Walter Sims
Walter Arthur Sims was an American politician and reputed Klansman.Biography
Born in Dawson County, Georgia,, he was the son of John Newton Sims.
The family moved to Buckhead in 1892, and Walter was educated in public schools.
He graduated from the University of Georgia in 1899 and began a twenty-five-year law career in Atlanta. In 1903, he married Edna Belle Cheshire, daughter of Napoleon Cheshire. He served as councilman of Atlanta's Ninth Ward.
He was twice elected mayor of Atlanta promising to clean up the police department after a gambling scandal which also included an anti-Catholic platform. During his tenure, the Spring Street Viaduct was completed, the north half of which still stands after the southern half was rebuilt in 1996.
He also built two new schools, not from bonds but from general revenue, and he also paid off a $1,000,000 deficit left over from the previous Key administration.
In 1923, he proposed building an airport, sending alderman William Hartsfield to find a suitable location.
Candler Field proved to be the best, and in 1925 the city leased it and the next year won a lucrative U.S. Mail route.
In 1924, he opened the city's Municipal Market. He is buried in Arlington Memorial Park, in Sandy Springs, Georgia.