The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Home has deep ties to suburb

- By Katie Tiller

Q: I heard that a gorgeous Queen Anne Victorian home in Atlanta’s Inman Park played a role in the gentrifica­tion of the neighborho­od. Is that true?

A: The Beath-Dickey House has long been viewed as an example of preservati­on, and in fact, its previous owner is credited with kickstarti­ng the intown Atlanta neighborho­od’s revitaliza­tion.

The three-bedroom, three-bath home at 866 Euclid Ave. was built in the ornate Queen Anne Victorian style by ice-magnate John Beath in 1890. Much like the neighborho­od’s two-faced butterfly logo, the house represents both the past and the future.

“Inman Park was the first planned suburb in Atlanta, and the first lot that sold was to John Beath,” said current owner Andre de Winter, a real estate agent who purchased the home with his wife, Bobbi, in 2007. “He constructe­d this house, and in those days in 1890, the first homes that went in were Queen Anne Victorian.”

Beath sold the home to the Dickey family just five years later. The family owned it for about 50 years, until the neighborho­od fell into disrepair. The stately Victorian was broken up into apartment units, where seven families lived, de Winter said.

Then one day in the late 1960s, after the neighborho­od had fallen victim to neglect, interior designer Robert Griggs drove by.

“According to a few of the old residents here, who are now in their 80s, Griggs was on his way to appraise a house on Poplar. There were old mansions there, and he was on his way to that property to appraise some old stained windows,” de Winter said. “He drove by our house here on Euclid Avenue, and he basically stopped his car. He loved the house, walked in, made them an offer and bought the house.”

The first time Griggs stepped into his landmark home, people were playing basketball inside the foyer and the doors were nailed open so that they couldn’t be shut, de Winter said the designer told him. But Griggs immediatel­y saw the 5,024-square-foot home’s potential, he said.

The front porch columns are made of Italian marble, and there are eight fireplaces, one of which bears Beath’s initials inside.

Many of the ro o ms were designed in the octagonal shape characteri­stic of Queen Anne Victorian homes, but this home also was constructe­d around an organ built in 1874 that can’t be removed, de Winter said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States