https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tanyard_Creek_Park
Tanyard Creek Park is a 14.5-acre (5.9 ha) park in the Buckhead area of Atlanta.[1] It is located along Tanyard Creek between Collier Road on the north and BeltLine rail corridor to the south. The neighborhood of Collier Hills borders it on the west and Collier Hills North on the east.
A 1-mile (1.6 km)-long BeltLine trail runs through the park - not along the BeltLine rail corridor itself but perpendicular to it. The trail begins at the west end of Colonial Homes neighborhood, proceeds west along the south end of Bobby Jones Golf Course, Louise G. Howard Park, under Collier Road and through Tanyard Creek Park, under a trestle bridge (active CSX rail line), connecting to both Ardmore Park in the Ardmore neighborhood and into the Tanyard Creek Urban Forest. The trail, and urban forest, terminates at Semel Circle, a new infill development area at the back of Brookwood neighborhood. The trail opened in April 2010.[2]
The Civil War Battle of Peachtree Creek took place in and around the park.
https://beltline.org/places-to-go/northside-trail/
Winding for approximately 1 mile through Tanyard Creek Park, the Northside Trail treats visitors to one of the most picturesque stretches of the Atlanta BeltLine. Offering a secluded feel that lets city life fade away, it serves as a connector for two previously existing trails
In 1932, the Bobby Jones Golf Course opened as the first public golf course in Atlanta and a tribute to one of the greatest golfers of all time: Bob Jones. Over the years, the course became rather obsolete and no longer properly honored the most iconic name in golf.
The newly renovated course has been designed by the late Bob Cupp and includes state of the art practice facilities, the Georgia Golf Hall of Fame, and programming designed to grow the game of golf with a specific focus on juniors and adaptive golf. Bobby Jones Golf Course’s Murray Golf House will also become the center of golf in Georgia serving as the Georgia Golf Hall of Fame and home to the Georgia State Golf Association and Georgia Section of the PGA of America.
The Bitsy Grant Tennis Center is a historic Atlanta public tennis facility consisting of 13 clay courts and 10 hard courts (all lighted). Built in 1952, the tennis center is named for Bryan Grant, the most outstanding southern tennis player of his time. Named “Bitsy” because of his 5-foot, 4-inch frame, he personified the “everyone can play” credo of the tennis center named in his honor. He was inducted into the International Tennis Hall of Fame in Newport, Rhode Island in 1972.