释义 |
- List of street name changes up to 1903
- Other street origins
- See also
- References
Atlanta has a penchant for frequent street renamings, even in the central business district, usually to honor the recently deceased. Many recent Atlanta street renamings commemorate prominent African Americans in Atlanta's history. These renamings can be identified by the use of the person's full name (e.g., Rev. Dr. Joseph E. Lowery Boulevard) rather than the more traditional last name only (e.g., Cain Street). According to local and state rules and regulations, street renamings must have support of 75% of property owners along that street, and state guides advise against using proper names as street names. However, these rules and procedures are usually ignored or waived, as demonstrated by the recent Ted Turner Drive at Historic Spring Street renaming resolution by the Atlanta City Council. - 10th St.
- Bleckley Ave. (alternative name, 1890s, Piedmont Avenue to Peachtree); Madison (between Crescent and West Peachtree)
- 11th St.
- Harrison Ave. (alternative name, 1890s, Piedmont to Peachtree); Davis (between Crescent and West Peachtree)
- 12th St.
- Downe St. (alternative name, 1890s, Piedmont to Peachtree); Stewart (between Crescent and West Peachtree)
- 13th St.
- Center St. (alternative name, 1890s, Piedmont to Peachtree); Cleveland Street (between Crescent and West Peachtree)
- 14th St.
- Wilson Ave. (alternative name, 1890s)
- Andrew J. Hairston Pl. (as of April 30, 2014)[1]
- Andrew Young International Boulevard
- International Boulevard
- Cain Street (for pioneer John J. Cain)[2]
- Magnolia Street (1886 map, one block section between Marietta St. and railroad tracks)[3]
- Argonne Ave. (Midtown)
- Bedford Place (Bedford Place continued south to Forrest Ave., now Ralph McGill; that portion is now called Central Park Place)
- Atlanta Student Movement Boulevard
- Fair Street (Pertains to the 14 blocks of Fair Street between Northside Drive and James P. Brawley Drive (formerly Chestnut Street).
- Auburn Avenue (as of April 17, 1893)
- Wheat Street (for Augustus W. Wheat)[2]
- Barnett Avenue (Virginia Highland/Poncey-Highland)
- Benjamin E. Mays Drive
- Briarcliff Road (Atkins Park/Virginia Highland)
- Williams Mill Road[5] (for Frederick A. Williams)[2]
- Stillwood Avenue[6]
- Bolton Road
- River Road, roughly parallel to the Chattahoochee River
- Broad Street
- Boulevard
- Jefferson Street (marked in 1878 map - section from North Ave. to Foster St. (now Edgewood Ave.) in today's Old Fourth Ward)[7]
- Rolling Mill Street (north of the railroad) from the late 1860s to about 1880, for the Confederate Rolling Mill, which the retreating Confederate army inadvertently destroyed in 1864[8]
- See also Monroe Drive below
- Cameron M. Alexander Blvd. (English Avenue neighborhood)
- Kennedy Street (until 2010)[9]
- Capitol Avenue (as of 1885)
- McDonough Boulevard (for the town it eventually reaches)
- Carroll Street
- Factory Street (1892 Bird's eye view and 1906 map)
- Centennial Olympic Park Drive (from North Avenue south to around Mitchell Street)
- Techwood Drive (from North Avenue into Georgia Tech campus)
- Orme Street (from around North Avenue south to Cain St. (now Andrew Young Intl. Blvd.)
- Walker Street (from around Mitchell Street south to Peters Street)
- Central Park Place (Old Fourth Ward)
- Charles Allen Drive (Midtown)
- Parkway or Parkwood Drive, prior to that Jackson St.
- Cleburne Avenue
- Augusta Avenue (1906 map)
- Courtland Street (as of September 20, 1886)
- North Collins Street (for pioneer James Collins[2] — renamed because of South Collins Street's reputation as a red light district)
- Crescent Avenue
- Macon St., Old Peachtree Rd.
- Donald Lee Hollowell Parkway
- Bankhead Highway (renamed in an effort to revitalize and mask the name stigma attached to this high-crime section of the city)
- Bankhead Avenue (Changed to honor Senator Bankhead of Alabama)[10]
- Bellwood Avenue
- Mayson & Turner's Ferry
- Edgewood Ave.
