- Rhodes Hall
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caption = Exterior view of Rhodes Hall, "the castle on Peachtree Street."
location = Atlanta
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built = 1904
added = 1974
governing_body =National Register of Historic Places Rhodes Memorial Hall, commonly known as Rhodes Hall, was built as the home of
furniture magnate Amos Giles Rhodes,proprietor of Atlanta-basedRhodes Furniture .Inspiration
The c. 1904
Romanesque Revival building was inspired by theRhineland castle s that Rhodes admired on a trip to Europe in the late 1890s. ArchitectWillis F. Denny II designed the unique home, incoprorating medieval Romanesque and Victorian designs as well as necessary adaptations for an early 20th-century home.Victorian architecture
Known as Le Rêve or "The Dream", Rhodes Hall is one of the finest intact expressions of late Victorian architectural design in Atlanta. The grandest feature of the interior is a magnificent series of stained and painted glass windows that rise above a carved
mahogany staircase . The three-panel series depicts the rise and fall of the Confederacy fromFort Sumter to Appomattox, and includesmedallion portrait s of over a dozen Confederate heroes.Features of house
The house cost Rhodes $50,000 to build in 1904. Wired for
electricity when it was built, Rhodes Hall is a prime example of the fascination that newtechnology held for Atlantans at the turn of the century. Over 300light bulb s light the entire house. The house also had electric call buttons in most rooms as well as asecurity system . [http://www.georgiatrust.org/historic_sites/rhodeshallhistory.htm] Among the materials used to build the home, the mahogany was from theWest Indies and the exteriorgranite was brought over in 500-pound (227kg) blocks in wagons fromStone Mountain , located about 25 miles or 40 kilometers east of Atlanta.Although Rhodes Hall is now surrounded by commercial buildings and heavy traffic, it has survived damage due to careful
historic preservation andrestoration efforts. After the death of Rhodes and his wife, their children deeded the house to thestate of Georgia , with a restriction that it be used for "historic purposes". Today, the home is used as a housemuseum and the offices of theGeorgia Trust for Historic Preservation . From 1984 to 1992, it was also a haunted house attraction every year forHalloween , prior to therenovation .External links
* [http://www.rhodeshall.org Rhodes Hall]
* [http://www.georgiatrust.org Georgia Trust for Historic Preservation]
* [http://www.nationalregisterofhistoricplaces.com/ga/Fulton/state3.html Fulton County listings] at [http://www.nationalregisterofhistoricplaces.com National Register of Historic Places]
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