Chattahoochee Hills Oral History Project. Dot and T.E. Stephens

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Chattahoochee Hills Oral History Project Dot and T.E. Stephens

Chattahoochee Hills Oral History Project Dot and T.E. Stephens Introduction Dorothy and Thomas Earl Stephens live in the Rico Community in Chattahoochee Hills, GA. They met at a Cake Walk (a community social where cakes were awarded as prizes) in 1941 in the building that is now Chattahoochee Hills City Hall. They married in 1942 and raised four children Elaine, Tommy, Nina, and Nancy. Dorothy is known to family and friends as Dot. She was born June 15, 1923 and grew up in Newnan, GA, in a modern home that had indoor plumbing, electricity, and rest room facilities. Dot moved to Rico with her family in 1941. Thomas Earl is known to family and friends as T.E. He was born July 15, 1921 in Rico and was raised on the family farm on Upper Wooten Rd, east of Rico Rd. As an adult, T.E. worked as a pipe fitter and later joined the Seabees, the Construction Battalions (CBs) of the United States Navy, and served during WWII. Dot and T.E. have been civic leaders in the community most all of their adult lives. They both served as officers in the Rico Civics Club and helped the community by raising funds and support to pave the roads, install telephone service, make improvements to the community center, and raise funds for students to go to Washington D.C. Dot and T.E. Stephens (2009) Dot and T.E. Stephens celebrate their anniversary (c. 2002) Chattahoochee Hills Historical Society Stephens Oral History 09/25/09 Introduction - 1

T.E. (left) on the family farm T.E.'s father on the family farm (April 9, 1944) T.E. age c. 10~12 Dot in front of her childhood home in Newnan T.E. and Dot Stephens T.E. and Dot Stephens Chattahoochee Hills Historical Society Stephens Oral History 09/25/09 Photo Album - 2

Stephens Family Photo Pictured front row left to right: Tommy, Nancy, Nina. Pictured back row left to right: Elaine, Dot, T.E. Stephens Family Photo in front of Dot and T.E.'s home Stephens Family Photo Chattahoochee Hills Historical Society Stephens Oral History 09/25/09 Photo Album - 3

Chattahoochee Hills Oral History Project Dot and T.E. Stephens Interview * * * Date: September 25, 2009 Interviewer: Laurie Searle

Table of Contents 1. About the Oral History Project... 1 2. The Jefferson Hotel... 2 Dot visits T.E. during his furlough at the Jefferson Hotel in Richmond, VA. 3. Meeting at the Cake Walk... 3 Dot and T.E. meet at a Cake Walk in Rico. 4. T.E. Joins the Service... 4 T.E. served in the Seabees, the Construction Battalions of the U.S. Navy. 5. Wedding Day... 5 The couple marries at the courthouse in Newnan, GA. 6. Birth of First Child... 5 T.E. receives an announcement while in a foxhole. 7. Living in Rico... 6 Dirt roads, and primitive lifestyle. 8. The House... 9 Making a house a home. 9. Rico Cemetery... 10 Another cemetery called Piney Woods. 10. Dancing, Egg Boilings, and Practical Jokes... 11 Having fun as young adults. 11. Rico Civic Club... 12 Doing good works for the community. 12. Political Leaders... 13 Candidate forums and building roads. 13. Advice for Young People... 15 Be kind to each other. Appendix Bill Melear is honored advocate for South Fulton Parkway... 16 Chattahoochee Hills Historical Society Stephens Oral History 09/25/09 Interview - i

Track 1 About the Chatt Hills Oral History Project Overview Laurie Searle (LS) Welcome to the Chattahoochee Hills Oral History Project. The project is an effort to connect our past with our present through the sharing of stories. Each oral history is conducted using a conversational style of interview to give the audience the sense of sitting around a kitchen table, listening to their neighbors talk about the good old days. Each project includes: Index with an overview of the interview Digital audio recording of the interview Transcription of the interview Photographs and references About the Subjects 00:38 The interview subjects have a strong connection to our community. They may have grown up here, come here later in life, or only lived here for a short time, but one thing is for certain they love the community. About the Interviewers 00:53 The interviewers are members of the Chattahoochee Hills Historical Society. We are not professional historians; however, we have a passion for preserving and sharing the history of our community. About the Audio Recording 01:06 The digital audio for the oral histories are available on the Chattahoochee Hills Historical Society Web site: www.chattahoocheehillshistoricalsociety.org. (See: Collections>Oral History>Dot and T.E. Stephens). They are also available on loan via CD at the Rico Community Library. About the Copyright 01:25 The Chattahoochee Hills Historical Society owns all materials associated with the Chatt Hills Oral History Project. The public may use the material to learn about our history and may reproduce one copy per person without written permission or charge. No materials may be further reproduced for private or commercial use without the express written permission of the Chattahoochee Hills Historical Society. Chattahoochee Hills Historical Society Stephens Oral History 09/25/09 Interview - 1

