

  • @SoldierPoet
    @SoldierPoet Před 23 dny +104

    Another example of beautiful structures being replaced with ugly ones.

    • @EcceHomo1088
      @EcceHomo1088 Před 23 dny +5

      ... Its called Communism/Socialism...

    • @dxb4691
      @dxb4691 Před 16 dny +4

      @@EcceHomo1088 how is it communism/socialism?

    • @EcceHomo1088
      @EcceHomo1088 Před 16 dny

      @@dxb4691 .... Government excessive taxation until the individual family unit fails to pay and turns over their land to the state/fed so they can create low-income housing... Happens all the time...

    • @GWhiz-wn5zw
      @GWhiz-wn5zw Před 14 dny +1

      Amen

  • @Catswinter
    @Catswinter Před 13 dny +26

    I’m from Atlanta and know it’s history. I am 65 and have seen so many changes. Atlanta today is very different from when I grew up. It makes me sad, but generations come and go as progress moves on.

  • @scpatl4now
    @scpatl4now Před 22 dny +44

    Atlanta also has another row of mansions on Ponce de Leon going into Druid Hills, but sadly almost all of those were torn down as well

  • @megfuchs9425
    @megfuchs9425 Před 23 dny +103

    I found this interesting but mostly thoroughly depressing. So sad to see beautiful homes left to rot and decay. The new buildings are so unattractive to me!

    • @susitamarie5849
      @susitamarie5849 Před 23 dny

      I’m an old soul and always connect with old homes. Kitchens especially interest me whether in mansions or small cabins. It’s the heart of the home.

    • @keithlampkin
      @keithlampkin Před 20 dny +15

      The only mansion I know of that is left is Rhodes Hall and it is not decaying. Atlanta went through a horrible phase in the 1960’s and 70’s tearing anything down it could. It would have been even worse if the 2008 market downturn hadn’t happened. Atlanta has no shame when it comes to their history as it is a shameful past. I am from there and I will never live there again.

    • @bonniemcdaniel8
      @bonniemcdaniel8 Před 17 dny +2

      @@keithlampkin I echo your reply. I also grew up in downtown Atlanta. I have not been back there in over 20 years and probably will never go back. When I think of how it was when I was growing up and what it has become, it makes me depressed.

    • @bradbarnes1839
      @bradbarnes1839 Před 16 dny +1

      There was a revolution in politics that installed a new order in the 1960s Atlanta ​@@keithlampkin, the new managers delighted in tearing down the old

    • @deborahchasteen3206
      @deborahchasteen3206 Před 3 dny

      What I find unattractive is the fetishization of architecture and decorative arts created for those who exploited their workers and used racism to spread misery. There ain't enough parquet flooring in the world. Hell with these people and their self-congratulatory oppression.

  • @dannemcmillen7917
    @dannemcmillen7917 Před 20 dny +19

    I’m a native Atlantan and this video taught me a lot. Thank you!

  • @andreaberryhill6654
    @andreaberryhill6654 Před 23 dny +10

    I lived in Atlanta for several years. Love it's history. My apt was along Peachtree Battle Creek, in Buckhead. Oh the things I saw!

  • @SpanishEclectic
    @SpanishEclectic Před 23 dny +15

    Atlanta is still a transportation hub; huge airport! One photo shows snow on the ground, but I believe they do have cold weather there once in a while. Governor's mansion was beautiful. I visited the Margaret Mitchell house when I was there, as well as the Antebellum homes that were moved to Stone Mountain. After braving the cable car to the top, I was told that Atlanta is known as the " City in the Pine Forest"; the view of the skyscrapers rising from the trees is amazing. The Atlanta History Center has fantastic exhibits covering the Cherokee people and the history of the Civil War. Swann House is amazing too.

    • @frzstat
      @frzstat Před 17 dny +3

      I'm glad you enjoyed your visit! It's fun to hear a positive review or our City.

