Richard Peters (November 10,1810 – February 6,1889) was an American railroad man and a founder of Atlanta.
Grandson of Judge Richard Peters, Jr. (an associate of George Washington) he was born near Philadelphia at Germantown, Pennsylvania to father Ralph Peters.
He worked the state road the eight years it took to complete it from Augusta to the new town of Marthasville, Georgia, building a life-long friendship with Lemuel P. Grant both of whom began buying land in the new town. When the road was completed, he was made superintendent and while in that position heard many complaints about the length of the name Marthasville which took too long to write in log books, freight, etc. He traded letters with Thomson and when the latter suggested Atlanta, Peters began printing up thousands of circulars distributing them from Augusta to Tennessee advertising the new name which was officially changed in December 1845.
He built a home there and was married in 1848 to Mary Jane, the daughter of early settler Joseph Thompson. He founded the first Atlanta steam factory, the flour mill at the Georgia RR between Butler and Calhoun (the location of today's Sloppy Floyd office building). With no water, the mill needed to be powered by wood and Peters purchased 405 acres (the land lots 80 and 47) which is basically all of midtown between North Ave and 8th St for pine wood. This land turned out to be the key to his future wealth.
Always interested in transportation, he had run stage coach line from Atlanta to Montgomery, Alabama, but after the completion of the Atlanta & West Point Railroad he moved the northern end to West point and continued from there to Montgomery.
He left a million dollar estate. Of his two sons, Edward stayed on the estate and built a mansion which still stands while Ralph became president of the Long Island Rail Road.
He's buried in Oakland Cemetery, in Atlanta.
1810 births | 1889 deaths | People from Atlanta | History of Atlanta
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Richard Peters (Atlanta)".
Home Page • arts • business • computers • games • health • hospitals • home • kids & teens • news • physicians • recreation• reference • regional • science • shopping • society • sports • world