From the Notebook

  • Relic Signs: The Bootery (1958-2025) – Atlanta

    The Bootery (1958-2025). 81 Peachtree Street, Atlanta.

    This old parrot was recently toppled from its longtime perch on Atlanta’s Peachtree Street. Squawk!

    The Bootery was a national shoe store chain that first opened in Atlanta in 1946, catering to “Boys and Girls of All Ages,”1 and later touting itself as “Atlanta’s Most Popular Children’s Shoe Store.”2

    When the store moved to 81 Peachtree Street (previously 81 Whitehall Street) in August 1958,3 4 it was an exclusive seller of Poll-Parrot shoes, for which the parrot was a mascot.5 6

    The store closed sometime after 1996,7 but the sign was left to fade and rust for decades, and was finally removed in 2025 as the structure at 81 Peachtree was hollowed out to serve as a courtyard, part of a major renovation of the neighboring Bass Dry Goods building.8

    References

    1. Advertisement. The Atlanta Constitution, March 15, 1946, p. 6. ↩︎
    2. Advertisement. The Atlanta Journal and Constitution, March 30, 1958, p. 9-F. ↩︎
    3. ‘”The Bootery” Shoe Store Grand Opening August 14-16’. Atlanta Daily World, August 13, 1958, p. 3. ↩︎
    4. Advertisement. The Atlanta Constitution, August 14, 1958, p. 16. ↩︎
    5. ibid. ↩︎
    6. Advertisement. The Atlanta Journal and Constitution, March 30, 1958, p. 9-F. ↩︎
    7. Advertisement. The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, July 26, 1996, p. 25. ↩︎
    8. Photo tour: Where South Downtown’s painstaking rebirth stands now | Urbanize Atlanta ↩︎
  • Second Ponce de Leon Baptist Church (1937) – Atlanta

    George H. Bond. Second Ponce de Leon Baptist Church (1937). Buckhead, Atlanta.
    George H. Bond. Second Ponce de Leon Baptist Church (1937). Buckhead, Atlanta.1 2
    Pediments on the facade of the Second Ponce de Leon Baptist Church
    Pediments on the facade of the Second Ponce de Leon Baptist Church
    Swan-neck pediment with urn on the facade of the Second Ponce de Leon Baptist Church
    Swan-neck pediment with urn on the facade of the Second Ponce de Leon Baptist Church
    Door with segmental pediment on the facade of the Second Ponce de Leon Baptist Church
    Door with segmental pediment on the facade of the Second Ponce de Leon Baptist Church
    Cornice and pediment on the facade of the Second Ponce de Leon Baptist Church
    Cornice and pediment on the facade of the Second Ponce de Leon Baptist Church
    Blind arch on the facade of the Second Ponce de Leon Baptist Church
    Blind arch on the facade of the Second Ponce de Leon Baptist Church
    Palladian window on the facade of the Second Ponce de Leon Baptist Church
    Palladian window on the facade of the Second Ponce de Leon Baptist Church
    South elevation of the Second Ponce de Leon Baptist Church
    South elevation of the Second Ponce de Leon Baptist Church
    Oval window on the Second Ponce de Leon Baptist Church
    Oval window on the Second Ponce de Leon Baptist Church
    Windows on the south elevation of the Second Ponce de Leon Baptist Church
    Windows on the south elevation of the Second Ponce de Leon Baptist Church
    Loggia of the steeple on the Second Ponce de Leon Baptist Church
    Loggia of the steeple on the Second Ponce de Leon Baptist Church
    Steeple base on the Second Ponce de Leon Baptist Church
    Steeple base on the Second Ponce de Leon Baptist Church
    Steeple on the Second Ponce de Leon Baptist Church
    Steeple on the Second Ponce de Leon Baptist Church
    Weather vane on the steeple of the Second Ponce de Leon Baptist Church
    Weather vane on the steeple of the Second Ponce de Leon Baptist Church

    References

    1. Gournay, IsabelleAIA Guide to the Architecture of Atlanta. Athens, Georgia: The University of Georgia Press (1993). ↩︎
    2. Inventory of the Church Archives of Georgia. Atlanta: The Georgia Historical Records Survey (1941), p. 26. ↩︎
  • The Casino (1892) – Atlanta

    The Casino (1892). Kiser Law Building, Atlanta.1

    The Background

    The following article, published in The Atlanta Journal in October 1892, describes The Casino, a bar that operated inside the Kiser Law Building in Atlanta.

