Flat Rock is a historic African American community in DeKalb County, Georgia. It is located within the city of Stonecrest, as well as the Arabia Mountain National Heritage Area. Flat Rock is believed to be one of the oldest African American settlements in DeKalb County. In 1820, the area rested along the border of Creek and Cherokee Nation hunting grounds when it was settled during the Georgia Land Lottery. In 1865, after the end of the Civil War, the era of reconstruction provided opportunity for former enslaved people to stay in the area to build schools, churches, and civic organizations and create the tight knit African American Flat Rock Community. The community has continued to live in the area and have experienced the Black Codes, Jim Crow and the Great Migration. The area currently houses the Flat Rock Archives, which specialize in preserving African American rural history in Georgia.
In 1821, Revolutionary war soldiers and others acquired land through the Georgia Land Lottery and began to move into the area as Creek, Cherokee, and other natives were displaced. During this time, this area was described as a typical antebellum establishment and was located along the stagecoach route between Nashville and Augusta. Early settler, William Latimer established a stage coach stop in the area and incorporated a post office stop known as Latimer's Store April 26, 1832. [1] [2]
Early settlers have passed down stories of living along the border of the Creek and Cherokee Nation. It is recalled that the South River used to go by the name Weelaunee. [3] It is also noted that before the 1821 Creek cession that resulted in Henry and then DeKalb County, trails crisscrossed the area between the South and Chattahoochee Rivers. [4]
Flat Rock, Georgia, incorporated a post office in 1836. Henry Terry McDaniel (1810–1880) became the first postmaster of the Flat Rock post office in Henry County, Georgia. [5] Henry T. McDaniel and his brother Ira O. McDaniel operated the post office along with a small antebellum general store. Ira O. McDaniel took the role as post master of the Flat Rock post office February 6, 1844. [1] According to Ira McDaniel's unpublished manuscript, his father, Philip McDaniel was the first of the McDaniel family to move to the area where he owned a country residence situated on a high romantic hill near several acres of naked rock sprinkled with cedar trees. Ira stated that this area was called Flat Rock and gave name to the place and to the post office. [6]
In the antebellum days, this area was a desirable location for farm and plantation owners, and many included the practice of slavery. Some of these families include the paternal ancestors of Margaret Mitchell, author of Gone with the Wind , who moved into the Flat Rock area in the 1830s. Her great grandfather sold the initial farm to Ira O. McDaniel, father of Georgia Governor Henry Dickerson McDaniel (1836-1926). Revolutionary war veteran Joseph Emmanuel Lyon built a cabin on his property in the 1820s and the Lyon family continuously owned their farm and land until descendants transferred ownership of the still standing home to DeKalb county. And early settler Charles Latimer is the father of controversial figure Rebecca Latimer Felton.
During this time, country farms peppered the landscape and Ira O. McDaniel lived near many of his sisters, brothers, and parents at the center of the Flat Rock area from 1842 to 1848. In 1848, the Georgia Railroad reached Marthasville and Atlanta was born. Ira, along with A.W. Mitchell and Daniel William Herring built houses in the early Atlanta area of Whitehall and Hunter Streets. This is when Atlanta saw her first brick home built and Ira split his store merchandise between the Flat Rock store and Atlanta on a joint account. Two years later, the Flat Rock store and farm was losing profit, so Ira sold his stock in the area and moved the Flat Rock store merchandise to the Atlanta store and also took his slaves with him. At this time A.W. Mitchell, Edwin McDaniel, Henry McDaniel, Dr. Cheek, and George Key all moved out of the area in search of better financial opportunities.