    • @SteffiReitsch
      @SteffiReitsch Před 7 dny +4

      That Margaret Mitchell house is essentially a replica. i remember in the late 1970s the old house was being renovated to be some sort of tourist attraction, but it caught fire and was gutted. They said F***** it and built a fancy new copy, so it's essentially a fake. There's little of historical interest to see in Atlanta, most of it was torn down, so somebody came up with the Margaret Mitchell House idea. Author Ms Mitchell lived in the small apartment house only briefly in the 1930s and referred to it as " the dump." Back in the '60s the area had old houses that had become a bit shabby and they're now gone, replaced by fancy hotels and office buildings. In 1969 my boyfriend's mother was a waitress in a nearby restaurant and rented a small apartment in a subdivided old house there near 10th street. The area between about 10th and 14th street was nicknamed "the strip." Hippies and prostitutes sauntered along the strip then and the area was sort of scruffy, but had lots of character. There were two X- rated theatres and shops that sold "mod" clothes, posters, porno mags and stuff, along with a couple of bars and restaurants, including The Crystal. The Stein club had a nice juke box.There was a scruffy local guy named "Wolf" who hung out on the street corner and sold the "Great Speckled Bird," a counter culture newspaper. Another guy ,Tom, sold "The Hip Atlanta Sex Ads" along with pot. Yeah, they're both dead now. Anyway, it's now nothing like it was, and back then it was nothing like it was before that, and so on. Time marches on.

  • @kevinm-py1nt
    @kevinm-py1nt Před 23 dny +25

    I'm in an Atlanta suburb. It's sad, they tear down anything old and beautiful here. I actually live in a townhome built on the ground of a beautiful planation home. Thankfully they didn't tear the house down.

    • @EcceHomo1088
      @EcceHomo1088 Před 23 dny +4

      Thank the Communists/Socialists...

    • @aroaris843
      @aroaris843 Před 18 dny +12

      Beautiful plantation home is an oxymoron lol

    • @kevinm-py1nt
      @kevinm-py1nt Před 18 dny

      @@aroaris843 Good point!

    • @cisium1184
      @cisium1184 Před 15 dny +6

      @@aroaris843 You need to learn to separate architecture from agenda.

    • @aroaris843
      @aroaris843 Před 15 dny

      @@cisium1184 interesting how just noting the name “plantation” is an agenda

  • @ChampEaster
    @ChampEaster Před 7 dny +3

    I live in Midtown in one of the oldest buildings still on Peachtree Street, Cornerstone Village! a collection of four buildings, the oldest was built in 1923. Great video! I enjoyed the history lesson of my neighborhood.

  • @user-xt3gh6du9r
    @user-xt3gh6du9r Před 23 dny +10

    They all could have become lawyers offices,fashion houses, the lobby’s of hotels , with the towers behind them, the work, and materials of their grandeur were not appreciated, in America’s disposable culture.

    • @gaslandmoe
      @gaslandmoe Před 19 dny

      Lots of the ones still standing are exactly that

  • @markj9544
    @markj9544 Před 17 dny +8

    Downtown Macon, Ga still has many mansions that have been saved an restored that were built in the late 1800s to early 1900s. They're are mostly along College St, Washington Ave/Coleman Hill area.

    • @02nupe
      @02nupe Před 14 dny +1

      and its a world of difference between Atlanta's growth and Macon's stagnation unfortunately.

    • @markj9544
      @markj9544 Před 14 dny +1

      @@02nupe what does that have to do with mansions in Macon still standing?

    • @02nupe
      @02nupe Před 14 dny

      @@markj9544​​⁠lack of progress and holding on to the past vs moving forward. Says a lot actually. As a Maconite, it’s sad to see with all the potential Macon has.

  • @EmilyShoup-pu1nt
    @EmilyShoup-pu1nt Před 22 dny +7

    Loved Atlanta when I lived there!

  • @Lornicopia
    @Lornicopia Před 21 dnem +5

    I was just in Newnan Ga. And thought, Atlanta must have looked similar. Of course it in fact did!

  • @Portia-oc6mr
    @Portia-oc6mr Před 23 dny +7

    All the mansions were gorgeous.
    Love the governor's mansion and the interior of Frank E. Block's house.
    We still have a few stately old mansions where I live.
    The retrofitting and upkeep is indeed costly.
    Thank you, Ken.

  • @tt8807
    @tt8807 Před 23 dny +14

    Omg that governors mansion!!!
    💜💜💜

    • @keithlampkin
      @keithlampkin Před 20 dny +3

      You should see the ugly one they replaced it with. Looks like a plastic funeral home.

