MidTown (Columbus, Georgia)

MidTown (Columbus, Georgia)
MidTown
—  Neighborhood  —
Country United States
State Georgia
County Muscogee
Population (2009)
 - Total 22,000UNIQ38,997f93,374f168-ref-00,000,000-QINU
Area code(s) 706
Midtown Logo

MidTown is an area of nine square miles[1] in Columbus, Georgia. Within its boundaries are diverse residential neighborhoods and historic districts, eleven public schools, numerous parks and public greenspaces, the Columbus Museum, the Columbus Public Library, the Muscogee County Public Education Center, commercial office and retail districts, and the international headquarters for Aflac. MidTown is presently home to over 22,000 residents living in 8500 households[1] and is six miles (10 km) north of Fort Benning on I-185.

MidTown's boundaries are Talbotton and Warm Springs Roads on the north; I-185 on the east; Martin Luther King, Jr. Boulevard on the south; and 10th Avenue on the west. It is a diverse, and increasingly walkable and bicycle friendly part of town. MidTown is centrally located to Columbus' many cycling amenities: the newly opened Fall Line Trace bike trail parallels MidTown's northern boundary and access to the 14-mile (23 km) Riverwalk is one mile (1.6 km) away.[2]

Contents

History

Shortly after the founding of Columbus, Georgia in 1828, wealthy Columbusites began to look just beyond the original city limits to build their large, suburban estates and gardens. The gentle hills of what is now the MidTown area were attractive to those looking to escape the mosquitoes of the lower lying, Chattahoochee riverbanks. While many of the owners of these suburban villas had working plantations in other areas, these estates were for their urban-based businesses like law, commerce, or manufacturing.[3]

After the American Civil War, the invention of the street-car made suburban life possible for more Americans. In 1887, John F. Flournoy and Louis F. Garrard purchased the Columbus Railroad Company and created the Belt Line trolley, "a coke-burning, steam-powered dummy engine [that] pulled one or two cars eastward from downtown out 10th Street up the hill into Wynnton, turning north at Wynnton School, circling around the northern edge of the new Wildwood Park and returning to downtown on 18th Street."[4] In that same year, the two partners formed the Muscogee Real Estate Company and began to subdivide lots for residential development.

Many factors contributed to the boom of development that occurred in MidTown in the early part of the 20th century. Population increases, national trends, a growing middle-class, and a fire that destroyed one and a half blocks of houses in downtown Columbus, pushed people outside the city limits. After World War I and the creation of Fort Benning, MidTown flourished and it was at this time that the majority of MidTown was developed. Other Columbus entrepreneurs followed the example of John Flournoy and began carving neighborhoods out of once rural land. In 1925, the completion of the thirteenth street viaduct made automobile access easier and in that same year the city limits of Columbus grew to include the rapidly developing MidTown area.[3]

Neighborhoods and Historic Districts

MidTown is home to nineteen established and fledgling neighborhood associations.

Six National Register historic districts radiate from Wynnton Road in the heart of MidTown, creating one of the largest contiguous historic districts in the United States:[2]

MidTown Neighborhoods

Dinglewood Historic District

The Dinglewood Historic District is a small, residential neighborhood comprising the c. 1859 Dinglewood house; early 20th –century residences; a privately-owned, central, circular park; and a city-owned park. The district developed around Dinglewood, the two-story, Italianate-style house designed for Colonel Joel Early Hurt. The 30-acre (120,000 m2) estate was subdivided in the early 20th century, and sixteen houses were constructed between 1917 and 1951. Common house styles in the district include Georgian, Bungalow, Ranch, Colonial Revival, English Vernacular Revival, and Spanish Colonial Revival.[4]

Dinglewood (1429 Dinglewood Drive), a two-story, Italianate-style, Georgian house was designed for Colonel Joel Early Hurt by Columbus architects and builders Barringer and Morton in 1858. Hurt spared no expense when building his home. He even installed private water and gas works on the property. Located on either side of the Dinglewood House are two c. 1858 houses reportedly built for the craftsman who constructed the Dinglewood House.

Peacock Woods-Dimon Circle Historic District

The development of The Peacock Woods-Dimon Circle Historic District began in 1922. John Flournoy’s Peacock Woods subdivision comprises the northern half of the district and Samuel Kelly Dimon’s Dimon Circle subdivision, the southern portion. Flournoy, a prominent and prolific Columbus developer, hired the nationally acclaimed landscape architect Earle S. Draper to design Peacock Woods as a picturesque neighborhood with curving streets and park-like settings. Dimon Circle was subdivided from Dimon’s family property in 1922. Additional lots were added to the development in 1928. The center of the district (known as Rock Park) was developed by Charles Frank Williams and the southwest portion (known as Wynnton Heights) was subdivided by Hezikiah Land. The district includes a broad range of architectural styles including Colonial Revival, Craftsman, English Vernacular Revival, Spanish Colonial Revival and one 1954 California Ranch.[4]

