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Ponce de Leon Springs (Atlanta)

Ponce de Leon Springs was a mineral spring in Atlanta, Georgia, in the United States. The spring was a popular tourist destination from the mid-1800s through the early 1900s. Around the turn of the century, the land surrounding the spring was developed into an amusement park. By the 1920s, the amusement park was demolished, and the area was developed for industrial and, later, commercial properties.

Ponce de Leon Springs
An engraving of the spring in 1879
TypeMineral spring
LocationAtlanta, Georgia, United States
Coordinates33°46′20″N 84°22′0″W / 33.77222°N 84.36667°W / 33.77222; -84.36667

Residents of Atlanta had known of the spring, which was located about 2 miles (3.2 km) northeast of downtown Atlanta, since the early 1800s, though it was not until the mid-1800s that they became a popular tourist area as a local destination spa. The mineral content of the water was thought to provide health benefits to drinkers, and the spring was named in reference to the legend of Spanish explorer Juan Ponce de León's search for the Fountain of Youth. By the 1870s, there was a streetcar line extending from downtown to the spring, following a route that would later become Ponce de Leon Avenue, one of the city's busiest thoroughfares. In the early 1900s, the spring was sold to developers who created an amusement park on the site, nicknaming it "the Coney Island of Atlanta". By the 1920s, the amusement park's popularity began to wane and the land was eventually sold to Sears, Roebuck and Co., who built their regional distribution and retail headquarters on the site. Today, the building is Ponce City Market, a mixed-use development, and some of the original land that was home to the spring has been developed into the Historic Fourth Ward Park.

History edit

Early history edit

In the United States in the 1800s, numerous mineral spas were developed around naturally occurring mineral springs.[1] These locations, such as Saratoga Springs in New York and White Sulphur Springs in Virginia, were very popular tourist locations as destination spas, while the mineral water produced at the springs was sought out for its perceived health effects.[1] In the U.S. state of Georgia, there were eleven such mineral springs that had been commercially developed prior to the American Civil War, though many of those resorts were destroyed during that conflict.[1] In Atlanta, Georgia, around the mid-1800s, there were several natural springs that provided the city's residents with fresh drinking water and leisure areas, such as the Atlanta Mineral Spring.[1] Another spring located in the Atlanta metropolitan area was the Ponce de Leon Springs.[1][2] This spring was located northeast of the city,[3] about 1 mile (1.6 km) outside of the city limits and 2 miles (3.2 km) away from Downtown Atlanta.[4][1][2][5] The area was a low-lying vale where two creeks met,[6][7] and the spring itself was surrounded by a grove of beech trees.[8][5] Not far from the area to the southeast was another well-known spring called Angier Spring.[9][10] People in the area had known of the Ponce de Leon Springs since at least the early 1800s.[note 1] Between 1818 and 1820, John Young, a cattle rancher from the area, built a house near the spring,[11] and by the 1830s, the spring was being used as a source of drinking water for some local residents.[12] The water originated from a source rock of gneiss and biotite,[14] with the water being chalybeate.[15] The water was considered medicinal and good for health because of its mineral quality.[16][8] As a result, in the 1860s,[7] Henry L. Wilson, a retired physician from Atlanta, named the spring the Ponce de Leon Springs as a reference to the legend of Spanish explorer Juan Ponce de León and his search for the Fountain of Youth.[17]