    • @bonniemcdaniel8
      @bonniemcdaniel8 Před 17 dny +2

      @@keithlampkin i think the first one was over near GA tech.

    • @CoffeeCatsAndTrueCrime
      @CoffeeCatsAndTrueCrime Před 17 dny +1

      I agree, that first one was gorgeous. It's tragic to hear they replaced it.

  • @StamperWendy
    @StamperWendy Před 22 dny +2

    I love how your videos go into such depth and are so well researched. Thanks, Ken!

  • @LJB103
    @LJB103 Před 23 dny +6

    Let's just say that I wouldn't say "No" to the Willis B. Jones mansion. Excellent video.

  • @Klaus_Heindendorfer
    @Klaus_Heindendorfer Před 22 dny +1

    Once again I say thank you for your phenomenal work putting together these fine videos.

  • @eugenedowns2563
    @eugenedowns2563 Před 23 dny +2

    Ken! Great to see the man behind the voice :-) Excellent video. Thank you!

  • @jimwiskus8862
    @jimwiskus8862 Před 23 dny +6

    Thank God for me photographs and Ken! ❤😊

  • @jefflawrentz1624
    @jefflawrentz1624 Před 23 dny +4

    This was interesting. When I think of Peachtree Street I think of a bio of Margaret Mitchell I read long ago in which it states she told her brother Stevens Mitchell that she wished him to tear down their family home ( on Peachtree) after he no longer wished to live there as she “ did not want strangers looking in rooms that were once their own.”

  • @Zan_Chris
    @Zan_Chris Před 23 dny +4

    Thanks for covering Atlanta. It is often overlooked. Fortunately we still have Rhodes Hall, which is somewhat hidden but last I checked still open for tours. The formers governors mansion still stands as the Capital City Club.

    • @Zan_Chris
      @Zan_Chris Před 23 dny +1

      Also “Terminus,” which is Atlanta’s version of Grand Central and is now called the Gulch, is being redeveloped and included in project L for the World Cup.

  • @djplonghead5403
    @djplonghead5403 Před 23 dny +4

    I live near Dover Ohio and the Reeves House is certainly a place to visit. Lots of fun events they do!

  • @David-tm8sl
    @David-tm8sl Před 23 dny +6

    Seemed to be quite an array of various styles. Unfortunate to lose so much to urban sprawl 😮

  • @soangiewrites5639
    @soangiewrites5639 Před 22 dny

    Amazing how much one area changed through the years! Your research is appreciated and enjoyed.

  • @neighborhoodcatlady6094
    @neighborhoodcatlady6094 Před 23 dny +4

    You could easily get a job as a narrator. Your voice is magnificent. 👍👍

  • @leilanidewitt7442
    @leilanidewitt7442 Před 21 dnem

    This site is so informative and I love the old houses

  • @Emily_Paris
    @Emily_Paris Před 23 dny +1

    Thank you Ken. Quite interesting and sad to hear about Atlanta’s millionaires row. Reminded me a little bit of Cleveland’s millionaires row where the homes are left to decay, rot, destroyed or torn down.

  • @GlennMandeville154
    @GlennMandeville154 Před 19 dny +1

    Sadly, it is what it is. Ken, you offered a wonderful explanation of why this happened. Great video, thank you!

  • @Susie_Floozie
    @Susie_Floozie Před 7 dny +1

    I've lived in Atlanta since 1980, and one of my favorite sights was Rhodes Hall, where Peachtree Street bends to the west, then north. I regularly patronized an art cinema in a strip mall facing the south side of the mansion. Its walls and turret reminded me of a castle, and I thought it was lovely. At the time, there was a struggle to preserve it from the wrecking ball. It was inconceivable to me that this wonderful place could be at risk. I'm so happy it's still there!

    • @mariawesley7583
      @mariawesley7583 Před 6 dny +1

      I was just thinking of that movie theater yesterday! My first boyfriend and I would go see films there. Once we saw a short film festival that included the Dali/Bunuel film "Un Chien Andalou". My mom and I saw "It Happened One Night" there on a Saturday afternoon. There was a 90 year old ticket taker who had been there for decades. Great memories!

