Archive Atlanta
180 FOLLOWERS
A weekly history podcast sharing stories about the people, places and events that shaped the city of Atlanta.
Archive Atlanta
1w ago
This week, we’re talking about Vine City. This neighborhood just west of downtown Atlanta has SO much history, I struggled to fit it all in; from quarries, early German immigrants, to the largest nursery operation in the city, Black amusement parks, so many historic homes, and a prominent role in the Civil Rights Movement, and Dr. King - you do not want to miss this.
Want to support this podcast? Visit here
Email: thevictorialemos@gmail.com
Facebook | Instagram | Twitter ..read more
Archive Atlanta
1w ago
This week, I’m talking about Atlanta’s International Pop Festival, a concert held in July of 1969, the first of its kind in the South. And while it took place 20 miles south of Atlanta proper, everything about the festival was rooted in this city.
Want to support this podcast? Visit here
Email: thevictorialemos@gmail.com
Facebook | Instagram | Twitter ..read more
Archive Atlanta
2w ago
This week, we’re talking about Italian artist Athos Menaboni. In 1950, Time Magazine declared Menaboni the heir of James Audubon, because of his bird paintings that spanned over 150 different species. But this isn’t just a story about art and animals - it’s also a love story, a story about finding your calling after the age of 40, and the unsung roles of spouses or partners in someone’s success.
Want to support this podcast? Visit here
Email: thevictorialemos@gmail.com
Facebook | Instagram | Twitter ..read more
Archive Atlanta
1M ago
This week, we’re talking about Waffle House. Opened in 1955, in Avondale Estates, we’re covering the two men that started it, the first locations, franchising, expansions, controversies and legal issues and even the Waffle House Index.
Want to support this podcast? Visit here
Email: thevictorialemos@gmail.com
Facebook | Instagram | Twitter ..read more
Archive Atlanta
1M ago
In 1911, Atlanta’s population was only 150,000 people and the idea of Commerce Schools was new - only two operated in the South; one at Louisiana State and the other at Washington and Lee. Georgia State was born from Georgia Tech’s idea of starting an evening school, was later part of UGA and fought hard to become an independent institution. In this episode we’re covering how that idea took shape, who was behind it, when did the names and locations change and how the school became what it is today.
Educating the Urban New South
Ground Crew
Want to support this podcast? Visit here
Email: t ..read more
Archive Atlanta
1M ago
This week, we’re talking about Piedmont Hospital. From its start as a small sanitarium in 1904, the doctor that started it, its numerous expansions, the move to Peachtree Street and the impact it had on Atlanta.
Want to support this podcast? Visit here
Email: thevictorialemos@gmail.com
Facebook | Instagram | Twitter ..read more
Archive Atlanta
1M ago
Spring is here and if you’re in Atlanta, everything has just started to bloom. I decided it’s the perfect time to re-release my episode from 2021 about the history of the Dogwood Festival in Atlanta. This year’s festival is happening April 12-14th, and so you have time to listen in for a deep dive into this blooming tree, why it’s associated with Atlanta, why we celebrate it, when it was created, who came up with the idea and why?
Want to support this podcast? Visit here
Email: thevictorialemos@gmail.com
Facebook | Instagram | Twitter ..read more
Archive Atlanta
2M ago
This week, we’re talking about Georgia’s only remaining velodrome - the Dick Lane Velodrome in East Point. We're talking about what a velodrome is, Atlanta’s first velodrome, Dick Lane and the decade long efforts to open this velodrome in East Point.
Want to support this podcast? Visit here
Email: thevictorialemos@gmail.com
Facebook | Instagram | Twitter ..read more
Archive Atlanta
2M ago
March is Women’s History Month, and researching women is my very favorite thing to do. So while I was brainstorming an episode idea, I realized I had this huge collection of women on my list whose stories were very short - in terms of research, not the length of their lives or quality of achievements.
This week I have collected these shorter stories into one episode about three different women; educator Bazoline Usher, artist Kate Edwards, and cosmetologist Dale Boring Strebel.
Want to support this podcast? Visit here
Email: thevictorialemos@gmail.com
Facebook | Instagram |&nb ..read more
Archive Atlanta
2M ago
This week, I picked up the story of Coca-Cola after it’s sold in 1919 and took it through the Great Depression, World War II, Civil Rights, the Cola Wars, Diet Coke, New Coke and the World of Coca Cola.
Book
Want to support this podcast? Visit here
Email: thevictorialemos@gmail.com
Facebook | Instagram | Twitter ..read more