Imaginary Worlds: Alice’s Wonderland at the Atlanta Botanical Gardens

By Ashley Ausburn, Jessica Baker and Amecia Matlock

Hiding in the shade amongst the foliage, the Cheshire Cat peeks out with his signature grin at the Atlanta Botanical Gardens in Atlanta, Ga., on July 19, 2019. Given the fact that he is nearly camouflaged in the greenery, visitors are treated to an almost optical illusion of only seeing the Cat’s eyes and mouth. (JEM Capstone/Ashley Ausburn, Jessica Baker & Amecia Matlock) 

Hiding in the shade amongst the foliage, the Cheshire Cat peeks out with his signature grin at the Atlanta Botanical Gardens in Atlanta, Ga., on July 19, 2019. Given the fact that he is nearly camouflaged in the greenery, visitors are treated to an almost optical illusion of only seeing the Cat’s eyes and mouth. (JEM Capstone/Jessica Baker, Ashley Ausburn & Amecia Matlock) 

Before visitors can follow the White Rabbit, they must first brave the dragon mosaiculture at the Atlanta Botanical Gardens in Atlanta, Ga., on July 19, 2019. (JEM Capstone/Ashley Ausburn, Jessica Baker & Amecia Matlock)
Centered in a courtyard garden is one of the beautiful Dale Chihuly sculptures that can be found at the Atlanta Botanical Gardens  in Atlanta, Ga., on July 19, 2019. This sculpture was created for the Gardens back in 2004 and is one-of-a-kind with its twisting, brightly colored glass meant to represent water, ice and sky. (JEM Capstone/Ashley Ausburn, Jessica Baker & Amecia Matlock)
Because of how large the mosaiculture pieces are, the exhibition needs a lot of maintenance – the Alice pieces alone requires four full time employees to maintain them. Here, one of those employees is watering a card soldier on the Queen of heart’s chessboard at the Atlanta Botanical Gardens in Atlanta, Ga., on July 19, 2019. (JEM Capstone/ Ashley Ausburn, Jessica Baker & Amecia Matlock)
The Mermaid mosaiculture looks almost like she’s posing for pictures at the Atlanta Botanical Gardens in Atlanta, Ga., on July 19, 2019. (JEM Capstone/Jessica Baker, Ashley Ausburn & Amecia Matlock)
Coming full circle with the original Lewis Carroll tale, visitors enter the Queen of Hearts’ garden and feel intimidated by her card and chess piece soldiers at the Atlanta Botanical Gardens in Atlanta, Ga., on July 19, 2019. Unfortunately, visitors are not allowed to walk among the life-sized pieces or else it’s off with their heads. (JEM Capstone/Jessica Baker, Ashley Ausburn & Amecia Matlock)
Floating in the Skyline Garden is the White Rabbit relaxing with his signature pocket watch and top hat at the Atlanta Botanical Gardens in Atlanta, Ga., on July 19, 2019. This 27-foot-tall exhibit  is brand new to Alice’s Wonderland. (JEM Capstone/Ashley Ausburn, Jessica Baker & Amecia Matlock) 
Rising from the ashes above the Longleaf Restaurant is the Phoenix mosaiculture at the Atlanta Botanical Gardens in Atlanta, Ga., on Jul 19, 2019. (JEM Capstone/Jessica Baker, Ashley Ausburn & Amecia Matlock)
Nestled off in the outdoor area of the Quick Cafe is the Shaggy Dog mosaiculture at the Atlanta Botanical Gardens in Atlanta, Ga., on July 19, 2019. Though he is not a Wonderland exhibit, he could bring to mind the broom-based dog that swept up Alice’s path in the 1951 Disney film. (JEM Capstone/Jessica Baker, Ashley Ausburn & Amecia Matlock)

Dr. Bombay’s Underwater Tea Party

Dr. Bombay’s Underwater Tea Party, located in Atlanta, Ga., 20 minutes from the Atlanta Botanical Gardens. Photo taken on July 19, 2019. (JEM Capstone/ Ashley Ausburn, Jessica Baker & Amecia Matlock)
All of the proceeds from items sold at Dr. Bombay’s Underwater Tea Party, located in Atlanta, Ga., go towards the tea shop’s women’s education program, The Learning Tea. Photo taken on July 19, 2019. (JEM Capstone/ Ashley Ausburn, Jessica Baker & Amecia Matlock)
All of the proceeds from items sold at Dr. Bombay’s Underwater Tea Party, located in Atlanta, Ga., go towards the tea shop’s women’s education program, The Learning Tea. Photo taken on July 19, 2019. (JEM Capstone/ Ashley Ausburn, Jessica Baker & Amecia Matlock)
Dr. Bombay’s Underwater Tea Party, located in Atlanta, Ga., 20 minutes from the Atlanta Botanical Gardens. Photo taken on July 19, 2019. (JEM Capstone/ Ashley Ausburn, Jessica Baker & Amecia Matlock)
Dr. Bombay’s Underwater Tea Party, located in Atlanta, Ga., 20 minutes from the Atlanta Botanical Gardens. Photo taken on July 19, 2019. (JEM Capstone/ Ashley Ausburn, Jessica Baker & Amecia Matlock)

