Atlanta: A Twentieth-Century City
The Illuminated Cover of this Pamphlet is a reproduction of the Famous Picture “ATLANTA BY NIGHT” published by Harper’s Weekly in the issue of October 10th, 1903, and here presented by courtesy of Harper & Bros.
THE BYRD PRINTING CO., ATLANTA
UNION PASSENGER STATION.
The Atlanta of to-day is a growth of thirty-eight years. Twice has the upbuilding of a city on this site demonstrated its natural advantages. Within a few years before the war Atlanta had become a bustling town of 11,000 inhabitants, and during the three years which intervened before its destruction the place was the seat of varied and important industries, whose principal object was to sustain the military operations of the Confederacy. It was also a depot for the distribution of supplies to the surrounding country and a forwarding station for the commissary department of the army.
After its baptism of fire in November, 1861, when the inhabitants had been dispersed by the exigencies of war, and of more than 2,000 houses only 300 remained, the city took a new start, and its great growth dates from that time. It is therefore, a city of the new regime, erected on the ruins of the old.
The coat of arms of Atlanta fittingly typifies this remarkable history. No city on the continent has survived such destruction. No city has twice attained prominence with such rapidity. Atlanta’s foundation reaches back to the forties, and far-seeing men recognized it then as the place of promise, destined to be an important railroad-center and a seat of commerce. This conception of the new city had been accepted as a true one when it was destroyed by fire, and since its new birth in reconstruction days the old spirit arose and lighted the new path of Atlanta to a greater destiny.
The capital of the state was brought here from Milledgeville when the new city was hardly out of the ashes of war, and this gave a great impetus to its growth, which was further insured in 1877, when the people of Georgia voted to make Atlanta their capital. Its rapidly developing business and manufactures were brought to the attention of the whole country by the Cotton Exposition of 1881 which was a point of departure for the tremendous development of the Southeastern States during the decade between 1880 and 1890. This development found a splendid illustration in the great Cotton States and International Exposition of 1895.
Atlanta Chamber of Commerce
ATLANTA
A TWENTIETH-CENTURY CITY
ISSUED BY THE
Atlanta Chamber of Commerce
1904
How Atlanta Grew.
The New Atlanta.
Population, Area and Government.
Area and Expansion.
City Government.
Police.
Fire Protection.
Sanitary Department.
Mortuary Record.
Waterworks.
Sewers.
Streets.
Boulevards.
Prominent Structures.
List of Fire-Proof Office Buildings.
Car Wheel Works.
Business.
Atlanta Manufactures in 1904.
Atlanta Banks.
Deposits December 1st Each Year.
Government Receipts in the Southeast.
Growth of Postal Business.
Insurance.
Cotton.
Transportation.
The Radius of Distribution.
Street Railways.
Light and Power.
Great Power Plant.
Rapid Growth of Business
Chamber of Commerce.
Daily Newspapers.
Educational Facilities.
The Carnegie Library.
Institutions for Negro Education.
Theatres.
Residential Advantages.
The Climate.
Monthly Mean Temperature.
Department of the Gulf.
Fort McPherson.
Hospitals.
Churches.
Orphan Asylums.
Other Asylums.