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A downtrodden East Atlanta apartment complex is about to be transformed, courtesy of an $18-million renovation, AtlantaFi has learned.
The Edgewood Apartments, located at 1572 Hardee St. SE, is being spruced up as part of a city of Atlanta plan to retain affordable housing. The renovation work will be done by Jonathan Rose Companies, in tandem with Columbia Residential, according to Curbed Atlanta.
Atlanta leaders, including former Mayor Kasim Reed, have long stressed that affordable housing would be the linchpin to a successful and thriving city. But wholesale changes to the city’s landscape, such as the Beltline and the torrid pace of commercial redevelopment, has boosted rents across the region.
While there is no firm word on when construction will start, work is expected to be done well into 2019.
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One of the the oldest arts organization in the United States is partnering with the Atlanta Beltline to add more community representation to the project, according to the AJC.
The collaboration between the National Black Arts Festival and Atlanta Beltline stems from the need to highlight art in the city’s neighborhoods. Joining forces, the two entities believe they can reach more artists and better reflect Atlanta’s diverse interconnected communities.
Known in Atlanta and internationally for its annual festival, the NBAF offers local, national and international artists an exposure they can’t achieve on their own. Add the Beltline’s arts initiative and you have a winner.
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Exit stage left for music acts and welcome wrestling! NXT wrestling tapings will begin taping this week in Midtown Atlanta’s Center Stage. The popular weekly WWE Network program is et to begin taping Thursday, Jan. 4, Thursday, Feb. 1, and Friday, Feb. 2, 2018.
Center Stage is no stranger to wrestling. High-profile bouts of NWA and WCW Saturday Night have been held there featuring ring legends such as Lex Luger and Sting.
While not as well known to Atlantans, the stars of NXT are going to be seen and heard a lot more around Atlanta. They include: NXT Champion Andrade “Cien” Almas, Mae Young Classic winner Kairi Sane, Aleister Black, NXT Women’s Champion Ember Moon, SAnitY, The Undisputed ERA, Johnny Gargano, Roderick Strong and more battle inside the squared circle.*
@WWEDozovic and I are ready to show Atlanta why we're the future of @WWENXT
Best believe we will run through anyone who gets in our way.#NXTAwardFutureStar pic.twitter.com/IUEdM18fOo
— Tucker Knight (@TuckerKnightWWE) January 4, 2018
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Two Atlanta sports legends are getting the recognition they deserve later this month, it was announced Thursday. Former Atlanta Braves pitcher Tim Hudson and longtime Braves broadcaster Joe Simpson are both going to be inducted into the Braves Hall of Fame.
The honors will happen on Saturday, January 27 at the Coca-Cola Roxy in The Battery Atlanta. The tandem will bring to 33 the number of greats in the Braves Hall of Fame.
Hudson played in the Mayor Leagues for 17 years, joining Atlanta from the Oakland Athletics in a December 2004 trade. In his nine seasons in Atlanta, he accumulated 113 wins and a 3.56 ERA in 244 games, the Braves said.
Simpson, now in his 27th season as a Braves broadcaster, is a former player who starred in stints at several ballclubs, including the Los Angeles Dodgers, Seattle Mariners, Kansas City Royals and California Angels. Starting his playing career in 1973, he retired after the 1984 season.
Eleven years later, in 1995, he was named “Georgia Sports Broadcaster of the Year.”
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Alabama and Georgia fans will be hit with a feast of the senses when they visit Mercedes-Benz Stadium in downtown Atlanta. For many, the College Football Championship on Monday, Jan. 8 will be the entree to a smorgasbord of experiences, including grade A restaturants, in the new venue.
No doubt, fans will want to try Kevin Gillespie’s Gamechanger, located in the 200 concourse Western end zone of Atlanta’s Mercedes-Benz Stadium. Favorites there include the “Closed on Sunday” chicken sandwich, the pork shoulder “French dip,” smoked cheddar cheese steaks, fries and adult slushies.