A Passion for Comics Passed Through Generations

Written by: Rebekah Ozbun, Ian Milliken and Treasure Johnson 

ATLANTA– Comic Con is back in Atlanta for the second time, along with many fans and vendors. Local comic vendor, Mario Russo, had his set-up of over one thousand comic books and graphic novels at the entrance of the convention. Russo and his two sons have been traveling to comic conventions to sell his comics for more than three decades. Russo has been passionate about comics and graphic novels since he was a child, and after graduating from Georgia State University with an art degree, he stepped into the world of selling and trading comics and attending conventions. 

“This is all I’ve ever done,” Russo said. “I’ve been traveling the country selling comics for the last 33 years. This is my bread and butter.” 

Russo, like many other vendors that attend conventions, enjoys the lifestyle because they have the opportunity to connect with their families in a way that many people do not understand and continue to do what they are passionate about.  

“My dad has taught me all that I need to know about comics, marketing and sales,” Charles Russo said. “I wouldn’t want it any other way.” 

James and Charles, Russo’s two sons, have been traveling with their father and helping him with his business since they were young boys.  

“We have been to different conventions nearly every weekend for as long as I can remember,” Charles said. “I used to be jealous of my friends for getting to be on sports teams, but I am now grateful for the bond that I have with my dad and my older brother, James, because we get to do this.” 

What are Comic Conventions? 

Comic-Con originated in San Diego, California in 1970; founded by four teenagers, who had no idea what Comic-Con would be today.  

“We were four teenagers, one preteen and an unemployed graphic artist. And we started this thing, Comic-Con,” said one of Comic-Con’s teen founders. “We did it because we wanted to do it. We weren’t trying to make money from it. We just did it for the fun,” according to an interview with the LA Times. 

The Atlanta Comic Con is an event hosted by Imaginarium, who also hold other conventions in major cities across the United States that bring together artists, celebrities, fans and vendors to celebrate their fandoms. Over the last four decades, Comic-Con has spread across the county and the world, now being held in over 100 cities world-wide. Click here to learn more about Comic-Con. 

Who Attends Comic-Con? 

People from all different fandoms come together to celebrate their interests and express themselves in a place they feel comfortable.  

“I think it is really important for us to have a place where we can hang out with people that are like-minded, that we can relate to, a safe place,” said a Comic-Con staff member. “You’re going find somebody that you can talk to you whether you have anxiety or issues being in public; these are your people, so it’s a nice place the you come and cosplay and party and just meet people that have the same interests as you.” 

Comic-Con is a family-friendly event and was created to attract the entire community surrounding the event. People are encouraged to come and express themselves through cosplay or different costumes, or to just come to enjoy the camaraderie. 

Why Have Comic Conventions? 

Conventions such as Comic-Con are important to the community of fans that follow different fandoms and give visitors an opportunity to meet people like them. But conventions also give artists, writers and collectors an opportunity to be seen and gain a following.  

“We are located in Marietta, but we do conventions all over the place,” Russo said. “We were in Miami last weekend, and we will be in Louisiana and Baltimore in the coming weekends. We have chosen to live like this because there is nothing more meaningful than the camaraderie and joy found at these conventions.” 

Russo, like many other convention vendors, make their living by simply doing exactly what they love.  

How have comic books survived modern times? 

Comic book retailers have had to go through changes in their approaches over the last few decades because of the changes in technology, and the fewer number of younger people showing interest in comics. Over the last two decades, comic book sales have greatly fluctuated, but there has always been a demand for comics.  

“Some of the books we have are two years old, and some of the books are 75 years old. The collectability of a comic is dependent on how popular it is. There are books from the 40s and 50s that aren’t worth anything because there is no connection. Batmans from the 40s are worth a lot because there are Batman movies going on right now.” 

