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| Title | Bedford Pine |
| Photographer | Unknown
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| Description | View of unidentified children in the Bedford Pine neighborhood of Atlanta, Georgia. |
| Geographic Location | Atlanta (Ga.) Bedford Pine (Atlanta, Ga.)
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| Subject | Neighborhoods--Georgia--Atlanta Children--1970-1980 Clothing & dress--1970-1980 African Americans--1970-1980 Play (Recreation)--Georgia Teenagers--1970-1980 Basketball--Georgia--Atlanta City & town life--Georgia--Atlanta Houses--Georgia--Atlanta Dwellings--Georgia--Atlanta Poverty--Georgia--Atlanta
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| Date Original | 1971 January |
| Date Digital | 2006 |
| Type | 35 mm color transparency
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| Digital Format | JPEG |
| Catalogue Number | VIS 152.03.84 |
| Collection | Bedford-Pine Neighborhood Photograph Collection |
| Publisher | Kenan Research Center, Atlanta History Center, 130 West Paces Ferry Road, Atlanta GA 30305 |
| Rights | This material is protected by copyright law. (Title 17, U. S. Code) Permission for use must be cleared through The Kenan Research Center at the Atlanta History Center. Licensing agreement may be required. |
| Notes | Bedford Pine is an area in Atlanta, Georgia bounded by North Avenue on the north end, Highland Avenue to the south, Boulevard to the east, and Piedmont Avenue to the west. The area was annexed by Atlanta in 1870 and developed until a fire destroyed businesses and homes in 1917. After the fire, the neighborhood deteriorated in value and maintenance as middle class residents moved away and were replaced by people at or near the poverty line. Most of the structures in the neighborhood were destroyed during the 1960's and 1970's in urban renewal projects. New housing was constructed during the decades that followed, and Georgia Power Company chose the area for its headquarters in 1979. |
| Source | ahc152003084a.jpg |