    Five years after Atlanta’s failed prohibition attempt, its residents were drinking more than ever, and the city issued 80 saloon licenses in 1892.2

    As the Journal noted in 1893:

    “Now, there are about eighty saloons in Atlanta, and by calculating how many glasses of beer are drank an hour in each evening and then multiplying it by the number of saloons, those who do not think that beer drinking is vastly on the increase in Atlanta will find out their mistake.”3

    The Casino tried to distinguish itself as a high-class establishment, and catered exclusively to “first-class trade,”4 but in a building full of lawyers, that was a lofty aspiration.

    It isn’t clear who designed the bar, but the writer of the following article (I suspect it was Walter H. Howard) described the Casino’s interiors as “furnished like unto a king’s palace” and concluded objectively: “well, it is just a great place.”

    A Constitution report from November 1892 provided additional notes, stating that the bar fixtures were “some of Rothschild‘s best makes”, and that the proprietor, Emil Selig, stocked “nothing but the very best to be had in choice brands of wines, liquors and cigars,” with attendants who were “willing to dispense the choicest drinks known to he barkeepers’ art.”5

    The included menu below is, well, an interesting look at what people were eating at the time. Bet their shit stank something awful.

    Of course, Atlanta always has to compare itself to the better cities of the North, and the Casino’s stated intent was to be “to Atlanta what the Hoffman house bar is to New York.”

    That never happened. Despite early descriptions of the bar’s “crowds, who flock daily there”,6 The Casino was out of business by early 1894.7


    The Casino Now Open

    This Palatial Bar Ready For Business.

    Magnificent Saloon in the Kiser Building

    To Atlanta What the Hoffman House Bar is to New York.

    A Description of This Elegant Bar–A Rush at the Grand Opening Today–Catering for the Best Trade.

    The magnificent Casino bar in the Kiser building was thrown open to the public today.

    There was an immense gathering there at the time and all day the clerks have been as busy as bees.

    Everybody admires the exquisite furniture and furnishings, the immense buffet of marble, antique oak and French plate glass mirrors with their mahogany finish and statuary ornaments.

    The room is about 25×100 feet, and it is furnished like unto a king’s palace. The long, rich counters of antique oak with mahogany and marble finish, and the great mirrored sideboards and cabinets, the beautiful frescoed walls and statuary ornaments, the rich, dazzling curtains, the pretty linoleum floor, the costly buffet, the dainty sixteenth century chairs and tables, the smoking hot lunches and the sparkling wines and liquors–well, it is just a great place.

    The Casino is a success from the very jump. It is such a place as has been demanded for a long time and of course it will be liberally patronized.

    The Casino is now on full blast. The hot lunches will be one of its features will be served daily from 11 to 2 o’clock. Cold lunches will be served at all hours.

    The very finest wines and liquors will always be kept in stock, as will also the best tobacco and cigars.

    Following is the bill of fare as served today from 11 to 3 o’clock:

    MENU

    SOUPS.

    Cream of celery.

    Peru tomato.

    Cold slaw. Onions. Slice tomatoes.

    FISH.

    Boiled snapper, Anchovy sauce.

    Pickles. Olives. Diced potatoes.

    BOILED.

    Ham. Tongue.

    ENTREES.

    Saut of kidneys au champignos.

    Potato salad. Sous Herring.

    Salmon. Ox maul salad.

    ROAST.

    Sirloin of beef (soured) a la Jardinare.

    Ferris ham. Champagne sauce.

    COLD.

    Smoke tongue. Ham.

    VEGETABLES.

