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curses
07-17-2007, 05:55 PM
Following on baldbantam's post, I present to you te abandoned paper mill on Sope Creek in East Marietta, Georgia. According to the all-knowing wiki:


Located at the intersection of Paper Mill Road and Sope Creek are old industrial ruins. These ruins used to be the center of an industrial center based on the waterpower that the creek produced. During the period from 1850 to 1940, a paper mill, twine plant, flourmill and hydroelectric power plant occupied an area about one mile long.

The company that ran the paper mill at Sope Creek was called the Marietta Paper Mills. The Marietta Paper Mills were incorporated on December 19 of 1859, possibly by Andrew Schofield Edmondston and Saxon A. Anderson. Facilities at the Paper Mill included a mill, oil room, office, mill sluice (raceway), storeroom, dam, machine shop, pulp-grinding mill, and two shelters.

The Daily Intelligencer of Atlanta printed a letter dated September 10, 1863 from Mr. A.S. Edmonston [sic] to the Intelligencer. In it, Mr. Edmondston pleads with the Intelligencer, letting them know, that while they are the newspaper’s main source of paper, they can only send them so much due to war constraints. Edmondston writes:

I have on hand a few bundles of paper, which I will ship you, and this will be the last for some time; for when we shall resume again I cannot tell. My hands volunteered in the Home Guard, to protect the country against raids, and are now called out to guard stores and prepare the defences [sic] of your city, I understand. In the first instance, at the commencement of the war, I was disposed to aid all in my power and encouraged two of the hands to volunteer in Confederate service. This left hardly hands enough to get along with when all were well. Afterwards we lost two or three hands, and this left us short of hands, and one machine has only run when our hands have worked eighteen hours in the day.--We applied for the detail of the hands which has not been done, though the Government has been urgent for paper, and we have strained every nerve to supply. Shorthanded, we have done the best we could, and now all our hands are taken, of course we are obliged to stop.

Edmondston goes on to complain about the fact that while the Confederate government demands paper, he is shorthanded because paper workers were not considered vital to the war effort. Edmondston says, “You know Paper makers are not to be had South, and are not like Shoe-Makers, and many other callings which give exemptions to so many thousands, and cannot be learned after the Conscript officer takes after a fellow.”

In 1933, the Atlanta Journal printed an article reminiscing about the Marietta Paper Mills. In an editorial note that accompanied the article, a senior staff member at the Journal, H.H. Cabaniss, recalled that the Marietta Paper Mills, under the ownership of Saxon A. Anderson supplied paper for a great many of the Atlanta area daily newspapers. That senior staff member was H.H. Cabaniss. In 1867, he had been the business manager for the Atlanta New Era and bought his paper in rolls from the Marietta Paper Mills.

The paper supply became even harder to come by when on July 5, 1864, Union soldiers under the command of General Gerrard burned the Marietta Paper Mill, along with Denmead’s Flour Mill. The Paper Mill was rebuilt in 1865, only to burn again in 1870 and be rebuilt in 1871. The mill struggled to survive the years immediately following the second rebuilding. The mills were sold at a public sale in 1873 and restructured as the Marietta Paper Manufacturing Company. In 1888 and 1889, a wood pulp mill and a twine factory were added to the site, respectively. Finally, in 1902, production at that location stopped.

The Atlanta Constitution printed a picture of the Paper Mill ruins on the banks of the Soap creek [sic] in May of 1932. The caption read “GREAT WALLS BUILT BY SLAVE LABOR… Before the Civil War this building housed a large paper mill.” This is the only reference to slavery in the material concerning the Sope Creek Industrial Area. It should also be noted that the language of this caption infers that the Paper Mill never recovered from the burning by Gerrard’s men, when in fact it had.

Along with the Paper Mill was Denmead’s Flour Mill. Founded in 1855, Edward Denmead had built a Flour Mill on the west bank about 200 yards up from where Paper Mill Road and the Sope Creek intersect. Denmead apparently ran this operation and shared a road off of Paper Mill Road with the Marietta Paper Mills. The flourmill was burnt at the same time as the Paper Mill, but apparently was never rebuilt.

In 1922, a hydroelectric dam and a power plant were built on the west side of the creek 900 yards (~820m) upstream from where Paper Mill Road crosses. As of 1973, this dam was inoperable.

When the GHC submitted its report in March of 1973, they gave great detail to the purpose of every remaining structure. Additionally, the description of the layout of the site was accurate enough that someone could attempt to locate and identify all remaining structures. The mill room was “The largest structure remaining is the mill building downstream from Paper Mill Road approximately ¼ mile on the east bank of the Creek. It contained five rooms and is approximately 300 feet long.” The oil room and office was “nearby… just across a small creek.” The pulp-grinding mill was “just south of Paper Mill Road. It is two stories high and approximately 100 feet long.” Denmead’s flourmill was described, although evidence is difficult to spot today, due to construction. Even the foundations of an old bridge, which lay near the aforementioned dam, were identified.

