Even though this is a bye week for me, I wanted to share a bonus episode related to a special project that I got to do recently. I worked with Canopy fellow Damius Smith on his piece "Built for Legacy". Collier Heights was designed by and for Black people, with the architectural design of every house telling a story. From American Small Houses, to ranch-style, to mid-century, each home focuses on the symbolic power of the neighborhood. https://canopyatlanta.org/2025/06/27/legacy-collier-heights-...
Jun 27, 2025•12 min
This week, we’re talking about the Lakewood Cutting - the story of the murder of Fred Thompson. I’ve said a million times that I’m not a fan of true crime, but centuries-old murders in Atlanta’s past seem to have worked their way into my heart. But this week’s story isn’t just a murder story, this is a story of an abduction, self defense, secret orders, ransom notes and the far and wide reach of the Ku Klux Klan. Want to support this podcast? Visit here Email: [email protected] Facebook...
Jun 20, 2025•14 min•Ep. 291
This week, I am SO excited to share a conversation that I had with Marty Padgett about this new book, The Many Passions of Michael Hardwick: Sex and the Supreme Court in the Age of AIDS . Sodomy laws had been used to discriminate against queer people for centuries, but in 1986, the US Supreme Court ruled that the constitution did not guarantee a person the right to engage in homosexual conduct, even in the privacy of their own home. The case began with the arrest of Michael Hardwick and happened...
Jun 06, 2025•49 min•Ep. 290
This week, I am bringing you a short bonus story about the Bagby Family, mainly brothers William and Hubert, who were known throughout the Bolton area of Atlanta for living along the banks of the Chattahoochee River while evading arrest. In April of 1957, brothers Hubert and William - the “The Ghost” and “Cobb County Roosting Man” - were arrested. Police found them hiding in the chifforobes at their family home and they were charged with 13 counts of burglary and one count of larceny. Want to su...
May 30, 2025•9 min•Ep. 289
This week, we’re talking about Roman Catholicism in Atlanta, mainly centered around the city’s historic Catholic churches from the 1850s through the 1950s. Want to support this podcast? Visit here Email: [email protected] Facebook | Instagram
May 16, 2025•19 min•Ep. 288
This week, I'm sharing the short history of "Miss Sepia Atlanta", Atlanta’s African American beauty pageant that ran from 1947 until 1963. Want to support this podcast? Visit here Email: [email protected] Facebook | Instagram
May 02, 2025•9 min•Ep. 287
This week, we’re talking about one of Atlanta’s most well-known attractions - it’s strip clubs. But why and how and when did we get this claim to fame? Why is Atlanta one of the few places that allows full nudity and alcohol? Why are the wings so good? Today we’re going to cover all of this and more; from the legislation battles to some of the iconic strip clubs from our history. Lustful Appetites book Want to support this podcast? Visit here Email: [email protected] Facebook | Instagra...
Apr 18, 2025•18 min•Ep. 286
This week, I am so excited to share an interview episode with Mike Ayling , who is the writer and researcher behind Birds of Kirkwood . We talked about the story of how he moved into his home Kirkwood, Robert Windsor Smith, Atlanta first amateur ornithologist and we talked about birding and the natural environment of Kirkwood 122 years ago. Birds of Georgia Bird Fest Want to support this podcast? Visit here Email: [email protected] Facebook | Instagram...
Apr 04, 2025•47 min•Ep. 285
This week, we’re talking about Druid Hills - one of the most iconic Atlanta neighborhoods known for its housing stock and connection to the Olmsted landscape architecture firm. From Joel Hurt's idea through the most recent annexation; we are talking about historic houses, prominent residents and schools and churches. Want to support this podcast? Visit here Email: [email protected] Facebook | Instagram...
Mar 21, 2025•19 min•Ep. 284
This week, we are celebrating Women’s History Month by learning the history of three more women from Atlanta’s past; Eva Lovett, Emily Norman and Alexa Stirling. One who founded a well-known private school, another a prominent real estate firm and a pioneer in golf. Want to support this podcast? Visit here Email: [email protected] Facebook | Instagram...
