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Gene Kansas – Civil Sights

March 25, 2025 @ 6:30 pm - 8:30 pm

This illustrated guide and historic narrative sheds light on one of Atlanta’s most significant neighborhoods, Sweet Auburn, known for its vital role in the civil rights movement and its enduring cultural impact.

A Cappella Books and Atlanta City Studio welcome author and preservationist Gene Kansas to discuss his new book, “Civil Sights: Sweet Auburn, a Journey through Atlanta’s National Treasure.”

This event is free and open to the public; copies of “Civil Sights” will be available for purchase at the venue.

About the Book

Once the wealthiest Black neighborhood in the world, the Sweet Auburn Historic District in Atlanta, Georgia, now occupies a distinct place, both historically and geographically. It is at once the globally significant birthplace of the civil rights movement; and it also lays in the wake of social, commercial, and urban challenges that have left some of its most important spaces and places in a state of peril—and even in danger of demolition—as Atlanta grows in, around, and over it.

Now, for the first time, author, preservationist, and cultural developer Gene Kansas shines a spotlight on the district in “Civil Sights.” An illustrated and historic guidebook designed to educate visitors and inspire action, “Civil Sights” not only describes and depicts historically significant Sweet Auburn buildings and streets; it also tells the stories of people and places, then and now, that came together to move mountains before, during, and after the civil rights movement.

These are the streets and buildings in which Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., Congressman John Lewis, Roslyn Pope, Alonzo Herndon, Ella Baker, John Wesley Dobbs, and countless others laid the groundwork for a social movement of equality that would sweep the country, change laws, and positively affect lives around the world. With accounts of such places as the first integrated fire station and the Butler Street YMCA that served as Atlanta’s “Black City Hall,” and of the churches, restaurants, and entertainment halls that have dotted the neighborhood, Kansas unspools a riveting history that also aims to illuminate a path to preservation. Most importantly, “Civil Sights” poses questions of historical accountability to us all: How are we educating, advocating, and investing in the causes that Sweet Auburn represents?

This volume includes illustrations from Atlanta architect Clay Kiningham, a foreword from New York Times best-selling author and journalist Gary M. Pomerantz, and an afterword from former dean of Georgia Tech’s Ivan Allen College of Liberal Arts Jacqueline Jones Royster.

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