Henri’s Bakery & Café puts football-sIf you can’t make the game, there are several eateries around the city that will be offering football fare. Here are several of them.
Atkins Park Restaurant & Bar in Virginia-Highland will have game-time grub, a large beer selection and of course, plenty of TVs.
HOBNOB Neighborhood Tavern locations in Midtown and Brookhaven will be game-ready as well with fan-centric fare, creative cocktails and cool craft brews. The Brookhaven location has even added a large-screen TV.
Marlow’s Tavern in Midtown will be catering to fans withseveral flat screen plasma TVs, booze and classic dishes to choose from.
Ormsby’s on the Westside will stay open until 3 a.m. for after-game festivities.Ray’s in the City will be rolling out the red carpet for game fans, including a choice selection of hand-cut steaks, made-to-order sushi and fresh seafood from the Atlantic and Pacific oceans. Reservations: 404-524-9224.
College Football Playoff National Championship
Monday, January 8, 2018
Mercedes-Benz Stadium | Atlanta, Georgia -
Atlanta Mayor-designate Keisha Lance Bottoms was sworn in Tuesday in an emotional ceremony that saw the wife and mother vow to uplift the city and continue its deliberate path to greatness.
“I am committed to working with City Council to resolve issues surrounding property deeds to the Atlanta Public Schools & land on the Morris Brown campus,” Lance Bottoms told the crowd, which was filled with many who look like her.
“It is imperative that we be united, so we can move forward and take the next great step in our collective future. Now is the time to put aside race and division and geography and politics, and invest in becoming #OneAtlanta.”
Yesterday was incredibly special to me. Being sworn in as the 60th Mayor of Atlanta was one of the happiest moments of my life. Here is a look back at my inauguration speech. pic.twitter.com/zvb7kFlake
— Keisha Lance Bottoms (@KeishaBottoms) January 3, 2018
The inauguration was streamed live on the city of Atlanta’s website so that any who wished could see the star-studded event. Outgoing Mayor Kasim Reed spoke, as did former Mayor Andrew Young.
Lance Bottoms seemed overwhelmed with emotion at times as she reflected on her place in local and national history. “Standing here today as the 60th Mayor of Atlanta is the proudest moment of my life. I want to thank all of Atlanta and each and every one of you here today for your support, your encouragement and your faith in me.”
She promised to work with regional leaders to help improve the lot of all Atlantans and pledged to create a citywide Children’s College Savings account for each child entering kindergarten in the Atlanta Public Schools. She also said that she would appoint a Chief Education Officer on her staff to make sure the city’s youngest residents were a priority.
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Local news anchor Amanda Davis’ impact was felt far beyond metro Atlanta, where she warmly served court among the region’s viewers for nearly 30 years. On Tuesday, many of her colleagues, many of them whom Davis paved the way for, paid tribute to the CBS 46 broadcaster by donning a red outfit.
Read: Amanda Davis hospitalized after massive stroke
Davis, 62, was at Hartsfield-Jackson Airport last week when she suffered a spontaneous massive stroke while waiting for a flight to go to San Antonio.
Davis was about to board a flight to attend the funeral of her stepfather in San Antonio, according to news accounts.
On social media, especially Twitter, newswomen showed up to work in red to call attention to stroke awareness — and Davis’ legacy.
“Stroke is the 5th leading cause of death in the U.S. About 795,000 people in the U.S. have a stroke each year. #RedForAmanda #StrokeAwareness,” one Twitter user posted.
Stroke is the 5th leading cause of death in the U.S. About 795,000 people in the U.S. have a stroke each year. #RedForAmanda #StrokeAwareness pic.twitter.com/9QnIkn5H45
— Candace S. Coleman (@candacescoleman) January 2, 2018
Wearing #RedforAmanda and #StrokeAwareness in honor of late Atlanta news anchor, Amanda Davis.
*Heart disease is the leading cause of death for both men and women.