Popularity as a trolley park edit

 
Illustration of the area in 1881

By the 1860s, the spring was under the private ownership of John Armistead.[5] Around this time, the spring started to become a major source of Atlanta's water supply after Yancey Springs, another freshwater spring in the city, had been filled in in 1868 to make way for a new railroad in the city.[5] By 1870, Ponce de Leon Springs had also become a popular day trip destination for Atlanta citizens.[1][2][18] With the spring's popularity well-established, Armistead began bottling the water and established a residential water delivery service by 1871.[19][5] That same year, the Atlanta and Richmond Air-Line Railway constructed a railroad near the spring, which was located at the foot of its embankment.[13][8] This railroad would later come under the ownership of Southern Railway.[13][8] In 1872, an amphitheater with a dance pavilion was constructed near the spring,[20] and that same year,[5] a local businessman established an omnibus service to the spring, with a one-way fare of $0.50.[20] The service ran between the spring and Kimball House in downtown and helped to increase tourism to the spring.[20] At the time, it was one of only a handful of public parks in the area, alongside Oglethorpe Park, Oakland Cemetery, and a small park near Atlanta City Hall.[21] Around this same time, Richard Peters, a co-owner of the Atlanta Street Railway,[5] took notice of the increasing popularity of the spring and had a route created to the location.[18][22][23] This route, a part of the railway's Nine-Mile Circle, was an extension of their Peachtree Street line and followed a path that would later become known as Ponce de Leon Avenue,[5] one of the most traveled thoroughfares in the city.[24] The line opened in June 1874[20] and charged a fare of $0.10, which was twice the amount the railway charged for their other routes.[24] This increased price was due to the remote location of the spring, which was in a sparsely populated area, and the line only ran for six months out of the year, as few people visited the spring during the winter.[24] Additionally, the railway had had to construct a bridge across Clear Creek to reach the spring.[8][18][25][5] By 1884, another rail company, the Gate City Street Railroad, had also established a line to take people from downtown to the spring.[5] In 1875, an article in The Atlanta Constitution called the spring "Atlanta's Charming Suburban Resort".[2] By this time, a bath house had also been built at the spring, and there were numerous vendors selling fruit and ice cream to the visitors.[26] A ten-pin bowling alley was added by 1879, the same year that the spring was discussed in the national publication Harper's New Monthly Magazine,[6] and by 1881, the spring was receiving several thousand visitors annually.[4] The popularity of the spring during this time was part of a larger nationwide trend of trolley parks that had become popular in large cities throughout the United States.[5]

Purchase by the Atlanta Street Railway edit

In May 1886, Armistead, who still owned the land, began to charge visitors $0.05 to drink water from the spring. Armistead's decision was met with resistance from the Atlanta Street Railway, whose management worried that customer frustration over the charge could hurt their business. However, the following year, the railway purchased the land from Armistead. In January 1888, the railway leased the land to N. C. Bosche, a local businessman who planned to convert the area into a beer garden, though this plan never came to fruition. Two years later, in 1890, W. A. Hemphill, the president of the railway, hired Julius Hartman, a local landscape designer, to renovate the area. Hartman had previously worked on developing Little Switzerland, an amusement park near Grant Park that would later be known as the White City. Hartman proposed enhancing the natural beauty of the area by adding walking paths and by creating a 4-acre (1.6 ha) large artificial lake called Ponce de Leon Lake. This lake, as well as a smaller pond called Pairs Pond, were created in mid-1890.[5] Around the same time that the railway company had purchased the land, African Americans began to be denied entry to the area.[27] Throughout the early 1880s and before, the parkland had previously been open to both African Americans and white Americans,[5] though they were required to use separate venues while at the park.[28][29] However, by 1887, black people who were taking the streetcar to the spring were told by police that they would not be allowed to enter the land.[27]

Amusement park edit

 
The amusement park, c. early 20th century

In January 1903, 47 acres (19 ha) of land surrounding the spring was purchased by a company that would eventually be known as the Ponce de Leon Amusement Company, which intended to develop the land as an amusement park.[5] Construction began the following month and saw the creation of several new buildings, a theater, a carousel, and a casino.[5] The owners also brought in many other amusement rides and attractions similar to those found at the resort areas of Coney Island, New York, and Atlantic City, New Jersey, such as a ping pong parlor, a gravity railroad, a Ferris wheel, and a penny arcade, among others.[5] The new area soon became known as "the Coney Island of Atlanta".[30][5] The park was scheduled to open for its inaugural season in May 1903, but this opening was postponed by about a month.[5] The casino opened on June 1 with a performance of The Lady Slavey operetta, and the park as a whole opened to several thousand visitors several days later on June 6.[5] Like with the spring area before it, this amusement park enforced a policy of racial segregation, only allowing African Americans entry if they were servants for white guests.[5] In 1906, the park was purchased by the Ponce de Leon Park Association, which was run by casino lessee Jack Wells as president, Joseph Whitehead as treasurer, and Hugh L. Cardoza as secretary and manager.[5] The association invested $50,000 into renovations for the park (equivalent to $1,695,556 in 2023), which added new attractions and ushered in the park's heyday.[5] In 1907, the lake was filled in and a ballpark, Ponce de Leon Park, was built on the location.[5] This ballpark served as the home venue for the Atlanta Crackers, the city's Minor League Baseball team, who debuted at the park on May 23 of that year before 8,000 spectators.[5] The ballpark would later also serve as the home venue for the Atlanta Black Crackers, the city's Negro league baseball team.[5]