    • @Susie_Floozie
      @Susie_Floozie Před 6 dny +1

      @@mariawesley7583 Haha, UN CHIEN ANDALOU sure is one wild film to see on a big screen! I do vaguely remember a venerable old lady who manned the ticket booth with refined grace, but I can't recall the name of that theatre. We also used to go to Silver Screen at Peachtree Battle a lot, so I know it wasn't that one.

    • @mariawesley7583
      @mariawesley7583 Před 5 dny +1

      @Susie_Floozie I think it was called the Rhodes Theater. I also remember the Silver Screen at Peachtree Battle. I think it changed its name to The Screening Room and moved to Broadview Plaza. I also enjoyed seeing classic films at the Ellis Theater, which is now the Variety Playhouse. Good times!

    • @Susie_Floozie
      @Susie_Floozie Před 5 dny +1

      @@mariawesley7583 Thanks for putting me out of my mystery, Maria! Ah, of course--the Rhodes Theatre, DUH me! I saw so many avant-garde films there I thought it had some edgy, artsy cinema name. One of my roommates was a projectionist at Film Forum at Ansley Plaza, and he'd come home with all sorts of crazy stories about working for the cantankerous George Ellis. I wish I could remember them!

  • @AIvey-qs1so
    @AIvey-qs1so Před 21 dnem +1

    Nice video! I grew up in metro Atl.

  • @rosepelzel4244
    @rosepelzel4244 Před 23 dny +2

    One more beautiful than the last!!

  • @drlarrybrown
    @drlarrybrown Před 23 dny +6

    Another nice video - thanks. Are there any mansions left in ATL and are you aware of any that can be toured?

    • @andrewspruell8498
      @andrewspruell8498 Před 23 dny +3

      Rhodes Hall still stands.....Atlanta is my hometown....in 2000 I was able to take a private tour of the mansion...beautiful inside and out. The house can be toured by appointment.

    • @drlarrybrown
      @drlarrybrown Před 22 dny

      Excellent. Thanks so much.

  • @bonniewills2814
    @bonniewills2814 Před 23 dny +4

    I would have liked to know which ones actually survive to this day.

  • @dhelton40
    @dhelton40 Před 23 dny +4

    Well, you might have included the few that remain, like Rhodes Hall.

  • @johhue
    @johhue Před 22 dny +2

    Of course Peachtree St. Every street in Atlanta is some form of Peachtree st.

  • @user-sg6ji2kk3u
    @user-sg6ji2kk3u Před 23 dny +5

    Such an array of beautiful Mansions but sadly left to decay and rot only to have urban sprawl and “ renewable” swallow them up and eventually be demolished. Soo sad to see this happen after viewing such lovely homes in photos from a better time . Thanks Ken as always ❤😊👍🏻

  • @sherirunnels545
    @sherirunnels545 Před 22 dny

    Wonderful video. So interesting. Change is inevitable. Sad at least a few of those homes couldn't be saved. As the World Churns.. 😅. Thanks for your work. You guys are very talented

  • @joltjolt5060
    @joltjolt5060 Před 12 dny +1

    I lived there, wonderful place. Even the hippies in Piedmont park were nice in the 70s!

  • @thomascefalo938
    @thomascefalo938 Před 13 dny

    I live in Midtown Atlanta/Ansley Park area and this was very interesting to see what had been here before my time.

  • @marquiesriley6479
    @marquiesriley6479 Před 21 dnem +7

    There are still a few older mansions present along the north end of peachtree street…they’ve primarily been turned into historical landmarks…

  • @UncleMoonshine
    @UncleMoonshine Před 18 dny +1

    I don't know if it's considered a mansion, but the Rufus M Rose house is still in downtown Atlanta on Peachtree. It's had some rough years, but it's still an eye catcher.

  • @JJRR50
    @JJRR50 Před 20 dny +2

    Thanks Ken, there is even another story as these millionaires moved further down Peachtree and into Buckhead. The fate of the newer homes is as the same as the older homes; torn down for big ugly Buildings. I am old enough to remember them before taken over. The novel, Peachtree Road by Anne Rivers Siddons. A part of old Atlanta is probably torn down every day. And it didn't take Gen. Sherman and a war, just Greedy Politicians.

  • @jill-ti7oe
    @jill-ti7oe Před 23 dny +1

    I liked the honest brick-built 'Tudor' manor house, I would never have guessed its actual location.