Mar 07, 2025•12 min•Ep. 283
This week, we’re talking about “We Charge Genocide” , a 1951 petition accusing the United States government of genocide based on the newly adopted UN Genocide Convention. A strong content warning that this is going to be a heavy topic about racialized violence and murder across the US and specifically in Atlanta. Burnham-Nobles Archive Life Magazine Photos of the Stone Mountain Klan Initiation Want to support this podcast? Visit here Email: [email protected] Facebook | Instagram...
Feb 21, 2025•21 min•Ep. 282
This week, we’re talking about WEB DuBois’ time in Atlanta, which spans two different periods and a total of 24 years. Arriving first in 1897, he lived here during the death of his son, the lynching of Sam Hose, the 1906 Race Massacre and the publishing of several books and magazines. His second arrival was in 1934, where is once again taught at Atlanta University and published several more books. Want to support this podcast? Visit here Email: [email protected] Facebook | Instagram...
Feb 07, 2025•16 min•Ep. 281
With my new bi-weekly format, there are two ways you can do this; a rolling schedule or what I did, which is say that the podcast will be out every first and third Friday. That means that a few times a year, we have months with 5 weeks. January is one of them! So I thought I’d bring you a shorter, but fascinating topic to cover this bonus week. Today, we’re talking about Sevananda, the natural foods co-op in Little Five Points that just celebrated its 50th anniversary. This is a story of an Indi...
Jan 31, 2025•9 min•Ep. 280
This week, we’re talking about Atlanta’s Veterans Hospitals. When I first put this topic on my list, I thought I’d be covering the 1960s-era hospital that is still operating over on Clairmont Road, but I was surprised to learn we had several other variations and the history of caring for veterans in Atlanta is over 130 years old. Want to support this podcast? Visit here Email: [email protected] Facebook | Instagram...
Jan 17, 2025•16 min•Ep. 279
This week, we’re talking about Lustron Houses - prefabricated enameled steel houses developed in the post-World War II era in response to the shortage of homes for returning GIs. I’m going to cover the inventor, the Lustron Company, and more importantly, Lustrons in Atlanta - how many were built, who lived in them and how many remain? https://lustronresearch.com/ Want to support this podcast? Visit here Email: [email protected] Facebook | Instagram...
Jan 03, 2025•14 min•Ep. 278
Happy 2025! I started this podcast in September of 2018 and if you told me then I would be here recording in 2025, I would never have believed it. Over six years and over 250 episodes later, I am finally making a material change to Archive Atlanta - and that’s format. We’re starting off 2025 with a new, bi-weekly format - that means twice a month - the first and third Fridays. So much has changed in 6 years that I also thought it’d be fun to record a new introduction. Want to support this podcas...
Jan 01, 2025•6 min•Ep. 277
My last episode of 2024 is a conversation I had inside Constellations , with the incomparable Gene Kansas , who just wrote a book called Civil Sights: Sweet Auburn, a Journey through Atlanta's National Treasure , which is being released in February of 2025. Every time we get together, our shared love of historic preservation, Auburn Avenue and Atlanta come out and this is no different. University of Georgia Press 50% off coupon code: 08HLDY24 Want to support this podcast? Visit here Email: thevi...
Dec 20, 2024•48 min•Ep. 276
Today, I am sharing a conversation I had with Abra Lee , Director of Horticulture at Oakland and scholar in Black garden history from Reconstruction to Civil Rights. Black Flora Want to support this podcast? Visit here Email: [email protected] Facebook | Instagram | Twitter...
Nov 15, 2024•47 min•Ep. 275
To celebrate Halloween, my friends Liz and Cynthia joined me to discuss the mystery of the Atlanta Blood House. On September 8, 1987, Minnie Winston stepped out of the bath and into a pool of blood. But it wasn't her blood or her husbands... The Blood House mystery has never been formally solved, but we discuss the neighborhood, the house, the people, the facts, debunk some theories, share out own theories and even discuss other famous "bleeding houses" like the Amityville Horror. Want to suppor...
Oct 29, 2024•45 min•Ep. 274
This week, we’re talking about Atlanta’s first, official Playboy Club and the place it was located, the people who worked there, went there and when it closed. Want to support this podcast? Visit here Email: [email protected] Facebook | Instagram | Twitter...
