Tag Archives: Marietta

Marietta’s Big Chicken

If you’ve driven Cobb Parkway through Marietta, Georgia, you’ve likely spotted it a 56-foot-tall steel rooster with rolling eyes and a moving beak, high atop a KFC. The much loved icon was built in 1963, originally part of a restaurant called Johnny Reb’s Chick, Chuck and Shake. Hubert Puckett, a 1957 graduate of the Georgia Tech School of Architecture, designed the chicken after a company salesman sold the idea of a giant chicken to owner S.R. “Tubby” Davis. Puckett was working for Dixie Steel, a subsidiary of Atlantic Steel, who then constructured the giant metal bird.

Turn left at the Big Chicken!

In 1966, Davis sold the restaurant to his brother, who later turned it into a KFC franchise. Despite initial resistance from Colonel Sanders himself, the Big Chicken stayed because it of its iconic status. It supposedly was also the busiest KFC in the world.

In 1993, a severe storm damaged the Big Chicken. KFC considered tearing it down, but public outcry led to its full restoration. Pilots voiced their support to save it because they used it as a navigational marker when flying into Atlanta. The rebuilt version kept the moving beak and eyes but eliminated the original’s intense vibrations, which shattered windows.

The structure was fully restored in 2017.

Watch the Big Chicken move!

Zion Baptist Church of Marietta, Georgia

On April 8, 1866, Zion Baptist Church in Marietta, Georgia, was established by 88 formerly enslaved individuals who left First Baptist Church to form their own congregation. Rev. Ephraem B. Rucker, Zion’s first pastor, laid the foundation with deacons and Sunday School. Growth continued, and it was determined that the church would build its first physical home in 1888 at the corner of Haynes & Lemon Streets.

Eventually, the church built a much larger building across the street to house its much larger congregation. The church is still active today.

The original building was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1990.

Strand Theatre of Marietta, Georgia

The Earl and Rachel Smith Strand Theatre, located in the heart of Marietta, Georgia, is an Art Deco gem that opened in 1935. Originally built as a movie palace by the Manning-Winks Theatre Company, the Strand is used for movies and the performing arts today. Manning-Winks was a theatre company that owned movie houses throughout north Georgia and eastern Tennessee.

The theater has a long history in the community. The first Strand was opened in 1914 on Atlanta Street, but like so many early buildings, it was lost to fire in 1929. The current location came to fruition after another fire damaged the buildings at this corner of Marietta Square.

The theater was used continuously until the early 2000s. It then fell into disrepair. Under the leadership of Earl and Rachel Smith, the theater was restored and reopened in 2009.

Marion “Mary” Meinert Marker at St. James Episcopal Cemetery-Marietta, Georgia

If you’ve ever visited St. James Episcopal Cemetery in Marietta, Georgia, you were likely looking for the final resting place of JonBenét Ramsey. Another reason is to visit the supposedly haunted grave of Mary Meinert (1863-1898).

The striking marker of the mother holding her two babies stands out in the cemetery. At night, people claim they can hear the cries of a weeping woman, who they believe is Mary. Some say that if you get close enough that you can see the tears on her face. Others claim to hear a young child crying for their mommy or that the twin babies switch positions in her arms. On Halloween night, you can circle the marker three times and ask, “Mary, Mary, how did your children die?” and she will appear.

According to her obituary, Mary left behind six children, two of them being twin girls that were only four weeks old. By the 1900 census, Henry Meinert is listed as a widow with four children. I am unable to determine when the two twin girls passed away. The mother died of a lung ailment, but it was likely a birth complication.

Obituary from the Marietta Journal‘ on May 26th 1898 (page 1)

The Death Angel Darkens a home

Death has again invaded the happy home in Marietta and took a pure and good wife and a loving devoted mother. Mrs. Marion Meinert wife our esteemed fellow citizen Mr. Henry Meinert. The sad event occurred last Saturday morning about 11:30 o’clock. The deceased had been sick some four weeks, her lungs being involved.

She was one of the most patient, lovable women in Marietta. She had a heart that sympathized with suffering humanity and one who did more charitable work in visiting the poor and sick ministering unto their need that did Mrs. Meinert. She was a truly a disciple of Christ and went about doing good.

She was in her 34th year of her age at the time of her death. She leaves behind her husband and six children, of that number were twin girls four weeks old.

The funeral services were conducted at the family residence on last Sunday afternoon at 4 o’clock, Rev J.H. Patton officiating. There was a number of our citizens present.

The casket was literally covered with flowers, some arrange in beautiful designs, offerings of friends. The internment took place in the Episcopal cemetery.
We tender our sincere sympathy to the bereaved husband, children, relatives in this their sad hour of their grief.

JonBenét Ramsey at St. James Episcopal Cemetery-Marietta, Georgia

Cobb County
1990-1996