Guides & Advice  : Georgia : 
Atlanta

 
Frommer's Guide
INTRODUCTION
GETTING TO KNOW
DINING
ATTRACTIONS
Suggested Itineraries
Special-Interest Tours
Especially for Kids
Parks
NIGHTLIFE
SHOPPING
WALKING TOURS
ACTIVE PURSUITS
SPECTATOR SPORTS
ATTRACTION Frommer
Wren's Nest

Named for a family of wrens that once nested in the family mailbox, Wren's Nest is the former home of Joel Chandler Harris, who chronicled the wily deeds of Br'er Rabbit and Br'er Fox. It's been open to the public since 1913, when his widow sold it to the Uncle Remus Memorial Association.

Harris's literary career began at the age of 13, when he apprenticed on the Countryman, a quarterly plantation newspaper. In 4 years spent learning journalism there, young Harris spent many an evening hanging about the slave quarters, drinking in African folk tales and fables spun by George Terrell, a plantation patriarch who became the prototype for Uncle Remus. Sherman's army put the Countryman out of business, and Harris went on to other newspapers, working his way up to editorial writer at the Atlanta Journal-Constitution by age 28. There, plagued by writer's block one gloomy winter afternoon, he remembered the plantation stories of his youth and evoked Uncle Remus to fill his column. Enthralled readers clamored for more, and the rest is history.

The house itself is an 1870s farmhouse with a Queen Anne-style Victorian facade added in 1884. Harris lived here from 1881 until his death in 1908, doing most of his writing in a rocking chair on the wraparound front porch. On a 30-minute tour, including a slide presentation about Harris's life, you'll see a good deal of Uncle Remus memorabilia. The stuffed great horned owl over the study door was a gift from Theodore Roosevelt, whose White House Harris visited; the original wren's nest mailbox reposes on the study mantel; and all of Harris's books, along with signed first editions of major authors of his day (Mark Twain and others) are displayed in a bookcase.

The house is interesting, but the best part is the storytelling. Call ahead to find out when storyteller-in-residence Akbar Imhotep will be telling stories culled from African and African-American folklore; it's a real treat.

1050 Ralph David Abernathy Blvd.Phone: 404/753-7735.Open: Tues-Sat 10am-4pm; Sun 1-4pm.Admission $3 adults, $2 seniors and students age 13-19, $1 children age 4-12; free for under age 4.Closed on major holidays.Take I-20 West to Ashby St., turn left on Ashby, then right on Ralph David Abernathy Blvd.; Wren's Nest is 2 long blocks down on the left; MARTA: Bus no. 71 from West End rail station.


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