GEORGIA’S WAR STORIES
The echoes of Georgia’s war stories aren’t hard to hear if you know where to listen. Follow a trail of independence-seekers and unearth history’s mysteries at these Revolutionary and Civil War sites.
Read MoreEnergy of the Stage
The echoes of Georgia’s war stories aren’t hard to hear if you know where to listen. Follow a trail of independence-seekers and unearth history’s mysteries at these Revolutionary and Civil War sites.
Read MoreAlliance Theatre remount of “Native Guard” takes its place alongside Atlanta History Center’s Civil War memories, a reminder that attention must be paid.
Read MoreThe AJC Decatur Book Festival has lined up plenty of free theater, music, chalk art and more for the third art|DBF, the arts-festival-within-the-book-festival held Labor Day weekend (Sept. 4-6) in downtown Decatur.
Read MoreA new $22 million facility will open sometime in 2017 on the Atlanta History Center campus in Buckhead.
Read MoreDon’t wait for visitors to get out and see the city you call home. Atlanta’s best attractions are all around us, as we sit in traffic, daydream or wonder why we’re at work while the sun is shining.
Read More“Gone With the Wind” and other Civil War topics dominate the Atlanta History Center’s fall lecture and author series, which also touches on Jewish life in America, the U.S.-Mexican border culture and American politics from Lyndon B. Johnson to Ronald Reagan. The series begins Sept. 2.
Read MoreArt, history and writing camps for kids, plus a Civil War encampment marking the 150th anniversary of the Battle of Peachtree Creek art all part of a jam-packed summer lineup at the Atlanta History Center and Margaret Mitchell House.
Read MoreBuckhead, once known as Irbyville, has a big-city vibe way beyond its famous malls.
Read MoreHundreds of years will be on display, in myriad ways, at the Atlanta History Center this year. There’s plenty to discover between now and June, on and off the center’s 33-acre Buckhead campus. Read on for some highlights.
Read MoreStorytelling, organic gardening and live music are just the beginning of the Atlanta History Center’s annual Fall Folklife Festival this Saturday.
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