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Tom’s Foods

Tom’s Foods

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Tom's Foods was founded in Columbus in 1925 as the Tom Huston Peanut Company. Purchased by Lance Incorporated in 2005, the company continues to operate its plant in Columbus, producing candy, crackers, and peanut products.

Courtesy of Georgia Department of Economic Development.

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Crown Bottling Works

Crown Bottling Works

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The Crown Bottling Works in Valdosta, pictured in the early 1900s, was one of the many plants around the state that bottled and distributed Chero-Cola, later known as Royal Crown (RC) Cola. The beverage was developed in 1905 by Claud Hatcher, a Columbus pharmacist.

Courtesy of Georgia Archives, Vanishing Georgia, #
low058.

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Royal Crown Cola

Royal Crown Cola

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Founded during the early twentieth century in Columbus, the Royal Crown (RC) Cola Company is today owned by Cadbury Schweppes, which purchased the beverage company in 2000. In the mid-1990s RC Cola held 2.5 percent of the soft-drink market share.

Courtesy of Cadbury Schweppes Americas Beverages

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Bobs Candies Candy Canes

Bobs Candies Candy Canes

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A box of Bobs Candies signature product, candy canes.

Courtesy of the Farley's and Sathers Candy Company, Inc.

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Coca-Cola Delivery Truck

Coca-Cola Delivery Truck

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The Coca-Cola Company and independent bottlers expanded across the country and globally during the 1930s. The company also launched several innovative marketing campaigns, including the introduction of the six-bottle carton, during this decade. Today Coca-Cola is the world's largest manufacturer and distributor of nonalcoholic beverages and syrups.

Courtesy of the Coca-Cola Museum

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Robert W. Woodruff

Robert W. Woodruff

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Robert W. Woodruff became president of both the Trust Company of Georgia and the Coca-Cola Company in 1923 and eventually became the architect of Coke's worldwide expansion. In later years Woodruff was also Emory University's greatest benefactor. In 1937 he established the Robert W. Woodruff Foundation, a charitable organization.

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Huddle House

Huddle House

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Huddle House was founded in Decatur in 1964 by John Sparks. Today the company has grown to include nearly 400 restaurants located in fourteen states, with 145 outlets in Georgia.

Courtesy of Huddle House

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Huddle House

Huddle House

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Huddle House, a restaurant chain founded in Decatur in 1964, is known for serving breakfast twenty-four hours a day. In the early 2000s the company expanded its menu to include such items as chicken wings and butterfly shrimp.

Courtesy of Huddle House

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Waffle House

Waffle House

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The first Waffle House opened in 1955 in Avondale Estates, an eastern suburb of Atlanta. Since its founding, the company has expanded to occupy more than 1,400 locations, most of which are located in the Southeast.

Courtesy of Waffle House

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Tom Forkner and Joe Rogers

Tom Forkner and Joe Rogers

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Company founders Tom Forkner (left) and Joe Rogers pose in a newly built Waffle House. The two partners have built one of the most successful restaurant chains in the Southeast.

Courtesy of Bill Lisenby Photography

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Waffle House

Waffle House

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Food in Waffle House kitchens is cooked to order in plain view of the patrons. Waffles, eggs, T-bone steaks, and hashbrown potatoes are among the restaurant's most popular items.

Courtesy of Bill Lisenby Photography

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Stuckey’s

Stuckey’s

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Following the success of his roadside pecan stand, Williamson S. Stuckey Sr. constructed the first Stuckey's store in Eastman around 1940. The store continued to offer pecans and pecan products, in addition to a restaurant and gasoline pumps.

Courtesy of Stuckey's Corporation

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Stuckey’s Pecan Stand

Stuckey’s Pecan Stand

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Williamson S. Stuckey Sr. stands beside a replica, built in 1962, of his original 1937 pecan stand, from which he sold pecans and the famous Stuckey's Pecan Log Roll along Georgia Route 23 in Eastman. The replica was constructed to commemorate the twenty-fifth anniversary of Stuckey's business.

Courtesy of Stuckey's Corporation

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Diet Coke

Diet Coke

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Diet Coke, developed in 1982 under the leadership of Coca-Cola president Roberto C. Goizueta, is the most popular diet soft drink in the world.

Courtesy of the Coca-Cola Company

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Emory University

Emory University

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Emory's relationship with Coca-Cola extends to the early days of the corporation, when founder Asa Candler donated $1 million to the university in 1914. The school recently built a $33.4 million addition to the Goizueta Business School, named after former Coca-Cola president Roberto Goizueta.

Image from Yaniv Yaakubovich

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Goizueta Business School

Goizueta Business School

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The Goizueta Business School at Emory University in Atlanta is named for Roberto Goizueta, the former president of the Coca-Cola Company. The school, which offers both undergraduate and graduate programs, was ranked among the top fifty business schools by in 2004 .

Courtesy of Emory University

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Truett Cathy

Truett Cathy

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Truett Cathy, founder and chairman of the Chick-fil-A restaurant chain, is pictured outside the company's headquarters in Atlanta. Chick-fil-A is one of the largest privately owned restaurant chains in the country.

Courtesy of Chick-fil-A

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Greenbriar Mall Chick-fil-A

Greenbriar Mall Chick-fil-A

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The first Chick-fil-A restaurant opened in Atlanta's Greenbriar Mall in 1967 and occupied a space of 384 square feet. Today, in addition to locations in malls, on college campuses, and in airports, Chick-fil-A operates free-standing restaurants and its full-service Chick-fil-A Dwarf Houses.

