Atlanta History Center

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Atlanta History Center
Atlanta History Center rear.jpg

Contact Information

Email: reference@atlantahistorycenter.com

Address:
130 West Paces Ferry Road NW
Atlanta, GA 30305-1380

Telephone: Kenan Research Center 404-814-4040
Fax: 404-814-4175

Hours and holidays: Research, Holidays.

Directions, maps, and public transportation:

  • Driving directions
  • Map: Google map: Atlanta History Center
  • Public transportation: Take the MARTA train to the Buckhead Station on the Red Line. Keep your rail ticket as a transfer pass.
    • Take the Peachtree Road exit out of Buckhead Station (not via the bridge) and go up the first set of stairs after exiting the fare gate. At street level is a bus stop where you transfer to southbound bus #110 Peachtree Street/"The Peach". Tell the bus driver that you’d like to exit at West Paces Ferry Road.
      • Exit the bus where Peachtree Street and Roswell Road fork together at Sardis Way. At that forked intersection, make a right on West Paces Ferry Road (toward Johnny Rockets) and proceed west two blocks. The Atlanta History Center is located on the left.

Internet sites and databases:

  • Atlanta History Center explore, visit, programs, membership, research, rentals, about us, newsroom, contact, and buy tickets.
  • Kenan Research Center archives, resources, search collections, genealogy programs, Cherokee Garden Library, and Veterans History Project.
  • Terminus Kenan Research Center online catalog searchable by keyword, title, author, subject, and more.
    Logo wcmasthead en.png

Also available in WorldCat.

Collection Description

Sources for studying Atlanta and southern regional history and culture. The 42,000 square foot library possesses over 15,000 cubic feet of records, including 33,000 published volumes, more than 2,000 manuscript and photograph collections, and 7,800 rolls of microfilm. Collection includes African-American history and the Civil Rights movement; Atlanta politics; gay and lesbian historical studies; regional photography and the history of photography; folklore; transportation and economic development; the Beverly M. DuBose Jr. library on Civil War and military ordnance; and Thomas S. Dickey library of the Sons of the American Revolution genealogy collection; family and county histories from Georgia, North and South Carolina, and Alabama. They also have Georgia censuses and indexes, the Garrett Necrology (cemetery survey and obituary abstracts) 1855–1933, Fulton County estate records, and historic Atlanta newspapers.

Tips

Special offers tours, sweetheart package, free admission weekends, military discounts, and hotel deals.

Alternate Repositories

If you cannot find the record you seek through the Atlanta History Center, a similar record may be available at one of the following.

Overlapping Collections

  • National Archives I, Washington DC, census, pre-WWI military service & pensions, passenger lists, naturalizations, passports, federal bounty land, homesteads, bankruptcy, ethnic sources, prisons, and federal employees.[1]
  • National Archives at Atlanta federal censuses, Ancestry.com, military, pensions, bounty-land, photos, passengers lists, naturalizations, Native Americans, African Americans, and workshops.[2]
  • Federal Records Center, Ellenwood, GA., receives federal agency and court records of Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, and Tennessee.
  • Georgia Archives, Morrow, is the best place to start family history research in Georgia.[3] Genealogies, county histories, newspapers, tax digests, private papers, church records, cemeteries, Bible records, municipal records, census, maps, land plats, photographs, Georgia Confederate service and pension records, colonial, headright & bounty land grants, land lottery, and Georgia county records.
  • FamilySearch Library, Salt Lake City, 450 computers, 3,400 databases, 3.1 million microforms, 4,500 periodicals, 310,000 books of worldwide family and local histories, civil, church, immigration, ethnic, military, and records pertaining to members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Many Georgia Archives microfilms are also available at branch FamilySearch Centers in local church buildings of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, and described in their online FamilySearch Catalog.[4]
  • Dallas Public Central Library 111,700 volumes, 64,500 microfilms, 89,000 microfiche, and over 700 maps, marriage, probate, deed, and tax abstracts in book form, or microfilm of originals for some states, and online databases including Georgia and other Southern states.[5]

Similar Collections

  • DeKalb History Center, Decatur, subject files, biographical files, cemetery index, maps, manuscripts, photographs, rare books, memoirs, yearbooks, and Atlanta City and suburban directories.[6]

Neighboring Collections

Sources

  1. William Dollarhide, and Ronald A. Bremer, America's Best Genealogy Resource Centers (Bountiful, UT: Heritage Quest, 1988), 2. WorldCat 39493985; FS Library Book 973 J54d.
  2. Dollarhide and Bremer, 127-28.
  3. Dollarhide and Bremer, 33.
  4. Dollarhide and Bremer, 1.
  5. Dollarhide and Bremer, 107.
  6. Collections in DeKalb History Center (accessed 11 September 2015).
  7. William Dollarhide and Ronald A. Bremer. America's Best Genealogy Resource Centers (Bountiful, Utah: Heritage Quest, 1998), 33. At various libraries (WorldCat). FS Library Ref Book 973 J54d.
  8. Living History Museum in Visit Ebenezer (accessed 6 February 2022).
  9. Dollarhide and Bremer, 85.
  10. Collections in State Archives of North Carolina (accessed 7 February 2014).