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Vulcan! Table of Contents
SAVE OUR CITY SYMBOL Activities for Students of All Ages BIRMINGHAM HISTORICAL SOCIETY 1999 VIVE VULCAN! TABLE OF CONTENTS Teacher Materials A. Overview D. Quiz & Answers B. Activity Ideas E. Word Search Key C. Questions & Answers F. Map of the Ancient World Key Activities 1. The Resumé of a Man of Iron 16. The Red Mountain Revival 2. Birmingham at the Turn 17. National Park Service of the 20th Century Documentation 3. The Big Idea 18. Restoring the Statue 4. The Art Scene 19. A Vision for Vulcan 5. Time Line 20. American Landmarks 6. Colossi of the Ancient World 21. Tallest American Monument 7. Map of the Ancient World 22. Vulcan’s Global Family 8. Vulcan’s Family 23. Quiz 9. Moretti to the Rescue 24. Word Search 10. Recipe for Sloss No. 2 25. Questions Pig Iron 26. Glossary 11. The Foundrymen’s Challenge 27. Pedestal Project 12. Casting the Colossus 28. Picture Page, 13. Meet Me in St. Louis The Birmingham News–Age Herald, 14. Triumph at the Fair Sunday, October 31, 1937 15. Vital Stats On the cover: VULCAN AT THE FAIR. Missouri Historical Society 1035; photographer: Dept. Of Mines & Metallurgy, 1904, St. Louis, Missouri. Cast of iron in Birmingham, Vulcan served as the Birmingham and Alabama exhibit for the St. Louis World’s Fair. As god of the forge, he holds a spearpoint he has just made on his anvil. The spearpoint is of polished steel. In a gesture of triumph, the colossal smith extends his arm upward. About his feet, piles of mineral resources extol Alabama’s mineral wealth and its capability of making colossal quantities of iron, such as that showcased in the statue, and of steel (as demonstrated with the spearpoint). -
Birmingham Activities
Things to See and Do in Birmingham AL Sloss Furnace: National Histor- Ruffner Mountain: 1,038-acre urban Barber Museum is recognized by ic Landmark, offering guided & nature preserve. One of the largest Guinness World Records as the self tours. It is also a unique privately held urban nature pre- world’s largest motorcycle collection venue for events & concerts. serves in the United States. w/over 1,400 cycles over 100 years Railroad Park: beautiful 8-block Birmingham Zoo is Alabama's must Birmingham Botanical Gardens green space that celebrates the -see attraction, w/approx. 950 offers stunning glasshouses, industrial and artistic heritage animals of 230 species calling it beautiful gardens, playground, of downtown Birmingham. home. tearoom & gift shop over 15 acres. AL Jazz Hall of Fame: Honors ALA Sports Hall of Fame: More Birmingham Museum of Art is great jazz artists w/ties to Ala, than 5,000 sports artifacts are owned by the City of Birmingham furnishing educational info, displayed in this 33,000-sq-foot and encompasses 3.9 acres in the exhibits, & entertainment. home for heroes. heart of the city’s cultural district Arlington House & Gardens is on The Vulcan statue is the largest cast Rickwood's miracle mile of under- the National Register of Historic iron statue in the world, and is the ground caverns! The 260 million- year -old limestone formations, Places located on 6 acres in the city symbol of Birmingham, Alabama. heart of Old Elyton. blind cave fish & underground pools. Birmingham Civil Rights Insti- McWane Science Center in Birming- Rickwood Field, America's oldest tute: large interpretive museum ham features 4 floors of hands-on ballpark. -
Chapter 5 – Open Space, