After
Before
click on each picture to enlarge it
Martin Luther King, Jr. was assassinated this date 49 years ago.
100 Cherokee
Street is a Cobb County Government
business building easily accessible to the public. You go there when you want to change
something on your property taxes, sit in on a commissioner's meeting, and more
(I just don't know what).
Before it
was owned by the county it was a built by Barnett Bank, which bought The First
National Bank and in time change its name.
Before the
Barnett Bank/First National Bank it was another banking institution, which I
don't recall the name.
The building
sits on the corner of Lawrence and
Cherokee Streets. Across Cherokee Street is the Strand Theater;
across Lawrence Street is another Cobb County Government building which was a
judicial building; and cater-cornered is Glove Park.
Before the
big white elephant building it was a
racial dividing line. Into the Marietta
Square were mostly white people. Down
Lawrence Street were mostly Afro-Americans, a pool hall, historical slave
started Mt Zion Church and a black -owned funeral parlor.
Afro-American
men were always standing around talking and not many feet away at the
courthouse white men always doing the same thing.
On April 4,
1968, Anna and were still newlyweds. We went
to see Odetta perform at Bottom of the Barrel in Atlanta on something like 9th
or 11th Street. We went in and was
waiting when the manager came out and said Odetta would not be performing
because Martin Luther king has been assassinated in Memphis, Tennessee.
Stunned, We
drove back to Cobb County.
Before going
home I wanted to drive up through downtown Marietta to see if anything was
going on because of the latest news.
We went
through the Square from Atlanta Street.
At the corner of Cherokee and Lawrence Streets was a big crowd of young
black men talking intensely.
I was
driving slsowly studying them when I ran a red-light, almost hitting a car
going through the green-light. I slammed
on my brakes making a loud skidding scream and at the same time held out my arm
to block Anna from ramming the dash. All
the young men looked up at me. I turned
left and we got the heck out of there.
We went
there to witness history, not to be part of it.
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