Later land use edit

 
Historic Fourth Ward Park with Ponce City Market in the background, 2012

While the spring and accompanying amusement park remained a popular retreat throughout the early 1900s,[1] by the 1910s, the area around the spring began to see substantial development. In 1914, the Ford Motor Company built a headquarters for their operations in the southeastern United States near the spring.[5] This building served as a factory, showroom, and office for the company until they sold the building to the United States Department of War in 1942.[5] By the early 1920s, the amusement park had fallen out of fashion and, in 1924, Sears, Roebuck and Co. purchased the land that contained the spring and the amusement park in order to construct their new retail and distribution headquarters for the southeast.[5] In 1966, following the construction of Atlanta Stadium, the ballpark was demolished.[5] Following its demolition, the area was converted into commercial real estate and is currently home to Midtown Place, an outdoor shopping mall.[5][7] In 1990, Sears sold this building to the government of Atlanta, which operated the building for several years as "City Hall East".[5] In 2011, the building was sold by the city to developers who converted it into a mixed-use development called Ponce City Market.[31] Additionally, as of 2016, the Ford building has been converted into an apartment complex called the Ford Factory Lofts.[32] Also in the 2000s, a significant amount of land just south of Ponce City Market in what had previously been the spring area was converted into the Historic Fourth Ward Park, while the railroad right of way that ran next to the spring area has undergone redevelopment as part of the BeltLine, a series of shared-use paths and urban green spaces that surround the city.[33]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Several sources mention that residents of Atlanta had known of the spring since the early 1800s.[11][12] However, in a 2016 book, Ryan Gravel, one of the founders of the BeltLine in Atlanta, said that railroad workers constructing the Atlanta and Richmond Air-Line Railway in 1871 may have discovered the spring.[13]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Zaring 1987, p. 42.
  2. ^ a b c d McMahon 1944, p. 220.
  3. ^ Partridge 1951, p. 55.
  4. ^ a b Clarke 1881, p. 187.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae Toton 2008.
  6. ^ a b Harper's New Monthly Magazine 1879, pp. 39–40.
  7. ^ a b c Williamson & Dunham-Jones 2021, p. 169.
  8. ^ a b c d e King 1939, p. 254.
  9. ^ King 1939, p. 255.
  10. ^ McMahon 1944, p. 224.
  11. ^ a b Irvine 1938, p. 118.
  12. ^ a b Zaring 1987, p. 44.
  13. ^ a b c Gravel 2016, p. 28.
  14. ^ Herrick & LeGrand 1949, p. 106.
  15. ^ Peale 1886, p. 82.
  16. ^ Janes 1876, p. 86.
  17. ^ Johnson 2020.
  18. ^ a b c Wright 1938, p. 199.
  19. ^ McMahon 1944, p. 223.
  20. ^ a b c d McMahon 1944, p. 221.
  21. ^ Davis & Davis 2012, pp. xxvii–xxviii.
  22. ^ Klima 1982, p. 71.
  23. ^ MacDougald 1940, p. 137.
  24. ^ a b c King 1939, p. 253.
  25. ^ Garrett 1981, p. 22.
  26. ^ McMahon 1944, pp. 222–223.
  27. ^ a b Rabinowitz 1994, pp. 150–151.
  28. ^ Grant 1993, p. 218.
  29. ^ Rabinowitz 1994, p. 151.
  30. ^ Mixer 1906, p. 8.
  31. ^ The Atlanta Journal-Constitution 2020.
  32. ^ Johnston 2016.
  33. ^ Williamson & Dunham-Jones 2021, pp. 169–173.

