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One of These Days: Furman Bisher Blvd.
I have just squandered an hour or two of my life trying to solve the maze of streets named Peachtree in the northern Atlanta suburbs.

At $4 a gallon, this isn't funny.

My two sisters live in the northern burbs – half an hour apart, a long way from Queens. Between them are a staggering number of streets named Peachtree – Peachtree Corners, Peachtree Parkway, Peachtree Industrial Boulevard.

In the dark, on badly-engineered roads with wretched signage, this can be downright frightening.

I have seen estimates that over 70 streets in the Atlanta area have the word Peachtree in them.

This suggests a staggering failure of imagination, if all the planners of the New South cannot do better than slap the name Peachtree on bisecting boulevards.

But I have a proposal. And it involves the great American pastime.

The Atlanta Braves have been in town since 1966, and by now have accumulated enough history to provide heroic names to replace most of those Peachtrees.  

What makes it worse is that I just read that the name peachtree just may have stemmed from the type of pine, called a pitch tree, common to the south. How fitting if this regional jumble were based on a mistake.

I learned to like Atlanta during the 1996 Olympics (we lived in the very sweet Inman Park neighborhood near downtown) and later when my son’s family lived in Inman Park and moved out to Roswell. March is a gorgeous time to visit Atlanta. So is October.

This past weekend was a flying visit for a family reunion, but whenever I have time in Atlanta I love to visit friends and old haunts. However, I have a Peachtree rule: If a restaurant or some other business is listed on something called Peachtree, I won’t even try to patronize it. Otherwise, I could be driving up and down the region from Buckhead to Norcross, looking for the right Peachtree. 

Here’s my proposal:

Keep one Peachtree St. The main drag on the spine of the hill in downtown Atlanta would seem to be the logical choice. 

Then they should name every other Peachtree after a Braves stalwart – and there have been dozens of them.

Henry Aaron? Phil Niekro? Dale Murphy? Greg Maddux? Chipper Jones? Bobby Cox. I could keep going. John Smoltz. Tom Glavine. Rico Carty.

And when they are finished with the stars, I bet there is some humble little Peachtree Circle out in the middle of nowhere, where confused out-of-town drivers sometimes blunder. One modest cul de sac could be named Francisco Cabrera Circle, in honor of the vagabond who delivered the clutch hit that put the Braves into the 1992 World Series.

Who should be in charge of this crucial task to end the anarchy on the Atlanta highways?

This task demands an eminent historian. 

I suggest the Georgia favorite who is currently blustering around the country, running for public office.

Pretty soon, Newt Gingrich is going to need a job other than soliciting funds from wealthy sponsors. It’s time to put Newt’s massive intellect to work on something truly challenging --  ending Peachtree anarchy.

 


Comments

Brian Savin
03/18/2012 10:02am

Absolutely right on! We were at the '96 Olympics for about two weeks and I gave up on the rental car pretty quickly when every place we wanted to go in our off time was located on a Peachtree! In actual fact -- just like in GV's nightmare - we missed a dinner reservation exactly because I had the wrong street. It turned out there were two streets with the exact same Peachtree whatever name! Nuttiest signage outside of Tokyo, where street numbers are assigned in the order of when the building was built!

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Michael Berman
03/18/2012 1:35pm

On the other hand Queens has intersecting Streets, Avenues, Roads, and Drives all with the same numbers, plus numbered Beach Streets. Brooklyn has numbered Streets (North, South, East, West, Brighton, and unqualified) and Avenues. Manhattan, of course, has East and West numbered Streets -- some of which are grossly misplaced, e.g. West 4th Street -- and Avenues. And every borough has its own Broadway, with only those in Manhattan and the Bronx having any relationship to each other.

:-)

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Alan Rubin
03/18/2012 5:51pm

George, it is so logical that Romney should use your idea to encourage Newt to drop.

My interest in maps was a result of the maze of names in Queens. It was the only way that I could find the house of my blind date. I was living in Teaneck, NJ at the time. In almost any of the Bergen County towns, someone could direct you to an address a mile or so away. For Queens residents of the time, anything more than a block away was a foreign country.

My Manhattan favorite was standing at the corner of of W 4th and W 12th streets. Luckily, the city planners developed the grid that starts at 14th street.

Also, there are five or six blocks north of Manhattan that are across the river in the Bronx.

My wife an I spent a month one summer in Cleveland, OH when I was on assignment with my company. We stayed in Parma Heights and soon learned that almost every community was "something" Heights. We never saw even a hill.

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george vecsey
03/18/2012 8:28pm

Confessions of a Queens Boy: I get helplessly lost in Astoria, with both streets and avenues in the 20's and 30's. The solution there is to just ditch the car and eat anywhere. can';t go wrong with Greek food in Astoria.
The Tokyo system is nuts --but if you are on foot, people are so helpful and polite. People would stop and try out their English on us...and walk us to the right door.
Not exactly like 50 mph in the Atlanta burbs at night when you catch a glimpse of a Peachtree...but not which one. Nuts.
GV

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Andy Tansey
07/02/2012 10:06pm

If you want to be obnoxious and get somebody lost in Queens, send him or her to the great confluence of major arteries known as the Kew Gardens Interchange and tell them to "Take the Intaboro." It leads to a good old neighborhood deep in Brooklyn and no farther (or nearer, for that matter).

