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Encyclopedia > Five Points (Atlanta)

Five Points is an area of Atlanta, Georgia, the primary reference for the downtown area. The name refers to the convergence of Marietta Street, Edgewood Avenue, Decatur Street, and two legs of Peachtree Street. Though Five Points is usually considered by Atlantans to be the center of town, the origin of the street-numbering system lies two blocks southwest, at the intersection of Peachtree and Alabama Streets.


History

Prior to the arrival of white settlers, Five Points was the intersection of two Creek Indian trails, the Pitch Tree (corrupted to Peachtree) Trail and the Sandtown Trail. In 1845, George Washington Collier opened a grocery store at what is now Five Points, and the store later served as Atlanta's first post office in 1846.


In 1848, Five Points served as the location of Atlanta's first mayoral election. Moses Formwalt became Atlanta's first mayor, defeating Jonathan Norcross.


In 1875, Atlanta's drinking water system began with the construction of three artesian wells at Five Points. The system delivered water to Atlanta's residents via wooden pipes.


Modern era

In the 1940s and 1950s, Five Points represented the central hub of downtown Atlanta. The downtown Rich's department store near Five Points became a common gathering point for Atlanta's residents prior to urban sprawl, white flight, and the development of shopping malls. The highlight of many Atlanta residents' childhoods was riding the pink pig around the Great Christmas Tree at Rich's.


Today, Five Points is the location of MARTA's largest rail station, where its north-south and east-west lines intersect. To the southeast extends the campus of Georgia State University. To the northeast is Woodruff Park. To the northwest lies the Fairlie-Poplar business district. Just south lies Underground Atlanta, a shopping center built underneath Atlanta's viaduct system.


External links

  • Five Points Map (http://www.gpb.org/gptv/georgialegacy/peachtree/map_fp.htm)
  • MARTA Five Points Rail Station (http://www.itsmarta.com/getthere/stations/5pts.htm)

 

Atlanta neighborhoods
Adamsville | Ansley Park | Atlantic Station | Bankhead | Ben Hill | Berkeley Park | Buckhead | Cabbagetown | Candler Park | Cascade Heights | Castleberry Hill | Center Hill | Downtown - Fairlie-Poplar - Five Points | Druid Hills | East Atlanta | Edgewood | Grant Park | Grove Park | Home Park | Inman Park | Kirkwood | Lake Claire | Lakewood Heights | Little Five Points | Loring Heights | Mechanicsville | Midtown | Morningside-Lenox Park | Oakland City | Piedmont Park | Poncey-Highland | Sandtown | Sandy Springs | Sweet Auburn | Vine City | Vinings | Virginia-Highland | West End


  Results from FactBites:
 
Five Points (Atlanta) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (314 words)
Five Points is an area of Atlanta, Georgia, the primary reference for the downtown area.
Though Five Points is usually considered by Atlantans to be the center of town, the origin of the street-numbering system lies two blocks southwest, at the intersection of Peachtree and Alabama Streets.
Prior to the arrival of white settlers, Five Points was the intersection of two Creek Indian trails, the Pitch Tree (corrupted to Peachtree) Trail and the Sandtown Trail.
Georgia State University - Special Collections & Archives (2064 words)
Five points was one block north and two blocks west of Union Station This picture was taken in 1890 from the Whitehall Street (later Peachtree Street) viaduct.
Five Points is at the center of the photo surrounded by a cluster of large buildings to the right of the railroad gulch (located on the left side of the photo).
Five Points is one block to the east or left on the photo.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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