Courtesy of Chick-fil-A

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Truett’s Grill

Truett’s Grill

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In 1996 Chick-fil-A opened Truett's Grill in Morrow to commemorate founder Truett Cathy's fifty years in the restaurant business. A second location of the 1950s-style diner opened in McDonough in 2003. Both restaurants are decorated with items from Cathy's collection of antiques.

Courtesy of Chick-fil-A

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Truett Cathy

Truett Cathy

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Atlanta native Truett Cathy was the founder and chairman of Chick-fil-A, one of the largest privately owned restaurant chains in the United States. Cathy, who attributed his business success to hard work and trust in God, donated a significant portion of his wealth to disadvantaged children and provided college scholarships to many of his employees.

Courtesy of Chick-fil-A

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Original Dwarf House

Original Dwarf House

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Truett Cathy, the founder of Chick-fil-A, first started in the restaurant business by opening a twenty-four-hour diner in Hapeville, outside Atlanta, in 1946. Because the restaurant was so small, Cathy and his brother, Ben, decided to name the restaurant the Dwarf Grill (later changed to the Dwarf House).

Courtesy of Chick-fil-A

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Truett Cathy with Foster Children

Truett Cathy with Foster Children

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Truett Cathy, along with his wife, Jeannette, took in more than 150 foster children. In 1984 Cathy established the WinShape Center Foundation, which supports foster care for disadvantaged children. The foundation also runs WinShape Camps, a Christian camp for children, each summer on the campus of Berry College.

Courtesy of Chick-fil-A

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Eat Mor Chikin: Inspire More People

Eat Mor Chikin: Inspire More People

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Truett Cathy, who opened his first Chick-fil-A restaurant in 1967, published his memoir Eat Mor Chikin: Inspire More People in 2002. In addition to telling his life story, the book discusses Cathy's unique business philosophy and his philanthropic work with foster children.

Courtesy of Chick-fil-A

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WinShape Home

WinShape Home

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Founded in 1987 by Truett Cathy, WinShape Homes offer nurturing foster environments to children, ages six to sixteen. A total of thirteen WinShape Homes have been established in Georgia, Alabama, Tennessee, and Brazil. Each home houses up to twelve children, and large sibling groups are given an opportunity to live together.

Courtesy of WinShape Foundation

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Coca-Cola Bottles

Coca-Cola Bottles

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A 1960 Atlanta Coca-Cola Bottling Company store display. Coca-Cola drinks have appeared in a variety of bottle shapes and sizes over the years, settling finally into its distinctive "hobbleskirt" bottle in 1916.

Courtesy of Special Collections & Archives, Georgia State University Library, Tracy O'Neal Photographic Collection, 1923-1975.

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Pemberton House

Pemberton House

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This Greek revival-style cottage, at 11 Seventh Street in Columbus, was occupied by John Stith Pemberton and his family, 1855-60. Pemberton, a druggist in Columbus and later Atlanta, was the originator of Coca-Cola. The apothecary, once the kitchen, houses unique Coke memorabilia.

Courtesy of Historic Columbus Foundation

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Vin Mariani Bottle

Vin Mariani Bottle

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John Stith Pemberton based "Pemberton's French Wine Coca," a drink that was very popular in Atlanta, on Vin Mariani, a French beverage formulated by Mariani & Company of Paris.

Image from Wikimedia

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Asa Griggs Candler

Asa Griggs Candler

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Asa Griggs Candler, founder of the Coca-Cola Company, was also a banker and real estate developer and was noted for his philanthropy. His best-known philanthropy was in the form of a personal check for $1 million, donated to defray the costs of establishing Emory University in Atlanta as a Southern Methodist institution.

Courtesy of Stuart A. Rose Manuscript, Archives, and Rare Book Library, Emory University.

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Coca-Cola Delivery Trucks

Coca-Cola Delivery Trucks

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The Coca-Cola Company is the world's largest manufacturer, distributor, and marketer of nonalcoholic beverage concentrates and syrups.

Image from CEphoto, Uwe Aranas

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Former World of Coca-Cola Museum

Former World of Coca-Cola Museum

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In 1990 the Coca-Cola Company opened the original World of Coca-Cola museum in Atlanta. The museum moved to a new structure in 2007.

Photograph by David

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Coca-Cola Santa Advertisement

Coca-Cola Santa Advertisement

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A 1956 Coca-Cola advertisement campaign featured a jolly Santa Claus first made famous by artist Haddon Sundblom in 1931.

From Readers Digest December 1956, image shared by SenseiAlan

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Tom’s Foods Crown Bottling Works Royal Crown Cola Bobs Candies Candy Canes
Coca-Cola Delivery Truck Robert W. Woodruff Huddle House Huddle House Waffle House Tom Forkner and Joe Rogers Waffle House Stuckey’s Stuckey’s Pecan Stand
Diet Coke Emory University Goizueta Business School Truett Cathy Greenbriar Mall Chick-fil-A Truett’s Grill Truett Cathy Original Dwarf House Truett Cathy with Foster Children Eat Mor Chikin: Inspire More People WinShape Home Coca-Cola Bottles
Pemberton House Vin Mariani Bottle
Asa Griggs Candler Coca-Cola Delivery Trucks Former World of Coca-Cola Museum Coca-Cola Santa Advertisement