  • @ronaldhorton2438
    @ronaldhorton2438 Před 22 dny

    Thank you for this video. Did you forget to mention the Peachtree Center?

  • @ericdudley9925
    @ericdudley9925 Před 23 dny +26

    Architectural tragedy 💔

  • @blackdove3057
    @blackdove3057 Před 17 dny

    I was an art student at 1280 Peachtree Street NE back in the 90s. I used to walk those streets as a teen but never knew the history of the area until now. This comes as a surprise. I don't recall seeing any mansions. But that was a long time ago.

  • @garygloska7396
    @garygloska7396 Před 23 dny +2

    The house at 2:50 time stamp to 2:56 time stamp amazing Victorian eclectic mansion

  • @allanya74
    @allanya74 Před 12 dny

    I remember reading about this in high school.

  • @anthonycaldwell1308
    @anthonycaldwell1308 Před 11 dny

    I enjoyed this vid and could’ve watched more it was so interesting. I ove those type of elegant mansions I hate seeing them being cut into common apartments but accept they’re nit most peoples taste and style you could have save one for me dang lol. I understand time is filled with swift transitions and it has made wonderful progress to accommodate present times but, some people are privileged to a fault and don’t cherish anything because for them it can be easily replaced . It would have been nice to see the mansions that remained.

  • @SMtWalkerS
    @SMtWalkerS Před 23 dny +4

    I would have loved to tour those mansions, especially the opulent governor's mansion. Interesting history! I always enjoy your videos; thank you!

  • @mileshigh1321
    @mileshigh1321 Před 22 dny

    At least there are photos of them!

  • @owe6260
    @owe6260 Před 14 dny +1

    The truth is these houses didn't hold up well and needed a lot of work if they weren't taken care of they started to look horrible. Look at the size of these homes. It happened here in Durham NC in the 1970s *urban renewal* or the new term gentrification had a lot of these houses torn down. Because they looked horrible. Backyards used as parking lots..etc

  • @mccanlessdesign
    @mccanlessdesign Před 10 dny

    I live a bit outside Atlanta, and we've put years of work into our 1886 house to get it ready for the next hundred or so years.

  • @donaldrichardson9132
    @donaldrichardson9132 Před 18 dny

    You should do a Video of Capital Ave and the Parallel streets of Washington Street and Pryor street that ran South from the Georgia State Capital that Ended at the Railroad Tracks that Crossed McDonough Blvd and ended at beyond the Entrance Gate into the South Atlanta Campus of Clark College And Gammon theological Seminary of which I grew up in the South Atlanta Community surrounding these Campus. There were large Mansions built on Capital Avenue, Washington Street and Pryor street that Was subdivided the to Compliment the Georgia State Capital of the 1880s.

  • @PoeticOsmosisEntanglement

    Well, that definitely explains why I like Midtown better.

  • @belindacheatham9140
    @belindacheatham9140 Před 22 dny +1

    Have you ever done something on the Hutchinson Homes in Chicago? Maybe not old enough.

  • @keithlampkin
    @keithlampkin Před 20 dny +1

    Rhodes hall is not only still there but accessible and it wasn’t even featured. You left a lot out that was right there easily available.

  • @Notmycatsanctuary
    @Notmycatsanctuary Před 9 dny

    Well I live in Atlanta and I can promise you our in town streets, Buckhead, Piedmont, Peachtree street (all of them) are narrow. I drive a ford expedition and it’s a very tight fit.

  • @gabrielleparis3532
    @gabrielleparis3532 Před 19 dny

    St. Paul MN managed to save most of its mansions, Summit Avenue has the longest stretch of these types of mansions in the United States. Beautiful, stately and well preserved.

  • @johnadams1317
    @johnadams1317 Před 18 dny

    It's interesting to watch the flow from wealthy elites to poor to commercial and then the art/counterculture with diversity, followed by a return of the elite. The changes in zoning laws allowed the area to become more commercial, displacing the low-income people occupying the apartments. Could you expand on what enabled the transitions in the 60-70s that made it affordable for a more diverse, artistic community to thrive and then what displaced them to allow the luxury apartments and other high-income properties?

