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Cabbagetown: Atlanta's Appalachian families keep traditions alive

Atlanta's Cabbagetown, down to a handful of families from Appalachia, get together for quilting, bingo, and reminiscing each week.

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Tami Chappell/Reuters/File
Skateboarder rolls by Cabbagetown tornado damage, 2008.

A local, slice-of-life story from a Monitor correspondent.

Tornadoes, drought, floods, and gentrification 鈥 nothing, it seems, can wipe away Atlanta鈥檚 Cabbagetown, an Appalachian village set amid the 10th biggest urban economy in the United States.

Stubbornly close-knit, members of Cabbage颅town鈥檚 original Appalachian families, now numbering only about 13 households, still meet four days a week at the Savannah Street Neighborhood House, known as 鈥渢he mission,鈥 to quilt, play bingo, and reminisce.

Increasingly boxed in by incoming hipsters, skate punks, and young professionals, Cab颅bage颅town鈥檚 original families sometimes feel marginalized. Resentment has flashed both ways, as newer residents complain about unkempt front yards.

But natural disasters have helped to forge an unusual alliance in a changing Cabbagetown and given new direction and spirit to one of America鈥檚 most unusual urban neighborhoods.

A 2008 tornado, a stubborn drought, and, last month, a 100-year flood shook residents out of their routines and into their neighbors鈥 lives. In the wake of the events, appreciation quickly built for the kind of self-reliance and communal spirit epitomized by the Appalachian descendants.

Cabbagetown was built in 1881, a mill village of small tightly spaced homes. The name comes from the once-ubiquitous cabbage peddlers who plied the streets. Mountain people looking for work settled it and worked at the mill. The entire 300-residence district is now on the National Register of Historic Places because of its concentration of Victorian frame homes and 鈥渟hotgun鈥 houses.

The concrete-block mission is the only organization original to the area still run by Appalachian descendants. The 鈥淐abbagetown Ballad,鈥 with its refrain, 鈥淲e鈥檙e a mountain clan called Cabbage颅town in the city of Atlanta, GA,鈥 is still hummed amid quilting bees there.

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