The History, Lore and Stories of Sagamore HillsSagamore Hills subdivision takes its name from Teddy Roosevelt’s Oyster Bay, New York, residence (1885 to 1919). Clairmont Road was originally an Indian path. LaVista Road was a cattle trail. Oak Grove United Methodist Church was originally built where the cemetery now is located. The church site was chosen because it was already a stage coach stop. We were told by Miss Ina Mae Jones that her family lore had Sherman marching his way into Atlanta via our sections of Oak Grove Road and Briarcliff Road. During the Great Rebellion of 1861, the Union army moved down what is now Briarcliff Road , camping near Echo Lake and eventually ending up in Savannah. Many artifacts still remain in the area. Peachtree Baptist Church, one of the oldest Baptist churches in the area, actually baptized people in Peachtree Creek. The late Atlanta historian Franklin Garrett tells the story of our Sagamore Hills area once being part of a great farm that extended to what is now Century Center (there was no I-85 then) There was a severe hog disease and many hundreds of hogs were rounded up in a low area and shot. The Briarcliff Woods Beach Club now sits atop that site. In the late 60s, the 7:00 am radio traffic reports spoke of all traffic being halted at the intersection of Oak Grove Road and LaVista Road. The problem was an alligator in the intersection. The police and the “owner” who lived adjacent to a lake located behind Sagamore Hills Drive, finally removed the offender back to the lake. (It was known as Phillips Lake.) Numerous pets would mysteriously disappear during those years. The lake is now gone as is the alligator. Bill Hicks, who once lived with his wife Johnny at 2346 Fair Oaks, says that he took a mule and hitched a big log behind it and laid out Angelique. He realized he could get more money selling lots rather than a whole area to a developer. Bill and Connie Keet originally moved into their home, 1645 Heatherwood Drive in about 1958. It was not Heatherwood then. The name originally chosen was rejected by the post office because it was already taken. So, a group of neighbors got together and agreed to the name Heatherwood. Heather was the name of Keets’ pet dog! After a destructive ice storm around 1973, the sanitation department was overwhelmed with collections. Five days later someone called the refuse collections office and proposed that they furnish a truck and driver and the neighborhood would supply the loading labor. They consented and everyone pitched in. The truck had to make four or five trips to unload the debris at the dump and -that was only from Heatherwood Drive! It took all day. In the 1970s, a petition was circulated to have street lights installed. It passed and the lights were installed. One Heatherwod resident did not like the idea and in protest, took an ax and chopped the telephone/light pole down. 1407 Council Bluff has an old apple tree in the yard, part of an orchard from farm days. Williams Lumber Company was one of the first developers in the area and they built many of the original Sagamore Hills homes. Deer Park Street used to have an annual Halloween Carnival featuring a Fortune teller and a Cake Walk. Ray Ragsdale, better known by his stage name Ray Stephens, wrote the “Flying Squirrel Revival” at the spot that became the Oak Grove United Methodist Church Barbeque Pit. Ray Stephens also wrote “Ahab, the Arab”. Mary Culpepper Harris’ “Sagamore Thoughts”:
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