| Atlanta Attractions |
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| World of Coca-Cola |
| More than 1 million people visit this attraction annually to learn more about the world's most popular soft drink through memorabilia, video presentations and displays. Included is a re-creation of a 1930s soda fountain, vintage TV and radio commercials and the Everything Coca-Cola store, with the world's largest selection of Coke merchandise. |
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| Jimmy Carter Presidential Center |
441 Freedom Parkway 404.331.0296
Every day in countries all over the world, people live under difficult, life-threatening circumstances caused by war, disease, famine, and poverty. The non-profit Carter Center strives to relieve this suffering by advancing peace and health in neighborhoods and nations around the globe |
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| Margaret Mitchell House |
999 Peachtree Street NE 404.249.7012
The docent-led tour is a one to one and a half-hour experience with exclusive photographs and archival exhibits that begin to tell the story of Margaret Mitchell beyond Gone With The Wind. The tour starts in our Visitors' Center with "It May Not Be Tara," a locally-produced movie about the life of Margaret Mitchell and the battle to preserve the house. The tour continues into the house, through her apartment where she wrote Gone With The Wind and finally to the NEW Gone With The Wind Movie Museum. This museum, which opened on December 15, 1999 - the 60th anniversary of the movie premiere in Atlanta - illuminates the making of the movie, the premiere and legacy with memorabilia from the Herb Bridges collection and the doorway of Tara from the movie set. Your experience at our historic site ends with an opportunity to enjoy the Museum Shop, complete with unique gifts, souvenirs, and Gone With The Wind collectibles and memorabilia. |
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| SciTrek |
395 Piedmont Ave NE 404.522.5500
You're invited to journey through curiosity, wonder, creativity, discovery and fun.
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| Piedmont Park |
In 1887, a group of prominent Atlantans purchased 189 acres of farmland from Benjamin Walker to build a harness racing track. The land was then developed into the site of the Cotton States International Exposition of 1895. The Exposition Company owned the Park land until 1905, when the Atlanta City Council purchased the land for $99,000.
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