During the Civil War, General George Steone Jr, sent Kenner Garrid's Division to the Flat Rock area in order to protect the Union rear during the Atlanta Campaign. Garrard's Raid to South River, Georgia, included the 7th Penn. Cavalry heading to Flat Rock Bridge, Georgia, July 28, 1864. [7] Union foraging parties also searched the area for supplies to bring back to the Union army while they occupied Atlanta. There was a skirmish between the Union and Confederate armies, on November 16, 1864, after Sherman's armies successfully defeated the Southern Confederate armies in the Battle of Atlanta, the March to the Sea, which included about 26,000 Union soldiers heading East traveled through the Flat Rock area where they crossed Snow Finger Creek and continued through Lithonia and Conyers. [8] Some Union soldiers described what they witnessed as they traveled the countryside in Sherman's March to the Sea which included the following: the area was peppered with freed slaves, venturing out of their cabins and plantations to meet the singing soldiers to celebrate what seemed to former slaves as the day of the Jubilee. Some freed souls claimed that Sherman was the Great Deliver, as one man claimed he had been waiting for this "Angel of the Lord since he was knee high", as he had come and freed them all. So many freed peoples overwhelmed the soldiers as they recalled seeing every type of person imaginable from old to young, mulatto to black, males and females. The soldiers wrote about seeing toothless aunties, old souls with gray heads, woman carrying their babies in their arms wearing old torn clothing and all running to thank the soldiers and embrace the flags which were flown by the many regiments and companies. The newly freed slaves, which seemed like thousands to the Union soldiers, ran after the troops to join the Army of the Lord to freedom. At every crossroad and plantation more freed people joined the crowds signing with the bands playing their instruments. [8] [9]
After the Civil War ended and the enslaved received word of their freedom, many African Americans stayed in the area and banded together into a tight-knit community which would prove successful and be later recognized as the African American Flat Rock Community. According to the Flat Rock Community Church, formerly known as the Flat Rock United Methodist church, the Flat Rock Community expanded rapidly during 1870s-1880s bringing in more African American families which included the Shumake, Hellums, Christians, and Syphos families from Morgan County and the Waits and Wise families from Butts county in 1887. [10]
The earliest known Flat Rock Methodist Episcopal church deed is from 1896, 16th District, DeKalb County and lists the church trustees as Samuel Folds, George Holt, Early Reed "and their Successors" acquiring land from a white landowner to own the land for the Flat Rock church. Later on July 7, 1909, the Flat Rock church trustees are listed as Flat Rock school trustees as shown in an agreement/deed signed by Burgress, Clerk and reads: "State of Georgia, DeKalb County, there is an agreement with trustees of the Flat Rock School, S.B. Bryant, H. Lyons and …. And they are acquiring land from white landowner Mr. South." [9]
During the Great Migration, Flat Rock resident, T.A. Bryant Sr. saw the need to keep the community together by encouraging others to stay in Flat Rock. He purchased 45 acres for $600 and sold it in pieces to family members and others so they could stay in the area. In an interview for NPR, Henry Louis Gates stated that "[Bryant] was trying to give them a stake in the South, a reason to stay, 'cause they were not going to own property in Pittsburgh, Detroit or Cincinnati, in Philadelphia or New York." [11]
Electricity and telephone did not come to the Flat Rock area until the 1940s. As a result, cold drinks and ice were considered a luxury. Community member Joe Kelly owned a small store next to the Flat Rock Ball Field. The luxury items that came out of his store included cold drinks, ice, snuff tobacco, cigarettes and cigars, sardines and crackers, potted meat, moon pies, and lots of candy. The Kelly's also had fresh cantaloupe and watermelon, sweet potatoes and white dirt (to white wash). [9]
Baseball had a huge presence within the community, with stories stemming from the days of the Early Flat Rock Church trustees like Spenser Bryant who lived during the late 19th century until the 1940s. Mr. Spenser Bryant had an area in their pasture that they leveled and drew a baseball diamond. This field would draw crowds from neighboring communities during weekends in the summertime. The communities would play baseball and picnic in the field. Being the businessman that he was, Mr. Spenser Bryant also rented out the area to churches in Atlanta. These congregations would come out and spend the day picnicking and playing in the field. [9]
Many main roads remained unpaved until the 1980s.
The Flat Rock Archive, located in Stonecrest, Georgia, is currently working to preserve the African American story in this area. One example is that after looking at the Lyon family that lived in the area, the archive concluded that in 1860, the Lyon farm had three slave houses located on the knoll east of the main house. According to Slave Schedules of 1860, the Lyons family had seventeen slaves. [12] One of these slaves is identified as Mary Lyon, who had a son by the name of Thee Lyon.