Sources edit

  • "Everything you need to know about Ponce City Market". The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Cox Enterprises. January 9, 2020. ISSN 1539-7459. from the original on May 30, 2022. Retrieved September 15, 2022.
  • Clarke, E. Y. (1881). Atlanta Illustrated (3rd ed.). Atlanta: J. P. Harrison.
  • Davis, Ren; Davis, Helen (2012). Atlanta's Oakland Cemetery: An Illustrated History and Guide. Introduction by Timothy J. Crimmins. Athens, Georgia: University of Georgia Press. ISBN 978-0-8203-4313-6.
  • Garrett, Franklin M. (Spring 1981). "A Short History of Land Lot 49 of the Fourteenth District of Originally Henry, now Fulton County in Georgia". Atlanta Historical Journal. XXV (1). Atlanta Historical Society: 17–40.
  • Grant, Donald L. (1993). The Way it was in the South: The Black Experience in Georgia. Edited with a foreword by Jonathan Grant. Athens, Georgia: University of Georgia Press. ISBN 978-0-8203-2329-9.
  • Gravel, Ryan (2016). Where We Want to Live: Reclaiming Infrastructure for a New Generation of Cities. New York City: St. Martin's Press. ISBN 978-1-4668-9053-4.
  • "The City of Atlanta". Harper's New Monthly Magazine. LX (CCCLV): 30–43. December 1879.
  • Herrick, S. M.; LeGrand, H. E. (1949). Geology and Ground-Water Resources of the Atlanta Area, Georgia. The Geological Survey: Bulletin Number 55. Atlanta: Georgia State Division of Conservation Department of Mines, Mining and Geology.
  • Irvine, William Stafford (April 1938). "Terminus and Deanville". Atlanta Historical Bulletin. III (13). Atlanta Historical Society: 101–119.
  • Janes, Thomas P., ed. (1876). Hand-Book of the State of Georgia: Accompanied by a Geological Map of the State (2nd ed.). Atlanta: Georgia Department of Agriculture.
  • Johnson, Adam C. (March 31, 2020). "Solved: The case of Midtown's missing, historic magnolias marker". Curbed Atlanta. Vox Media. from the original on June 2, 2022. Retrieved December 28, 2022.
  • Johnston, Andy (May 23, 2016). "Ponce lofts were once Ford plant". The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Cox Enterprises. ISSN 1539-7459. from the original on October 20, 2020. Retrieved September 15, 2022.
  • King, Augusta Wylie (October 1939). "Atlanta's First Car Barn (1874)". Atlanta Historical Bulletin. IV (19). Atlanta Historical Society: 252–255.
  • Klima, Don L. (Summer–Fall 1982). "Breaking Out: Streetcars and Suburban Development, 1872–1900". Atlanta Historical Journal. XXVI (2–3). Atlanta Historical Society: 67–82.
  • MacDougald, Louise Black (April 1940). "A Trip Down Peachtree Street in 1886". Atlanta Historical Bulletin. V (21). Atlanta Historical Society: 134–145.
  • McMahon, Doreen (October 1944). "Pleasure Spots in Old Atlanta". Atlanta Historical Bulletin. VII (29). Atlanta Historical Society: 220–234.
  • Mixer, Adam (October 1906). "A Yankee Druggist in Dixie". The Spatula. XIII (1). Boston: 7–8.
  • Partridge, Croom (October 1951). "Remember? or Atlanta During the Spanish–American War". Atlanta Historical Bulletin. IX (35). Atlanta Historical Society: 39–64.
  • Peale, Albert C. (1886). Lists and Analyses of the Mineral Springs of the United States [A Preliminary Study]. Bulletin of the United States Geological Survey, No. 32. United States Department of the Interior. Washington, D.C.: United States Government Printing Office.
  • Rabinowitz, Howard N. (1994). "From Exclusion to Segregation: Southern Race Relations, 1865–1890". Race, Ethnicity, and Urbanization: Selected Essays. Columbia, Missouri: University of Missouri Press. pp. 137–164. ISBN 978-0-8262-0930-6.
  • Toton, Sarah (January 15, 2008). "Vale of Amusements: Modernity, Technology, and Atlanta's Ponce de Leon Park, 1870–1920". Southern Spaces. from the original on February 20, 2022. Retrieved September 14, 2022.
  • Williamson, June; Dunham-Jones, Ellen (2021). Case Studies in Retrofitting Suburbia: Urban Design Strategies for Urgent Challenges. Hoboken, New Jersey: John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 978-1-119-14919-4.
  • Wright, Wade Hampton (July 1938). "Georgia Power Company". Atlanta Historical Bulletin. III (14). Atlanta Historical Society: 195–217.
  • Zaring, Russell A. (Fall 1987). "Cascade Springs: An Atlanta Urban Spa". Atlanta History: A Journal of Georgia and the South. XXXI (3). Atlanta Historical Society: 42–56.

