Standard Club

The Standard Club is a private, country club, with a Jewish heritage dating back to 1867, originally located in Atlanta, Georgia which later moved to suburban areas in Metro Atlanta. The club today includes members from a variety of backgrounds and ethnicities representative of the Atlanta Metro region.

History

The club started as the Concordia Association in 1867 in Downtown Atlanta. Their premises, the 1892 Concordia Hall], are still standing in the Hotel Row historic district. In 1905 it was reorganized as the Standard Club and moved into the former mansion of William C. Sanders on the east side of Washington Street between Fair Street (now Memorial Drive) and Woodward Avenue. The neighborhood, Washington-Rawson, became the heart of the Jewish community until the 1920s and would later be razed to make way for the Downtown Connector interchange with I-20 and for Atlanta Fulton County Stadium and its parking lots (now Turner Field and its parking lots).

In the late 1920s the club moved to Ponce de Leon Avenue in Midtown Atlanta. The site was later acquired by its neighbors, the Yarrab Shrine temple.

In 1940, new quarters opened near Brookhaven, in what is now the Lenox Park business park, in 1940[1] and was located there until 1983. Today, the five buildings that form the headquarters of AT&T Mobility form a circle and overlook what was once the club's golf course and its lake.

In the 1980s, the club moved to its present location in Johns Creek, Georgia in the northern suburbs.

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