Track 2 THE JEFFERSON HOTEL Laurie Searle (LS): Today is September 25, 2009 and I m at the home of Dot and T.E. Stephens in the Rico Community of Chattahoochee Hills, Georgia. My name is Laurie Searle, and I ll be asking the Stephens some questions about growing up in this area and about their work in the community s civic club. The interview begins with Dot describing a picture hanging in her dining room of the Jefferson Hotel in Richmond, VA. 00:30 (LS): I want you to tell me the story about that drawing you have hanging up there. 00:32 Dot: Well T.E. got one leave; no he got two leaves when he went in service. He got one that s in March. He was getting out of boot came in Williamsburg. So he wrote me to meet him in Richmond. Well, we didn t have a name of the hotel, all we knew was he was right there at Richmond and he didn t have time enough to come home. So he wrote me and told me to meet him in Richmond and for me to check into the motel and he d find me. When I got to Richmond, it was full of service people because so many service people were on furloughs. So when I got to Richmond I went to the Jefferson (hotel) and I got off the elevator off the top of the stairs and there was a balcony all the way around. So I stepped out on that balcony to see, and T.E. was down in this sea of white sailor caps and I spotted him in that crowd and he spotted me. And that s how we met in Richmond. 02:05 LS: And what s the name of the hotel? 02:10 Dot: The Jefferson. That hotel s always meant a lot to me. So my son-in-law (my granddaughter married), she married an artist. And so one Christmas, he did that painting for me (it s a drawing). He went over there and made pictures and he gave that to us for Christmas one year. 02:40 LS: And tell me what year it was that you and T.E. met up (in Richmond)? 02:45 Dot: It was 1942. (Later Dot recalls the year was 1943.) Chattahoochee Hills Historical Society Stephens Oral History 09/25/09 Interview - 2

Track 3 MEETING AT THE CAKE WALK LS: Tell me how you met. 00:04 Dot: At a Cake Walk. It was a school event. 00:08 LS: Up at the corner there? 00:10 Dot: No it was where city hall is. It was just a little four room school then. 00:20 LS: So you both lived in the community? 00:23 Dot: Yes. I had moved up here from Newnan (Georgia) in January of 1941 but he was already living up here. 00:30 TE: I ve been here 80 years. 00:38 LS: Where did you grow up? 00:40 TE: I grew up on a farm. 00:42 Dot: Over there where the road is closed now, by the softball field. It came out way over yonder (by Cochran Mill Park). 01:05 LS: Upper Wooten Rd is what it was called. (Looking at a topographical map, you can see that Upper Wooten Rd used to run from Rico Rd, through what is now Cochran Mill Park, out to Cochran Mill Rd. Today, a portion of Upper Wooten Rd is now privately owned.) 01:07 Dot: My brother (Bill) and I walked up to the Cake Walk and I met him (T.E.). Chattahoochee Hills Historical Society Stephens Oral History 09/25/09 Interview - 3

Track 4 T.E. JOINS THE SERVICE LS: Have you always lived here as a married couple? 00:04 Dot: After he came back from WWII. He served two and a half years. Elaine wasn t born He went in service, they called him in March and she was born in October. And he didn t see her until she was two years, one month, and three days. 00:28 LS: What branch of service were you in? 00:35 TE: I was in the Marines then, but I was in the Navy Reserves working in Tampa as a pipe fitter in the Navy yard there, and we ll start off there. And I worked there and got a deferment. I didn t want to go in as a buck private, you know. I heard about this Navy Reserves that you could go in as a pipe fitter. And I was a first class pipe fitter you know. There was about 10 of us that went to Jacksonville and got sworn in after we heard about it and signed up for it. So I went in as a first class petty officer. I went in with a good rating, you know. And you got 20 percent on top of that for being overseas. 01:30 LS: That s a pretty good deal, not to have to go in as a slick sleeve. But to not see your first baby until she s two years old, that s something! 01:47 TE: Yes, I was 21 years old when I got married. (Dot was 19). Chattahoochee Hills Historical Society Stephens Oral History 09/25/09 Interview - 4