Further reading edit

External links edit

  Media related to Ponce de Leon Springs (Atlanta) at Wikimedia Commons

ponce, leon, springs, atlanta, ponce, leon, springs, mineral, spring, atlanta, georgia, united, states, spring, popular, tourist, destination, from, 1800s, through, early, 1900s, around, turn, century, land, surrounding, spring, developed, into, amusement, par. Ponce de Leon Springs was a mineral spring in Atlanta Georgia in the United States The spring was a popular tourist destination from the mid 1800s through the early 1900s Around the turn of the century the land surrounding the spring was developed into an amusement park By the 1920s the amusement park was demolished and the area was developed for industrial and later commercial properties Ponce de Leon SpringsAn engraving of the spring in 1879TypeMineral springLocationAtlanta Georgia United StatesCoordinates33 46 20 N 84 22 0 W 33 77222 N 84 36667 W 33 77222 84 36667Residents of Atlanta had known of the spring which was located about 2 miles 3 2 km northeast of downtown Atlanta since the early 1800s though it was not until the mid 1800s that they became a popular tourist area as a local destination spa The mineral content of the water was thought to provide health benefits to drinkers and the spring was named in reference to the legend of Spanish explorer Juan Ponce de Leon s search for the Fountain of Youth By the 1870s there was a streetcar line extending from downtown to the spring following a route that would later become Ponce de Leon Avenue one of the city s busiest thoroughfares In the early 1900s the spring was sold to developers who created an amusement park on the site nicknaming it the Coney Island of Atlanta By the 1920s the amusement park s popularity began to wane and the land was eventually sold to Sears Roebuck and Co who built their regional distribution and retail headquarters on the site Today the building is Ponce City Market a mixed use development and some of the original land that was home to the spring has been developed into the Historic Fourth Ward Park Contents 1 History 1 1 Early history 1 2 Popularity as a trolley park 1 3 Purchase by the Atlanta Street Railway 1 4 Amusement park 1 5 Later land use 2 See also 3 Notes 4 References 5 Sources 6 Further reading 7 External linksHistory editEarly history edit In the United States in the 1800s numerous mineral spas were developed around naturally occurring mineral springs 1 These locations such as Saratoga Springs in New York and White Sulphur Springs in Virginia were very popular tourist locations as destination spas while the mineral water produced at the springs was sought out for its perceived health effects 1 In the U S state of Georgia there were eleven such mineral springs that had been commercially developed prior to the American Civil War though many of those resorts were destroyed during that conflict 1 In Atlanta Georgia around the mid 1800s there were several natural springs that provided the city s residents with fresh drinking water and leisure areas such as the Atlanta Mineral Spring 1 Another spring located in the Atlanta metropolitan area was the Ponce de Leon Springs 1 2 This spring was located northeast of the city 3 about 1 mile 1 6 km outside of the city limits and 2 miles 3 2 km away from Downtown Atlanta 4 1 2 5 The area was a low lying vale where two creeks met 6 7 and the spring itself was surrounded by a grove of beech trees 8 5 Not far from the area to the southeast was another well known spring called Angier Spring 9 10 People in the area had known of the Ponce de Leon Springs since at least the early 1800s note 1 Between 1818 and 1820 John Young a cattle rancher from the area built a house near the spring 11 and by the 1830s the spring was being used as a source of drinking water for some local residents 12 The water originated from a source rock of gneiss and biotite 14 with the water being chalybeate 15 The water was considered medicinal and good for health because of its mineral quality 16 8 As a result in the 1860s 7 Henry L Wilson a retired physician from Atlanta named the spring the Ponce de Leon Springs as a reference to the legend of Spanish explorer Juan Ponce de Leon and his search for the Fountain of Youth 17 Popularity as a trolley park edit nbsp Illustration of the area in 1881By the 1860s the spring was under the private ownership of John Armistead 5 Around this time the spring started to become a major source of Atlanta s water supply after Yancey Springs another freshwater spring in the city had