Sunday, September 15, 2013

Westview Cemetery and Atlanta History


In September of 1864, Atlanta was burned to the ground after General William Tecumseh Sherman captured the city in one of the major Southern campaigns of the Civil War. The city's seal reflects this major event, with a phoenix rising from the ashes, the dates 1847 (incorporation of the city of Atlanta) and 1865 (reconstruction), and the Latin word "resurgens," meaning "rising again."


After the Civil War, Atlanta quickly grew in importance. In 1868 it became the state capital, and by 1880 it was the largest city in Georgia, surpassing Savannah. Georgia Tech was founded in 1885, and ten years later Atlanta hosted the Cotton States and International Exposition, which had an attendance of 800,000 and promoted what the Atlanta Constitution newspaper editor Henry W. Grady called "the New South." Commerce and industry replaced agriculture; Coca-Cola and streetcars proliferated.

Much of Atlanta's early history is reflected in historic Westview Cemetery. Founded in 1884, and located just 3.5 miles west of city hall and the state capitol building, Westview is the largest cemetery in the Southeast. It's full of names that any Atlantan would recognize: Grady, Candler, Woodruff, Egleston and others are etched onto the tombstones and vaults. The Civil War Battle of Ezra Church was fought on July 28, 1864 on the site that would become the cemetery just 20 years later. Three thousand Confederate soldiers and 642 Union soldiers died in the battle.

Atlanta's more recent history is also represented in the cemetery. Mayor William B. Hartsfield (of Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport fame, and promoter of "the city too busy to hate" slogan) is laid to rest in Westview. Vivian Malone Jones, one of the first two African Americans to enroll at the University of Alabama, is also buried in the cemetery. Fifty years ago in 1963, segregationist governor George Wallace tried to block her from registering by standing in the doorway to the University auditorium in the famous "stand in the schoolhouse door." On a sad note, Alice Hawthorne, the only person to die in the Centennial Olympic Park bombing during the 1996 Olympics, is also buried at Westview.

Atlanta is often criticized as a city that lacks substance. Observing this sprawling metropolis replete with strip malls and parking lots, sometimes I think the city's detractors have a point. Just within walking distance of our apartment, the recent demolition of the Crum and Forster building and a Neel Reid apartment building show the lack of reverence for the past that sometimes occurs in Atlanta. But a visit to Westview Cemetery helps to uncover some of the rich history of our city. A lot of locals are familiar with historic Oakland Cemetery, but Westview is an under-rated gem that every Atlantan should visit.

The original entrance gates
Last Supper relief. 



Confederate memorial. 
Confederate graves.



The water tower.








Candler family plot.
Asa Griggs Candler, Coca-Cola magnate and mayor of Atlanta.
Candler Park and the Candler Building are named after him.

The Grady Vault. Henry Grady described General Sherman as "an able man... though some people think he is a mite careless about fire."







Jesse Parker Williams, Confederate army captain and lumber and railroad magnate.



Ernest Woodruff led the Trust Company (SunTrust  bank). His sons Robert Woodruff and George Woodruff ran Coca-Cola from the 1920s to the 1950s. In 1979 the brothers donated $105 million to Emory University, at the time the largest single donation ever to an institution of higher education. The Woodruff Foundation has since donated nearly $600 million more to Emory.
In a bit of overlapping history, the Woodruff brothers attended the high school that would later be named for Henry W. Grady, and bought the Coca-Cola company from Asa Griggs Candler.



"She hath done what she could."


Born in 1797.







The Adair family plot, namesake of Adair Park. George Adair was the conductor on the first train entering Atlanta over the Georgia Railroad in 1845. He founded the first streetcar system in Atlanta in 1871. His son (also named George) worked with Asa Candler to establish the Druid Hills neighborhood.
While Hezekiah Cheshire (of Cheshire Bridge fame) is buried in Rock Spring Presbyterian Church Cemetery, at least one of his children is buried at Westview. 
Children's Healthcare Egleston Hospital is named after Henrietta Egleston.
In yet another bit of connected history, Egleston Hospital has a George Woodruff pavilion.


James Joseph Haverty founded Haverty's furniture company in downtown Atlanta in 1885. There are now more than 100 stores in 16 states.


Joel Chandler Harris, author of the Uncle Remus and Brer Rabbit stories.

Very odd statue in one of the vaults.

Another odd vault set-up.




The mausoleum, built in 1943,  is the largest structure of its kind.  It contains space for 11,444 entombments.
Weather vane on the mausoleum/abbey.
City seal on the mausoleum.
Mausoleum entrance



















Thursday, September 12, 2013

West Coast Bash

Last weekend I flew out to Southern California for West Coast Bash with Theme Park Review. It's a coaster event at Six Flags Magic Mountain and Knott's Berry Farm where we get exclusive ride time and behind the scenes tours. I've been on a couple of other bashes (Deep South Bash, New Texas Giant Bash), and a tour (Europe 2012) with TPR. I saw a cheap(ish) flight to LA and jumped on the chance to meet up with old friends and ride some coasters. I hadn't been to Magic Mountain since 2001 and Knott's Berry Farm since 2011, so I picked up several credits along the way. In fact, I surpassed my target for the year, which was to reach 550 coasters. I'm up to 551! Maybe next year's target will be 600...