Track 5 WEDDING DAY TE: I told my boss man in the Navy yard, I said, I got to go to Rico, back to Georgia, to see about some property, I m going to get married (T.E. joked). 00:10 Dot: We married at the courthouse. We were going to get married at Palmetto Methodist Church, but he was having to make such a quick trip up here and back, we didn t have time, so we went to the courthouse in Newnan and got married. We had more people there than we would have had a church because at that time we were still well known in Newnan. So when people saw us going into the courthouse, they knew something was going on because my Daddy had to go with us to sign for me to get married. People were at the porch around the courthouse, people were looking in the windows and the hall and everything, we had a crowd of people. And then we road an all-night train, taking us all night and part of the next day to get back to Tampa. The train had wooden seats and a straight up back. And we didn t have a pillow or anything. And that s where we spent our wedding night. Track 6 BIRTH OF FIRST CHILD LS: When you had your children, which hospital did you use? 00:09 Dot: Elaine was born at home with Dr. Tanner at my mother s home. 00:52 TE: I wasn t here then. (T.E. was in the military.) There was a Red Cross girl, she had to crawl a half of mile or better to tell me I had a baby girl. I ll never know whether she got back or not, because we couldn t even get out of our foxholes. And she crawled a half a mile or better to tell me, I had a baby girl. That was in Guadalcanal, during our first invasion. I was with the Marines then. Chattahoochee Hills Historical Society Stephens Oral History 09/25/09 Interview - 5

Track 7 LIVING IN RICO Dot: We moved out here in January 1941 and everything was a dirt road. The only thing paved close around was Hutcheson Ferry Rd and it had just been paved by the CCCs (Civilian Conservation Corps) through the government. And he worked for them for a while. Because it was a depression then like you ve never seen. 00:27 LS: I bet the roads weren t nice gravel roads like they are now. 00:32 Dot: They weren t nice gravel roads, they were dirt. 00:34 LS: So when it rained, it turned into a big old muddy mess, right? 00:38 Dot: Over where Ken Langley lives (on Campbellton Redwine Rd, north of Rico Rd) our preacher, if it had rained (Rev. Langley was our pastor) and every time it would rain, and he started up that hill. See, there wasn t all these other roads that bring you to Rico. There was that one (Upper Wooten), and this one (Rico Rd), and Campbellton Redwine, and that s how you got into Rico. My Daddy, he was a politician. He would talk to anyone to get them to do what he wanted done. 01:14 LS: Tell me, what is your relationship to Bonnie Goode s father? 01:19 Dot: That s my brother, Bill Melear. 01:25 TE: She s got another brother who runs a barbecue place over on 85 in Fayetteville (Georgia). 01:35 Dot: But he got the roads paved, he got the telephone service out here. 01:38 TE: Me and him were the only ones to have a telephone here in Rico. 01:40 LS: I heard that. Bonnie (Goode) has a picture of her talking on the first phone in Rico. Chattahoochee Hills Historical Society Stephens Oral History 09/25/09 Interview - 6

01:50 Dot: I used to have one of those little insulator things that go on the top of the telephone pole and I kept it when the school up here closed. It was open for a little while after we moved out here. The little black children had to walk to Palmetto. And so as he (her father) went to work, he was running the barbecue place, he and Mamma would go to work, they would pick them up and they would ride in the back seat or in the truck or whatever they were in and take them to Palmetto to school. And he said this is ridiculous, I m going up and get a school bus. So he got the school bus to run out here for the little African American children. That was just a few of the major things out here. 02:44 LS: Now you all lived here before electricity came, didn t you? 02:48 Dot: No, it came in about a year or two before. It came in the late 30s, I think. 03:04 TE: We didn t have any electricity (growing up). They didn t have any electricity where I lived. 03:12 LS: It took a while to get up there then. 03:16 Dot: All we had, now I came out of Newnan where we had a bathroom, we had everything, and nice looking pictures and everything. We moved out here and there was just a string with a bulb hanging down for your light. It was very primitive. 03:33 LS: And what about your restrooms, your washrooms? They were outside? 03:41 Dot: (She laughs). We have seen a lot of changes. 03:55 LS: When I had (previously) talked to Joe Smith, he told me they used to have to fill the oil lamps because they didn t have electricity. 04:03 Dot: When we first moved out here, I cried. Just before turning 18. 04:10 Chattahoochee Hills Historical Society Stephens Oral History 09/25/09 Interview - 7