been filled in in 1868 to make way for a new railroad in the city 5 By 1870 Ponce de Leon Springs had also become a popular day trip destination for Atlanta citizens 1 2 18 With the spring s popularity well established Armistead began bottling the water and established a residential water delivery service by 1871 19 5 That same year the Atlanta and Richmond Air Line Railway constructed a railroad near the spring which was located at the foot of its embankment 13 8 This railroad would later come under the ownership of Southern Railway 13 8 In 1872 an amphitheater with a dance pavilion was constructed near the spring 20 and that same year 5 a local businessman established an omnibus service to the spring with a one way fare of 0 50 20 The service ran between the spring and Kimball House in downtown and helped to increase tourism to the spring 20 At the time it was one of only a handful of public parks in the area alongside Oglethorpe Park Oakland Cemetery and a small park near Atlanta City Hall 21 Around this same time Richard Peters a co owner of the Atlanta Street Railway 5 took notice of the increasing popularity of the spring and had a route created to the location 18 22 23 This route a part of the railway s Nine Mile Circle was an extension of their Peachtree Street line and followed a path that would later become known as Ponce de Leon Avenue 5 one of the most traveled thoroughfares in the city 24 The line opened in June 1874 20 and charged a fare of 0 10 which was twice the amount the railway charged for their other routes 24 This increased price was due to the remote location of the spring which was in a sparsely populated area and the line only ran for six months out of the year as few people visited the spring during the winter 24 Additionally the railway had had to construct a bridge across Clear Creek to reach the spring 8 18 25 5 By 1884 another rail company the Gate City Street Railroad had also established a line to take people from downtown to the spring 5 In 1875 an article in The Atlanta Constitution called the spring Atlanta s Charming Suburban Resort 2 By this time a bath house had also been built at the spring and there were numerous vendors selling fruit and ice cream to the visitors 26 A ten pin bowling alley was added by 1879 the same year that the spring was discussed in the national publication Harper s New Monthly Magazine 6 and by 1881 the spring was receiving several thousand visitors annually 4 The popularity of the spring during this time was part of a larger nationwide trend of trolley parks that had become popular in large cities throughout the United States 5 Purchase by the Atlanta Street Railway edit In May 1886 Armistead who still owned the land began to charge visitors 0 05 to drink water from the spring Armistead s decision was met with resistance from the Atlanta Street Railway whose management worried that customer frustration over the charge could hurt their business However the following year the railway purchased the land from Armistead In January 1888 the railway leased the land to N C Bosche a local businessman who planned to convert the area into a beer garden though this plan never came to fruition Two years later in 1890 W A Hemphill the president of the railway hired Julius Hartman a local landscape designer to renovate the area Hartman had previously worked on developing Little Switzerland an amusement park near Grant Park that would later be known as the White City Hartman proposed enhancing the natural beauty of the area by adding walking paths and by creating a 4 acre 1 6 ha large artificial lake called Ponce de Leon Lake This lake as well as a smaller pond called Pairs Pond were created in mid 1890 5 Around the same time that the railway company had purchased the land African Americans began to be denied entry to the area 27 Throughout the early 1880s and before the parkland had previously been open to both African Americans and white Americans 5 though they were required to use separate venues while at the park 28 29 However by 1887 black people who were taking the streetcar to the spring were told by police that they would not be allowed to enter the land 27 Amusement park edit nbsp The amusement park c early 20th centuryIn January 1903 47 acres 19 ha of land surrounding the spring was purchased by a company that would eventually be known as the Ponce de Leon Amusement Company which intended to develop the land as an amusement park 5 Construction began the following month and saw the creation of several new buildings a theater a