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NGE >> History and Archaeology >> Progressive Era to World War II, 1900-1945 >> People >> Joel Hurt (1850-1926)

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Digital Library of Georgia

Joel Hurt (1850-1926)

Atlanta businessman Joel Hurt was involved in real estate, insurance, and streetcars.
Courtesy of Atlanta Historical Society
Joel Hurt
He was born on July 31, 1850, in Hurtsboro, Alabama, to Lucy Apperson Long and Joel Hurt. After attending Auburn Methodist College in Auburn, Alabama, for one year, he left and enrolled at the University of Georgia in Athens, graduating in 1871 with a degree in civil engineering. He married Annie Bright Woodruff, and they had six children.

In 1871 Hurt secured his first job, with the Atlantic and Pacific Railroad, surveying a line from St. Louis, Missouri, to San Francisco, California. After finishing that assignment, he worked for the Northeastern Railroad, surveying a line in Georgia from Lula to Athens.

Hurt moved to Atlanta in 1875. With his brother, Elisha Fletcher Hurt, he formed E. F. and Joel Hurt, a real estate and insurance firm. The company's name was changed to Hurt and Low when Elisha left for New York, and James H. Low became Joel's partner.

After selling Hurt and Low, Hurt organized and managed the Atlanta Building and Loan Association. In 1882 Hurt established the Atlanta Home Insurance Company, acting as its secretary, and in 1889 he organized the United Underwriters Insurance Company, acting as its president. He later merged the two companies and served as president of the new business (which took the name Atlanta Home Insurance Company) from 1906 until 1914, when he sold it to the Fireman's Fund Insurance Company of San Francisco.

In
Courtesy of Historic Preservation Division, Georgia Department of Natural Resources
Equitable Building
1886 Hurt established the East Atlanta Land Company to acquire and develop more than 130 acres east of the city for Atlanta's first planned suburb. He named the new suburb Inman Park for his friend and business partner Samuel M. Inman. Later that same year Hurt formed the Atlanta and Edgewood Street Railway Company, which was financed through the East Atlanta Land Company. In 1889 Hurt's railway company initiated the first streetcar line, which ran from downtown along Edgewood Avenue to Inman Park. In 1891 Hurt electrified and consolidated the six streetcar lines in Atlanta, forming the Atlanta Consolidated Street Railway Company. Ernest Woodruff, father of Coca-Cola magnate Robert Woodruff, was vice president and general manager of the company, and Hurt served as president until he sold his interest in 1902 to Henry Atkinson, of Georgia Electric Light Company of Atlanta. Atkinson then formed the Georgia Railway and Electric Company, a precursor to the Georgia Power Company. That same year Hurt organized the Kirkwood Land Company, which bought the northeast section of Atlanta and developed another suburb, Druid Hills.

Hurt
Photograph by Darby Carl Sanders, New Georgia Encyclopedia
Hurt Building
was responsible for the construction of three buildings in Atlanta. The Equitable Building (1892, razed), designed by architect John Wellborn Root, was the first fireproof office building in the South. In 1911 he built the Atlanta Theater, the first fireproof theater building in the South. The Hurt Building, completed in 1926, was the seventeenth-largest office building in the world, and it remains a distinctive Atlanta landmark.

Hurt was one of the incorporators of the Commercial Travelers Savings Bank, which he reorganized in 1893 to form the Trust Company Bank of Georgia. He also owned and was the president of the Pratt Engineering and Machine Company, which built the Cotton States Fertilizer Company in Macon.

Conscious of his civic duty as well, Hurt was elected as water commissioner in 1886, 1888, and 1889 and served on the first legal planning commission. He also donated Springvale Park, the centerpiece of Inman Park, to the city. Hurt died on January 9, 1926, in Atlanta and is buried in Oakland Cemetery.

Suggested Reading

Sarah Simms Edge, Joel Hurt and the Development of Atlanta (Atlanta: Atlanta Historical Society, 1955).

Tammy Harden Galloway, The Inman Family: An Atlanta Family from Reconstruction to World War I (Macon, Ga.: Mercer University Press, 2002).

Franklin M. Garrett, Atlanta and Environs: A Chronicle of Its People and Events, 3 vols. (1954; reprint, Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1969).


Tammy H. Galloway, Smyrna


Updated 8/28/2007

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