LS: Because you were so used to having all the normal comforts? 04:14 Dot: Yes, we had (in Newnan) paved streets and sidewalks. 04:17 LS: So this was real country. 04:20 Dot: Definitely. 04:22 LS: What about all the trees? Where there as many trees back then? 04:25 Dot: We had more trees. 04:30 LS: And lots of crops that peopled farmed? Did they farm cotton? 04:45 TE: We used to raise cotton. 04:49 LS: Did you have to pick it too? 04:54 TE: Yes. (We d) Plow all day, and then run to Rico, and back three miles. We d plow all day, I mean from sun up to sun down. Then we d run to Rico, us kids, the two of us anyway. We d run to Rico three miles with a nickel, find some egg nests, bring them down there, and we d get a piece of candy. 05:35 LS: And I bet you didn t have big plow equipment either, I bet you had the hand plows. 05:46 TE: We had to do it all by hand. We didn t have any tractors. 05:49 LS: Did you have horses or mules to help you? 05:52 TE: We had mules. Well Daddy was a horse trader. On Monday morning he d go to Fairburn Chattahoochee Hills Historical Society Stephens Oral History 09/25/09 Interview - 8

and come back with one or two, they never had a bridle on them, never had nothing on them. And by noon time, we were plowing. Track 8 THE HOUSE LS: Did you all have ice boxes back then or did you have regular refrigerators? 00:05 Dot: We had ice boxes. 00:45 LS: So did somebody come through with those big ice cubes? 00:13 TE: We had an ice man come through every once a week. 00:16 Dot: This is the original part of this house. You see this house is over 100 years old. This was my kitchen. It was much smaller then because we had this wall moved over so I d have room for my cabinets. And my ice box sat right here. And you had a pan under it. If you didn t have a big pan, you had water on the floor. And we had kerosene stove over here, and in that corner we had a little two-eye burner. And between that and my kerosene stove, that s what I had to cook on. 01:07 TE: And that s where we had our first hot water. We had a coil in the heater that furnished water, and nobody else in Rico had hot water. 01:18 LS: So you were the first with hot water too, huh? 01:20 TE: We were the first with hot water. And we had a (security) light out here. That was the first security light in Rico and on this side of the River. It cost $7 a month, and it s still $7 a month and they keep it up, you know. Chattahoochee Hills Historical Society Stephens Oral History 09/25/09 Interview - 9

Track 9 RICO CEMETERY LS: People wanted me to ask you if you knew anything about the cemetery that s across the street (on Rico Rd across from the softball field). 00:09 Dot: Well that cemetery was already there when we moved out here. My Daddy s property included that cemetery. And so when they paved Rico Rd, they wanted to straighten it out so Daddy swapped property and that cemetery had a lot of big tall tombstones, but I don t remember any of the names. And it was called Piney Woods, just like that one on beyond where John (Smith s) Store is (on Kite Rd). People stole the tombstones. I don t know whether there s any at all in there now. 00:48 LS: There s just a few. Was it a community cemetery or was it attached to a church? 00:54 Dot: As far as I know it was (a community cemetery) there wasn t a church there. See I was 18 years old when we moved out here. 01:01 LS: Those two houses weren t there either so it must have just been open fields. 01:09 Dot: It was just fields. Like I said there was the house on the corner and our house and then there wasn t another until you got past where Mary France (White) lives. Her Mamma and Daddy s house was the first one up next to the store (Barns Store was across the street from where Chattahoochee Hills City Hall now is, on Rico Rd). And Roy, Mary Frances Daddy, owned that store. 01:27 TE: My sister and her husband owned all that before Roy (Barns) bought it. 01:33 Dot: And that old house the other side of the store is where they lived. And that was his family s home place. 01:45 TE: Aunt Ida was his Mamma and Aunt Fanny was his aunt. They lived there in that house. Chattahoochee Hills Historical Society Stephens Oral History 09/25/09 Interview - 10

