|
Du bist hier: Referate Datenbank | Erdkunde
| Atlanta
Atlanta
1. Geographical position; climate
Atlanta lies in the northwest of Georgia whose capital it is. The city
itself has a population of just more than 400.000, but the metropolitan area has
almost nine times that number of people. Atlanta is approximately located in the
latitude of Gibraltar which becomes chiefly apparent through the sun that has
much more power than in Central European latitudes.
The climate in Atlanta can be described as temperate but pleasant
throughout the whole year. From November to late March, average temperatures
range between a minimum of 25 degrees F. and a maximum of 60; the thermometer
occasionally falls below 15, but snow is infrequent. Spring and fall are
delightful, with temperatures fluctuating between 50 and the low 70s. June, July
and August are warm and humid, and daily highs often exceed 90 degrees. The
wettest months are January and March; summer thunderstorms contribute to another
rainy peak in July.
2. History
The area of today´s Atlanta was first discovered by some
explorers
who in 1782 found an Indian village at the river Chattahoochee
and called it standing peachtree. Scientists persume that
peach
is derived from pitch (Pechkiefer) because peachtrees
(Pfirsichbäume)
are not native in this area. Oh, and the area has more than 30 streets
with the word Peachtree in its name....gotta be a record, huh?
In 1812 Fort Peachtree was founded in order to protect the early
settlers from the Indians. Twenty years later the state sold the
Indian land to white settlers. Hardy Ivy from North Carolina was
in 1833 the first white man who settled down there for a longer
time (at today´s crossing Courtland/ Ellis Street).
As the land was still undeveloped to a large extent, the State of
Georgia
chartered a railroad to connect farming and cotton states to eastern
markets and ports in 1836. A rail line was built between Atlanta and
Chattanooga and 138 mile markers were placed. The Zero Milepost
still stands at Underground Atlanta today. The first engine,
however,
passed over the bridge over the Chattahoochee river only in 1845 --
pulled by some mules because rails had not yet been built. The terminal and
the town were named as unimaginative as possible: Terminus. This was the
birthname of Atlanta. 17.000 Indians were driven away by force, 4.000 of them
died during the 1.280 kilometres march to Oklahoma. As Trail Of Tears
this incident entered into history books.
Gradually more and more people settled down there and in 1847 they renamed
Terminus into Marthasville referring to the daughter of their governor
Wilson Lumpkin. At the same time a 23-year-old second lieutnant of the army,
William Tecumseh Sherman, was stationed in Marthasville for two months. Later he
should be of great importance for this town.
In 1845 taciturn railway-men complained that the name Marthasville was too
long and the 2000 imaginative citizens opted for Atlanta which is the
female form of Atlantic.
As a bustling new town Atlanta emerged rapidly around the Zero Milepost. On
the eve of the Civil War, Atlanta had 10.000 people. It had already become the
trade and cultural center for the South and gained a lot of importance because
of its railway lines (today the trains have been replaced by planes concerning
this function).
Alabama Street, between Peachtree Street and Central Avenue, was the
city´s center, which was to become Underground Atlanta. In 1855
America´s first gas-lamps were lighted in Atlanta.
In 1861 the Civil War broke out and Georgia seceded from the Union in
January. Atlanta was a prime target for the Army of General William T. Sherman.
At the beginning of the year Atlanta saw an earthquake, later it got strategic
importance because it was the railroad center for the South and served as the
supply depot of the Confederacy. However, Atlanta´s wish to become the
capital of the Confederacy run aground; instead of this Richmond (Virginia)
became the capital.
In 1862 James J. Andrews, a spy of the Union, together with some soldiers
boarded a train with the engine General. They were pursued by the engine
Texas, caught and executed. This event is known as The Great
Locomotive Chase. The engine Texas is on view in the Cyclorama Museum,
General in the Big Shanty Museum.
Federal shelling into the city´s center damaged the gas-lamp, which
still stands at Peachtree and lower Alabama Streets.
In 1864, exactly on July 22, General Sherman invaded Atlanta with 100.000
Union-soldiers and put 60.000 Confederates to flight. The battle lasted six
weeks and cost the lives of 66.650 people until the mayor of Atlanta, James
Calhoun, walked through the streets with a white flag and capitulated. But that
didn´t impress Sherman and so his drunken soldiers passed through the town
and reduced it to a smoking ruin. Finally 3300 of the 3600 houses were burned
down -- a dramatical scene in Gone With The Wind, a traumatical event for
the city and its inhabitants. Atlanta is the only American city that has ever
been destroyed during a war.
One year later the Civil War was over and the rebuilding began. The last
soldiers of the Confederacy, however, didn´t leave before 1876. Atlantans
sifted through the ashes of wartime and the city drew upon its unconquerable
spirit and the wise use of carpetbagger money to again become a booming
commercial center.
In the five years between 1866 and 1871 the city´s population doubled
to 22.000. In 1877 Atlanta became the capital of the State of Georgia.