    Mash potatoes. Tomatoes. Stuffed peppers.

    EXTRAS

    Edam cheese. Roquefort cheese.

    Swiss cheese. Russian caviar crackers.

    The drinks today were all to the health of Mr. Emil Selig and the Casino.

    The very best clerks and attendants have been secured, Mr. R.J. Lewis, the well known club superintendent, being assistant manager.

    Mr. Selig assures his friends and patrons that neither money nor pains will be spared to make the Casino not only the finest and most magnificent bar in Atlanta, but he don’t [sic] propose to let any place in the south eclipse it.

    His purpose is to make the Casino to Atlanta what the Hoffman house bar is to New York.

    The Casino has steam heat and both gas and electric lights. It will cater to the best trade and keep in stock such articles are demanded by that trade.8

    References

    1. Illustration credit: “The Casino Now Open”. The Atlanta Journal, October 11, 1892, p. 3. ↩︎
    2. “City Notes.” The Atlanta Constitution, June 23, 1892, p. 5. ↩︎
    3. “Tea Table Topics”. The Atlanta Journal, January 4, 1893, p. 4. ↩︎
    4. The Atlanta Journal, October 14, 1892, p. 6. ↩︎
    5. “The Casino.” The Atlanta Constitution, November 11, 1892, p. 5. ↩︎
    6. ibid. ↩︎
    7. “Miscellaneous.” (advertisement). The Atlanta Journal, March 28, 1894, p. 6. ↩︎
    8. “The Casino Now Open”. The Atlanta Journal, October 11, 1892, p. 3. ↩︎
  • Rohm & Haas Corporate Headquarters (1965) – Philadelphia

    Pietro Belluschi with the George M. Ewing Company. Rohm & Haas Corporate Headquarters.1 2 Philadelphia.
    Looking across the east facade of Rohm & Haas Corporate Headquarters
    Sun screens on Rohm & Haas Corporate Headquarters

    References

    1. “Rohm & Haas builds for the future in Philadelphia” (advertisement). The Philadelphia Inquirer, June 28, 1965, p. 9. ↩︎
    2. “Rohm & Haas Moves Into 9-Story Building, Joins 41 Departments”. The Philadelphia Inquirer, June 28, 1965, p. 18. ↩︎
  • Uncommon Advice

    Skywater Creek, Albany, Georgia
    Skywater Creek, Albany, Georgia

    Never tell anyone of your good deeds —
    They will loathe and despise you for it,
    Lest their own conscience be pricked.

    Let your soul’s light shine,
    But not for your fellow humans,
    Who are too absorbed and enamored
    With the comfort of their own darkness.

    Most of them are hollow avatars, anyway —
    One-dimensional specters void of creative power,
    Having exchanged the robustness of their identities
    For the passive ease of collective psychosis.

    Nod along when they spout their nonsense
    And let them believe their choices are their own,
    Then quietly undermine them at every opportunity —
    They’ll be too blind to notice it.

    They always accept the path of least resistance:
    That which is fated and familiar,
    Leading to the old pain and destruction
    With which they habitually identify.

    Lacking courage and conviction,
    They will find your choices puzzling —
    That is, if they think about them all.

    But if your presence is silent and stealthy,
    They’ll never detect the true extent of your power
    And you will be free to roam and create without restriction.

  • East Building, National Gallery of Art (1978) – Washington, D.C.

    I.M. Pei and Eason H. Leonard of I.M. Pei & Partners. East Building, National Gallery of Art (1978). Washington, D.C.1 2
    Henry Moore. Mirror Knife Edge (1977).3 West facade of the East Building.
    South facade of the East Building

    References

    1. National Gallery of Art, East Building | Pei Cobb Freed & Partners ↩︎
    2. Miller, Donald. “A Temple for Contemporary Art”. Pittsburgh Post-Gazette (Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania), June 1, 1978, p. 18. ↩︎
    3. Mirror Knife Edge – Works – The Henry Moore Artwork Catalogue ↩︎
  • Third and Fifth Ward Grammar Schools (1890) – Atlanta

    Bruce & Morgan. Fifth Ward Grammar School / Wallace Street School / State Street School (1890-1929). Atlanta.
    Bruce & Morgan. Fifth Ward Grammar School / Wallace Street School / State Street School (1890-1929). Atlanta.1

    The Background

    The following article, published in The Atlanta Journal in July 1890, describes Atlanta’s Third and Fifth Ward Grammar Schools, completed in 1891 and designed by Bruce & Morgan.