  • @Dan_Morrison
    @Dan_Morrison Před 6 dny

    A the 4:05 mark is the Morton Emmons home, not the Joseph Burke home. The Emmons house stood at the NW corner of Peachtree Street and Peachtree Place. The Burke house stood several hundred feet West of Peachtree on Peachtree Place. The Emmons home stood 2 houses South of the Margaret Mitchell house which still stands today.

  • @laurielaurie8280
    @laurielaurie8280 Před 23 dny +1

    Such beautiful homes. Too bad they were destroyed.

  • @Lantana1
    @Lantana1 Před 20 dny

    Great history lesson. You really do your homework! I lived nearly half my life in Midtown and let me tell you the late 80s and early 90s were trashy! Most of the old buildings were divided into tenements and quite nearly uninhabitable. Rent was cheap and the "artistic types" flourished! It's now so very Rha Sha Sha...

  • @davidpalmer9334
    @davidpalmer9334 Před 23 dny +1

    You should do a video on Lake George NY’s millionaires row as well as Saratoga Springs. Keep up the great videos

  • @donmcallister6115
    @donmcallister6115 Před 14 dny

    I wish we'd come back to show the 3 or 4 remaining mansions along Peachtree including Rhodes Hall, Wimbish House and the sad legacy of the Rufus-Rose House. They're survivors.

  • @garryferrington811
    @garryferrington811 Před 21 dnem

    Rather sad. The same thing has happened in many cities. It put me in mind of Booth Tarkington's classic novel "The Magnificent Ambersons."

  • @socksal
    @socksal Před 18 dny

    Booth Tarkington's "The Magnificent Ambersons" dramatizes what happened to the great neighborhoods of that era.

  • @frzstat
    @frzstat Před 17 dny

    Actually there are still a lot of mansions left in Atlanta. They just aren't on the main roads anymore. Check out the neighborhoods of Tuxedo Park, Morningside-Lenox Park, Chastain Park, Mt Paran-Northside just to name a few. They widened the roads and built businesses on Peachtree, Piedmont, Ponce, but there are plenty of large, lovely homes and actual mansions in the City.

  • @Losttouchjs
    @Losttouchjs Před 23 dny +6

    Diverse array of residence brought a vibrant culture seen to the area? Is that what we’re calling it? 😂

  • @stvp68
    @stvp68 Před 6 dny

    I wish we still had multiple long distance rail routes

  • @sopwithsnoopy8779
    @sopwithsnoopy8779 Před 15 dny

    I liked the old Governor's mansion 🙂

  • @Superiormotorsport
    @Superiormotorsport Před 22 dny

    So sad none if those gorgeous architectural works of art were never saved!😢

  • @bonnieyuse5876
    @bonnieyuse5876 Před 21 dnem

    I live on 5th Ave...in Kettle Falls!

  • @howardgreenman2908
    @howardgreenman2908 Před 12 dny

    I love old homes and great architecture. But as a practical matter times change and urban needs change. Homes like this are difficult to retrofit for other purposes and all that fancy architecture requires a lot of expensive maintenance. Fact is if the structure is not financially viable it has to come down. Fortunately in almost all cities a few such homes can be repurposed or turned into museums to be saved.

  • @cheifburninggrass
    @cheifburninggrass Před 7 dny

    Inman park and Grant park still have some beautiful Victorians .

  • @Trenaway
    @Trenaway Před 18 dny

    You do not happen to have blue prints of these structures, like the major's mansion?

  • @jakeshallow4068
    @jakeshallow4068 Před 18 hodinami

    Hmmmm… Atlanta, what changed? I think the answer is obvious. In fact is was mentioned in this video ever so briefly and subtle

  • @Wakeywhodat
    @Wakeywhodat Před 10 dny

    Thankfully, New Orleans was able to keep their historic homes.

  • @vickiephilpitt7697
    @vickiephilpitt7697 Před 23 dny +2

    I loved the history lesson of the area. The city's dymanic changed for the worse, and once the beautiful homes of the rich were divided into small apartments and the city's growth, there was nowhere else to go. As the buildings were no longer feasible and the land was premium, the owners of what was left really didn't have much of a say on keeping or selling. If there were any hold outs, they could have lost what they had simply by the city declaring eminent domain. Sometimes thats progress, or loss due to inheritance taxes. Too bad to.

