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Benjamin J. Davis
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Contractor Robert E. Pharrow
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View from East
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Terra cotta ribs w/ gaines
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Terra cotta gaine
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Odd Fellows Annex entry 2002
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Pediment of tower with construction date 1912
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Crown of Annex with construction date 1913
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Odd Fellows
Building and Auditorium
228-250 Auburn Avenue
Sweet Auburn Historic District
Atlanta, Georgia
Original Owner: Built
under the leadership of Benjamin J. Davis and the Grand Order of Odd
Fellows.
Built: 1912 - main building opened; 1913 - annex with auditorium
is opened.
Architect: William A. Edwards
Contractor: Robert E. Pharrow
Architectural Style: Jacobean Revival; the façade is embellished
with unique terra cotta figures.
Original Use: This building housed businesses along the street,
office space in the tower and also had a 1,296 seat auditorium and a roof
garden- the site of most of black Atlanta's dances and social functions
during the 1920's and 1930's.
Re-adaptive Use: The entire building was renovated in late 1980's.
The present day use of the auditorium and roof garden can be seen here:
http://atriumonauburn.com/
Recorded dates:
1903-The Atlanta Independent, a weekly newspaper
published by Benjamin J. Davis and the Grand Order of Odd Fellows makes
its appearance (latter to be located in this building). Benjamin Davis
was editor. The Atlanta Independent was closed in 1933,
consequently leaving
The Daily World
(1928) as the lone voice for the city's growing black community.
1912-The Odd Fellows Building is dedicated by
Booker T.
Washington.
1913 - Annex with auditorium is opened.
1914 - June 10. The Gate City Drug Store is opened in the new Odd
Fellows Building by Dr. Amos Moses. Visitors receive ice cream and
souvenirs.
1918- October. The Odd Fellows Hall Roof Garden closes due to
outbreak of Spanish Flu in the African American Community.
1921- June 2-4. The Auditorium Theatre in the Odd Fellows Annex
shows the movie Youth, Pride , Achievement- a motion picture about
African Americans in Atlanta.
1980's- The building was completely restored to its original
luster.
The Atlanta Chapter of the Grand Order of Odd Fellows,
a fraternal organization supporting and networking the black business
community, built this substantial building as their headquarters and to
provide much needed office, retail, professional, meeting and
entertainment space for African Americans in Atlanta. One of the major
black entrepreneurial centers in America, this well appointed building
provided space for The Gate City Drug Store (later Yates and
Milton; owned by the first black pharmacist in Georgia, Dr.Amos
Moses), Baileys Royal Theatre, Curry-Hall Haberdasher, the
offices of Dr. Shaw (Atlanta's first black optometrist), The Gate City
Barber Shop, Sportsmans Smoke House and the House of
Flowers to mention a few.
The Odd Fellows Auditorium in the Annex became a center for entertainment
as soon as it opened. The Royal Theatre was located in the Annex
and was the only movie house in Atlanta where Blacks could be seated on
the main floor. The roof garden created a space to dine and dance in an
elegant atmosphere.
The buildings were restored in the late 1980's and
established a benchmark for redevelopment in the Sweet Auburn Historic
District.
Other information sites:
http://www.atriumonauburn.com/
http://www.sweetauburn.com/Start.html
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