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October 16 1918 The Atlanta Constitution reported that the Red Cross was calling for local volunteers to construct 40,000 'flu masks' for patrons at the Southeastern Fair Association, then being held in Atlanta. Patrons were required to wear the masks to attend the fair, under a regulation adopted by the State Board of Health. The Red Cross also announced it was immediately opening a school of nursing in Atlanta, to teach elementary hygiene and home nursing to people to help with home emergencies brought on by the flu epidemic. Meanwhile Governor Dorsey called for a meeting of the State Board of Health to discuss statewide preventative measures. Still Atlanta had not been hit by the epidemic as badly as most cities its size; only 500 new cases had been reported in the previous week, most of them mild. [For more information on the pandemic, see PBS's The American Experience: Influenza 1918 web site.] 1930 Air passenger service was inaugurated between Atlanta, Dallas, and Los Angeles. 1968 Ivan Allen died in Atlanta, the city he loved so much and promoted so well. Allen was born in Dalton, Georgia on March 1, 1876. He became so successful at selling office supplies that he moved to Atlanta in 1895 to work for a larger firm. Allen eventually worked himself up through the ranks until he became the company's owner. He made the Ivan Allen Company into one of the largest office supply firms in the world, and was the creator of the one-stop department store concept. But as successful as he was in business, his passion was to promote Atlanta to the nation and the world. Serving in such positions as president of the Atlanta Chamber of Commerce and organizer of the Atlanta Rotary Club, he worked ceaselessly to present Atlanta as a great place to live and do business. In 1925, while Atlanta suffered under a sagging economy and many businesses were looking to Florida for the future, Allen organized the Forward Atlanta campaign. Within the span of three years some 17,000 new jobs were created in Atlanta. But Allen was not interested in business alone; he also collected rare maps, purchased and donated the land for Fort Mountain State Park, and even wrote two booklets explaining and praising Atlanta --Atlanta from the Ashes and The Atlanta Spirit. Throughout his life he continued to serve on various boards and committees, from government advisory positions to director of the Trust Company of Georgia. Allen never ceased singing the praises of Atlanta and almost daily walked its streets and conversed with its citizens around his home on Peachtree. 1973 Maynard Jackson was elected mayor of Atlanta -- becoming the first black mayor of a major southern city. 1976 Campaigning in Youngstown, Ohio, Jimmy Carter harshly responded to recent attacks upon him by President Gerald Ford. Carter read from a telegram he had sent the President, denying charges of wanting new income taxes, wanting to eliminate homeowner exemptions, advocating costly new programs, and wanting to drastically cut defense. Carter then told the enthusiastic crowd that "Mr. Ford knows that he is telling the American people things that are not true." Georgia towns and cities incorporated by acts approved on Oct. 16: 1891 Springville (Randolph County)
In Their Own Words on This Day. . . 1862 In Atlanta, D.C. Smith, Confederate Enrolling Officer for the 8th Congressional District, issued the following notice:
Source: Franklin M. Garrett, Atlanta and Environs: A Chronicle of Its People and Events (Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1969 reprint of original 1954 volume), p. 530. 1864 Col. Fredrick Winkler of the 26th Wisconsin Infantry wrote his wife from Atlanta:
Source: Civil War Letters of Major Fredrick C. Winkler, in 26th Wisconsin Infantry Volunteers Home Page January / February / March / April / May / June / July / August / September / October / November / December
© Carl Vinson Institute of Government, University of Georgia If you have a date related to Georgia history or people that ought to be included, or if know of entries that should be corrected, send a note to Ed Jackson or Charles Pou. Go to Yahoo/The History Channel's "This Day in History" page for Oct. 16 |
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