In the GHC report there is no mention of a printing press. In the all the articles concerning the ruins at Sope Creek, never once is there any mention of printing press. More specifically, there is never any mention of a mint. The idea that the Confederate States of America used to print money on the banks of the Sope Creek had to have developed somewhere.

One single article mentions money printing. The New York Times printed an article on May 31, 1968 written by Lincoln A. Werden, describing the Atlanta Golf Classic being played at Atlanta Country Club. The Atlanta Country Club abuts Sope Creek about a third of a mile from the Sope Creek entrance to the Chattahoochee. Werden writes “The par-3 13th, a 135-yard hole, is a photographer’s delight. The tee is on high ground and Soap Creek, a fast moving muddy stream, runs in front of the green. To the left is a waterfall and off to the right of the green is the site of a former Confederate mint.”

Outside of the golfers themselves, the only source Werden quoted was the tournament director, Jack Tuthill. At that time, Atlanta Country Club was only four years old and hosting a major tournament event.



There's not much left of the original structures, and nature is slowly reclaiming the site.




http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v227/invisikitty/Paper%20Mill%20Park/mill3.jpg

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v227/invisikitty/Paper%20Mill%20Park/mill6.jpg

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v227/invisikitty/Paper%20Mill%20Park/mill5.jpg

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v227/invisikitty/Paper%20Mill%20Park/mill4.jpg

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v227/invisikitty/Paper%20Mill%20Park/mill2.jpg

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v227/invisikitty/Paper%20Mill%20Park/mill1.jpg

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v227/invisikitty/Paper%20Mill%20Park/mill7.jpg

viscousmemories
07-17-2007, 05:57 PM
Excellent.

LadyShea
07-17-2007, 06:08 PM
Who owns the land?

curses
07-17-2007, 06:09 PM
I believe the city does. It's a park now with quite a bit of human traffic.

Shelli
07-17-2007, 07:36 PM
:joecool2:

Pendaric
07-17-2007, 08:05 PM
Did you go and have a wander and take the pictures yourself?

Very cool anyway. I just love the thought of old buildings standing there quietly forgotten by everyone, marking the passage of time.

curses
07-17-2007, 08:15 PM
I did, this was several years ago, though. I want to go back out in the fall/winter when the vegetation dies off some, I was afraid to go inside the structure due to the overgrowth and seeing as we had seen several copperheads in the area.

There are several old mills in the immediate vicinity of Atlanta that Sherman's troops burned down. They're interesting structures, but this is the best preserved of them.

Pendaric
07-17-2007, 08:29 PM
Is this it?

http://www.flashearth.com/?lat=33.940346&lon=-84.437643&z=20&r=0&src=msl

curses
07-17-2007, 08:39 PM
That is indeed it! I'm amazed at how well that came out.

curses
07-17-2007, 09:21 PM
Ooh, Flash Earth is fun!

Here's the New Manchester mill in Douglasville. There was once a whole town called New Manchester, but Sherman razed it. The mill's all that's left.
here (http://www.flashearth.com/?lat=33.940346&lon=-84.437643&z=20&r=0&src=msl)
I have been out to see it, but couldn't find it. Now I know where it is thanks to Flash Earth :excited:

New Manchester Mfg Co. history (http://civilwaralbum.com/atlanta/kennesaw13d.htm)


Sadly the only thing that shows up for the old Roswell Mill is the dam and one of the newer storage buildings.

Pendaric
07-17-2007, 09:30 PM
Your link just takes us back to the original mill.

You need to centre on the place you want, then click on 'link to this location' in the bottom right hand of the screen. That will change the URL to reflect the current position rather than where you started from.

curses
07-17-2007, 09:44 PM
Gah.

How about this? (http://www.flashearth.com/?lat=33.747666&lon=-84.623195&z=20&r=0&src=msl)

And this is the abandoned mental hospital I'm working on finding an entrance for :llink (http://www.flashearth.com/?lat=33.93059&lon=-84.302255&z=18.9&r=0&src=msl).

Just have to find someone willing to go with me and check out the security, this is a nawty location ;)

Ymir's blood
07-17-2007, 11:23 PM
The Roswell mill is the one we went near at Halloween right?

So many cool places to see where you are.

curses
07-18-2007, 12:40 AM
Yeah, you never got a chance to see the ruins, they're all blocked of at the moment.

Ymir's blood
07-18-2007, 12:57 AM
:anarchy:

Watser?
07-18-2007, 01:02 AM
There was an abandoned railway station near where I grew up, we used to hang out there once in a while. Two railway lines used to cross there, one North-South and one going West-East into Germany. The Germans invaded over that line in WWII with an armored train. The line was abandoned after the war and the station was some time later I guess, I don't really know. The other line is still in use though. But the station was not really close to any town.