The lifestyle of a traveling comic sales-family 

Comic conventions like this are held year-round and become home to many traveling comic book vendors, like Russo and his family. 

After Russo graduated with an art degree and had little luck in his field, he was interested in starting his own business with the small collection of comic books that he had at the time. He started Mario’s Comics in 1986, and shortly after started traveling to different comic conventions around the United States. He met his wife at a convention, and they started their family a few years later. 

Now that Mario’s oldest son, James, is going off to college, there is more work for Charles and Mario in preparing for conventions, but for the last 18 years, Russo has had his two sons to help in the process of organizing, pricing, packing up and traveling from state to state. Both Charles and James have gone through different times of being home-schooled so they could help with the family business. 

“I have chosen this lifestyle because I can’t picture anything better than traveling the country with my boys and doing the thing that I love the most,” Russo said. “There is absolutely nothing I would change about my life.” 

Side Bars:  

Dark Art Mark  

Since his childhood, Mark Hadley has always aspired to be an Artist.  The first watercolor painting he ever created was published in a book when he was in the fifth grade. He is a self-taught artist and has won multiple awards including Best in Show, Best Black & White, and Best Horror for the last three years in a row at Dragon Con in Atlanta.  

Known for his dark art original acrylics, Hadley manages to capture a truly creepy scene, and presents the viewer with a disturbing, yet beautiful image. He calls this “approachable terror.” Hadley has designed apparel and marketing pieces for name brand companies, such as Fox Films, Harley Davidson, and Warner Brothers.   

He has also worked with numerous charities, created murals including one for the movie Jackass 2, and he said his favorite project was painting a 10-foot Gibson Guitar that was featured on Fox TV. Hadley lives in Orlando, Florida with his two boys and his wife. He travels around the nation exhibiting his art at conventions and galleries to make his living.  

“If I can make a month’s salary doing two shows a month, why wouldn’t I?” Hadley said.  

Hadley said that he enjoys the extra time that he is able to spend with his children by not working 40 hours a week. Part of his creative process is to have his children paint with him. He said the quality time with his children and mixing his two passions helps him produce his best work. Hadley said he wants his children to have the same opportunities to express themselves as he has been awarded.  

Hadley attended the Atlanta Comic Convention in 2018 as well as this year’s conventions and he said that he will continue to come back each time because it is a great group of people and the attendees really enjoy his work.  

Comic Con: A Brief History  

Shel Dorf, Ken Krueger, and Richard Alf were four comic loving teenagers in the ‘70s when they founded what is now known as Comic-Con International: San Diego began in 1970. Comic-Con started as a one-day event, which they called a “minicon,” also known as San Diego’s Golden State Comic-Minicon and it was held in downtown San Diego. The purpose of this single-day event was to raise money and create interest for a possible larger comic convention. The success of the minicon gave the founders the funds and the confidence they needed to hold the first full-on, three-day San Diego Comic-Con called San Diego’s Golden State Comic-Con. Over 300 people attended this inaugural event.  

From the beginning, the founders of the show set out to include not only the comic books they loved, but also other aspects of the popular arts that they enjoyed and felt deserved wider recognition, including films and science fiction/fantasy literature. After one more name change to San Diego’s West Coast Comic Convention, in 1972, the show officially became the San Diego Comic-Con in 1973. In 1995, the non-profit event changed its name to Comic-Con International: San Diego. 

With attendance exceeding 130,000 in recent years, in a convention center facility that has maxed out in space, the event has grown to include satellite locations, including local hotels and outdoor parks. Programming events, games, anime, the Comic-Con International Independent Film Festival, and the Eisner Awards all take place outside of the main Convention Center, creating a campus-type feel for the convention in downtown San Diego. During this three-day event, participants are welcomed all over the city and can bring the fun from the center to the rest of downtown.  

Comic Conventions like this are now popular across the nation and comic lovers everywhere can enjoy the inclusivity and ambiance. Other organizations put on conventions annually to bring this culture into its cities and towns. 

Alice in Atlanta: Bringing Wonderland to Life

By Ashley Ausburn, Jessica Baker and Amecia Matlock

 

View photos with Captions here.

ATLANTA, Ga.– Leafy green vegetation covers the surface of the steel mesh, thriving in the sunlight as people stop to take pictures with the giant topiary-like figures. Knights, card soldiers and a mysterious doorway adorn a black and white chess set the size of a living room as part of the Atlanta Botanical Garden’s new exhibit Imaginary Worlds: Alice’s Wonderland. The exhibit, which opened in May 2019, includes over a dozen giant topiary-like structures of fantasy creatures and characters. Emily Saccenti, the exhibition manager for ABG, refers to the structures as “mosaiculture,” an art form similar to topiary but not quite the same.