Matt and I stopped by Pacific Park in Santa Monica on Friday night to get the credit. It's a fun little park with a zippy Morgan family coaster. After the 40 minute drive up to Valencia, we grabbed dinner and drinks at BJ's (seriously... BJ's brewpub) and caught some shut-eye for the busy weekend ahead.

Saturday started with some ERT at Magic Mountain. We went straight to Full Throttle, the new coaster. It's a very fun ride. The best part is the giant loop - there is some serious upside down hang-time. It's probably one of the best coasters at Magic Mountain, but could use a little more length and re-configuring of the brakes so they don't stop you in the middle of the ride's biggest drop. Another new ride for me was Tatsu. This is my favorite B&M flying coaster. It's really neat how it swoops over the mountain top, and the pretzel loop is insane. The new-ish wood coaster, Apocalypse (formerly Terminator), was a mixed bag. When I rode near the front of the train in the morning, it was just an OK ride, a bit rough with not much airtime. When I rode at night in the back of the train, it was a really fun out of control experience.

Magic Mountain is a decent park, but they could use some serious customer service training, and need to work on ride reliability. X2 was down, Scream and Apocalypse were only running one train, my friends got stuck on a malfunctioning Superman coaster, and both Tatsu and Apocalypse broke down during ERT. The loading on Tatsu and Green Lantern seemed to take ages. But since the park wasn't very crowded and we had plenty of ERT, we still rode everything and got multiple rides on our favorites.

In contrast to Magic Mountain, Knott's really rolled out the red carpet for us. The staff was amazing. We got a behind the scenes tour of the log ride and a special tour of the Calico mine ride narrated by a hilarious Knott's historian. The day started with morning ERT, which included the entire Boardwalk section plus Xcelerator. I think Xcelerator may be my favorite coaster in Southern California. I love the intense launch and top hat, comfortable trains, and smooth ride. Silver Bullet was running much better than when I rode it last. It was glass smooth and actually had some decent forces in the final helix. At lunch we got a full buffet with Mrs. Knott's fried chicken (huge improvement on the previous day's lunch!), complete with old west bandit actors who "robbed" our table. Unfortunately I had to leave after lunch to catch my flight. I wish I could have stayed longer to enjoy this excellent park!

On to the pictures:

Great weather and atmosphere at Pacific Park.
Full Throttle's launch and loop.
Full Throttle's dive loop - forwards and backwards!
Kiddie credit!
Tatsu's first drop swoops over the path
ANOTHER kiddie credit? No shame.
Full Throttle goes through the loop...
...and over the loop!
Some creepy dolls outside Knott's Berry Farm.
The inside drop on the log flume (sans water).
We got to walk in the actual flume trough!
The TPR group on the log flume tour.
Just saying hi to Bert the donkey.
Creepy animatronic characters.
Boat storage area.
Outside flume drop without water.
The Calico Mine Ride may be getting a major update soon!

I love special coaster events like these, and I'm hoping to be able to do a TPR tour or at least a bash event next year. I'm really looking forward to a trip to Missouri in October with the Metro Atlanta Coaster Club.We'll be going on Outlaw Run, which I've heard is one of the best coasters on earth.


Thursday, September 5, 2013

Clusterfest 2013

Labor Day in Atlanta is pretty much amazing. Each year there are a ton of events. This year it was DragonCon, NASCAR race, Black Gay Pride Festival, Decatur Book Festival, Chick-fil-A kick-off game, Georgia Tech and Georgia State home football games, Weekender Music Fest, Beer and Whiskey Fest, StarLight Drive Invasion, Atlanta Jerk Festival, and even "LudaDay Weekend" sponsored by Ludacris.

We didn't have the time (or energy!) to go to ALL of the events, but we made our way around town to several of the big happenings. Let the cluster commence:

Labor Day Weekend has arrived!
DragonCon takes over downtown, with 55,000 sci-fi nerds. 
The Box Heroes agree that MARTA is SMARTA.
DragonCon parade! 
Just a pirate ship. Nothing to see here.
Box Hero pounds it out.
More Box Heroes! 
THIS IS SPARTA! 
Steampunk Tetris! 
Why yes, yes it does. 
The kilted stormtrooper contingent. 
MUPPET STORMTROOPERS! I love these guys. 
We stopped by Bobby Dodd Stadium to see Georgia Tech win 70-0. 
Watched the Notre Dame game too, of course. 
White Party at our friend Jenny's house.
For some reason we got in the shower. No, we weren't drunk! 
Soccer in Piedmont Park. 
Rainy afternoon at the Decatur Book Festival. 
Scrabble Decatur Book Festival sign in a storefront.