Smoke Rise Garden Club records
Scope and Contents
This collection contains award books of evidence, scrapbooks, and yearbooks that document the history of the Smoke Rise Garden Club. Featured in the scrapbooks are photographs, clippings, correspondence, and invitations that detail the club's monthly meetings, flower shows, and community service work. Award books of evidence provide details of major projects such as the creation of a bluebird trail and sanctuary at Stone Mountain Memorial State Park, a children's garden and Nature Club at Smoke Rise Elementary School, and conservation work at the Callanwolde Fine Arts Center.
Dates
- 1970-2009, undated
Creator
- Smoke Rise Garden Club (Stone Mountain, Ga.) (Organization)
Conditions Governing Access
This collection is open for research.
Conditions Governing Use
Unpublished manuscripts are protected by copyright. All requests to publish, quote, or reproduce must be submitted through the Kenan Research Center.
Biographical / Historical
Smoke Rise Garden Club was formed in 1968 by ten residents of the Smoke Rise neighborhood in Stone Mountain, Georgia, with the mission to stimulate the interest of amateur gardeners in the study of flowers, landscape gardening, the environment and conservation, and the beautification of their neighborhood. The club is governed by elected officers and committees that oversee monthly meetings, flower shows, and field trips, with Helen Heinze (1927-2002) serving as the first president in 1969. As a member of The DeKalb County Federation of Garden Clubs, Inc., The Garden Club of Georgia, Inc. Redbud District, and the National Garden Clubs, Inc., the Smoke Rise Garden Club has received several awards for its flower shows, garden education programs, and community service projects at Stone Mountain Memorial State Park and the Callanwolde Fine Arts Center.
Extent
21.67 linear ft. (12 oversize boxes and four document cases)
Language
English
Arrangement
This collection is arranged alphabetically by titles supplied by staff.
Immediate Source of Acquisition
Gift, 2019
Bias in Description
As archivists, we acknowledge our role as stewards of information. We choose how individuals and organizations are represented and described in our archives. We are not neutral, and bias is reflected in our descriptions, which may not accurately convey the racist or offensive aspects of collection materials. Archivists make mistakes and might use poor judgment. In working with this collection, we often re-use language used by the former owners of the material. This language provides context but often includes bias and prejudices reflective of the time in which it was created. The Kenan Research Center’s work is ongoing to implement reparative language where Library of Congress subject terms are inaccurate and obsolete.
Kenan Research Center welcomes feedback and questions regarding our archival descriptions. If you encounter harmful, offensive, or insensitive terminology or descriptions, please let us know by emailing reference@atlantahistorycenter.com. Your comments are essential to our work to create inclusive and thoughtful description.
Processing Information
This collection was processed in 2026.
- Birds -- Conservation -- Georgia
- Callanwolde (Cultural center : Atlanta, Ga.)
- Flower shows -- Georgia -- DeKalb County
- Garden Club of Georgia. Redbud District
- Gardening -- Georgia -- DeKalb County -- Societies, etc.
- Gardening -- Therapeutic use
- Horticulture -- Georgia
- Neighborhoods -- Georgia -- DeKalb County
- Smoke Rise Garden Club (Stone Mountain, Ga.)
- Stone Mountain (Ga.)
- Stone Mountain Memorial State Park (Ga.)
- The DeKalb County Federation of Garden Clubs, Inc.
- Urban beautification -- Georgia -- DeKalb County
- Women -- Georgia -- DeKalb County -- Societies and clubs
- Title
- Smoke Rise Garden Club records
- Subtitle
- ahc.MSS1298
- Author
- Thora Jordt
- Date
- June 2026
- Description rules
- Describing Archives: A Content Standard
- Language of description
- English
- Script of description
- Latin
Repository Details
Part of the Kenan Research Center at Atlanta History Center Repository