Emily Saccenti, the Exhibitions Project Manager at the Atlanta Botanical Gardens. (JEM Capstone/ Ashley Ausburn, Jessica Baker & Amecia Matlock)

“Mosaiculture was first done by a company called Mosaiculture Montreal International,” says Saccenti. “Instead of taking one plant and pruning it to look like an animal like topiary, they take metal and steel mesh and make these frames. Then the frames are filled with dirt and plants so that more than one kind of plant can grow on one piece. It’s living art.”

Saccenti first started working at the Atlanta Botanical Gardens about two years ago. Previously, she had worked at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art as an exhibit manager until moving to Atlanta with her husband. While plants might not be the same as paintings, Saccenti says that there are some similarities between her old job and new.

“I come from a traditional art museum background so there was definitely a steep learning curve,” Said Saccenti. “One of the things that has been important for both jobs is problem-solving. You can plan forever and still have problems.”

When it comes to differences, Seccenti says that there are plenty of those as well.

“It’s easier in some ways,” says Saccenti. “It’s a lot less restrictive. However, it also has other challenges like working with the weather, outdoor environment, and sheer size of the exhibits. For the dragon and white rabbit, they took up two tractor trailers each. Some parts were too big to put together before transporting so they were assembled here.”

The centerpiece for the Alice exhibit at the Botanical Gardens is a 27 ft tall white rabbit resting in an upturned umbrella in the middle of fountain. Some of the other mosaiculture pieces share the white rabbit’s massive size, including three camels, a dragon and mother earth, who became a permanent addition to the garden after the tumultuous response from garden guests.

In addition to the work put into constructing them, the exhibit requires a large amount of upkeep. Just for the Alice portion of the exhibit alone there are four full-time staff members dedicated to the watering, trimming and general caretaking of the Mosaicultures. The giant creatures tower above the garden guests as they stop for photos.

“You can tell where the good photo spots are by the grass,” says Saccenti with a smile. “If you look, you see it’s all flat and worn down.”

After the opening of the exhibition in May, the gardens saw an increase in attendance. Saccenti says that she expects that attendance to rise again near the end of the exhibit in October because of Halloween. While Saccenti herself hasn’t seen any real-life Alice characters wandering around the garden, she says that she has heard about a few from co-workers, some being little kids with their families while others were cosplaying taking advantage of the Wonderland setting so close to home.

View photos with Captions here.

The Atlanta Botanical Gardens is not the only place Alice fans can go to feel like they’re part of the movie. Another destination reminiscent of the Lewis Carroll story is Dr. Bombay’s Underwater Tea Party. Located about 20 minutes away from the Botanical Gardens, Dr. Bombay’s offers different teas, scones, pastries and drinks that allows guests to feel as if they’ve stepped into the pages of Lewis Carroll’s famous tale. Patrick Dunlea, the manager at Dr. Bombay’s Underwater Tea Party, says that while many younger guests come dressed as princesses for high tea, one instance from around 5 or 6 hears ago comes to mind when he thinks of Alice in Wonderland.

“A group came in dressed as the characters from Alice in Wonderland,” recalls Dunlea. “They brought their own table decorations and stayed in character for most of the time they were here. They seemed determined to recreate the tea party scene from the movies.”

Dr. Bombay’s Underwater Tea Party offers an array of options from high tea, which takes place at 4 o’clock from Monday to Friday and three times a day on the weekend, to a simple pot of tea with a few scones. The feel of the restaurant is distinctly “kitschy,” as described by Dunlea, given the fact that all the linen and dishes are bought from garage sales, thrift stores and occasionally antique shops. In some sense, each teacup and saucer are unique. Truly a tea shop worthy of a mad hatter.

“We’re not serving the queen’s high tea here,” says Dunlea. “Our goal is that you should leave here having fun.”

Georgia resident Madison Woodard decided to do just that when she visited the Atlanta Botanical Gardens a few days before her birthday to see the new Alice’s Wonderland exhibit. A fan of elaborate birthday parties, Woodard gazed up at the mosaiculture pieces with interest.

“If I was going to plan an Alice in Wonderland themed birthday party, I would have everyone dress up as one of the characters from the Disney movies and come to the botanical gardens to take pictures,” says Woodard. “Then, we would go shopping at the Disney store and have high tea at a tea shop nearby, probably Mary Mac’s or Dr. Bombay’s Underwater Tea Party since they’re nearby. That seems like the perfect Alice birthday party to me.”