Aug 16, 2024•14 min•Ep. 273
This week, we’re talking about one of Atlanta's most famous thoroughfares - and no, it’s not Peachtree Street - it’s Cheshire Bridge Road. Each time the city debuted a new thoroughfare, so began the promotion of its caliber and residents. Streets and avenues like Peachtree, Washington, Edgewood and so on would wage the battles of maintaining its status as an upper class section. As Cheshire Bridge Road has made the news recently because of the fight against adult businesses, it was interesting t...
Aug 09, 2024•11 min•Ep. 272
This week, I am checking off another Atlanta neighborhood off the list - Ormewood Park. From its start as a single large estate that bred jersey cows, to the 1890s development, annexation, through its current history and unique landmarks and homes. Want to support this podcast? Visit here Email: [email protected] Facebook | Instagram | Twitter...
Aug 02, 2024•16 min•Ep. 271
This week, I am sharing my interview with Peter Bahouth, talking about the Springlake neighborhood, and exploring his treehouse, which A irBnb named it’s #1 “Most Wished For” listing. While we talk about the history of the Battle of Peachtree Creek, the Springlake neighborhood, its connection to the Klan and the efforts to form a park space that can be accessible to the public, the most impactful part of this conversation for me was Peter’s thoughts about nature and how important it is for all h...
Jul 26, 2024•38 min•Ep. 270
This week, we’re covering the The Great Speckled Bird, Atlanta’s alternative press that ran from 1968 through 1976. It was one of the longest-running underground newspapers of the era, publishing articles on Atlanta's political leaders, the women's movement, abortion, racial issues, culture and gay liberation. https://digitalcollections.library.gsu.edu/digital/collection/GSB Want to support this podcast? Visit here Email: [email protected] Facebook | Instagram | Twitter...
Jul 19, 2024•11 min•Ep. 269
This week, I am re-releasing an episode from waaaay back in August of 2019, all about Atlanta’s Carnegie Libraries. It's not only a story of where we keep books, it’s also a story of gender, power, race and access to information. Before the age of technology and the internet, books represented knowledge, and knowledge is power. Keeping that power away from people has been a tool used by the ruling party since the dawn of time. Libraries are a physical link to that power struggle and help us tell...
Jul 12, 2024•19 min•Ep. 268
This week, I am covering one of my most requested topics, the Science & Technology Museum of Atlanta, better known as SciTrek. I didn’t grow up here and so I love hearing people’s stories of classic Atlanta memories or experiences that really defined their childhood and one of these is definitely SciTrek. The way that current Atlantans reminisce about and their stories of school field trips, etc., makes me wish I could go back in time and experience it. So today we’re talking about the idea ...
Jul 05, 2024•12 min•Ep. 267
This week, we’re talking about basketball - from the invention of the game, when it arrived in Atlanta, who played it and where, and all the way into the story of our professional teams today. Loserville: How Professional Sports Remade Atlanta - and How Atlanta Remade Professional Sports Want to support this podcast? Visit here Email: [email protected] Facebook | Instagram | Twitter...
Jun 28, 2024•12 min•Ep. 266
This week, we’re talking about an Atlanta radio icon - WABE-FM. Located at 90.1 on your radio dial, the station has a fascinating history that dates back to the 1940s. So this week, we’re talking about radio history, the educational radio movement, who funded the station here in Atlanta, who it was for and how it became the public radio institution that we know and love today. Want to support this podcast? Visit here Email: [email protected] Facebook | Instagram | Twitter...
Jun 21, 2024•12 min•Ep. 265
This week, in honor of the upcoming Peachtree Road Race , we are talking about the origin of the world’s largest 10K and the organization that sponsors it, the Atlanta Track Club. Want to support this podcast? Visit here Email: [email protected] Facebook | Instagram | Twitter...
Jun 14, 2024•10 min•Ep. 264
Surprise! Yes - I am still on the podcast break and I will be back officially on June 14th with fun new episodes, but while I’ve been gone I was a guest on another amazing Atlanta podcast, Savory Stories . Savory Stories is a WABE podcast about Atlanta’s rich stories through the lens of cuisine and food history. It’s hosted by Chef Asata Reid and culinary historian Akila McConnell, and if Akila sounds familiar, she was a guest on Archive Atlanta way back in Episode 68 talking about Atlanta’s cul...
Jun 07, 2024•36 min•Ep. 263