In 1886 the chemist John S. Pemberton invented the most popular product
that has been offered all over the world for 100 years: a drink called
Coca-Cola. Two years later Pemberton sold the patent to Asa Chandler for
2300 dollars who developed Coca-Cola into a product for millions of people.
Ernest Woodruff, a banker from Atlanta, bought the company in 1916 for 50 mio
dollars and became Mr. Coca-Cola. Woodruff endowed 225 mio dollars to
Emory University which today would not exist without him.
In 1929 Atlanta´s first airport was opened and became the home-airport
of Delta Air Lines.
Seven years later, in 1936, Margaret Mitchell´s novel Gone With The
Wind was published, three years later the movie was shown for the first
time. Due to segregation blacks were not allowed to watch the film.
In the late 50s Martin Luther King Jr. who was born in Atlanta in 1925 and
assassinated in Memphis in 1968 succeeded with his idea of nonviolent
resistance. In 1959 segregation was abolished in public transport, two years
later at schools and universities. Maynard Jackson was in 1974 the first black
mayor of Atlanta, his successor Andrew Young was also black.
Starting in 1960 the unknown architect John Portman made Atlanta a booming
city. For example he built the Marchandise Mart, the Portman Center, some
towers, famous hotels (like the Hyatt Regency Atlanta which made him famous all
over the world) or the Mariott Hotel. Soon another architect, Tom Cousins came.
The hard competition between the two architects led to today´s skyline of
Atlanta without any order or architectural planning.
In 1979 Atlanta got a modern rapid-rail system: MARTA.
After selection by the International Olympic Committee, Atlanta
hosted
the 1996 summer Olympics.
Today Atlanta is the third largest city of the USA, the commercial,
industrial
and financial giant of the Southeast. Atlantans call it The Next
Great
International City and that shows a certain pride in their booming
city. From
an economic perspective, there is ample evidence to support this
slogan:
more than 30 international banks have offices there, foreign capital
investment
tops $ 6 billion, and there are more than 1.000 facilities either owned or
leased
by international companies. The Atlanta International School attracts
students
from 48 countries and the city boasts three foreign-language newspapers,
a consular corps representing 22 nations, two dozen international trade
and
tourism offices and nine foreign chambers of commerce. The United
Nations
is even preparing to move its international training facilities from
Switzerland
to Atlanta. And how many cities can claim a chamber of commerce branch
office in Russia? CNN is based there and Coca-Cola claims Atlanta as its
hometown. With low unemployment and a solid, multi-industry economy
to
keep the cost of living in check, Atlanta draws annual praise from business
journals as one of the country´s
″best cities in which to do
business″.
Some more of the claims to fame are the Hartsfield International Airport
which is the largest passenger terminal complex in the world, the Atlanta
Ballet (the longest running ballet company in the world) or the Georgia World
Congress Center (the most-occupied city convention site in the United States).
And this list could go on and on, so experience it yourself...
3. Neighborhoods
Atlanta is, like numerous other cities, a city of neighborhoods. Profiled
below are some of Atlantas´s most distinctive intown districts.
Downtown
At Atlanta´s famed Five Points, a quintet of streets spins from the
city´s early commercial center towards some of its most compelling
landmarks. Close by are the 1889 State Capitol, capped with glittering gold
mined in north Georgia, the Georgia State Univeristy, the Atlanta/Fulton County
Stadium, home of the Braves and the Falcons, and the Omni Coliseum, where the
Hawks play; the World Congress Center and the CNN Center. A skip away, between
the bases of finance and governments, Underground Atlanta spreads its attractive
shops, restaurants and nightspots over 12 lively acres. Next to Underground
Atlanta you find the World of Coca-Cola. In contrast to downtown´s soaring
twentieth-century skyline, you should visit Woodruff Park which offers a
lunchtime oasis for the office crowd. Don´t miss Peachtree Center, the
galaxy of gleaming hotels and office towers.
Midtown
North of downtown, corporate elegance continues into burgeoning midtown --
but the mood changes. Along these wide, shady streets, cushy condos contrast
with the spacious, spruced-up older houses, while restaurants and nightspots run
the gamut from jeans to dress-up. Nearby, at the north end of Piedmont Park you
should visit the Atlanta Botanical Garden which shelters rare tropical and
desert plants. In Midtown you find also the Fox Theatre and the Woodruff
Memorial Arts Center.
Buckhead
About six miles north of downtown Peachtree enters Buckhead which is
Atlanta´s answer to Beverly Hills. Its elite homes and fashionable
lifestyle belie its humble beginnings, when the head of a hapless buck, tacked
up outside a long-ago tavern, gave birth to the section´s singular
designation. Today, a far cry from humble, Buckhead is the locale of the
currently ″in″
restaurants, favored watering holes of the city´s young professionals, and
such ultrachic shopping enclaves as Phipps Plaza and Lenox Square. Buckhead
includes also the elegant 1928 Swan House and the 1840 plantation plain-style
Tullie Smith House, part of the Atlanta History Center complex.
