BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
PRODID:City of Smyrna, GA Calendar Creator
METHOD:PUBLISH
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP:20250415T123831
DTSTART:20250803T150000
DTEND:20250803T160000
SUMMARY:Sunday Lecture: "The City That Never Was"
DESCRIPTION:<h3>Sunday Lecture: "The City That Never Was: Fact and Fallacy in the Early History of Smyrna, Georgia, 1872-1910"</h3>Sunday, August 3, 2025<br>3:00 - 4:00 p.m.<br>Smyrna Public Library, Meeting Room<br>Light refreshments will be served.<br><br><strong>Presenter, Dr. William P. Marchione, author of <em>A Brief History of Smyrna, Georgia</em> (History Press, 2013)</strong><br>The identity of Smyrna’s mayors and city council members serving in the 1872 to 1900 period has long been a matter of conjecture. The traditional explanation for this informational void holds that a fire destroyed Smyrna’s earliest city records.&nbsp;<br>&nbsp;<br>This lecture turns to another source for an explanation of the absence of this information---the several hundred of regularly published Smyrna news columns that appeared in the pages of Cobb County’s chief newspaper, the <em>Marietta Journal</em> in those years. A close analysis of these news columns establishes, beyond a reasonable doubt, that Smyrna, though authorized by its Charter of 1872 to establish a functioning municipal government, never did so.<br>&nbsp;<br>This leads to a host of questions. What forces were behind the 1872 incorporation initiative?&nbsp; What was the role of the powerful W&amp;A Railroad in fostering the incorporation venture?&nbsp; What were the resident sponsors of Smyrna’s 1872 incorporation hoping to achieve?&nbsp; Most importantly, why were the provisions of Smyrna’s 1872 act of incorporation never approved by Smyrna's body politic? And finally, what alterations in the economic and political climate made the establishment of a functioning municipal government feasible 28 years later, in 1900, but in the context of radically reduced municipal boundaries?<br>&nbsp;<br>The Sunday Lecture series is sponsored by the Friends of Smyrna Library.<br><div></div>
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:<h3>Sunday Lecture: "The City That Never Was: Fact and Fallacy in the Early History of Smyrna, Georgia, 1872-1910"</h3>Sunday, August 3, 2025<br>3:00 - 4:00 p.m.<br>Smyrna Public Library, Meeting Room<br>Light refreshments will be served.<br><br><strong>Presenter, Dr. William P. Marchione, author of <em>A Brief History of Smyrna, Georgia</em> (History Press, 2013)</strong><br>The identity of Smyrna’s mayors and city council members serving in the 1872 to 1900 period has long been a matter of conjecture. The traditional explanation for this informational void holds that a fire destroyed Smyrna’s earliest city records.&nbsp;<br>&nbsp;<br>This lecture turns to another source for an explanation of the absence of this information---the several hundred of regularly published Smyrna news columns that appeared in the pages of Cobb County’s chief newspaper, the <em>Marietta Journal</em> in those years. A close analysis of these news columns establishes, beyond a reasonable doubt, that Smyrna, though authorized by its Charter of 1872 to establish a functioning municipal government, never did so.<br>&nbsp;<br>This leads to a host of questions. What forces were behind the 1872 incorporation initiative?&nbsp; What was the role of the powerful W&amp;A Railroad in fostering the incorporation venture?&nbsp; What were the resident sponsors of Smyrna’s 1872 incorporation hoping to achieve?&nbsp; Most importantly, why were the provisions of Smyrna’s 1872 act of incorporation never approved by Smyrna's body politic? And finally, what alterations in the economic and political climate made the establishment of a functioning municipal government feasible 28 years later, in 1900, but in the context of radically reduced municipal boundaries?<br>&nbsp;<br>The Sunday Lecture series is sponsored by the Friends of Smyrna Library.<br><div></div>
LOCATION:Smyrna Public Library\, 100 Village Green Circle SE Smyrna\, Georgia 30080
CLASS:PUBLIC
END:VEVENT
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