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Buckhead, Atlanta : ウィキペディア英語版
Buckhead

Buckhead is an affluent uptown district of Atlanta, Fulton County, Georgia, comprising approximately the northern fifth of the city. Buckhead is a major commercial and financial center of the Southeast, and it is the third-largest business district in Atlanta, behind Downtown and Midtown. The district's highrise office buildings, hotels, and condominiums form a highly urbanized core along Peachtree Road. Surrounding this dense core are Buckhead's suburban neighborhoods, which feature large single-family homes situated among dense forests and rolling hills.
==History==
In 1838, Henry Irby purchased 202 1/2 acres surrounding the present intersection of Peachtree, Roswell, and West Paces Ferry roads from Daniel Johnson for $650. Irby subsequently established a general store and tavern at the northwest corner of the intersection. The name "Buckhead" comes from a story that Irby killed a large buck deer and placed the head in a prominent location.〔( WABE-FM: Sam Massell – How Buckhead Got Its Name )〕 Prior to this, the settlement was called Irbyville.〔〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Atlanta, Georgia – History, historic )〕 By the late 1800s, Buckhead had become a rural vacation spot for wealthy Atlantans.〔(Buckhead History )〕 In the 1890s, Buckhead was rechristened Atlanta Heights but by the 1920s it was again "Buckhead".〔"In the eighteen-nineties an effort was made to change the name to Atlanta Heights, but it would not go. The people preferred the picturesque name of Buckhead." in (''The Atlanta Historical Bulletin'', Volume 1 (1927), p.26 )〕〔(Google News Archive search for "Atlanta Heights" )〕
Buckhead remained dominated by country estates until after World War I, when many of Atlanta's wealthy began building mansions among the area's rolling hills. Despite the stock market crash of 1929, lavish mansions were still constructed in Buckhead throughout the Great Depression. In 1930, Henry Aaron Alexander built one of the largest homes on Peachtree Road, a house with 33 rooms and 13 bathrooms.〔(ppbuckhead.html )〕 The community was annexed by Atlanta in 1952, following an earlier attempt by Mayor William B. Hartsfield in 1946 that was voted down by residents.〔
Buckhead's black neighborhoods, including Johnsontown, Piney Grove, Savagetown and Macedonia Park, were razed beginning in the 1940s.〔(Scott Henry, "Buckhead's black past: Historians are finding a rich African-American history in Atlanta's whitest neighborhood", ''Creative Loafing'', June 6, 2012 )〕 In 1956, an estate known as Joyeuse was chosen as the site for a major shopping center to be known as Lenox Square. The mall was designed by Joe Amisano, an architect who designed many of Atlanta's modernist buildings. When Lenox Square opened in 1959, it was one of the first malls in the country, and the largest shopping center in the Southeastern U.S. Office development soon followed with the construction of Tower Place in 1974.
To reverse a downturn in Buckhead Village during the 1980s, minimum parking spot requirements for bars were lifted, which quickly led to it becoming the most dense concentration of bars and clubs in the city,〔(Buckhead Village BAR BRAWL: Critics try to pressure landlords of busy clubs )〕 such as BAR, World Bar, Lulu's Bait Shack, Mako's, Tongue & Groove, Chaos, John Harvard's Brew House, Paradox, Frequency & Havana Club〔(Scott Henry, "Buckhead Rising", ''Creative Loafing'', 2006-05-31 )〕
Beginning in 2000, residents sought to ameliorate the crime situation by taking measures to reduce the community's nightlife and re-establish a more residential character. The Buckhead Coalition's president and former Atlanta Mayor Sam Massell, along with councilwoman Mary Norwood were instrumental in persuading the Atlanta City Council to pass a local ordinance to close bars at 2:30 AM rather than 4 AM, and liquor licenses were made more difficult to obtain. Eventually, most of the Buckhead Village nightlife district was acquired for the "Buckhead Atlanta" multi-use project, and many of the former bars and clubs were razed in 2007.〔(Clark Dean, "Lost in Buckhead Atlanta", ''Atlanta Business Journal'', June 29, 2011 )〕
In 2008, a newsletter 〔(Retrieved on November 22, 2009. )〕 by the Fulton County Taxpayers Foundation began circulating that proposed the secession of Buckhead into its own city after more than 50 years as part of Atlanta. This came on the heels of neighboring Sandy Springs, which finally became a city in late 2005 after a 30-year struggle to incorporate, and which triggered other such incorporations in metro Atlanta's northern suburbs. Like those cities, the argument to create a city of Buckhead is based on the desire for more local control and lower taxes.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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