Chief Tomochichi and Monuments to Peace

Atlanta, Georgia October 28, 2021 Chief Tomochichi stands proudly at the Millennium Gate Museum at Atlantic Station, his home for the next year or so while they ready his permanent placement at Rodney Cook, Sr. Peace Park in West End. The first photos I saw in the Atlanta Journal-Constitution struck me as wrong, the statueContinue reading “Chief Tomochichi and Monuments to Peace”

Railroad Atlanta?

Saturday, August 11, 2012 Posted by Hubert and Debby Yoder, DULUTH, GA — Atlanta’s current struggles with transportation problems are ironic given the city started as a railway hub. In the early 1800s, when goods and people moved about by railroad, Atlanta was an essential crossroad between major routes north and west from Georgia’s southern ports. Some say Atlanta’sContinue reading “Railroad Atlanta?”

1970: The Year Women Finally Got the Right to Vote

Sunday, July 15, 2012 Editor’s note: I was in college in the 1980s and by then I thought discrimination and prejudice against women were things of the past (well at least for white women anyway). I wasn’t aware of it happening to me often. But during the times throughout my life when I knew it wasContinue reading “1970: The Year Women Finally Got the Right to Vote”