Martin Luther King, Jr., Historic District and
″Sweet
Auburn″
About a mile east of downtown´s Five Points is the Auburn Avenue site
of the birthplace of civil rights leader Martin Luther King, Jr. Also on the
artery dubbed ″Sweet
Auburn″ is the Ebenezer Baptist Church, were he
and his father preached. Next door is the Freedom Hall complex, location of
King´s gravesite and the Martin Luther King, Jr., Center for Nonviolent
Social Change. The two-block district was named a National Historic Site in
1980.
4. Sights to see
Georgia State Capitol was patterned after the National Capitol. Gold
leaf mined in north Georgia covers the exterior dome. Inside, the Georgia State
Museum of Science and Industry displays rocks, minerals, fossils, commercial
products and Indian artifacts.
The Antebellum Plantation is a complex of early 19th-century homes
and buildings relocated from throughout the state. The buildings include the
main house, overseer´s house, slave cabins and a country store, all
furnished in period.
Martin Luther King, Jr., Memorial Center
The tomb of Atlanta´s native son, civil rights leader and Nobel Prize
winner, stands next to the Ebenezer Baptist Church, so closely associated with
his life, work and death. The birthplace house is in the next block. Across
Auburn Avenue is the Martin Luther King, Jr., Center for Nonviolent Social
Change.
The Fox Theatre
The Fox is not just a movie theater, but a complex of different facilities,
including the 7.000-square-foot Egyptian Ballroom, Grand Salon, executive
offices and the Grand Auditorium. The auditorium was conceived as an open
courtyard in a Moorish city, with twinkling stars and floating clouds in an
azure sky overhead. Listed in the National Register of Historic Places, the Fox
is now used for performances of a wide scope of entertainment, from Broadway
musicals and plays to rock concerts and classic films.
Georgia World Congress Center
Atlanta´s largest convention center, located next to the Omni Hotel.
The World Congress Center boasts exhibit areas totaling 639.000 square feet, the
equivalent of more than 13 football fields. This unique structure offers
simultaneous interpretation facilities for up to six languages in a theater and
meeting room. Georgia´s products, tourist attractions and heritage are
displayed in the Georgia Hall.
Peachtree Center
Renowed for its unique modern architecture, this downtown center now
includes seven office towers, shops and restaurants, the 70.000 square-foot
Peachtree Athletic Club and three hotels the Hyatt Regency Atlanta, the 73-story
Westin Peachtree Plaza, and the Marietta Marquis, the largest convention hotel
in the Southeast. Also included as part of the Atlanta Market Center complex are
the Atlanta Apparel Mart and Atlanta Merchandise Mart.
Atlanta Botanical Garden
The center´s 60 acres contain vegetable, herb, Japanese and rose
gardens, forest walking trails and a glass-enclosed conservatory for tropical,
Mediterranean, desert and endangered plants.
Atlanta History Center encompasses 32 acres of gardens and woodland
trails that are the setting for two historic homes. Swan House is a 1928
Palladian-style mansion furnished in period; Tullie Smith Farm is an 1840s
plantation farmhouse completed with traditional outbuildings.
Zoo Atlanta exhibits more than 1.000 animals on 37 acres. Known for
ist reptile collection and children´s zoo, the zoo also includes the Ford
Rain Forest, where mountain gorillas live in family groups; Flamingo Plaza, home
to 50 Chilean flamingos; Masai Mara, a replica of the East African plains with
browsing giraffes, antelopes and the endangered black rhinoceros; and the
Ketambe exhibit, home to rare Sumatran tigers.
Robert W. Woodruffs Arts Center is dedicated to the 122 Atlanta Art
Association members killed in a Paris plane crash in 1962. The four-story center
offers education and entertainment in the visual and performing arts.
High Museum Of Arts is a modern six-story building sheathed in white
enamel panels. The museum incorporates large windows and a soaring atrium lit by
skylights, allowing glimpses of more than one exhibition area at a time and both
distant and close-up views of individual works of art. Permanent exhibits
include Italian art from the 14th-18th centuries, 19th-century French and 19th-
and 20th-century American art, African art, photographs, prints, and an
extensive collection of decorative arts. Paintings by American artists form the
basis of the collection.
SciTrek, the sience and technology museum of Atlanta
More than 100 exhibits in four main halls -- Simple Machines; Light, Color
and Perception; Electricity and Magnetism; and Kidspace -- provide opportunities
for learning about science and technology through hands-on
participation.
The World of Coca-Cola
This $15 million, 45.000-square-foot, three-story facility commemorates
more than a century of one of America´s favourite refreshments. The
outside features a 12-ton neon display, while inside, Coca-Cola artifacts,
technological displays and interactive exhibits are presented.
CNN Center
Hourly tours provide an inside look at Turner Broadcasting´s networks
-- CNN and Headline News -- which revolutionized television journalism with
their 24-hour live news coverage.
|