Battle of Backbone Mountain

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Holland House (demolished). Built in 1842 or 1848, this was the oldest house in Atlanta still standing in the early 1900s.
1902 image from the Atlanta Journal

Holland House was a house in Atlanta, which, in the early 1900s, was the oldest house standing in the city. Different sources state that it was built in 1842[1] or 1848.[2] It originally had stood at the northeast corner of Whitehall (now Peachtree St. SE) and Alabama streets,[1] at the rear of the Republic Block.[3]

After its construction, it was sold to Edward W. Holland (b. 1807), a hotel owner,[1] and of the candy manufacturing firm Jack & Holland,[3] who then passed it along to his son.[1]

It was used by the engineers and other officers of the Western and Atlantic Railroad and it labeled in an 1881 book as the Engineer's Office. Later it was used as a boarding house - the first in Atlanta.[3]

The building was later moved to Peters Street (now Trinity Street),[1] across from Trinity Church[3] (which stood at the SW corner of Whitehall, now Peachtree St. SW - this would place the Holland House on the northeast side of today's Trinity Ave. between Peachtree and Forsyth). The site is now part of a parking lot.

References

External links

Media related to Holland House (Atlanta) at Wikimedia Commons

33°45′00″N 84°23′40″W / 33.750077°N 84.394314°W / 33.750077; -84.394314