The Flat Rock Archive strives to preserve African American rural history in Georgia and is located in the home built by T.A. Bryant Sr., and donated by Reverend T.A. Bryant, Jr. The archive was established as a museum and resource to genealogical and historic research, as well as a heritage tourism site. In addition to preserving and cataloging artifacts, records, and oral histories related to the slaves, former slaves, and descendants in the community, the Flat Rock Archive maintains the nearby Flat Rock Historic Cemetery as a part of their mission.
The Flat Rock Archives consists of a variety of historic sites, most of which are connected by the paved, multi-use Arabia Mountain PATH trail. [13] [14] All of these sites are located within the Arabia Mountain National Heritage Area.
The T. A. Bryant, Sr. House and surrounding homestead are a centerpiece of the Flat Rock Archives and key to the story of the Flat Rock Community. The House was built in 1917. After Bryant, Sr. bought the land subsequently sold or leased small parcels off to other members of the Flat Rock community. In doing so, Bryant, Sr. gave people a stake in the South and kept the people of Flat Rock together. [15] [16] [17]
The Historic Flat Rock Cemetery is an important part of the Flat Rock community, with numerous people from throughout the community's history buried at the historic cemetery site. [18] A list of interred can be found on the Flat Rock Archives website. [19] This list only includes those that have been definitively placed in the cemetery. There are many more that do not have historical records.
In 2008, Dr. Jeffrey Glover of Georgia State University organized a cemetery mapping project with his Fall Archaeological Methods course students. [20] Glover's class worked with the local Flat Rock community and the Greater Atlanta Historical Society (GAAS) to clear the overgrowth from the cemetery. After the clearing, students documented the graves using standardized forms, digital cameras, and some stone rubbings. The graves were then mapped using a total station to create accurate GPS points within the cemetery. The project documented 202 graves total and of those 107 were unidentified fieldstones. [20]
Built in the 1820s by former British soldier Joseph Emmanuel Lyon, the Lyon House and homestead are key to Flat Rock's beginnings: people were enslaved here. The Lyon House underwent a stabilization effort in 2019-2019 and today is a part of Flat Rock tours. [21] [22] [23]
The Flat Rock Church was an important meeting place for the community for decades. While it is no longer standing, a new church has been built on the site and archaeologists and historians with the Flat Rock Archives are working to preserve its role in the community. [15] [24]
Name | Known for | Association to the Flat Rock Area |
---|---|---|
Lee Brown | 59th Mayor of Houston, criminologist and businessman | Direct descendant of early Gault family Flat Rock community members |
Willie Gault | NFL football player and track and field athlete | Direct descendant of early Flat Rock community members Reece Gault and Agnes Waits (born a slave) |
Warren Moon | NFL and CFL football player | Direct descendant of Early Flat Rock Methodist Church Trustee John Waits and Agnes Wise Waits |
Chris Tucker | Actor and stand-up comedian | Direct descendant of early Flat Rock Methodist Church trustee Spencer Bryant |
Ernest J Waits, Sr. 'Ernie' | Civil Rights pioneer, first African-American DJ in Cincinnati, Ohio | Direct descendant of Agnes Wise Waits |
Robert E. Wooten, SR. | Founded the Wooten Choral Ensemble in 1949 | Direct descendant of Floral Waits and early Flat Rock Methodist Church trustee John Waits |
Bobby Wooten | Music Producer | Direct descendant of Floral Waits and early Flat Rock Methodist Church trustee John Waits |
DeKalb County is located in the north central portion of the U.S. state of Georgia. As of the 2020 census, the population was 764,382, making it Georgia's fourth-most populous county. Its county seat is Decatur.
Decatur is a city in, and the county seat of, DeKalb County, Georgia, United States, part of the Atlanta metropolitan area. With a population of 24,928 in the 2020 census, the municipality is sometimes assumed to be larger since multiple ZIP Codes in unincorporated DeKalb County bear Decatur as the address. The city is served by three MARTA rail stations. The city is located approximately five miles northeast of Downtown Atlanta and shares its western border with both the city of Atlanta and unincorporated DeKalb County. The Druid Hills neighborhood is to the northwest of Decatur.
Lithonia is a city in eastern DeKalb County, Georgia, United States. The city's population was 2,662 at the 2020 census. Lithonia is in the Atlanta metropolitan area.