    The Third Ward Grammar School was officially named the Fraser Street School, built on the corner of Fraser and Love Streets in southeast Atlanta.2 3 The school opened on February 9, 1891.4 5

    Location of Third Ward Grammar School

    The Fifth Ward Grammar School, officially named the Wallace Street School6 and later the State Street School,7 was built on a road that no longer exists, occupying a lot in northwest Atlanta that is now part of the Georgia Tech campus.

    The Wallace Street School also opened on February 9, 1891.8

    Location of Fifth Ward Grammar School

    As the leading architectural practice in the Southeast, Bruce & Morgan planned so many academic structures in the 1880s that they published a book of their educational designs, titled Modern School Buildings, in 1889.9 I wish I could find a copy.

    Atlanta’s steady growth in the late 19th century fueled a constant need for new or expanded school buildings, and the Fourth Ward Grammar School, or Boulevard School, completed in 1888,10 was one of the firm’s many designs for the city’s public school system.

    Bruce & Morgan. Fourth Ward Grammar School /Boulevard School (1888). Atlanta.
    Bruce & Morgan. Fourth Ward Grammar School /Boulevard School (1888). Atlanta.11 12

    As noted in the article, Bruce & Morgan also designed the Gray Street Grammar School, which was designated for Black students13 and built on the same plan as the Third and Fifth Ward schools. After the building was completed in 1889, it was said to be “the best school house in Atlanta.”14

    This effusive article was written by our favorite young dynamo, Walter H. Howard, who, as usual, described every nook and cranny of the buildings in enthusiastic detail, such as the stairs that were “free from all winding or devious ways”. Of course, baby boy was only 19 and barely out of school himself, so he may have taken a special interest in the projects.

    Despite Howard’s claim that the Third and Fifth Ward schools represented “a new departure in the architectural style of Atlanta’s grammar schools,” they didn’t appear much different from the Fourth Ward Grammar School, built two years earlier.

    All three of the schools were two-story brick buildings with eight classrooms—one for each grade. They all looked like oversized homes, too, topped with cozy gables and cutesy belfries that weren’t far removed from the one-room schoolhouses of earlier days.

    It was G.L. Norrman‘s 1892 design for the Edgewood Avenue Grammar School in Inman Park that truly marked a shift in Atlanta’s school designs, dispensing with the homey pretense and embracing a bold Renaissance styling that befitted an educational facility in a modern city.

    With Atlanta’s growth continuing unabated in the early 20th century, the schoolhouses from the early 1890s inevitably became outdated and inadequate, and both the Fraser Street and State Street schools were ultimately replaced.

    The Fraser Street School was torn down in August 1923,15 and shortly before the State Street School was demolished in 1929,16 it was reported that “All of State’s contemporaries have been razed.”17


    The New Schools

    Being Built For Atlanta’s Children.

    Details Of Improved Construction.

    The Two New Grammar School Buildings in Course of Erection–A New Departure in School Architecture for Atlanta–Locations.

    The two new public school buildings now in course of erection mark a new departure in the architectural style of Atlanta’s grammar schools.

    The wise decision reached by the board of education some time ago, that hereafter none but brick schools of the most approved pattern should be built, is being carried out most satisfactorily in these two new schools.

    The schools are located, one in the third ward at the corner of Love and Frazier streets, and one in the fifth ward near the corner of Wallace and State streets.

    They are of a similar style of architecture, both exactly alike, and each when completed will cost about $16,000.

    Bruce & Morgan. Grammar School Building (1890). Atlanta.

