United States historic place
Emory Grove is a small area of bungalow style homes built in 1939 and the 1940s in Druid Hills, Georgia near Emory University . The Emory Grove Historic District , located between Emory University and the city of Decatur, Georgia , is a 90-acre (36 ha) historic district that was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2000.[2]
The district has 200 contributing buildings , 4 contributing sites and one other contributing structure . It includes work by architects and/or builders Ivey and Crook and Robert and Company in Colonial Revival and Late Gothic Revival architectural styles.
A significant date in its history is 1938. It includes single dwellings, a school, a religious structure, and a church school, and it was listed for its architecture.
Emory Grove consists of Princeton Way, Westminster Way, and Edinburgh Terrace, and some houses along N. Decatur Road.[3]
See also [ ]
References [ ]
U.S. National Register of Historic Places
Topics Lists by state Lists by insular areas Lists by associated state Other areas Related
National Register of Historic Places portal
Category
Atlanta landmarks
Current
Cemeteries Commercial Educational Governmental Monuments
Statue of Ellis Arnall
Atlanta from the Ashes (The Phoenix)
Autoeater
Carnegie Education Pavilion
Confederate Obelisk
Continuing the Conversation
Albert Einstein Memorial
Erskine Memorial Fountain
Expelled Because of Color
Five Points Monument
The First Graduate
Free Nelson Mandela
Gateway of Dreams
Statue of Henry W. Grady
Homage to King
Hope Moving Forward
Statue of Jimmy Carter
Statue of John Brown Gordon
Statue of John Stith Pemberton
Kessler Campanile
Statue of Martin Luther King Jr.
Sidney Lanier Monument
Millennium Gate
Peace Monument
Pioneer Women
Statue of Samuel Spencer
Thomas W. Talbot Monument
Statue of Eugene Talmadge
The Three Pioneers
Statue of Thomas E. Watson
World Athletes Monument
Museums Parks and wildlife Performing arts Religious Residential (former) Skyscrapers
Historic (pre-WWII )
Bona Allen (1923)
Candler (1906)
Carnegie (1925)
Connally (1916)
Cox-Carlton (1925)
Flatiron (1897)
Georgian Terrace (1911)
Glenn (1923)
Healey (1914)
Hurt (1926)
J. Mack Robinson (Empire) (1901)
The Metropolitan (1911)
Ponce de Leon Apartments (1913)
Rhodes-Haverty (1929)
Southern Bell (1929)
William-Oliver (1930)
Winecoff Hotel (1913)
W. D. Grant (1898)
Downtown
25 Park Place (Trust Company of Georgia)
55 Marietta Street (Fulton National Bank)
101 Marietta Street
191 Peachtree Tower
Coastal States Building
Equitable
Five Points Plaza
Fourth National Bank building
Georgia Power
Georgia-Pacific Tower
Hyatt Regency Atlanta
Marriott Marquis
One Park Tower
Peachtree Center
Peachtree Summit
State of Georgia Building
SunTrust Plaza
TWELVE Centennial Park
Westin Peachtree Plaza Hotel
Midtown Buckhead Perimeter Center
Planned
903 Peachtree
1105 West Peachtree
Atlanta Multi-Modal Passenger Terminal
Atlanta Symphony Center
Midtown Union
Opus Place
Statue of Evander Holyfield
The Stitch
See also: Atlanta sports venues
History of Atlanta
Origins Buildings
Historic districts
Buildings listed on National Register : (Atlanta in Fulton Co.)
(Atlanta in DeKalb Co.)
Demolished buildings
Demolished public housing projects
Civil War Crime
Massacre (1906)
Ripper (1911)
Leo Frank lynching (1915)
Temple bombing (1958)
Peyton Road affair (1962–1963)
Child murders (1979–1981)
Prison riots (1987)
Centennial Olympic Park bombing (1996)
Otherside Lounge bombing (1997)
Shooting of Kathryn Johnston (2006)
Public schools cheating scandal (2009–2015)
Shooting of Scout Schultz (2017)
Ransomware attack (2018)
Killing of Rayshard Brooks (2020)
Spa shootings (2021)
Culture
Opera in Atlanta
Arts in Atlanta
Disasters Events
Timeline
International Cotton Exposition (1881)
Piedmont Exposition (1887)
Cotton States and International Exposition (1895)
Gone with the Wind premiere (1939)
Funeral of Martin Luther King Jr. (1968)
Atlanta International Pop Festival (1969 , 1970 )
Democratic National Convention (1988)
Super Bowl XXVIII (1994)
World Series (1991 , 1992 , 1995 , 1996 , 1999 , 2021 )
Summer Olympics (1996)
WrestleMania XXVII (2011)
Super Bowl LIII (2019)
Labor LGBT
Library perversion case (1953)
Lonesome Cowboys police raid (1969)
Atlanta Pride (1971)
Atlanta Eagle police raid (2009)
People
Mayors
Pioneers
History of Hispanics in Atlanta
History of African Americans in Atlanta
Demographic history
Gentrification
Racial segregation
Places
History by neighborhood
Former neighborhoods and settlements
Annexations and city wards
Street names
History of Georgia Tech
Historic mills
Zero Mile Post
Protests Transportation
History of Atlanta
Timeline of Atlanta history
Druid Hills neighborhood of Atlanta and DeKalb County, Georgia
Architects
Frederick Law Olmsted
Joel Hurt
John Charles Olmsted
Olmsted Brothers
Historic buildings Historic districts Institutions
Callanwolde Fine Arts Center
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Druid Hills Golf Club
Druid Hills High School
Emory University
Emory University Hospital
Fernbank Forest
Fernbank Museum of Natural History
Fernbank Science Center
Georgia Mental Health Institute
The Paideia School
People
Ron Blomberg
Asa Griggs Candler
Asa G. Candler Jr.
Jimmy Carnes
Enrico Leide
Carlos H. Mason
Louie De Votie Newton
Lucy Beall Candler Owens Heinz Leide
Transportation Other
Driving Miss Daisy (film)
Emory Point mixed-use development
External links [ ]