carousel and a casino 5 The owners also brought in many other amusement rides and attractions similar to those found at the resort areas of Coney Island New York and Atlantic City New Jersey such as a ping pong parlor a gravity railroad a Ferris wheel and a penny arcade among others 5 The new area soon became known as the Coney Island of Atlanta 30 5 The park was scheduled to open for its inaugural season in May 1903 but this opening was postponed by about a month 5 The casino opened on June 1 with a performance of The Lady Slavey operetta and the park as a whole opened to several thousand visitors several days later on June 6 5 Like with the spring area before it this amusement park enforced a policy of racial segregation only allowing African Americans entry if they were servants for white guests 5 In 1906 the park was purchased by the Ponce de Leon Park Association which was run by casino lessee Jack Wells as president Joseph Whitehead as treasurer and Hugh L Cardoza as secretary and manager 5 The association invested 50 000 into renovations for the park equivalent to 1 695 556 in 2023 which added new attractions and ushered in the park s heyday 5 In 1907 the lake was filled in and a ballpark Ponce de Leon Park was built on the location 5 This ballpark served as the home venue for the Atlanta Crackers the city s Minor League Baseball team who debuted at the park on May 23 of that year before 8 000 spectators 5 The ballpark would later also serve as the home venue for the Atlanta Black Crackers the city s Negro league baseball team 5 Later land use edit nbsp Historic Fourth Ward Park with Ponce City Market in the background 2012While the spring and accompanying amusement park remained a popular retreat throughout the early 1900s 1 by the 1910s the area around the spring began to see substantial development In 1914 the Ford Motor Company built a headquarters for their operations in the southeastern United States near the spring 5 This building served as a factory showroom and office for the company until they sold the building to the United States Department of War in 1942 5 By the early 1920s the amusement park had fallen out of fashion and in 1924 Sears Roebuck and Co purchased the land that contained the spring and the amusement park in order to construct their new retail and distribution headquarters for the southeast 5 In 1966 following the construction of Atlanta Stadium the ballpark was demolished 5 Following its demolition the area was converted into commercial real estate and is currently home to Midtown Place an outdoor shopping mall 5 7 In 1990 Sears sold this building to the government of Atlanta which operated the building for several years as City Hall East 5 In 2011 the building was sold by the city to developers who converted it into a mixed use development called Ponce City Market 31 Additionally as of 2016 the Ford building has been converted into an apartment complex called the Ford Factory Lofts 32 Also in the 2000s a significant amount of land just south of Ponce City Market in what had previously been the spring area was converted into the Historic Fourth Ward Park while the railroad right of way that ran next to the spring area has undergone redevelopment as part of the BeltLine a series of shared use paths and urban green spaces that surround the city 33 See also editList of springsNotes edit Several sources mention that residents of Atlanta had known of the spring since the early 1800s 11 12 However in a 2016 book Ryan Gravel one of the founders of the BeltLine in Atlanta said that railroad workers constructing the Atlanta and Richmond Air Line Railway in 1871 may have discovered the spring 13 References edit a b c d e f g h Zaring 1987 p 42 a b c d McMahon 1944 p 220 Partridge 1951 p 55 a b Clarke 1881 p 187 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae Toton 2008 a b Harper s New Monthly Magazine 1879 pp 39 40 a b c Williamson amp Dunham Jones 2021 p 169 a b c d e King 1939 p 254 King 1939 p 255 McMahon 1944 p 224 a b Irvine 1938 p 118 a b Zaring 1987 p 44 a b c Gravel 2016 p 28 Herrick amp LeGrand 1949 p 106 Peale 1886 p 82 Janes 1876 p 86 Johnson 2020 a b c Wright 1938 p 199 McMahon 1944 p 223 a b c d McMahon 1944 p 221 Davis amp Davis 2012 pp xxvii xxviii Klima 1982 p 71 MacDougald 1940 p 137 a b c King 1939 p 253 Garrett 1981 p 22 McMahon 1944 pp 222 223 a b Rabinowitz 1994 pp 150 151 Grant 1993 p 218 Rabinowitz 1994 p 151 Mixer 1906 p 8 The Atlanta Journal Constitution 2020 Johnston 2016 Williamson amp Dunham Jones 2021 pp 169 173 Sources edit