    To Superintendent Slaton, the members of the committee on public buildings and grounds from the board of education, and to the architects, Messrs. Bruce & Morgan, are due in the main the credit for the advanced type of grammar school buildings in Atlanta.

    The two new schools will be two-story brick buildings, with eight grades each, and precisely similar to the handsome new building known as the Gray street grammar school, in the fifth ward, a school which was only completed this year.

    The new schools will be ready for occupation before the first of January. They will enable the superintendent to seat the larger part of the applicants for places in the schools, and will greatly lessen the size of each school district adjoining them.

    For instance, the one in the Third ward at the corner of Love and Frazier, will relieve both Crew and Fair street schools, both of which were greatly crowded last year.

    Correspondingly, the new school near the corner of Wallace and State streets will take those scholars who are unable to obtain seats in either Davis or Marietta street schools.

    Then again, the new schools are built very near to the present city limits and consequently will be convenient to the citizens who live in the territory recently acquired by the extension of the limits.

    With these two new schools and the Gray street school Atlanta will have three brick schools just alike and of the recent style of school architecture. All the new schools built in the near future will probably be of a similar plan. It will, therefore, be of interest to Atlanta’s citizens and school patrons to know something of these most excellently constructed school buildings.

    In them safety, health, comfort and convenience are combined.

    In the first place everything has been done to well light and ventilate the class rooms. Each room is entered from a door opening on the hall and one opening into a hat and cloak room, which also has a door opening into the hall. The windows are very large and are placed on the side and end of the room. The teacher’s stand is placed at the dark end of the room, so that the light comes in from the near and left of the pupil. The end endeavored to be attained in the ventilation of these buildings is to practically put the scholars as much out of doors as possible.

    The ventilation and heating is most carefully looked after. The rooms will be heated by steam and the foul air all carried rapidly off by large ventilation shafts.

    The halls up and down stairs are very large and well lighted. There are two wide entrances admitting fresh air. Then the stair cases are unusually wide and free from all winding or devious ways, sloping not too much.

    The great object to be attained in having the great wide exits, the large open hallways and the large stairways is the prevention of danger or panic in cases of fire. One of the greatest safeguards against panics is the admirable manner in which the superintendent keeps the children instructed in the fire drill, but then the proper construction of the buildings lessens the danger very greatly.

    Summed up briefly, the other advantages to be found in the construction of the new style school buildings are, perfect sanitation, abundance of room, economy of space, durability of the buildings, excellent acoustical conditions, and the neat and comfortable manner in which the class rooms are furnished.

    The buildings are not only constructed substantially, but with a view to beauty as well. The floors are deadened so as to destroy sound, and the doors are constructed so that all open on the outside, thus lessening the danger in case of a panic.

    Nothing has done more toward building Atlanta up and in making her a great city than her excellent system of public schools, and the new departure in the style of her school buildings will greatly increase the efficiency and the value of her great public school system–already the best at the south.

