- Hardy Ivy
Hardy Ivy (1779-1842) is said to be the first person of European descent to permanently settle in what is now the city of
Atlanta , GA.By 1821 the last of the Native Americans who held claim to the land east of the
Chattahoochee River ceded their land to the state of Georgia in the "Creek Indian Cession of 1821". West of the Chattahoochee remained Cherokee territory. Shortly thereafter the land was divided into square land lots of 202-1/2 acres each. In 1833 Mr. Ivy, from the Abbeville district ofSouth Carolina , purchased Land Lot 51 of the 14th district of what was then Dekalb County from Mr. James Paden for the sum of $225. At that time DeKalb County included all of what is now Fulton County in which most of Atlanta City limits currently resides and the lot itself is now bounded by Edgewood on the south, Park Pl. and Peachtree on the west, a line south of Ralph McGill on the north and old Fort St. on the east. His land lot was on the northeastern edge of the heart of the original downtown Atlanta. [cite book
last = Garrett
first = Franklin
authorlink =
coauthors =
title = Yesterday's Atlanta
publisher = E.A. Seemann Publishing Inc.
date = 1974
location = Miami, FL
isbn = 0912458356] It is presumed that Mr. Paden had not occupied the land previous to selling it to Mr. Ivy.At the time Mr. Ivy could not have known that his new real estate acquisition was destined to become the center of a major city. As the driving force behind the growth of the town that eventually became Atlanta was its location as the terminus point of the
Western and Atlantic Railroad which was chartered by the State Legislature of Georgia onDecember 21 ,1836 . Surveying for the railroad was begun in 1837 and by 1838 the now famous 'zero mile post' marking it's termination was placed in Land Lot 78 - just west of Mr. Hardy's holdings.Mr. Hardy built a double log cabin near where the Marriott Marquis hotel now stands at the corner of Courtland and Ellis Street presumbably shortly after he acquired the land. He was thrown from his horse and killed during the winter of 1841-1842. His estate was valued at $714.67. [Shavin, p.3] Ivy Street which is in the immediate vicinity of his cabin was named in his honor and remained so named until late in the 20th century when Ivy Street was renamed Peachtree Center Avenue to honor the newly developed mixed use building complex designed by
John Portman .Even though Mr. Ivy and his wife (Sarah Todd Ivy 1782-1886) were the first settlers within the area which was to become downtown Atlanta there were earlier settlers in the immediate vicinity, most notably Sarah Todd Ivy's brother and his wife - Richard and Martha Todd. The Todd family had settled nearby in 1823, ten years before Hardy Ivy purchased his land. But their landlot was just outside of the original Atlanta city limits when the city was incorporated by charter on December 29, 1847. The Todd's land lot (17 of the 14th district, also 202-1/2 acres) encompassed much of what is now known as the neighborhood of
Virginia-Highland and is well within the present city limits of Atlanta. Their descendants resided on the original Todd homestead site until the 1960s on what is now Greenwood Street. Mr. and Mrs. Todd were buried nearby and their graves still remain there today. The tiny parcel of land (1/14th of an acre) was donated by the Todd Family to the City of Atlanta in the 1930s as a 'city park'. The 'park' is located in the back yard of a suburban infill house built around 1990. Their graves bear one monument - a large stone 'log' approximately convert|6|ft|m long and bearing the inscriptions: Martha Todd 1802-1896 and Richard Todd 1792-1850.One of the oldest known roads in Atlanta 'Todd Road' is clearly indicated on many civil war maps and its route is a direct connection between the Ivy and Homestead and the Todd's. A small portion of 'Old Todd Road' still exists in the Virginia Highland neighborhood.
References
* Shavin, Norman, "Whatever Became of Atlanta?", Capricorn, 1984
Notes
External links
* [http://home.cfl.rr.com/cedwardjones/descendants_of_hardy_ivy.htm Descendants of Hardy Ivy]
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