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Nine-Mile Circle

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The Nine-Mile Circle (today often called the "Nine Mile Trolley") was a streetcar line of the Atlanta Street Railway , later the Atlanta Consolidated Street Railway which went from downtown Atlanta to today's Virginia-Highland neighborhood as follows:

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22-699: The line started operation in late 1889, and was the second electric line in Atlanta, after the Edgewood line to Inman Park. The line was an extension of an earlier horsecar line: In its heyday in the 1890s, the Nine-Mile Circle line was one of the streetcar lines popular for pleasure trips. It also took visitors to the Cotton States and International Exposition in 1895, held in what is today Piedmont Park . At some point (it seems around 1901 as

44-400: A different state. The many elaborate displays reflected a diversity of views spanning the mainstream social and domestic roles of Southern women, such as patriotism and the ideals of traditional motherhood to little-known achievements of women counter to mainstream stereotypes. The Legion of Loyal Women display presented an arrangement of 45 dolls, each one adorned with a small shield showing

66-701: A founding member of the American Guild of Organists . Spencer was born in Newburgh , New York, to Cynthia McCollum and Timothy W. Spencer. She studied music in New York City with Alexander Lambert and Samuel P. Warren, then taught and worked as a church organist. She taught at the Dr. Holbrook’s Military School and Miss Fuller’s School for Girls in Ossining, and at Miss Spence’s School for Girls (today

88-516: A great deal of time on the streets looking at the strange crowds — American Indians, Circassians , Hindus, Japanese, and people from every corner of the globe — who had come as professional midway entertainers or fakirs. The exposition included many exhibits on Minerals and Forestry, Agriculture, Food and Accessories, Machinery and Appliances, Horticulture, Machinery, Manufacturers, Electricity, Fine Arts, Painting and Sculpture, Liberal Arts, Education, and Literature. About 6,000 exhibits were examined by

110-695: The New York City exhibit. An electric railway was built for the exposition by the Dixie Intramural Railway Company, founded and presided by Col. Ira Yale Sage . Pennsylvania 's first woman American architect , Elise Mercur (1864–1947) designed the Palladian style Woman's Building. The Women's Building showcased accomplishments of women throughout the South, and the country, in the areas of education, health care, and

132-644: The Spence School ) in New York City. She was an organist at Fourth Presbyterian Church, Lexington Avenue Baptist Church, and Pilgrim Congregational Church, all in New York City. Spencer chaired the music committee of the Professional Women’s League and served as vice president of the New York State Music Teachers Association, where she worked with Florence Sutro . She also chaired the music committee of

154-478: The 1895 Cotton States and International Exposition in Atlanta. In 1896, Spencer was one of 145 organists (and only four women) to found the American Guild of Organists. She gave organ recitals at churches throughout America, including two recitals at the 1901 Pan American Exposition . Spencer’s music was published by Oliver Ditson , G. Schirmer Inc ., James Hotchkiss Rogers , Novello & Co. (today

176-470: The Award Committee. The Awards Committee awarded a total of 1,573 medals: 634 gold medals, 444 silver medals, and 495 bronze medals. In late September Charles Francis Jenkins demonstrated an early movie projector called the " Phantoscope ." Organist and composer Fannie Morris Spencer chaired the exposition’s music committee. John Philip Sousa composed his famous march, " King Cotton ", for

198-513: The North and South." The exposition introduced new ideas to foster trade and collaboration between the Southern and Northern states and to also show ideas, products, and facilities to the rest of the nation and to Europe. The exhibitions presented prototypes for a hospital room, a nursery, a kindergarten classroom, and a model library—each one in working order. These functional rooms represented

220-652: The Transportation Building, and the United States Government Building. The grounds were designed by Joseph Forsyth Johnson . Over $ 2,000,000 was spent transforming the exhibition site. A pond was expanded to 11.5 acres (4.7 ha) Lake Clara Meer for the event. Tropical gardens, now known as the Atlanta Botanical Garden, were also constructed for the fair. The government allocated $ 250,000 for