Given the standing ovation the Imaginary Worlds exhibit has received, it’s very likely that it will be making another comeback in the near future, possibly with new themes pieces.

“There’s already talk about what the exhibit is going to be like next year,” says Saccenti. “A lot of people are saying they want dinosaurs. Personally, I think giant flowers would be nice. Flowers made out of other flowers- It could be something.”

Sidebar 1- Tea and Culture Intertwined -English tea versus Vietnamese tea

Dr. Bombay’s Underwater Tea Party provides a scenario in which tea plays a unique part in connecting cultures. The tea shop serves a variety of treats, teas and coffees in an eclectic teahouse environment and all their proceeds go toward the teahouse’s education program, ‘The Learning Tea,’ which is a scholarship program for young women in India who cannot afford an education. Beside the tables of teacups and saucers, bookshelves line the walls of the restaurant, brimming with books donated by customers. Each book costs a dollar to buy and all the proceeds from these sales go toward the scholarship program.

“There’s no rhyme or reason to how they’re organized,” says Patrick Dunlea, the manager of the tea shop. “Customers drop them off as donations, we stamp our name on them and sell them for a dollar. All the proceeds from that, along with the other items we sell and the revenue from the shop at the end of the day all go toward the Learning Tea.”

The teahouse gains much inspiration for their decor from Alice in Wonderland, with books, umbrellas and paper lanterns hanging from the ceiling and mismatched paintings decorating the wall, walking through the front door truly feels like falling down a rabbit hole.

“A lot of the charm and attraction from tea parties comes from the whimsical inspiration from Disney,” says Dunlea. “We all sort of grew up with that over the top tea party that they have.”

While this type of tea party may be one of the most common seen on the silver screen, tea itself plays a vital role in many cultures, most of which have their own tea party traditions. For example, the customs and traditions of a Vietnamese tea party are different from those of English high tea.

Karen Womack Ho Recently hosted one of these traditional Vietnamese tea ceremonies in Georgia for her wedding proceedings. She blended American culture with Vietnamese because her family, as well as her entire bridal party, is American while Womack Ho’s husband is of Vietnamese descent with a very traditional family. Womack Ho said that the proceedings began with the gathering of family and friends and sharing of words from immediate family members of the bride and groom. The brides unveiling is also an important part of the ceremony, and after all members are present, they serve tea to their families as a couple.

Womack Ho said that what makes Vietnamese tea parties different from American ones are the exotic fruits that they serve as well as the attire. Womack Ho and her husband donned traditional attire for the wedding ceremony and blended American culture into Vietnamese tradition.

Sidebar 2- Alice in Pop culture

“Curiouser and curiouser” is what one would say when they see the extended reach of Lewis Carroll’s classic tale Alice in Wonderland. The tale has inspired movies, art pieces and video games based on the story, but usually with some sort of original twist thrown in.

Published in 1856, the story follows 7-year-old Alice Liddell as she chases a waist-coated white rabbit down a rabbit hole into a fantastical world known as Wonderland. The tale is one of logic in which Alice, who had previously desired a sillier and more entertaining world, finds the nonsensical and disorderly Wonderland to be frustrating and chaotic. While the story concludes with the explanation that it was all a young girl’s dream, the legacy of Carroll’s work continues into the 21st century.

Due to its appeal to audiences of all ages, ‘Alice’ continues to spawn numerous reimaginations, parodies and adaptations. Alice even stars in her own video game series that delves into a darker, more twisted version of Wonderland: American McGee’s Alice (2000) and its subsequent sequel, Alice: Madness Returns (2011) Created by American game designer American McGee.

These psychological horror action-adventure games have spawned a large fan following, with love and dedication toward the story presented in the forms of artwork, fan-made stories and cosplay. Dara Goldfield, known as @daracosplay on Instagram, is a professional cosplayer who, after playing the games and falling in love with the character, wanted a chance to cosplay as her.

“I love that she’s strong and that she’s able to overcome the death of her family in order to put together the fact that her psychologist is trying to erase both her mind and the mind of other children, in order to sell them off, and that she’s able to save them.” 

While Goldfield is a fan of the original Alice in Wonderland story, she loves the video games as well.

“I think they bring something new to the story and add more detail that the original story is lacking.”

Goldfield has attended several conventions dressed as Madness Returns Alice, including Days of the Dead 2017, Momocon 2017, DragonCon 2017, Seishuncon 2018 and Anime Weekend Atlanta 2018.