    • @02nupe
      @02nupe Před 14 dny

      I disagree that it changed for the worse. Change is the only constant and looking back at that time, al lot of ppl who built the city and made it flow were shut out from wealth, ownership opportunities.

  • @mrs.g.9816
    @mrs.g.9816 Před 2 dny

    As with all cities of the 20th-21st century, the charm and humanity is gone - replaced by grim, tall structures.

  • @asylumlover
    @asylumlover Před 22 dny

    KEN, THIS IS HORRIBLE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! UNTIL NOW I NEVER KNEW THAT THIS AREA EXISTED, BUT THEN I KNOW VERY LITTLE ABOUT ATLANTA!!!!!!!!!!!! THESE STRUCTURES CANNOT BE REPLACED, ANY MORE THAN THE GLORIOUS ERA FROM WHICH THEY COME!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ALL I CAN SAY IS, GET ME A TICKET TO SOMEWHERE WHERE ALL OF THIS HORRIBLE DESTRUCTION HAS NOT RUINED A GLORIOUS LANDSCAPE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @glendeasy
    @glendeasy Před 9 dny

    Sadly, these treasure are all but gone. ATL is not alone. Cities all over the US did the same "urban renewal" disaster and ruined these great neighborhoods/homes.

  • @jetsons101
    @jetsons101 Před 15 dny

    Went on "street view" and followed Peachtree Street from end to end, not many Mansions to see. It the Atlanta Woman's Club at 1150 Peachtree St. NE a former Mansion ??????

  • @jamessullivan9992
    @jamessullivan9992 Před 18 dny

    i wish i could take a train to atlanta

  • @KCKingdomCreateGreatTrekAgain

    2:51 is that Richardsonian???

  • @raymartin3527
    @raymartin3527 Před 21 dnem

    I think they're beautiful to look at but after having lived in one I would never do it again.

  • @carcar78
    @carcar78 Před 21 dnem +1

    The fact that elegant homes focused on past conventions and did not plan for plumbing electric and AC doomed them quickly. I’ve always considered Atlanta as moving forward at breakneck speed without consideration of the future.

  • @philacesphilaces8116
    @philacesphilaces8116 Před 19 dny +1

    It was culturally enriched

    • @darbyclause8692
      @darbyclause8692 Před 19 dny

      To the modern, deracinated American goy peasant, these videos make no sense. He cannot comprehend why such grandeur and beauty was destroyed solely to maximize profits, because he is oblivious to the character of the in- group that rules over him. He also has no idea of the history of forced desegregation and its disastrous consequences on American society.

  • @ellenrose2855
    @ellenrose2855 Před 22 dny

    Would have like to know which ones have survived. A wealth of beauty replaced for the beauty of wealth.....

  • @tristanearley3465
    @tristanearley3465 Před 23 dny

    I would like to see the photos colorized

  • @DianeHodges-Red1
    @DianeHodges-Red1 Před 18 dny

    Free energy existed. History was erased. 6:29

  • @josephpadula2283
    @josephpadula2283 Před 15 dny

    The high federal income taxes might have helped , up to 90% for the very rich !

  • @stanleywest2619
    @stanleywest2619 Před 17 dny

    Me frankly l'd rather have saved these grand old houses and built the ugly suburban areas, shopping centers, apartments and high rise buildings elsewhere at least preserved more than than had. What's even more shame these stately houses were probably torn down and hauled off somewhere with little to none of it's materials salvaged. Shame!

  • @MiriamCoya
    @MiriamCoya Před 22 dny

    The wealthy just moved from Midtown to Buckhead.And the homes are far from ugly.smh

  • @Sndyj457
    @Sndyj457 Před 4 dny

    Only Rhoades Hall is left

  • @cynthiachronister4082
    @cynthiachronister4082 Před 22 dny +1

    Sherman happened

  • @shoelady6457
    @shoelady6457 Před 22 dny

    😁👌

  • @theantichrist4267
    @theantichrist4267 Před 18 dny

    What happened 🤔 well the same thing that happened to most every other city in America , the 13%ers moved in

  • @Saytheodd
    @Saytheodd Před 12 dny

    The rich are now in the Burbs and GA Mountains.