Sun, Nov 17, 4:05 AM CST

Have you seen Rock City?

Photography Architecture posted on Dec 28, 2009
Open full image in new tab Zoom on image
Close

Hover over top left image to zoom.
Click anywhere to exit.


Members remain the original copyright holder in all their materials here at Renderosity. Use of any of their material inconsistent with the terms and conditions set forth is prohibited and is considered an infringement of the copyrights of the respective holders unless specially stated otherwise.

Description


Rock City barn located on highway 411 near Cartersville, Georgia. History: By the time the Civil War reached the slopes of Lookout Mountain, more and more people had discovered what was already being called "the Rock City." During the famous battle of Lookout Mountain, both a Union officer and a Confederate nurse speculated in separate diary entries that one could see seven states from atop the summit. Rock City remained well known to hikers and geologists throughout the latter portion of the 1800's, but it would take the dawning of a new century before the fabulous Rock City would reach its full potential. Rock City officially opened as a public attraction on May 21, 1932. It got off to a slow start, because advertising in those days was difficult; especially since Carter's mountain-top attraction was not located in a place that people would just happen to be passing by and take notice. It was at this point another brilliant idea of Carter's was born. He enlisted the help of a young sign painter named Clark Byers, who was hired to travel the nation's highways and offer to paint farmer's barns in exchange for letting them paint three simple words: See Rock City. The distinctive black-and-white signs appeared as far north as Michigan and as far west as Texas. The advertising soon began to produce the desired effect and, by the close of the 1930's, more travelers than ever had seen Rock City Gardens. 1936 - Garnet Carter began his famous barn roof advertising campaign to lure vacationers from the highways. By the 1950's Clark Byers had painted "See Rock City" on 900 barn roofs from Michigan to Texas. For more on this: click here Hope you enjoyed... from the top of Look out Mountain where Rock City is located you can see 7 states can any one guess which seven those are?? thumb_1929846.jpg
To miss rock city would be a Pity.

Comments (70)


)

Shari123

2:19PM | Tue, 29 December 2009

When I was little, you could see those barns everywhere!! There are so few of them left now. I guess they went out with the Goat Man. Not too many people remember him either. Tell everyone if they haven't seen Rock City, they really need to. It's awesome!

)

cvrad

5:26PM | Tue, 29 December 2009

I see you found another Rock city Barn nice capture and nice to see some more Americana. Have a Wonderful New Year.

)

dbrv6

8:21PM | Tue, 29 December 2009

Lots of memories of these! Great capture!

M2A

11:33PM | Tue, 29 December 2009

Interesting piece of History.

)

wysiwig

5:44PM | Thu, 31 December 2009

I've always liked these old barns and am old enough to remember 'Burma Shave' signs. We don't get this out on the west coast. Everything gets torn down and replaced. Great image and description.

)

smittan

2:28AM | Sun, 03 January 2010

Great Shot !!

)

Hendesse

1:29PM | Sun, 03 January 2010

Fantastic shot and info!

)

Buffalo1

4:40PM | Mon, 04 January 2010

A fine example of "Rock City" advertising that either intrigues, or infuriates the driver going across the mid-South.

)

snowcrow1

12:59PM | Tue, 19 January 2010

Wonderful image, love the old barns with ad's!!!

)

lorandbartho

11:51AM | Wed, 10 February 2010

Great!


5 183 0

01
Days
:
19
Hrs
:
54
Mins
:
10
Secs
Premier Release Product
Eowyn Sci-fi for Dawn2
3D Figure Assets
Sale Item
$14.95 USD 40% Off
$8.97 USD

Privacy Notice

This site uses cookies to deliver the best experience. Our own cookies make user accounts and other features possible. Third-party cookies are used to display relevant ads and to analyze how Renderosity is used. By using our site, you acknowledge that you have read and understood our Terms of Service, including our Cookie Policy and our Privacy Policy.