It would seem that no matter how much time passes, ‘Alice in Wonderland’ will continue to be a much-loved story and continue to be told and retold in new and exciting ways. The third installment of McGee’s trilogy, Alice: Otherlands, is currently in development.

Atlanta Turns Weird for Comic Con

By: Ian Milliken, Treasure Johnson and Rebekah Ozbun

Atlanta Comic Con is held at the Georgia World Congress Center in Atlanta, Ga., from Friday, July 12 through Sunday, July 14, 2019. Patrons meet outside the main gate to buy tickets and t-shirts before the show begins. (JEM Capstone/Ian Milliken)
Patrons erupt in applause as the convention in Atlanta, Georgia, is officially opened at noon on Friday, July 12, 2019. Many patrons arrived several hours early to mingle with other fans and have first access to the events. (JEM Capstone/Ian Milliken)
Artist Marc Hadley exhibits his wide array of paintings in Atlanta, Georgia, on Friday, July 12, 2019. Hadley hand-paints with acrylics and works on both original pieces as well as pop culture-inspired pieces. (JEM Capstone/Treasure Johnson)
Two cosplayers show off their Rey and Kylo Ren costumes in Atlanta, Georgia, on Friday, July 12, 2019. The costumes, inspired by the recent Star Wars films, include a remote-controlled BB8 robot which can roll freely. (JEM Capstone/Ian Milliken)
The Bennet family shows off their own cosplay, including a jedi warrior, a ninja turtle, and Ron Weasley in Atlanta, Georgia, on Friday, July 12, 2019. The convention encourages patrons to dress as their favorite characters to help get into the spirit of fandoms. (JEM Capstone/Ian Milliken)
A large collection of collectible action figures is shown off at one of the many vendor booths in Atlanta, Georgia, on Friday, July 12, 2019. The convention features a huge array of different vendors offering art, merchandise, toys and many other interesting trinkets. (JEM Capstone/Treasure Johnson)
Richard Adams models his film-accurate scout trooper costume from the Star Wars films in Atlanta, Georgia, on Friday, July 12, 2019. Adams is a part of a group of cosplayers who dress in Star Wars inspired military uniforms known as the 501st Legion. (JEM Capstone/Treasure Johnson)
An original poster for the convention featuring characters from Marvel is given to patrons as they enter the exhibit hall in Atlanta, Georgia, on Friday, July 12, 2019. Patrons are able to stop by this booth for information and to collect maps and schedules of events. (JEM Capstone/Treasure Johnson)
Patrick Connors and his daughter Annabelle show off their Powerpuff Girls costumes with a big smile in Atlanta, Georgia, on Friday, July 12, 2019. The convention is a family-friendly event which encourages parents to dress up with their kids when possible. (JEM Capstone/Ian Milliken)
Among the merchandise and art available, one vendor sells source-accurate weapons and armor from video games and movies in Atlanta, Georgia, on Friday, July 12, 2019. For many vendors, these conventions represent their best opportunity to connect with a large audience interested in what they’re selling. (JEM Capstone/Ian Milliken)

Preserving Georgia History

By Jacari Brooks, Meghan Cooper & Haneefa J. Walton 

  • Retired Roswell police officer is a top historian
  • His life is devoted to uncovering untold stories
  • Offering closure for families

A little boy, around kindergarten age, walks into a small gift shop with shells and knick-knacks scattered about for tourists. A big wicker basket bin sitting on the floor filled with straw hats caught his eye. On the band of the straw hats were a Confederate flag and a cartoon comic Confederate Colonel with a speech bubble that read, ‘Heck no! Won’t forget!’ that repeated around the band of the hat.    

“The feeling of rage went in me, I hated that flag,” Hitt said. “It was a feeling of revenge.”  

Hitt  purchased that hat in the gift shop that day as a child. It was solely based on the aspect that it had something to do with the Civil War.      

“I didn’t want to buy it to wear it,” Hitt said. “For many years it sat on my shelf in the closet, I never wore it, but I knew it had a connection to a certain period of time. That’s why I bought it.”   

For many years  Hitt  wondered where this feeling came from, he was too young to know much about the Civil War at that time and that the flag had significance. This moment from his childhood is his earliest memory of his journey and passion into history.  

Hitt has spent his whole life researching and preserving history.  He served in the Army and on both the Georgia Tech and Roswell police department where he managed to balance his careers with his passion for historic preservation and research. 

