Atlanta Through the Archives
Vine City (1917 - 1989)
Summary
After the Great Atlanta Fire of 1917, residents began to move into the Vine
City area. The City of Atlanta began numerous public housing projects as a response to the growing
population, but failed to properly maintain the properties. Residents protest against the
substandard living conditions, including Martin Luther King, Jr.. In the 1980s, Vine City began to
face a declining population and increasing number of empty public housing units.
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(1917) The Great Atlanta Fire of 1917 burns through Old Fourth Ward, displacing over 10,000 people.
Black residents move further west along Simpson Road (today’s Joseph E. Boone Boulevard) and settle
in the English Avenue/Vine City area. As black families attempt to move north of Boone Blvd., white
residents cause violence and bombings.
(1934) “The outstanding success of University Homes was due to the fact that University Homes was
made of a highly intelligent board of directors and an educational group, people who had been in
education for years and people who considered housing to be a part of good education.
“I might’ve joined [Mr. Hope] on a couple trips to Washington, helping him do what he needed to do.
But you must understand that the white project picked up and carried Mr. Hope along knowing they
might explain to Washington the needs of Negroes generally.” -Lorimer D. Milton, Atlanta businessman
and banker, hired by John Hope (president at time of Morehouse College) to head Department of
Economics and Business Administration, later on Board of Directors of University Homes.
(1937) (before University Homes is built, same area near Chestnut Road) “It was a kind of rough
neighborhood before they put the [University Homes] in. All down here, they used to call it Beaver
Slide and it was rough. It was really rough down here…People did anything they wanted to do, they
shoot crap into the street, and if you come along walking you'd better walk out of the street and
not try to go through them.” -Clara Render, resident.
(1938) “No one thought it was necessary to hire a [landscape architect] on a salary…to keep up the
entire grounds of a building…the Housing Authority was going to see that [Clark Howell Homes] was
done but it was so alien to the usual thinking around the city…” She says City Hall was the main
opposition to hiring landscape architects for these public housing projects. -Edith Henderson,
female landscape architect planning and designing team of Clark Howell Homes.
(1967) Spelman College economics professor Marcia L. Halvorsen publishes her project “An Analysis…on
Vine City…a Negro Slum Ghetto.” Her study finds only 20% of the homes are owned by their residents
and over 30% of families are paying mortgages—but these are the families considered more “well off”
than the rest of Vine City. A resident says “we do the best we can and that is all that can be
done—we just never know what will happen.”
An interviewer says “to me the house is in terrible condition. [The resident] is very satisfied with
the house. It is clean in the sense that she has swept and dusted plus straighted it up; but the
house needs painting, replastering, and a plumber.”
54% of families interviewed had lived in Vine City for five years or longer, so there is a strong
sense of community with the long-term residents. More are “afraid to complain about their housing
from fear of having to move or…facing a higher rent.”
(1974) Lyndon A. Wade sends Mayor Maynard H. Jackson a letter about the establishment of a new
Neighborhood Improvement Program. Under the Atlanta Urban League, NIP would focus on Vine City and
south Atlanta, establishing community parks and gardens, refurbishing public school facilities, and
working with the mayor’s office for sanitation and housing concerns.
(1978) The Department of Housing and Urban Development denies the city of Atlanta’s application for
a 300-housing unit under the Section Eight Program because it does not meet the Site and
Neighborhood Standards criteria that 1) the site has the utilities to accommodate residents and 2)
the site is a racially-mixed area and increases the minority-to-majority ratio. It is found that the
federal law prohibits housing development funds for areas of heavy minority concentration. The
property does not meet the “good market area” standards.
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(1989) Vine City starts to face a 12% decline in the total of housing units, translating to a
whole
devaluation of the black neighborhood. Vine City has a 56% increase in vacant units. Black
residents
continue renting homes from the difficulty of receiving loans for home purchasing.
SOURCES:
Urban Collage, Inc. 2006. “English Avenue: Community Redevelopment Plan Update.”
https://web.archive.org/web/20100710225129/http://www.atlantaga.gov/client_resources/government/planning/english%20ave/section%201.pdf.
Interview of L.D. Milton by E. Bernard West, “Oral history interview of L.D. Milton,” 1978, MSS
637.102.001, Living Atlanta oral history recordings, Atlanta History Center, Atlanta, Georgia.
Interview of Clara Render by E. Bernard West, “Oral history interview of Clara Render,” 1978, MSS
637.122.001, Living Atlanta oral history recordings, Atlanta History Center, Atlanta, Georgia.
Interview of Edith Henderson by Clifford M. Kuhn, “Oral history interview of Edith Henderson,” 1978,
MSS 637.069.001, Living Atlanta oral history recordings, Atlanta History Center, Atlanta, Georgia.
Halvorsen, Marcia L. “An Analysis and Interpretation of Data on the Social Characteristics of
Residents of “Vine City” - A Negro Slum Ghetto Within the City of Atlanta, Georgia,” 1967,
0000-0000-0000-0044, Box 100, folder 3, Vivian Wilson Henderson Papers, Robert W. Woodruff Library
of the Atlanta University Center, Inc. Repository, Atlanta, Georgia,
https://radar.auctr.edu/islandora/object/auc.044%3A0184?search=vine%2520city.
Letter from Lyndon A. Wade to Mayor Maynard H. Jackson about the Neighborhood Improvement Program,
1974, 0000-0000-0000-0025, box 121, folder 3, Atlanta Urban League Papers, Robert W. Woodruff
Library of the Atlanta University Center, Inc. Repository, Atlanta, Georgia,
https://radar.auctr.edu/islandora/object/auc.025%3A1023?search=vine%2520city.
Hanson, Camillus M. 1979, “An Investigation of Selected Project Activities Carried Out by the Bureau
of Housing and Physical Development in the Community and Human Development Programming of the City
of Atlanta,” Master’s thesis, Atlanta University.
Young, Kurt B. 1991, “Institutional Racism, Redlining, and the Decline of Six Atlanta Communities,”
thesis, University of Florida.