Gone With The Wind City ◆ 【ORIGINAL】
The phrase almost universally refers to Atlanta, Georgia .
Margaret Mitchell’s novel is deeply rooted in the history of Atlanta . The city serves as a symbol of the "New South," rising from the ashes of the Burning of Atlanta during General Sherman’s March to the Sea. gone with the wind city
Here is a piece exploring that connection: The phrase almost universally refers to Atlanta, Georgia
Mitchell wrote her epic from a cramped apartment in a building known as "The Dump," typing out the saga of a willful woman who refused to lose. That location, now the Margaret Mitchell House, sits nestled amidst the modern expansion of Midtown, a brick-and-mortar reminder that the story was born from the concrete reality of a city trying to find its footing after total devastation. now the Margaret Mitchell House
