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			 Atlanta 
			Betterment Fund schedules open house for Atlanta’s newest tourist 
			attraction 
 
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            [July 05, 2018] 
             The public is invited to an Open House 
			at the J.P. Hieronymus Carriage House, one of Atlanta’s last 
			remaining, wooden carriages houses, now restored and turned into a 
			tourist attraction.   | 
        
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			 The event will take place on Sunday, July 15, 2018 
			from 2:00pm-4:00pm on the grounds of J.H. Hawes Grain Elevator 
			Museum in downtown Atlanta, Illinois. 
 In the early days of the 20th century, most homes in Atlanta 
			included a structure that housed the family’s carriage and the 
			trusted horse that pulled it. As the automobile gradually took the 
			place of horses and buggies, many wooden carriage houses were 
			replaced with more modern garages. In 2015, the Atlanta Betterment 
			Fund group, recognizing the community was close to losing a piece of 
			its transportation history, put a plan in place to save one of the 
			town’s last standing wooden carriage houses.
 
			
			 
			Originally located at 607 NW Vine Street at the 
			family home constructed in 1908 by John Pendelton Hieronymus, the 
			Carriage House was purchased, moved 9 blocks to its new site, and 
			fully restored for the public to enjoy.  
			
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			  The Carriage House now contains a two-wheeled buggy, life-sized 
fiberglass horse, along with an interpretive panel and short video that tell the 
story of this small part of Atlanta’s transportation history. The purchase and 
restoration of the Carriage House was made possible through a combination of 
support from the City of Atlanta’s hotel/motel tax, fundraising efforts of the 
Atlanta Betterment Fund, and personal donations – including several generous 
contributions from descendants of J.P. Hieronymus.
 Light refreshments will be served during the Open House.
 
				 
		[Bill Thomas] |