- Foster St. (portion marked in 1878 map, from Calhoun (now Courtland) St. to just east to BeltLine in today's Old Fourth Ward)[7]
- Euclid Terrace
- Felton Drive (for Rebecca Felton)
- Fulton Industrial Boulevard
- Hamilton E. Holmes Drive
- Hank Aaron Drive (from Fulton Street south to McDonough Boulevard/University Avenue)
- Hosea L. Williams Drive
- Ivan Allen Jr. Boulevard (from West Peachtree Street west to Marietta Street)
- Simpson Street (for Leonard C. Simpson, Atlanta's first lawyer),[2] Jones Avenue and Alexander Street (for Dr. James F. Alexander)[2]
- James P. Brawley Drive
- Jesse Hill Jr. Drive
- John Portman Boulevard At Historic Harris Street (as per Atlanta City Council vote May 16, 2011)[11]
- Harris Street - (for Fulton County's first elected legislator)[11]
- John Wesley Dobbs Avenue (for John Wesley Dobbs, African American civic and political leader, "mayor of Auburn Avenue")
- Houston Street (pronounced HOW-stun)[12] (for pioneer Oswald Houston)[2]
- Joseph E. Boone Boulevard (as of March 24, 2008, for the civil rights activist)[12][13]
- Simpson Street/Road (for Leonard C. Simpson)[2]
- Rev. Dr. Joseph E. Lowery Boulevard
- Ashby Street (for Civil War General Turner Ashby)
- Lindbergh Drive (Garden Hills) (as of 1927 for Charles Lindbergh, American aviator; from Peachtree Road to Piedmont Road)
- Maiden Lane (Virginia Highland)
- Martin Luther King, Jr. Drive
- Hunter Street, Gordon Road
- Mackenzie Drive NE
- Memorial Drive
- Fair Street (for the South Central Agricultural Society fair, which moved to facilities on Fair St. in 1850)[15]
- Metropolitan Parkway
- Stewart Avenue (renamed because of redlight district reputation)
- Monroe Drive (to honor the Monroe Landscaping Company which did extensive plantings in the area)[16]
- Moreland Avenue, after Major Asbury Fletcher Moreland (1828-1909), father-in-law of architect Willis F. Denny.[17] The Moreland Park community also named after him is now part of Inman Park.
- Park Avenue West (as of April 20, 2001)[19]
- Foundry Street and Luckie Street (south of Baker Street - formerly Thurmond Street)
- Parkway Dr. (Old Fourth Ward)
- Peachtree Center Avenue
- Ivy Street (for pioneer Hardy Ivy)
- Peachtree Street (south of railroad gulch)
- Whitehall Street (for the Whitehall Tavern, a tavern/inn established in the 1830s)[20]
- Peachtree Walk
- Centre Street (from 1895 map)
- Piedmont Road / Piedmont Avenue
- (Lindbergh/Buckhead area): Plaster's Bridge Road (or Plaster Bridge Road) for Benjamin Plaster who owned land between Piedmont and Peachtree around Lindbergh.[21] Renamed Piedmont around 1915-1920.
- (Midtown area): For the 1895 Cotton States Expo, Plaster's Bridge Road south of 10th street was rerouted to connect to an extension of Calhoun Street from downtown, all of which was renamed Piedmont Avenue.[22]
- Ralph David Abernathy Boulevard
- Gordon Street (for Civil War general John Brown Gordon)
- Ralph McGill Boulevard (for the Atlanta Constitution publisher who won the Pulitzer Prize for his anti-segregation editorials in 1969)
- Forrest Avenue (for Civil War lieutenant general and first Grand Dragon of the Ku Klux Klan Nathan Bedford Forrest)
- eastern portion just west of the BeltLine was Fortune St.
