Categories
- Digital Archive @ Georgia State University (33)
- Digital Collections (40)
- For Faculty (742)
- For Graduate Students (753)
- For Students (743)
- General News (968)
- GSU Centennial (13)
- Instruction (49)
- Publications and Research (247)
- Resources (863)
- Books (379)
- Databases (354)
- Ejournals (127)
- New Resources (151)
- Oral Histories (8)
- Primary Resources (20)
- Services (72)
- Software (68)
- Special Collections & Archives (205)
- Subject Areas (790)
- Accounting (1)
- African American Studies (94)
- Anthropology (55)
- Applied Linguistics and ESL (4)
- Art & Design (46)
- Biology (52)
- Business (62)
- Chemistry (23)
- Communication (58)
- Computer Information Systems (7)
- Computer Science (25)
- Criminal Justice (35)
- Early Childhood Education (8)
- Economics (62)
- Education (123)
- Educational Policy Studies (9)
- Educational Psychology & Special Education (12)
- English (63)
- Film & Video (40)
- Finance (2)
- Geosciences (35)
- Gerontology (17)
- Government Information (32)
- Health & Human Sciences (65)
- Health Administration (16)
- History (201)
- Hospitality (5)
- International Business (4)
- Journalism (7)
- Kinesiology & Health Education (11)
- Management (4)
- Marketing (7)
- Mathematics & Statistics (15)
- Middle & Secondary Education / Instructional Technology (8)
- Middle East Studies (28)
- Modern & Classical Languages (12)
- Music (35)
- Neuroscience (12)
- Nursing (33)
- Nutrition (10)
- Philosophy (30)
- Physical Therapy (6)
- Physics & Astronomy (22)
- Political Science (93)
- Psychology (50)
- Public Health (59)
- Public Management & Policy (43)
- Real Estate (3)
- Religious Studies (43)
- Respiratory Therapy (6)
- Risk Management & Insurance (3)
- Social Work (38)
- Sociology (137)
- Speech (1)
- Theatre (4)
- Women's Studies (87)
- Uncategorized (369)
Archives
-
Share this blog
Access Menu
Disclaimer
Georgia State University Library welcomes your feedback and comments, but we request that they be polite and library-related. Views expressed here are not necessarily the views of Georgia State University.Tag Cloud
African American Studies Announcements Astronomy Atlanta Behavioral Science News Biology Books and Libraries Chemistry Computer Science copyright Counseling & Psychological Services Customer Service Education Educational Policy Studies Educational Psychology & Special Education Education and Psychology News EndNote Georgia Georgia State University Health Health & Science higher education hours Internet Resources journalism Journalism & Speech Language and Literature Learning Technologies Library - Instruction Middle-Secondary Ed & Instr Tech Online Education Online Guides Online Indexes Online Journals open access Photographs Psychology research Research Services Research Studies science Science News Social Software technology zotero
Tag Archives: historic buildings
Photo of Overlooked GSU Landmark Rediscovered

Director George Sparks’ earliest memory of what is now Georgia State University was when it was located at Pryor St. (now Peachtree Center Ave.) and Auburn Ave. See Sanborn map of location here and hear Sparks describe the college. When … Continue reading
Posted in Digital Collections, For Faculty, For Graduate Students, For Students, General News, GSU Centennial, History, Primary Resources, Special Collections & Archives
Tagged Atlanta, business school, Georgia State College of Business Administration, Georgia State University, higher education, historic buildings, MAPS, urban education
Leave a comment
Bazaar Education: Night School in the Peachtree Arcade

In 1917, at the beginning of U.S. involvement in World War I, the Georgia School of Technology’s Evening School of Commerce (now Georgia State University) moved into two rooms at the newly constructed Peachtree Arcade near Atlanta’s Five Points. The … Continue reading
Posted in Digital Collections, Education, For Graduate Students, For Students, General News, GSU Centennial, History, Special Collections & Archives
Tagged Atlanta, business school, Georgia Institute of Technology, Georgia State College of Business Administration, Georgia State University, higher education, historic buildings, urban education
Leave a comment
Blank Slate: GSU’s First Downtown Location

The Georgia School of Technology’s Evening School of Commerce (now Georgia State University) was housed in the Walton Building from 1914 to 1916. This is the first building the Evening School occupied in downtown Atlanta. The relocation of the Evening … Continue reading
Posted in Digital Collections, Education, For Faculty, For Graduate Students, For Students, General News, GSU Centennial, History, Special Collections & Archives, Uncategorized
Tagged Atlanta, business school, Georgia Institute of Technology, Georgia State College of Business Administration, Georgia State University, higher education, historic buildings
Leave a comment
Good Chemistry: GSU’s First Location

In 1913, the Georgia School of Technology’s School of Commerce held its first classes at Tech’s ivy-covered chemistry building (Lyman Hall). The Evening School of Commerce moved to downtown Atlanta the next year. Since then, Georgia State University has … Continue reading
Posted in Business, For Faculty, For Graduate Students, For Students, General News, GSU Centennial, History, Special Collections & Archives, Subject Areas
Tagged Atlanta, Georgia Institute of Technology, Georgia State College of Business Administration, Georgia State University, higher education, historic buildings
1 Comment
Moving Around Town in Downtown: GSU’s Earliest Locations (1914-1955)

Ever wonder where Georgia State University was headquartered during its early years? The first class met at Georgia Tech, but in 1914 the school relocated to downtown Atlanta, where it then moved from one building to another. Early records are … Continue reading
Photo of the Week: Burns Cottage, Atlanta, GA

The Robert Burns Cottage, located three miles southeast of Atlanta, Georgia, is a replica of the Scottish poet’s birthplace in Alloway, Ayrsshire, Scotland. The Atlanta cottage was constructed in 1911 by the Burns Club of Atlanta, a social, literary, and … Continue reading