*64% of women who die suddenly of coronary heart disease have no previous symptoms. pic.twitter.com/TgLSaq0xq0
— Jazmin Bailey (@JazminMBailey) January 2, 2018
According to CBS46, Davis has been at WAGA-TV for 26 years. “She has received numerous honors and awards during her career, including: RTDNA Edward R. Murrow Award, ten Southeast Regional Emmy Awards, Georgia Association of Broadcasters Gabby Award and the Atlanta Association of Black Journalists Pioneer of the Year Award.”
Today is public viewing for @AmandaCBS46 @Cityofatlanta news anchor, who died suddenly of a stroke
Nationwide, black female journalists wearing #RedforAmanda❤&raising #StrokeAwareness
Know @American_Heart signs
Face drooping
Arm weakness
Speech difficulty
Time to call 911 pic.twitter.com/SrjcFJHpYl— Beairshelle Edmé (@BeairshelleWNCN) January 2, 2018
A public viewing is set for Tuesday while a funeral will be Wednesday in Cascade.
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It wasn’t easy, but the Atlanta Falcons got the job done Sunday evening with a 22-10 victory over the Carolina Panthers. The win secured the final playoff spot in the NFC for the Falcons, who had to win to keep the Seattle Seahawks at bay.
Matt Ryan passed for 311 yards, besting Cam Newton, who had a terrible game. The Falcons outgained the Panthers 371 to 248 in a packed Mercedes-Benz Stadium.
The Falcons will play the Rams in Los Angeles in the NFL Divisional Round of he playoffs.
Newton was consistently pressured by the Falcons front four. He started the game 0-9, a record of futility that ironically tied Ryan in 2008 in his second career start.
The Falcons now turn their attention to the Rams, who have very little playoff experience and cold be vulnerable. The winner of that game will travel to Minnesota to play the red-hot Vikings.
Panthers fall to Falcons 22-10 #WXII pic.twitter.com/RtxqljmguO
— Brian Formica (@BrianFormica) January 1, 2018
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The reminders of Margaret Munnerlyn Mitchell are all around Atlanta, including the author’s longtime home in Midtown.
Her lasting testament was one solitary novel, “Gone With the Wind,” a Civil War-era masterpiece which won the title of Most Distinguished Novel in 1936 and a Pulitzer Prize the following year.
Mitchell, who was born in 1900 and died in 1949, was shaped by much of what she learned in “The ’60s” — the 1860s. That’s what the old-timers of her day often told her about when she listened to their stories. Civil War veterans waxed on about a poetic South where the white man’s enchanted existence was seen as unstoppable.
When recalling her mother, Mitchell once said, “She talked about the world those people had lived in, such a secure world, and how it had exploded beneath them. And she told me that my world was going to explode under me, someday, and God help me if I didn’t have some weapon to meet the new world.”
From her older relatives who remembered the genuine, slaveholding Old South, this is what she said: “On Sunday afternoons when we went calling on the older generation of relatives, those who had been active in the Sixties, I sat on the bony knees of veterans and the fat slippery laps of great aunts and heard them talk.”
Margaret Mitchell, the Atlanta-born author whose 1936 novel Gone with the Wind captured the world’s imagination, had complex and multifaceted connections to Black women throughout her life.
While her book has long been critiqued for its romanticized portrayal of the antebellum South and enslaved people—including the iconic character of Mammy—the historical record reveals a more nuanced side to Mitchell’s personal relationships and actions in her hometown.
In her personal life, Mitchell formed close, long-term bonds with Black women who worked in her household.
For many years, she employed loyal housekeepers and domestic workers such as Carrie Holbrook and Bessie Berry Jordan. These women were not mere employees; Mitchell treated them with notable care and affection. In her will, she left a house specifically to one of her longtime servants as a bequest, ensuring their security after her death in 1949.
Letters and accounts show Mitchell’s compassion toward these women, reflecting personal loyalty that transcended the employer-employee dynamic common in mid-20th-century Atlanta.
One of the most documented ties was Mitchell’s correspondence and friendship with Hattie McDaniel, the groundbreaking actress who portrayed Mammy in the 1939 film adaptation.