They changed the name of the Intaboro to the Interboro (if your grade school teacher was concerned about elocution) and then, more recently, to the Jackie Robinson Parkway. It's fun to listen to the various references from the chopper traffic reporters. About a mile along the Grand Central towards the Triboro (oops, the RFK) Bridge (much good soccer for all ages thereunder), you come to within a Mantle poke of Forest Hills HS, where Simon and Garfunkel played, near where good sportswriters played ball down by the schoolyard and where the new ballyard is named Jackie Robinson Field. Go a couple of miles farther, and you'll see a ballpark named for a bank which, it was said early on, draws too much from its Brooklyn cousins and too little from the home team.

I am always entertained and intrigued by your ability to connect the distant and the familiar. That is the reason for this lately dated post. My mother loves to tell the story of how you could get free tickets to Ebbets Field during World War II if you brought enough iron with you and how she and her girlfriends dragged an old stove there.

I learned tonight that her granddaughter has moved to Atlanta and that her address is at, you guessed it, Peachtree Circle.

How's this all connected? I don't know, but on July 17, "After Dark," a groovin' group of some good old boys from a HS with a good athletic tradition in Briarwood, Queens will play a free show at 7:00 p.m. in Juniper Valley Park. To get there, take the Intaboro.

Michael Hill
03/19/2012 7:47am

As someone who grew up on Peachtree Battle Avenue, just up from Peachtree Battle Circle -- Peachtree Creek ran along the southern edge of our property -- I always thought all those Peachtrees were just a way to keep the Yankees confused. But now that the majority of Atlantans are probably from north of the Mason-Dixon line, you might be onto something. But we should go back into the early days of the Atlanta Braves for our street names, back before Ted Turner sent them out on cable systems everywhere, back to maybe Tony Cloninger, or Bobby Bragan, the manager who let Cloninger pitch 13 innings on Opening Day, in the first Braves game played in Atlanta, probably destroying his arm (though Cloninger did manage two grand slams and 9 rbi in a game against the Giants that season). How about Pat Jarvis. Or Felix Millan. Or Dennis Menke. Davy Johnson and his fellow 40 home run hitting Darrell Evans. You could even put Joe Torre and Orlando Cepeda (traded for each other) in there. Wade Blasingame, Clete Boyer, Tito Francona, and son on ....But you'd still probably have a few Peachtree streets left.

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georgevecsey
03/19/2012 9:19am

Good idea. If Newt doesn't take this job, we could ask Furman Bisher to do it. Atlanta could use some names to commemorate the Crackers (odd name, now that I think about it). Ernie Harwell deserves a street. GV

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03/19/2012 10:12am

What a fun column George.... You must have spent so much time getting lost among all the Peachtrees that you didn't have time for a visit with us.
Your column also made me realize that as an Atlanta native, I hardly notice the overabundance of Peachtrees....
Sadly, Furman Bisher has just passed away yesterday. Maybe we can name one of the Peachtrees after him.

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George Vecsey
03/19/2012 10:27am

Maria, thanks, just found that out.
What a great suggestion, to name a major street after Furman.
I always loved sitting in the Starbucks near our son's house and seeing Celestine Sibley Rd.
She wrote a book called Peachtree St. U.S.A.
Sorry we didn't have time on this trip. George

georgevecsey
03/19/2012 10:15am

No wonder Furman was on my mind. Mr. Hill told me Furman passed on Sunday at 93. He was a fixture in Atlanta for so many decades. My condolences to his lovely wife Lynda and to his family and friends. GV


From Michael Hill:

Too late to get Mr. Bisher's help, I'm afraid.

http://www.ajc.com/sports/sportswriter-furman-bisher-dies-1390135.html?cxntlid=brkng_nws_bnr

Mr. Hill continued: Like many Atlantans, I had no idea that Crackers was a term of derision until I moved north. They were my heroes ... If you give Ernie Harwell as street, you've got to give one to Milo Hamilton as well... and don't forget Denver Lemaster...

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Michael Hill
03/19/2012 9:48am

And a colleague at work reminds me that, though it would not take care of a Peachtree problem, Atlanta's beltway, known there at the Perimeter, should be named for Pascual Perez who famously missed a start in 1983, getting lost and driving around it three times before running out of gas.

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Janet Vecsey O'Rourke
03/19/2012 12:41pm

Hi George,
Hysterical - and loved the utube sequence also.
Just happy that you finally found your way to our house, and Liz's on Saturday. The names are different, but I've wondered since we moved south why Jimmy Carter Blvd. changes to Holcomb Bridge to Crossville, to Atlanta St. (for maybe 1/2 mile) to Highway 92, And have never understood why 92 is labeled north and south when it sure feels like going east and west to me. Next time, stay with us, and you won't have to deal with Peachtrees!

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George Vecsey
03/19/2012 1:50pm

Next time I'm staying near Furman Bisher Blvd. -- wherever they put it.
GV

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Hansen Alexander
03/19/2012 4:14pm

George,

All I can say is that you are making me hungry for peach pie.

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Michael Berman
03/20/2012 8:16pm

And Greek food in Astoria.

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George Vecsey
03/22/2012 7:47am

With all due respect to the Newt South, if you are going to get lost somewhere, I suggest Astoria over Atlanta.
Parakalo.
GV

03/24/2012 6:16pm

Newt's New Job The best suggestion of the political year

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