Atlanta
ATLANTA is a relatively young city: only incorporated in
1847, it was little more than a minor transportation center until
the Civil War, when its accessibility made it a good site for the
huge Confederacy munitions industry and consequently a major target
for the Union army. In 1864 Sherman's army burned the city,
an act immortalized in Gone with the Wind . Recovery after
the war took just a few years: Atlanta was the archetype of the
aggressive, urban, industrial ''New South,'' furiously championed
by '' boosters '' newspaper owners, bankers, politicians and
city leaders. Industrial giants who based themselves here included
Coca-Cola , source of a string of philanthropic gifts to the
city.
Very few of Atlanta's buildings predate 1915, and nothing at all
survives from before 1868. Its characters, on the other hand
politicians and newspaper people have changed little, and the
''booster'' tradition has continued to the present, peaking
spectacularly when Atlanta won the right to host the 1996
Olympics . The bid to convince the world of the city's
prosperity and sophistication was led by city leaders such as
ex-mayor Andrew Young (the first Southern black congressman
since Reconstruction, who became Carter's ambassador to the UN) and
flamboyant former CNN magnate Ted Turner .
Today's Atlanta is at first glance a large American city. Its
population has reached 3.5 million. The city is undeniably
progressive, with little interest in lamenting a lost Southern
past. Since voting in the nation's first black mayor, Maynard
Jackson, in 1974, an estimated 200,000 black families streamed in
from states further north in the 1980s alone. With its
ever-increasing international profile, cosmopolitan blend of
cultures and hip local neighborhoods, the spirit and dynamism of
modern Atlanta is a far cry indeed from its much-mythologized Deep
South roots.
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