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An overview of the Atlanta History Center
The Atlanta History Center (AHC) is a museum that is situated in the Buckhead district of Atlanta. The Center is one of the main cultural institutions of Atlanta (Jones, Melton & Atlanta History Center, 2014). Located on a 33-acre land, the Atlanta History Museum is the center’s main attraction, which regarded as one of the most prominent museums in the Southeast. The Atlanta History Center has six exhibitions, including the 33 acres of gardens and over fifteen historic structures such as the Kenan Research Center, six historic gardens, Smith Family Farm, Centennial Olympic Games Museum, Tullie Smith House, Atlanta …show more content…
The fist worker, an archivist, was hot employed until 1936. In the year 1946, the Society bought a house that was located at 1753 Peachtree Street for the organization’s new officers (Jones, Melton & Atlanta History Center, 2014). In 1951, the Society received a huge financial support when McElreath died, living most of his $5 million estate to the organization. the donation was formally passed to the Atlanta Historical Society in 1965 when the wife of McElreath died. With the financial support, the Society bought the Edward Inman property in 1966, referred to as the Swan House. From its new location in the Buckhead neighborhood, and with larger financial resources, the Atlanta Historical Society expanded by constructing additional structures, and buying the 1840s Tullie Smith Farm (Jones, Melton & Atlanta History Center, 2014). The Society also hired additional staff and undertook many new functions. The organization also moved its former headquarters at the historic Peachtree Road house to Buckhead …show more content…
Through 1980s, the Atlanta Historical Society became more culturally and socially diverse and inclusive by working toward diversification of the board and addressing the histories of women, African Americans, and the working class through its exhibits and collections (Jones, Melton & Atlanta History Center, 2014). Alongside the changes in audience and content, the Atlanta Historical Society changed its name to Atlanta History Center in the year 1990. The name change serve to demonstrate that the organization was no longer an exclusive institution but rather an organization that welcomed all visitors (Jones, Melton & Atlanta History Center, 2014). In the year 1993, the Atlanta History Center opened the Atlanta history Museum, a facility that seats in a 300,00-square-foot land, featuring four permanent exhibits and two galleries of traveling exhibits drawn from the collections of the