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Tucker is a city located in DeKalb County, Georgia, United States, located near Atlanta and was originally settled in the 1820s, and later developed as a railroad community in 1892. According to the 2016 United States Census Bureau annual estimate of resident population, it has a population of 35,322. In a November 2015 referendum, by a 3:1 margin (73.94%), voters approved incorporating Tucker into a city. In March 2016, Tucker residents elected the city's first mayor and city council.
East Atlanta is a neighborhood on the east side of Atlanta, Georgia, United States. The name East Atlanta Village primarily refers to the neighborhood's commercial district.
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Kirkwood is a national historic designated neighborhood on the east side of Atlanta, Georgia, United States. It is a historic streetcar suburb situated entirely in DeKalb County, bordered by the neighborhoods of Lake Claire, East Lake, Edgewood, and Oakhurst. Kirkwood is bound on the north by DeKalb Avenue, on the south by Memorial Drive and Interstate 20, on the west by Montgomery Street, and on the east by 1st Ave. A large part of the neighborhood is listed on the National Register of Historic Places as Kirkwood Historic District.
The DeKalb County School District (DCSD) is a school district headquartered at 1701 Mountain Industrial Boulevard in unincorporated DeKalb County, Georgia, United States, near Stone Mountain and in the Atlanta metropolitan area. DCSD operates public schools in areas of DeKalb County that are not within the city limits of Atlanta and Decatur. It will serve a portion of Atlanta annexed by that city in 2018 until 2024, when that portion will be re-assigned to Atlanta Public Schools (APS).
The Mall at Stonecrest is a super regional shopping mall along Interstate 20 in eastern Metro Atlanta that opened in 2001 on the growing I-20 corridor. It is off exit 75 in Stonecrest, Georgia, which became a city in 2017.
Winnona Park is a historic area in the southeast corner of the Atlanta, Georgia suburb of Decatur. It is listed as a historic district on the National Register of Historic Places, but it is not one of the City of Decatur's locally designated historic districts.
The Autrey Mill Nature Preserve & Heritage Center is located in Johns Creek, Georgia, U.S.A.
Smoke Rise is an upscale residential community in DeKalb County, Georgia, United States, located northeast of Atlanta in the City of Tucker, incorporated in 2016. It is located north of the city of Stone Mountain on the Eastern side of the city of Tucker. The main road through Smoke Rise is Hugh Howell Road. Smoke Rise is a part of the city of Tucker, and is near the Gwinnett-DeKalb county line. The local public schools are Smoke Rise Elementary School, Tucker Middle School and Tucker High School.
The Civil War Trust's Civil War Discovery Trail is a heritage tourism program that links more than 600 U.S. Civil War sites in more than 30 states. The program is one of the White House Millennium Council's sixteen flagship National Millennium Trails. Sites on the trail include battlefields, museums, historic sites, forts and cemeteries.
The Arabia Mountain Path (AMP) is a paved biking and hiking trail connecting sites within the Arabia Mountain National Heritage Area, built by the PATH Foundation. The trail covers more than 30 linear miles and features hills, sections of boardwalk, a serpentine bridge, and access to 13 free trail head parking areas. The AMP connects a number of visitor destinations and recreational areas including Panola Mountain State Park, the Monastery of the Holy Spirit, Davidson-Arabia Mountain Nature Preserve, the Mall at Stonecrest, and historic Lithonia, Georgia.
Stonecrest is a city in DeKalb County, Georgia, United States. The boundaries of the city generally lie in the far southeastern corner of the county, and a smaller portion just north of Interstate 20. The city borders the existing municipality of Lithonia, as well as Rockdale and Henry counties.
Hog Hammock is an African-American community on Sapelo Island, a barrier island of the U.S. state of Georgia.
The Flat Rock Archives is an African American historical museum located in the city of Stonecrest, Georgia. The mission of the archive is to preserve rural African American history in Georgia. The archive is located in a historic home built by T.A. Bryant, Sr., and was donated in 2005, by Rev. T.A. Bryant, Jr. and his sister, Zudia Guthrie, to preserve and store all the Flat Rock records and documents. It was established as a museum and resource to genealogical and historic research, as well as a heritage tourism site. The Flat Rock Archives consists of a variety of historic sites including the Flat Rock African American Historic Cemetery. All of these sites are located within the Arabia Mountain National Heritage Area. See Flat Rock, Georgia to learn more about the history of this area.
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