The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Marietta aims to save ruins of first mayor’s 1840s tannery

Remnants stand on land owned by couple who want to sell property.

- By Kristal Dixon kristal.dixon@ajc.com

The city of Marietta is exploring what can be done to save the last reminders of a business once run by its first mayor in the 1840s.

Remnants of the Glover-Wilder Tannery still stand on land owned by Jane and Bruce Kyburz, who have lived in their Kennesaw Avenue home for 41 years. The Kyburzes want to sell their 3.5acre property and home but hope what’s left of the 19th century business will be preserved for future generation­s to see.

Jane Kyburz said her research shows the tannery produced about 7,000 tanned hides each year. It was destroyed by Union soldiers in the Civil War, she said, but its walls remain standing and are visible to drivers along Kennesaw Avenue.

“It’s hard to imagine a tannery in Cobb County,” Marietta Mayor Steve Tumlin said. “I don’t know how it’s still standing.”

Tumlin has added a proposal to purchase the land holding the tannery to a list of projects that would be funded with Special Purpose Local Option Sales Tax revenue, if it’s approved by voters. The SPLOST referendum is expected to go on the ballot in November.

City Manager Bill Bruton said the cost to acquire the tannery property has not been determined.

“A purchase would not be able to take place until after the SPLOST passed and money was available,” he added. If the SPLOST is approved, those sales tax collection­s would start Jan. 1, 2022.

Cobb Landmarks Executive Director Trevor Beemon said the tannery was once part of Oakton Estates, which also included a home that was constructe­d in the 1830s. The tannery, operated by Marietta’s first mayor, John

Heyward Glover, and businessma­n John Wilder, opened sometime in the 1840s.

Beemon said not much informatio­n on the tannery is available, but the business was open long before Marietta’s original depot opened in 1864. However, a large portion of the structure has collapsed over the last 30 to 40 years, leaving just two walls.

Kyburz said she and her husband have had many people stop and check out the remnants. She said the site is an opportunit­y to preserve a piece of history that precedes the Civil War.

“A lot of cities in the South don’t have that,” she said. “It’s our past, and I’m not one for wiping out our past.”

Beemon said Cobb Landmarks volunteers have worked with the Kyburzes to remove vines and invasive plants that could damage the old walls.

In the future, the organizati­on would like to figure out a way to stabilize the stonework and install fencing around the structure. Beemon said the area would be nice to develop into a park featuring green space.

“People who know about it and appreciate it would be happy just to know that it’s going to be there and it’s not going to be developed or it’s not going to collapse from age,” he said.

 ?? JENNIFER BRETT / JBRETT@AJC.COM ?? Remnants of the Glover-Wilder Tannery still stand on land owned by Jane and Bruce Kyburz, who want to sell their 3.5-acre property and home but hope what’s left of the 19th century business will be preserved for future generation­s to see.
JENNIFER BRETT / JBRETT@AJC.COM Remnants of the Glover-Wilder Tannery still stand on land owned by Jane and Bruce Kyburz, who want to sell their 3.5-acre property and home but hope what’s left of the 19th century business will be preserved for future generation­s to see.
 ??  ??
 ?? JENNIFER BRETT / JBRETT@AJC.COM ?? Cobb Landmarks Executive Director Trevor Beemon said little info on the tannery is available, though it was open long before Marietta’s original depot opened in 1864. But much of the structure has collapsed in the last 30 to 40 years, leaving just two walls. Beemon said the area would be nice to develop into a park featuring green space.
JENNIFER BRETT / JBRETT@AJC.COM Cobb Landmarks Executive Director Trevor Beemon said little info on the tannery is available, though it was open long before Marietta’s original depot opened in 1864. But much of the structure has collapsed in the last 30 to 40 years, leaving just two walls. Beemon said the area would be nice to develop into a park featuring green space.

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