When McDaniel won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress—the first Black performer to win an Oscar—she and Mitchell exchanged warm letters. McDaniel praised the “authenticity” of Mitchell’s depiction of Southern life, drawing from stories her own grandmother had shared.
Mitchell, in turn, expressed admiration for McDaniel’s performance and regret over the segregation that barred Black cast members, including McDaniel, from attending the film’s glittering premiere in Atlanta.
Their exchange grew into a lifelong pen-pal relationship built on mutual respect, despite the racial divides of the era.
Beyond personal connections, Mitchell quietly supported Black Atlantans in ways that were extraordinary for a white woman of her time and social standing.
Deeply troubled by the inadequate healthcare available to African Americans in segregated Atlanta, she became one of the most significant anonymous benefactors of Morehouse College, the historically Black institution. Working discreetly with Morehouse president Benjamin Mays (a key civil rights figure and mentor to Martin Luther King Jr.), Mitchell funneled substantial funds—drawn from her Gone with the Wind royalties—to provide scholarships for Black medical students.
This support helped train nearly 50 physicians who might otherwise have been unable to complete their education, addressing the dire shortage of Black doctors serving their communities. Recipients like Dr. Otis Smith later credited her generosity with enabling their careers, noting that Mitchell insisted on anonymity to avoid controversy in a segregated society.
These efforts highlight a quieter, progressive aspect of Mitchell’s legacy—one often overshadowed by debates over her novel’s racial portrayals.
In an era when cross-racial friendships and philanthropy were rare and fraught, Mitchell reached across divides in private ways that benefited Black women and families in Atlanta for generations.
Margaret Mitchell’s Death
As a literary superstar Mitchell was second to none in Atlanta. So it made quite a commotion when in August 1949, she died at Grady Hospital of injuries received when she was struck down by a speeding caron Peachtree Street in downtown Atlanta.
The driver, a 29-year-old taxi driver, was charged with drunken driving, speeding and driving on the wrong side of the street.
Gov. Herman Talmadge ordered the flag over the State Capitol lowered to half-staff until after the funeral.
Crowds of people swelled to pay respects at a funeral service at Spring Hill, Atlanta funeral home. Today, she rests entombed at the historic Oakland Cemetery on the city’s east side.
Years later, it was disclosed that Mitchell secretly donated funds to educate young black men.
“We have in our archives, our collection, the bank books, the checks,” says college archivist Herman “Skip” Mason.
“Dr. Martin Luther King in his ‘I have a Dream’ speech talked about, ‘One day, I’d like to have a nation where the sons of former slaves will be able to sit down at the table of brotherhood with the sons of former slave-owners,'” Atlanta historian Ira Joe Johnson was quoted as saying. “And I say, at Morehouse, twenty years before Dr. King gave that speech, Margaret Mitchell not only sat down at the table, she pulled out the check.”
As our city continues to reflect on its literary icons, Margaret Mitchell’s story reminds us that history is rarely one-dimensional.
Her ties to Black women encompassed household loyalty, artistic collaboration, and behind-the-scenes advocacy—threads that wove her into the fabric of Atlanta’s complex racial story.
As you can see, Atlanta’s history is rich when it comes to African-American excellence. Along with having many cool things to do in Atlanta, the city offers a great history lesson of the progress of U.S. society. If you want to support black businesses in Atlanta in a material way, here are some resources to help you.
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The long studied and anticipated plan to turn an old, abandoned granite quarry into prime green real estate is one step closer to reality. Outgoing Mayor Kasim Reed announced this week that the city has came up with $26.5 million to build the initial phase of the Westside Park at Bellwood Quarry.
The 280-acre space will also be able to house a 30-day supply of drinking water for the city, Reed said.
A fall 2017 tour revealed the city’s plans to reporters, as reported in Intown Atlanta.
“We are very ambitious over here” said Amy Phuong, Commissioner of the Atlanta Parks & Recreation Department, was quoted as saying. “As we grow to 1.2 million residents, how do we connect folks to nature?”