Track 10 DANCING, EGG BOILING, AND PRACTICAL JOKES LS: Look, Dot s got a picture of Cochran Mill. 00:05 Dot: A friend painted that. 00:08 LS: Is that how you remember it? 00:12 Dot: Yes, that s it. And there was a house built out there in the middle of the lake. We used to, after there was nobody living in it, we had no dates. A gang of us young people would just get together and we d go out there and have dances. We d have someone around to play the fiddle and we d have dances. And we used to have egg boiling. 00:39 LS: Tell me about your egg boiling down on the River. 00:42 Dot: Well, just a bunch of us would get together. Everybody brought eggs, if they had them. And we d go down to the river and take a can, and light a fire and just boil eggs in them. And we called them egg boiling. It was a fun time back then. You didn t have to have plans. You didn t have to have these elaborate parties. We had watermelon cuttings. And some of the boys would go to the fields and get watermelons. And so one night, Rocky s Daddy (Earl Reeves) we were down there in some of his fields. Mr. Reeves said he was going get us. So one night we were out there, and they were just making a racket and just pulling jokes, the boys were. 01:33 TE: Claude Bryant lived up there on the hill, there s no house there now, there s trees there, that s where they lived. So we went down there one night to get some ribbon cane. And Claude Bryant had a coarse voice. And Earl shot up over our heads and old Claude said, Oh, I m shot, Oh, I m shot. Well they didn t find Earl for two weeks. He stayed in a cave across the road from him, from where Rocky (Reeves) lives. He stayed in a cave over there for two weeks. He didn t come to the store or nothing. 02:17 Chattahoochee Hills Historical Society Stephens Oral History 09/25/09 Interview - 11

LS: He was just playing a practical joke? It s funny. TE: It s funny now, but it wasn t real funny then. I won t ever forget it. 02:27 Track 11 THE RICO CIVIC CLUB TE: On the Civics Club, I was president and she was vice present. 00:05 Dot: It was the other way around (she laughs). 00:15 TE: It met at the school house (where Chattahoochee Hills City Hall is now) where she was dietitian and drove the bus, the only bus that Rico had. So we d have our meetings in the dining room in there, and everyone in the community was there. 00:30 Dot: They had closed the school by that time. 00:36 TE: They wanted to do away with the old part of the school. 00:40 Dot: No honey, the county didn t want to do anything with the old school. It was in bad shape and had leaks and such. And we were on to them to open it and let us use it for a recreation center or something like that. Well we got the library started. 01:24 TE: Me and her were in charge of the Civic Club and we had the county commissioners down. They wanted to do away with the old part of the school house, but we didn t want to give in. Then they wanted to build us a new building on this triangle of land the county owned (by the Parkway). We said no, we ve got a building. So we finally wound up getting a new top put on it. And that saved the city a lot of money. What we got done. 02:15 LS: How long ago do you think that was? Chattahoochee Hills Historical Society Stephens Oral History 09/25/09 Interview - 12

02:19 Dot: It s been a long time. 02:33 TE: We got the building renovated inside, floors, lights, ceiling and painted inside (when it was turned into a recreation building). We got the whole inside renovated a new top put on it which saved the city a lot of money. If you d have to done all that, it would have cost you a lot of money, because that s a big top. 02:58 Dot: And we re the ones that got the county to buy this property out here for the ball field. 03:08 LS: Because that was adjoining your father s property. 03:13 TE: Mr. Lloyd has his name put on it. 03:20 Dot: I m so glad that they finally put something up for Bill (a portion of South Fulton Parkway was named for Bill Melear). 03:24 TE: Well we got all that done with the school house before we gave up the Civics Club. That s about it. 03:35 LS: Well I just guess we need to make you honorary lifetime members of the Chattahoochee Hills Civic Club since you were the founders of it in the community. Track 12 POLITICAL LEADERS DOT: You know Judge Sears? (Leah Ward Sears is the former Chief Justice of the Georgia Supreme Court. When she was first appointed as justice in 1992, she became the first African- American female Chief Justice in the United States.) We had a meeting of the Civic Club. We met out here in this building on the corner out here (which is now the Scout Hut), and it was in Chattahoochee Hills Historical Society Stephens Oral History 09/25/09 Interview - 13