Everything you need to know about Ponce City Market The Atlanta Journal Constitution Cox Enterprises January 9 2020 ISSN 1539 7459 Archived from the original on May 30 2022 Retrieved September 15 2022 Clarke E Y 1881 Atlanta Illustrated 3rd ed Atlanta J P Harrison Davis Ren Davis Helen 2012 Atlanta s Oakland Cemetery An Illustrated History and Guide Introduction by Timothy J Crimmins Athens Georgia University of Georgia Press ISBN 978 0 8203 4313 6 Garrett Franklin M Spring 1981 A Short History of Land Lot 49 of the Fourteenth District of Originally Henry now Fulton County in Georgia Atlanta Historical Journal XXV 1 Atlanta Historical Society 17 40 Grant Donald L 1993 The Way it was in the South The Black Experience in Georgia Edited with a foreword by Jonathan Grant Athens Georgia University of Georgia Press ISBN 978 0 8203 2329 9 Gravel Ryan 2016 Where We Want to Live Reclaiming Infrastructure for a New Generation of Cities New York City St Martin s Press ISBN 978 1 4668 9053 4 The City of Atlanta Harper s New Monthly Magazine LX CCCLV 30 43 December 1879 Herrick S M LeGrand H E 1949 Geology and Ground Water Resources of the Atlanta Area Georgia The Geological Survey Bulletin Number 55 Atlanta Georgia State Division of Conservation Department of Mines Mining and Geology Irvine William Stafford April 1938 Terminus and Deanville Atlanta Historical Bulletin III 13 Atlanta Historical Society 101 119 Janes Thomas P ed 1876 Hand Book of the State of Georgia Accompanied by a Geological Map of the State 2nd ed Atlanta Georgia Department of Agriculture Johnson Adam C March 31 2020 Solved The case of Midtown s missing historic magnolias marker Curbed Atlanta Vox Media Archived from the original on June 2 2022 Retrieved December 28 2022 Johnston Andy May 23 2016 Ponce lofts were once Ford plant The Atlanta Journal Constitution Cox Enterprises ISSN 1539 7459 Archived from the original on October 20 2020 Retrieved September 15 2022 King Augusta Wylie October 1939 Atlanta s First Car Barn 1874 Atlanta Historical Bulletin IV 19 Atlanta Historical Society 252 255 Klima Don L Summer Fall 1982 Breaking Out Streetcars and Suburban Development 1872 1900 Atlanta Historical Journal XXVI 2 3 Atlanta Historical Society 67 82 MacDougald Louise Black April 1940 A Trip Down Peachtree Street in 1886 Atlanta Historical Bulletin V 21 Atlanta Historical Society 134 145 McMahon Doreen October 1944 Pleasure Spots in Old Atlanta Atlanta Historical Bulletin VII 29 Atlanta Historical Society 220 234 Mixer Adam October 1906 A Yankee Druggist in Dixie The Spatula XIII 1 Boston 7 8 Partridge Croom October 1951 Remember or Atlanta During the Spanish American War Atlanta Historical Bulletin IX 35 Atlanta Historical Society 39 64 Peale Albert C 1886 Lists and Analyses of the Mineral Springs of the United States A Preliminary Study Bulletin of the United States Geological Survey No 32 United States Department of the Interior Washington D C United States Government Printing Office Rabinowitz Howard N 1994 From Exclusion to Segregation Southern Race Relations 1865 1890 Race Ethnicity and Urbanization Selected Essays Columbia Missouri University of Missouri Press pp 137 164 ISBN 978 0 8262 0930 6 Toton Sarah January 15 2008 Vale of Amusements Modernity Technology and Atlanta s Ponce de Leon Park 1870 1920 Southern Spaces Archived from the original on February 20 2022 Retrieved September 14 2022 Williamson June Dunham Jones Ellen 2021 Case Studies in Retrofitting Suburbia Urban Design Strategies for Urgent Challenges Hoboken New Jersey John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 978 1 119 14919 4 Wright Wade Hampton July 1938 Georgia Power Company Atlanta Historical Bulletin III 14 Atlanta Historical Society 195 217 Zaring Russell A Fall 1987 Cascade Springs An Atlanta Urban Spa Atlanta History A Journal of Georgia and the South XXXI 3 Atlanta Historical Society 42 56 Further reading editDavis Anita Price 2013 The Margaret Mitchell Encyclopedia Jefferson North Carolina McFarland amp Company p 88 ISBN 978 0 7864 9245 9 Gumbrecht Jamie July 11 2008 How Ponce de Leon Avenue got its name The Atlanta Journal Constitution Cox Enterprises ISSN 1539 7459 Archived from the original on September 16 2022 Retrieved September 16 2022 External links edit nbsp Media related to Ponce de Leon Springs Atlanta at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ponce de Leon Springs Atlanta amp oldid 1200676195 Amusement park, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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