Hitt said he was moved to join the Army while working at Kennesaw National Park on the cannon crew. He said it did not make sense that he was researching and studying military history but did not have military any military service.   

“So, after high school, I left for Army boot camp, to be a part of history,” Hitt said.  

In the Army, he spent his time visiting historical sites and dressing up in historical military uniforms.  When he was stationed in Fort Hood, Texas, he was assigned to the 1st Cavalry Division Museum. 

Michael Hitt dresses in one of his many uniforms and talks to guests about the cannon at the Kennesaw Mountain Battlefield on July 21, 2019 in Kennesaw, Ga.

After serving his country, Hitt attended Kennesaw State University, where he studied criminal justice. He knew he did not want to be a history teacher, so his love of history took him down a path to law enforcement. Hitt said that law enforcement and researching history share the same objectives. 

“ In that field, you get to research a prove something happened, which is like historical research,” Hitt explained. 

Hitt, whose father was the director of admissions, joined the Georgia Tech Police Department because of their history but transferred after a couple of years to the Roswell Police Department.  

“ I wanted a larger area to study and patrol,” Hitt said. “ I then went to work for the Roswell Police Department because that city had a historic district.” 

Hitt shares his collection of newspaper clippings about his historical research as well as photos from his time in the military. (Photo by Haneefa Walton)

While Hitt was with the Roswell Police Department, he begins to publish his work on the city of Roswell.  One of the first works he published on the city of Roswell was on the gold mine shafts that were being found in subdivisions in Roswell. 

“What hit the paper was, that they believed these were tunnels the Cherokee Indians built to hide-out to prevent from going on the trail of tears; or they built them to hide their gold before they left,” Hitt said. “I started doing research, and these are in sure gold mines.” 

Now 62 years old and retired, Hitt has authored and co-authored 18 books and maps.  He spends his time researching historical mysteries that occurred on land or in the air, solving them with techniques he learned while being a police officer, giving lectures and putting together memorials for the forgotten. He conducts all of his projects and investigations using his own money and donates his work to museums and libraries. Hitt was instrumental in recreating the history of Roswell, Georgia, and its Police Department. 

“I wrote a book on the Roswell Police Department because they never knew their history; the Fire Department had their own museum,” Hitt said. “The Police Department had nothing; I did research on the history of law enforcement in the Roswell area before there was a police department and how it evolved from Indian ages.”  

Roswell Historical Society Archivist, Elaine Deniro said that Hitt is always accessible to them at a moment’s notice and has donated his research papers to the Roswell Historical Society.   

“He is a tremendous help by providing us information here,” Dinero said. 

Deniro has been with the Roswell Historical Society for twenty years and has known Hitt and his work since he was a Roswell Police Officer.  

Hitt’s subject matter experience has been used by museums, libraries, and historical societies across Georgia.  Gwen Koehler, the Education Director at Bulloch Hall in Roswell, Georgia; the childhood home of President Theodore Roosevelt’s mother, Mittie Bulloch, has used Hitt to fact check research that they have conducted. 

“He is without a doubt one of the very finest researchers available,” Koehler said. “We know that if Michael has researched it and says this is the way it is; it is a fact.” 

Hitt’s research has led to the marking of a grave at the Greenwood Cemetery in Atlanta, Georgia.  The grave belongs to World War I nurse, Camille Louise O’Brien, who died in France during the war.  According to the Emory University website and research from Hitt, O’Brien’s remains were returned to her family after her death, but due to funding, the grave was never marked.  Her descendants that her remains were still in France. 

Hitt conducted research and found her remains at the Greenwood Cemetery. She had actually been buried next to her brother.  Hitt was able to get a $1,900 donation from Patterson and Son Funeral Home to provide a headstone 100 years after her death.  The ceremony was held on April 19, 2019. 

Hitt said he loves providing families with closure.  He puts together custom tours for families that are interested to learn how a distant family member may have died during in war.   

“I do research on that individual and his unit, and I dig into the details,” Hitt said.  

Hitt looks at maps, diaries, and Army reports in order to focus on the last two days of the person’s life to recreate the tour.  Afterward, he is able to give the family a visual of what the family member was looking at and where he was standing at the time of his death.  He said he covers all periods of history for his tours, but Georgia is ground zero for the Civil War due to the Atlanta Campaign. 

Hitt has been donning historical war uniforms since the early ‘70s; starting when he was in high school.  He can be seen at most reenactments in the Atlanta area.  Sometimes, he even takes his 16-year-old daughter, Madeline, along with him, and she dresses up also.  She said her fondest memories with her dad are dressing up and camping out for Civil War reenactment in Roswell. 

