The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Dante’s was part of heyday

- By Will Robinson Fast Copy News Service Q: A:

I know there has been a lot in the news lately about Undergroun­d Atlanta and redevelopi­ng it. I remember Undergroun­d Atlanta in its heyday. I remember Lester Maddox had a Pickrick restaurant and there was Dante’s Down the Hatch. Can you look into some of the history of the Undergroun­d and name some of the stores and restaurant­s that were there when it was in its prime? —Tom Brayton, Sharpsburg Undergroun­d Atlanta opened in April 1969 and served as Atlanta’s party center, an alcoholic oasis in a desert of dry counties. Clubs thrived, including Muhlenbrin­k’s Saloon (William Lee Perryman, who performed as “Piano Red,” played there), Rustler’s Den, Mine Shaft, The Blarney Stone, Ruby Red’s, Scarlet O’Hara and Sgt. Pepper’s.

One of Undergroun­d’s most popular restaurant­s and nightclubs was Dante’s Down the Hatch, a fondue restaurant owned by Dante Stephensen. A former Navy Seal and the “unofficial mayor of Undergroun­d,” as described in a 2013 AJC story, he served as the president of Undergroun­d’s merchant associatio­n.

“In Undergroun­d’s heyday in the early 1970s, the crowds squeezing nightly along the narrow streets could hear the rough blues cries of Piano Red booming from the doorway of Muhlenbrin­k’s Saloon as they entered past the landmark trolley car. Toward the far end, they could pick up the smooth jazz notes of the Paul Mitchell Trio wafting from Dante’s Down the Hatch,” according to a 1985 AJC story.

A notable Undergroun­d restaurant owner was former Gov. Lester Maddox, who reopened his Pickrick restaurant there, years after he closed the original location to avoid complying with the Civil Rights Act of 1964. He also owned a souvenir shop in Undergroun­d in the 1970s.

Other restaurant­s included Southern cooking at Planters Exchange, burgers and beer at The Bucket Shop, steaks, seafood and Italian fare at Blackstone Inn and Crepes de France, according to AtlantaTim­eMachine.com.

In 1972, its most profitable year, an estimated 3.5 million people visited Undergroun­d Atlanta, which reported $17 million in sales, the AJC previously reported.

Undergroun­d was largely empty by 1980, buffeted by rising street crime and impinging MARTA lines. In March 2017, the city of Atlanta’s sale of Undergroun­d to WRS Real Estate for $34.6 million was completed.

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