    Walter H. Howard.18

    References

    1. Illustration credit: City of Atlanta: A Descriptive, Historical and Industrial Review. Louisville, Kentucky: The Inter-State Publishing Company, 1892-93, p. 25. ↩︎
    2. “Finance Committee.” The Atlanta Constitution, May 30, 1890, p. 5. ↩︎
    3. “The Public Schools.” The Atlanta Constitution, August 27, 1890, p. 7. ↩︎
    4. “Little Locals.” The Atlanta Constitution, February 4, 1891, p. 5. ↩︎
    5. “They Are Open.” The Atlanta Constitution, February 10, 1891, p. 3. ↩︎
    6. “The Public Schools.” The Atlanta Constitution, August 27, 1890, p. 7. ↩︎
    7. “State St. School Closing Fortieth Year Of Service”. The Atlanta Journal, May 5, 1929, p. 10. ↩︎
    8. “They Are Open.” The Atlanta Constitution, February 10, 1891, p. 3. ↩︎
    9. “From Our Notebook.” The Atlanta Constitution, June 23, 1889, p. 17. ↩︎
    10. “The Boulevard School”. The Atlanta Constitution, October 14, 1888, p. 12. ↩︎
    11. “Notice to Contractors”. The Atlanta Constitution, April 7, 1888, p. 8. ↩︎
    12. Illustration credit: City of Atlanta: A Descriptive, Historical and Industrial Review. Louisville, Kentucky: The Inter-State Publishing Company, 1892-93, p. 23. ↩︎
    13. “The Public Schools.” The Atlanta Constitution, December 28, 1888, p. 8. ↩︎
    14. “Major Slaton’s Report”. The Atlanta Constitution, February 6, 1890, p. 6. ↩︎
    15. “Wrecking” (advertisement). The Atlanta Journal, August 27, 1923, p. 16. ↩︎
    16. “6 School Structures Tentatively Accepted By Education Board”. The Atlanta Journal, May 15, 1929, p. 4. ↩︎
    17. Pitts, Mamie Louise. “State St. School to Celebrate Thirty-Ninth Anniversary”. The Atlanta Journal, January 27, 1929, p. 12N. ↩︎
    18. Howard, Walter H. “The New Schools”. The Atlanta Journal, July 12, 1890, p. 1. ↩︎
  • Hugh Shackleford Residence (1951) – Albany, Georgia

    Edward Vason Jones. Hugh Shackleford Residence (1951). Albany, Georgia.
    Edward Vason Jones. Hugh Shackleford Residence (1951). Albany, Georgia.1 2
    1. Mitchell, William R. Edward Vason Jones, 1909-1980: Architect, Connoisseur, and Collector. New York: Martin-St. Martin Press (1995). ↩︎
    2. 1962 American Architects Directory ↩︎
  • Urban Life: Morning in Williamsburg

    I had to wake up insanely early for this shot a couple of years ago—in July, the sun rises at 5:30 a.m. over New York.

    I couldn’t believe how clear and haze-free the sky was that morning: just like a cold winter day.

    I found a quiet bench where someone had left a pair of sunglasses, and popped them on to watch the show.

    It wasn’t an innocent time, but the world felt less constricting then, and for a moment at least it was a little easier to catch my breath and find some optimism.

    There will be more golden days ahead, but I’m steeling myself for the long, hard slog to reach them.

    This is, after all, what I was built for.

  • 696 Peachtree Apartments (1923) – Atlanta

    Hentz, Reid & Adler. 696 Peachtree Apartments (1923). Midtown, Atlanta.
    Hentz, Reid & Adler. 696 Peachtree Apartments (1923). Midtown, Atlanta.1 2 3 4
    Looking up at the facade of 696 Peachtree Apartments
    Looking up at the facade of 696 Peachtree Apartments
    Segmental pediment and ornamentation on second-floor window of 696 Peachtree Apartments
    Segmental pediment and ornamentation on second-floor window of 696 Peachtree Apartments
    Cornice and windows on 696 Peachtree Apartments
    Cornice and windows on 696 Peachtree Apartments
    Fifth-floor window on the facade of 696 Peachtree Apartments
    Fifth-floor window on the facade of 696 Peachtree Apartments
    Ball finial on the north elevation of 696 Peachtree Apartments
    Ball finial on the north elevation of 696 Peachtree Apartments
    Looking up at the north elevation of 696 Peachtree Apartments
    Looking up at the north elevation of 696 Peachtree Apartments
    North elevation of 696 Peachtree Apartments
    North elevation of 696 Peachtree Apartments

    References

    1. “Building Permits”. The Atlanta Journal, October 20, 1922, p. 12. ↩︎
    2. $250,000 Bond Issue Is Handled By Adair Co.” The Atlanta Constitution, November 16, 1922, p. 3. ↩︎
    3. “Dr. Coon Discovers An Apartment House Built Right”. The Atlanta Constitution, May 6, 1923, p. 7. ↩︎
    4. “Apartments For Rent 696 Peachtree Street” (advertisement). The Atlanta Journal, June 3, 1923, p. 4F. ↩︎