Currently, Hitt is researching a mysterious disappearance.  Hitt said that Countess Constance Hillyard De’Caen traveled to the United States from France to reach out to grieving families during World War I to update them on the up keeping of their loved one’s graves.  She did a lot of work with the Gold Star Mothers in Washington, D.C.  

“The national chapter of the Gold Star Mothers they never heard of her,” Hitt said. 

Hitt said that he could trace document of the Countess’s whereabouts to a hotel in Florida 1945 and then she just vanishes.  

“France nothing, United States nothing,” Hitt said. 

Hitt said that while he believes the Countess’s story will make a great book, he is not interested in publishing. However, he will give his research on her to anyone that wants to write a book after he solves the mystery. 

Family Matters

by Jacari Brooks, Meghan Cooper and Haneefa Walton

Members of a Georgia volunteers Union soldiers unit being called to attention by First Sergeant Gary Krohn. The volunteer unit is the only full time Union soldiers re-enactments unit in the Atlanta area. (Photo by Jacari Brooks)

Men marching in a formation to the left-right-left of cadence,  the beat of drums and the whistle of a fife guide their steps as they take their place in front of spectators.  Leading the formation is First Sergeant Gary Krohn, one of the drummers is Krohn’s son, Chris, the fife player is Krohn’s daughter-in-law Gabby. 

Together the Krohn family has a combined 34-years contributing to Georgia’s Civil War history by volunteering in with a military reenactment group.   

The youngest, Chris Krohn,15, started reenacting with the unit when he was just 10-years old.   

“It is a part of the family,”  Chris said. “My dad, brother, and sister were doing it, so I wanted to join also.” 

Gary Krohn has been reenacting for 20 years. He can be seen performing in a history documentary on the civil war, that is shown at the Kennesaw National Park Museum.   

The Krohn family is not the only family in the unit. Among them is the father-son duo, Tim and Ian Costley, who joined the unit together 5-years ago. Both father and son, are the rank of Private in the artillery formation. 

The Krohn and Costley family are members of a Georgia Civil War  volunteer reenacting unit.  The unit represents and follows procedures of the 125th Ohio Volunteer Infantry Unit formed in 1862 in Warren, Ohio.  

The 125th Ohio Volunteer Infantry Unit’s men were Union Soldiers who fought alongside General Tecumseh Sherman during the Atlanta Campaign. A significant battle for the unit came at Cheatham Hill, where they were pinned down by confederate soldiers and had to crawl out under cover of darkness. 

The volunteer unit, which the Krohn and Costley families are members, is the only full-time Union Soldier unit in the Atlanta, Georgia, area.  

“The Confederate commanders all want us to come to the battle,” Tim Costley said. “Monopolize, they have to change jackets. 

Sons of Union Veterans

by Jacari Brooks, Meghan Cooper and Haneefa Walton

For years, the number of hereditary members of the organization “Sons of Union Veterans” have continued to grow as members trace their ancestors who served in the Civil War as a Union soldier.   

“To be a member, all you have to have is one ancestor who fought for the Union,” said James Bryja, a member of the organization.   

Sons of the Union Veterans member James Bryja showcases his Union collection for guests during the 155th battle anniversary of Kennesaw Mountain in Kennesaw, Ga., on June 29, 2019. (Photo by Jacari Brooks)

In 1866, shortly after the Civil War, veterans of the Union army who served formed the organization Grand Army of Republic better known as GAR. This organization became one of the first advocacy groups to support the veteran’s rights and education. As the organization continued to grow, GAR created the Sons of Veterans of the United States of America in 1881 to help maintain the practices for future generations. The group was later renamed to Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War in 1925.   

Bryja, who became a member in 2014, was successfully able to trace his second great-grandfather Henry Fornette, who served in the Union in 1864.   

“When I asked to join up, they researched through the Pentagon,” Bryja said. “All of the people who have served ever in the United States are in those records. They found Henry’s pension records.”   

Bryja says the membership has been open to anyone who can prove that their ancestors are members of GAR or SUVCW and to those who are interested in the Civil War. The role of the members has been preserving the history of the Union veterans who fought in the war.  

“We generally try to go and keep up the Civil War sites and monuments,” Bryja said. “We adopt various locations, sometimes a cemetery that no one has taken care. We clean it up.”  

There are currently more than 6,300 men in the membership who dedicate themselves to continue the principles of GAR: “Fraternity, Charity, and Loyalty.”