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Atlanta Time Travel
Instagram Profile
Atlanta Time Travel’s Instagram is projected to grow by - / day
Projection based on recent performance trends.Followers Graph

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Atlanta Time Travel — Instagram Follower Projections
Projected growth from past data. Actuals may vary with trends or algorithm shifts.
Time Until | Date | Followers | Posts | Growth |
---|---|---|---|---|
Live | 5,396 | 139 | — | |
Not enough data. |

Atlanta Time Travel has an Instagram engagement rate of 7.52%
Atlanta Time Travel Historical Stats
Latest 15 entries. Daily follower gains and drops.

Atlanta Time Travel can charge up to $30 USD per Instagram post.
Typical range: $6 – $30 USDAtlanta Time Travel’s Influence Rate
Export CSVAtlanta Time Travel shows an influence rate of 7.52%, suggesting a reach of ~397 per post.
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Atlanta Time Travel (@atlantatimetravel) — 5K FollowersEngagement: 7.52% · Avg. Likes: 397 · Avg. Comments: 9
FAQ – Atlanta Time Travel Instagram Stats
Common questions about Atlanta Time Travel’s Instagram analytics.
- Here we are on Ponce, looking west towards Boulevard in the distance. This photo was likely taken between 1921-1923, just before Sears had purchase the property to build a catalog warehouse. Prior to Sears ownership this was an a amusement Park and mineral spring (1870-1920) that at one point fed a lake on the other side of the street. That lake was filled in around 1906 to build a baseball park. You can see the wooden stands of Spiller Park on the right - this is where the Atlanta Crackers played baseball, and later the Atlanta Black Crackers. This photo gives context as to why Ponce is such a wide boulevard - originally this was just a privately owned trolley line from Peachtree Street. Only later in the 1800s were public roads built, on either side of the trolley line
- Here’s a panorama photo of Atlanta taken by George Barnard in 1863, just before it was burned by Sherman. The photo was taken from around what is today Piedmont and Ellis street, looking towards the west. The entirety of the city was in what we consider downtown today and consisted of little more than 3000 buildings. The city limits extended only to North Avenue. The last image shows Ellis street going up towards the horizon (facing west): that is the intersection with Peachtree Street at the top of the hill.
- In 1890 an artificial lake was created across the street from what is now Ponce City Market. At the time, the land where PCM sits was a natural spring that itself became a tourist attraction. This lake was dried out, filled in, and a baseball park was constructed on the land in 1907. The Atlanta Crackers played here until 1965 when they moved to the new Atlanta Stadium and this baseball park was demolished. In 1987 a giant 380,000 square feet “Great Mall of China” was built - billing itself as a “new emporium for Chinese arts and crafts”. It didn’t last long and around 1998 the current shopping center was built - Midtown Place. And now you know why there is a street called Lakeview Avenue here but no lake. This photo is circa 1895. I also included a bonus photo with a close but not exact approximation of the view when it was a baseball field AND a birdseye view drawing from 1892. The line running up and down on the right side of the image is the BeltLine.