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Kirkwood traces its beginnings
to residential development begun as early as the 1870s. While no one
would consider Kirkwood a suburb of Atlanta today, an early tour book
described it as an area of beautiful suburban villas.
Kirkwood was an early streetcar suburb to Atlanta. By 1910 streetcars
provided express service to and from Atlanta three times daily, and
street cars continued service along some streets including Kirkwood
Road until the early 1950s.
Kirkwood was incorporated as an independent municipality in 1899.
Governed beginning in 1899 by its own city council and mayor, the
town boasted its own water system, school systems and fire department.
The former Kirkwood School is a handsome building from this period,
located on Kirkwood Road just north of Bessie Branham Park. Individually
nominated to the National Register of Historic Places, the primary
building on the propertys south side was originally designed
by John Francis Downing, the son of the noted Atlanta architect W.
T. Downing. Both buildings now comprise the Kirkwood Lofts apartments
as a result of a $1 million renovation in 1997.
In 1922, Kirkwood residents voted for annexation into the city of
Atlanta.
Beginning in the late 1950s and continuing into the 1960s,
Kirkwood experienced a transition from an almost all-white community
to an almost all-black community. Up until 1965 as the racial composition
of the community changed, black citizens made up an increasingly large
percentage of the communitys populations, but were denied the
opportunity to attend the white, segregated Kirkwood School. As a
result of community pressure, the Atlanta School Board in 1965. abruptly
integrated Kirkwood School, having declared a phased-in, grade-by-grade
attempt at integration a failure.
Beginning in the 1980s, the neighborhood began to witness another
influx of new residents interested in renovating the neighborhoods
stock of historic housing. Still underway, this influx of the middle-class
brings with it a whole host of new issues, among them issues related
to gentrification, and the clash of people of different social, racial
and economic histories living together in one community.
While rich in history, Kirkwoods rise, its fall into decline,
and its recent arrival again as a neighborhood attractive to middle
and upper-middle income homeowners illustrate how economic, racial
and social forces have shaped this historic inner-city community and
many others like it.
For some photographs of Kirkwood from the 1940's, visit the Photo
Gallery Page. |
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