242-534: The authors. On September 18, 1895, Booker T. Washington gave the "Atlanta Compromise" speech was an address on the topic of race relations . Washington's speech laid the foundation for the Atlanta Compromise , an agreement between African American leaders and Southern white leaders in which blacks would work meekly and submit to white political rule, while whites guaranteed that blacks would receive basic education and due process of law. The speech

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264-781: The construction of a government building. Many states and countries such as Argentina also had buildings. The Exposition was open for 100 days, beginning on September 18, 1895, and ending on December 31, 1895. It attracted nearly 800,000 visitors from the United States and thirteen countries. However, the exposition was plagued by financial issues. Walter McElreath described the fair in his memoirs: The railroad yards were jammed every morning with trains that brought enormous crowds. The streets were crowded all day long. Every conceivable kind of fakir bartered his wares. Dime museums flourished on every street   ... Vast stucco hotels stood on Fourteenth Street   ... I spent

286-412: The environments where women played important roles outside the home and family, and were equipped with the most up-to-date equipment, features, and furnishings. The model library included a collection of publications by women authors from every state in the nation. A photography exhibition featured portraits of women in every branch of literature, appended with a verse, letter, or section of a manuscript by

308-467: The exposition and dedicated it to the people of Georgia . December   26, 1895, was "Negro Day" at the exposition. Famed African American quilter Harriet Powers attended this day and met with Irvine Garland Penn , the chief of the Negro Building. The National League of Mineral Painters, with Adelaïde Alsop Robineau and Mary Chase Perry , contributed decorative objects and artwork to

330-1162: The exposition. Bradford Lee Gilbert was the supervising architect. He designed the Administration Building with the Main Entrance and Exits, the Agricultural Building, the Auditorium, the Chime Tower and Band Stand, the Electricity Building, the Fire Building, the Machinery Hall, the Manufacturers & Liberal Arts Building, the Minerals and Forestry Building, the Negro Building, the Semi-Circular Entrance and Exit Gateway,

352-610: The fine and decorative arts. Its exhibitions were curated by women from Georgia. The contents were contributed by women around the country. Women culled historical artifacts, decorative arts objects, and industrial products to compose displays in each room, including the Baltimore Room, the Lucy Cobb Room, Mary Ball Washington Tea Room, the Columbus Room, Model Library, Assembly Hall, and others, each assigned to

374-545: The line was frequently mentioned in the Atlanta Constitution and suddenly ceases to be mentioned after June 1901), service in a loop was discontinued (see map). Service to the area did continue as individual lines however: Cotton States and International Exposition The Cotton States and International Exposition was a world's fair held in Atlanta , Georgia , United States in 1895. The exposition

396-539: The name of a state, to illustrate the American Patriotic salute. Other displays posed a challenge to the roles of women and other social conventions. The Colonial Room presented utensils and furnishings, as well as Dolly Madison 's spectacles, a gun carried in the Battle of Concord , and brass medallions belonging to George Washington ; the display was said to represent "the growing bond of cooperation between

418-585: The opening of the exposition remotely by flipping an electric switch from his house in Massachusetts on September 18, 1895. The event is best remembered for the "Atlanta Compromise" speech given by Booker T. Washington on September 18, promoting racial cooperation. The idea for an international exposition in Atlanta was first proposed in November 1893 by William Hemphill , a former mayor of Atlanta. Hemphill served as vice president and director of

440-400: The park grounds remain largely as Joseph Forsyth Johnson designed it for the exposition. However, the stone balustrades scattered around the park are the only remaining part of the enormous main building. Fannie Morris Spencer Fannie Morris Spencer (August 15, 1865 – April 9, 1943) was an American composer and organist who wrote a collection of 32 hymns and was

462-418: Was designed "to foster trade between southern states and South American nations as well as to show the products and facilities of the region to the rest of the nation and Europe." The Cotton States and International Exposition featured exhibits from six states, including various innovations in agriculture and technology, and exhibits about women and African Americans. President Grover Cleveland presided over

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484-646: Was presented before a predominantly white audience and has been recognized as one of the most important, influential, and controversial speeches in American history. The Cotton States Exposition successfully showcased Atlanta as a business center and attracted investment to the city. After the exposition, the grounds were purchased by the City of Atlanta and became Piedmont Park and the Atlanta Botanical Garden . The buildings were demolished, but

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