Weracoba-St. Elmo Historic District

The history of the District begins with the founding of Columbus and with the city’s most famous antebellum mansion, St. Elmo, built circa 1830. Another smaller antebellum house, Highland Hall, dating from the 1850s, is also within the District. Both structures are listed in the National Register, and they illustrate the area’s original use as a setting for suburban estates prior to the American Civil War. Today, the Weracoba / St. Elmo Historic District is a vibrant multi-use residential, recreational, educational, and commercial area with a strong sense of community among its residents. Its canopy of mature hardwood trees shelters the city’s- and perhaps one of the state’s-largest and most intact 1920s/1930s concentration of middle-class Craftsman Bungalow, Tudor Revival, Classical, and Mission Revival style homes. Of the 440 surviving houses in the District, 85% were constructed by 1941.[4]

Wildwood Circle-Hillcrest Historic District

An early 20th century streetcar suburb—continued to develop through the mid-1950s. In the 1880s, a streetcar line was constructed along Wildwood Avenue to serve the Wynnton area. Owner of the streetcar line and the Muscogee Real Estate Company, John Francis Flournoy, built his own Queen Anne estate here as he developed the Wildwood Circle subdivision. Sale of lots along the streetcar line peaked from 1918 to 1925. Also within this district—at 1519 Stark Avenue—is the childhood home of Carson McCullers (1917–1967) the renowned novelist and playwright. Some of the architectural styles in this district include Colonial Revival, English Vernacular Revival, Mission/Spanish Revival, and Craftsman.[4]

Village of Wynnton Historic District

An example of an early- to mid-20th-century residential neighborhood developed from antebellum estates and in response to the streetcar line which ran along the southern and eastern boundaries of the district. The evolution of Wynnton Village spans over 150 years from its antebellum estates, to its village center developed in the mid-19th century, to the beginning of streetcar suburbs in the 1890s, to intense residential development from 1919 through the 1940s and then serving as a prime location for multi-family dwellings for World War II-era Fort Benning officers. Architectural styles vary from early examples of Greek and Gothic Revival to popular early 20th century styles including Craftsman, Colonial Revival and English Vernacular Revival.[4]

Wynn's Hill-Overlook Historic District

An outstanding example of an early- to mid-20th-century residential neighborhood developed from several antebellum estates. In 1834, Colonel William L. Wynn purchased 100 acres (0.40 km2) of land located on a rise east of downtown Columbus, just beyond the city limits. Wynnton Road was an important thoroughfare that also served as the early property line that divided Wynn’s land from John Woolfolk’s land (portions of which were later sold to Joel Early Hurt, builder of Dinglewood, among others). During the 1920s, a majority of the district was purchased and developed by Lloyd G. Bowers who hired nationally acclaimed landscape architect Earle S. Draper to design a picturesque neighborhood. Draper’s signature style of curvilinear streets and park-like settings can also be seen in the Peacock Woods-Dimon Circle Historic District and in the 1920s expansion of the village at the Bibb Mill (located outside of MidTown). With the incorporation of the larger Wynnton area into the city limits in the mid-1920s, residential construction boomed; a second peak in building occurred in the 1940s.[4] Some of the architectural styles in this district include Greek Revival, Neoclassical Revival, Colonial Revival, Craftsman, English Vernacular Revival, Mediterranean Revival and Post Modern.

Parks and Recreation

MidTown’s curvilinear tree-lined streets and pocket parks were integral to its original residential development and design and define part of MidTown’s unique character today. Weracoba Park, also known as Lakebottom Park, is the oldest, large-scale, daily use recreation facility and public greenspace within the city. It began in 1890 as a private park with a shallow lake, dance pavilion, a small bowling alley and zoo; in 1924, the city purchased the park, a part of it became the site of Columbus High School, Lakebottom Park’s lake was drained and the remainder became officially Weracoba Park, taking its new name from the creek that winds through it. Today, Weracoba Park expands over 40 tree-filled acres that incorporateball fields, tennis courts, a basketball court, playground and tracks for walking and running and is used by 10,000 people a day.[5]

The work of two of America’s early 20th century landscape architects is present in MidTown. Gardens surrounding the Columbus Museum were designed in the 1920s by the firm of Frederick Law Olmsted; and Earle Draper designed the curving streets and pocket parks of Peacock Woods.[4]

MidTown is also centrally located to Columbus’ many cycling amenities: the Fall Line Trace bike trail parallels MidTown’s northern boundary and access to the 14-mile (23 km) Riverwalk is one mile (1.6 km) to the west.

Cultural, Civic and Educational Attractions

The Columbus Museum, the second largest museum in the state,[6] and known for its focus on American art and regional history, is on the west end of Wynnton Road in MidTown. The Columbus Public Library, a state-of-the-art 100,000-square-foot (9,300 m2) facility designed by architect Robert Stern, and the Muscogee County School District’s Public Education Center (that opened in 2009) anchor MidTown’s eastern boundary on Macon Road near I-185.

Eleven public schools are within MidTown’s boundaries; Wynnton Arts Academy, founded in 1837 as Wynnton Academy, is the oldest continuously used elementary school in Georgia and among the oldest in the country.[4]

Shopping and Dining

Two of the city’s early suburban shopping centers—the Village on 13th and St. Elmo—are located in MidTown and have been renovated to offer a selection of independent shops and restaurants. Various other shops, galleries and services can be found throughout the MidTown area.