- Sidney Marcus Boulevard
- Seminole Avenue
- Augusta Avenue (1906 map)
- Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) Way (as of May 10, 2010)[23]
- Ted Turner Drive at Historic Spring Street
- Spring Street (south of Alabama — for Walton Spring)
- Madison Avenue
- Thompson Street (for Dr. Joseph Thompson)
- Spring Street (between Whitehall Street and West Peachtree in Downtown)
- Trinity Avenue
- Peters Street (for Richard Peters)[2]
- United Avenue
- Confederate Avenue, changed in 2018 to remove references to the Confederate States of America; minor street Confederate Court off of it was renamed Trestletree Court, after the apartment complex it serves
- Washington Street
- West Peachtree Street
- Atwood Street (alternative name on 1895 map)
- William Holmes Borders Drive
List of street name changes up to 1903On October 17, 1903 the Atlanta Constitution published the list shown below (and also transcribed online) that developer Forrest Adair had provided the Atlanta City Council of street name changes that had occurred since the founding of the city up until that time: Other street origins- Baker Street (for Thomas Baker)
- Cone Street (for Reuben Cone)
- Ellis Street (for James M. Ellis)
See alsoReferencesOld Atlanta Street Names1. ^http://citycouncil.atlantaga.gov/2014/images/adopted/0421/14O1004.pdf 2. ^1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 {{cite book | title=Atlanta and Environs: A Chronicle of Its People and Events | publisher=University of Georgia Press | author=Garrett, Franklin M. | authorlink=Franklin Garrett | year=1954 | location=Athens, GA}} 3. ^Sanborn Fire Map 1886 4. ^1 Sanborn's Map of Atlanta, Ga., 1917 5. ^1910 map on APNA website 6. ^1913 map on APNA website 7. ^1 1878 Hopkins Griffith and Morgan map 8. ^[https://books.google.com/books?id=UXSjh5f3EUsC Franklin Garrett, Atlanta and Environs: A Chronicle of Its People and Events, 1820s-1870s, p.427] 9. ^City of Atlanta online, ordinance no. 10-O-1420 {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111111230327/http://citycouncil.atlantaga.gov/2010/images/adopted/1018/10O1420.pdf |date=2011-11-11 }} 10. ^{{ cite web| url=http://www.artery.org/08_history/320-mid-local.htm| title=Marietta Street Artery | accessdate=2010-12-02 | date=2010-12-02 }} 11. ^1 Ernie Suggs, "Council finally agrees -- barely -- to honor Portman with a street", Atlanta Journal-Constitution, May 16, 2011 12. ^1 2 3 4 {{ cite news | url=http://www.ajc.com/news/for-black-history-month-332640.html | title=For Black History Month: What's in a street name? | last=Moore | first=David Aaron | accessdate=2010-02-26 | date=2010-02-26 | work=Atlanta Journal-Constitution }} 13. ^Ahead of the Curve: 911 upgrade pauses City Hall East sale | ajc.com 14. ^[https://books.google.com/books?id=7qpif6-Z5o4C&pg=PA833&lpg=PA833 Franklin Garrett, Atlanta and Environs: A Chronicle of Its People and Events, 1880s-1930s, p.833] 15. ^South Central Agricultural Society fair Roadside Georgia 16. ^Morningside-Lenox Park Association "Neighborhood Walk" brochure: Click on small b/w map under title "The Walking Tour ..." 17. ^Atlanta and Environs: A Chronicle of Its People and Events, 1880s-1930s, by Franklin M. Garrett, p.490 18. ^Atlanta City Council resolution (2002) to expand the Inman Park historic district {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120317013620/http://citycouncil.atlantaga.gov/2002/images/adopted/0410/02O0050.pdf |date=2012-03-17 }} 19. ^01-O-0135 An Ordinance to Rename Foundry Street and Luckie Street 20. ^{{cite web | url=http://www.atlantaga.gov/government/urbandesign_westend.aspx | title=West End District | publisher=City of Atlanta | accessdate=June 29, 2011 | deadurl=yes | archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20110916112419/http://www.atlantaga.gov/government/urbandesign_westend.aspx | archivedate=September 16, 2011 | df= }} 21. ^[https://books.google.com/books?id=fl6xNpS6qUUC&lpg=PA143&ots=98o7-jRK8g&dq=Spool%20Cotton%20Company%20atlanta%20lindbergh&pg=PA143 Franklin M. Garrett, Atlanta and Environs, p.143] 22. ^[https://books.google.com/books?id=REMTAAAAYAAJ The Atlanta Historical Journal, Volumes 26-27, p.57, Atlanta Historical Society, 1982] 23. ^10-O-0135 An Ordinance to Rename Raymond Street {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100729184617/http://citycouncil.atlantaga.gov/2010/images/proposed/10O0135.pdf |date=2010-07-29 }}
{{Atlanta history}} 5 : History of Atlanta|Roads in Atlanta|Lists of roads in Georgia (U.S. state)|Atlanta-related lists|Street renaming |