the summer time. We invited the candidates that were running for office. Right out there is where she gave her first campaign speech. See where she is today. 00:20 LS: A lot of great people come through Rico, huh? 00:22 Dot: My Daddy had, I don t know how many big shots, or big dogs, down here to speak to the Civic Club. 00:33 LS: And I heard that Bill Melear (Dot s brother) had a lot to do with the South Fulton Parkway. 00:38 Dot: That s right. Bill worked really hard and he was on the telephone a lot. 00:45 LS: The Parkway has just made the difference in opening up our community to Atlanta so people can work there and live here. 00:55 TE: There s a whole page (in our scrapbook) about Bill and the Parkway. He was president of the civic club. (See appendix.) 01:00 Dot: You know he had taken over the barbecue place from Daddy a few years before that. But Bill, you know, we never would have the Parkway if it wasn t for Bill. 01:12 LS: Well that s so neat that they named that little section after him. 01:18 Dot: T.E. and I met with Michael Hightower back then (Fulton County Commissioner). And Michael and T.E. and I, and someone else I ve forgotten, we met with Joey Byrd up at the office one Saturday morning. Joey come to me and told me, We need to get something going to remember and honor him (Bill Melear). This was before Bill died, way before he died. We went to the Atlanta Regional Commission down on the north side of town. We went up there one day and got a hold of the people (working on South Fulton Parkway) and said, We want something done. Bill s done so much on that road we want it named for him. (The section of South Fulton Parkway from Rivertown Rd to Cochran Mill Rd is now named after Bill Melear). Chattahoochee Hills Historical Society Stephens Oral History 09/25/09 Interview - 14

Track 13 ADVICE FOR YOUNG PEOPLE LS: What would you tell new people who would want to come and live here today? 00:05 Dot: Have a lot of love. And never fight over money. Money causes more divorce. What you have share it. I don t buy anything without his approval, and he does not buy anything without my approval. 00:31 LS: It looks like a lot of people just go off and do excessive stuff when they really have everything they need. 00:39 Dot: Be ready to make an adjustment to your life when you marry. You re a pair, you re not single. And you have to remember that. So many people rush into marriage. 00:57 LS: It s a partnership, isn t it? 00:59 Dot: It is, it s got to be. ***End of Interview with Dot and T.E.*** Chattahoochee Hills Historical Society Stephens Oral History 09/25/09 Interview - 15

BILL MELEAR IS HONORED AS ADVOCATE FOR SOUTH FULTON PARKWAY At long last, South Fulton Parkway is complete The Citizen.com: http://www.thecitizen.com/node/7991 Mon, 07/03/2006-8:06 a.m. By: Ben Nelms It was quite the occasion. An endless list of South Fulton civic and political leaders, residents and guests took their places at the intersection of Rivertown Road and South Fulton Parkway June 29 for the grand opening of the South Fulton Parkway. Also attending were family members of decades long parkway advocate, Bill Melear, who was honored during the ceremony and again after the ribbon cutting that opened the parkway. A sign marking the Bill Melear Parkway was unveiled along the roadway at the end of the ceremony. The ceremony marked the completion of phase 5 of the 20 mile parkway, extending the four lane portion of the highway from Rivertown Road to Cochran Mill Road. Already four lanes from I 285 to Rivertown Road, the completion of the $4.9 million phase 5 that began in 2003 extends those four lanes even further toward Douglas County. Playing off Commissioner Bill Edwards constant mantra that Good things are happening in South Fulton, Cliftondale Community s Bruce Moody told the large audience that great things are now happening. Smiling in response, Edwards later said South Fulton is a jewel and we are not going to give it away. Edwards and others thanked the family of Bill Melear for attending, noting Melear s unrelenting insistence that the parkway be built. That accomplishment, reflective of Edwards statement, does not come without other realizations inherent in the political and development landscape that now exists in metro Atlanta. We promised we would protect the parkway, said South Fulton Concerned Citizens Sandra Hardy. And that promise will continue. More of the parkway s history was provided by Palmetto Mayor Clark Boddie and Fairburn Mayor Betty Hannah. It used to be referred to as the road to nowhere. Now it s the road to everywhere, Boddie said. Chattahoochee Hills Historical Society Stephens Oral History 09/25/09 Appendix - A

Even for those unfamiliar with the area or the parkway s history, it was obvious that the occasion was significant. Fulton County Fire Department Color Guard set the tone for other speakers, including Fulton County Commissioner Rob Pitts, Georgia Dept. of Transportation s Angela Parker, Bill Davenport with South Fulton Parkway Alliance, Chattahoochee Hills Steve Nygren and South Fulton Chamber of Commerce President and CEO Leslie Hamrick. This opens the highway to prosperity and development, said Pastor Warren Henry, Fulton County Chaplain. The plan to construct the South Fulton Parkway was adopted in 1979 by Atlanta Regional Commission as a part of the 1975 Regional Development Plan to guide the growth of South Fulton. Constructed in five phases beginning in 1989, the project had a total cost of $44.5 million. The parkway continues past Cochran Mill Road as a two lane highway, entering Douglas County at the Chattahoochee River. # # # Chattahoochee Hills Historical Society Stephens Oral History 09/25/09 Appendix - A