Regional and national chain stores are centered in the Cross Country area on Macon Road at I-185.

MidTown eateries include Meritage Café and Loco’s Grill and Pub at the Village on 13th; Dinglewood Pharmacy, home of the world famous “scrambled dog”; Sugga’s soul food; Taj Mahal Indian Restaurant, El Vaquero Mexican Restaurant; Deorio’s Pizza, in operation for 50 years; The Speakeasy, a MidTown gathering place since 1976; the original home of Country’s Barbeque, since 1975 on Mercury Drive; and franchise restaurants that include Jimmy Johns and Firehouse Subs, and a Burger King located in a 1924 Tudor Revival house, a local example of adaptive reuse.[7]

MidTown, Inc.

In support of community, conservation and diversity, MidTown, Inc., through education and advocacy, works to sustain and enhance the neighborhoods and businesses within MidTown Columbus.[2]

MidTown, Inc. is a 501(c)(3) organization founded in 2006 by a diverse group of individuals who shared a common vision for a revitalized community in the heart of Columbus, Georgia. In a relatively short time, MidTown, Inc. established itself as an effective and sustainable community renewal organization. The MidTown Champions Campaign raised $1.2 million in broad-based support—from large corporations and national foundations, local businesses, family charitable foundations and individual residents and stakeholders. The MT staff includes three full-time professionals: the Executive Director, the Director of Community Affairs, and the Director of Programs/Office Administrator.[2]

The MidTown Business Association has over 100 members, features its own webpage and e-newsletter and hosts bi-monthly educational meetings for its members. When MidTown, Inc. began its neighborhood outreach efforts there were three existing neighborhood associations in MidTown: there are now nineteen neighborhood associations. Transportation enhancements facilitated by MidTown, Inc. include the completed pedestrian-friendly and green intersection of Peacock and Brown Avenues at Wynnton Road, and the design and ongoing implementation of a Wynnton Road Corridor Revitalization Plan funded by GDOT and grant monies. MidTown, Inc. has undertaken regional retail and watershed studies that will be of long-term benefit to developers, business owners and area residents. MidTown, Inc.—through the ongoing efforts of its staff and volunteer Board of Directors, residents and business owners—is continually working to revitalize a vibrant MidTown Columbus.[2]

References

  1. ^ a b c Buxton Co. http://www.buxtonco.com
  2. ^ a b c d e MidTown, Inc. http://www.midtowncolumbusga.org/
  3. ^ a b "Historic MidTown Tour." Distributed by MidTown, Inc., Historic Columbus Foundation, and the Columbus, Georgia Visitors Bureau. December 15, 2009
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i The National Register of Historic Places http://www.nps.gov/nr/
  5. ^ Columbus, Georgia Parks and Recreation Department http://www.columbusga.org/parks/park_sites/Lakebottom/park_lakebottom.html
  6. ^ The Columbus Museum http://www.columbusmuseum.com/
  7. ^ The MidTown Business Association http://www.midtowncolumbusga.org/mt_business.aspx

External links


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать курсовую

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Columbus, Georgia — City of Columbus   Consolidated city   Downtown Columbus skyline …   Wikipedia

  • Downtown Columbus, Georgia — Downtown Columbus   Neighbourhood   Fireworks in Downtown on July 4, 2009 …   Wikipedia

  • Dinglewood, Columbus, Georgia — Dinglewood Historic District U.S. National Register of Historic Places U.S. Historic district …   Wikipedia

  • North Columbus, Georgia — North Columbus is a district in Columbus, Georgia, situated just north of the district of Bibb City. It is bounded roughly by Moore Road on the north, Manchester Expressway to the south, Moon Road on the east, and J. R. Allen Parkway on the west …   Wikipedia

  • Clubview Heights (Columbus, Georgia) — Clubview Heights   Neighborhood   Area  – Total 0.513 sq mi (1.3 km2) Population (2007[1])  – Total …   Wikipedia

  • Neighborhoods in Columbus, Georgia — This is the list of neighborhoods in Columbus, Georgia. Neighborhoods are generally considered to be housing subdivisions of a city. In some cases, other layers of intervening organization exist (for example, boroughs in New York City) that may… …   Wikipedia

  • Midtown — puede referirse a: Una denominación anglosajona para ciertas zonas de la ciudad (véase también ciudad central y teoría de los lugares centrales para el sistema urbano o jerarquía de ciudades y modelo de zonas concéntricas o modelo Burgess para la …   Wikipedia Español

  • City Village (Columbus, Georgia) — City Village is a neighborhood in Columbus, Georgia. It is located north of the central business district of Downtown, and south of Bibb City. v …   Wikipedia

  • Crystal Valley (Columbus, Georgia) — Crystal Valley is a residential neighborhood located in Columbus, Georgia. It is located in the eastern section of the city. v · …   Wikipedia

  • Oakland Park (Columbus, Georgia) — Oakland Park   Neighborhood   Area  – Total 2.098 sq mi (5.4 km2) Population (2007[1])  – Total …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”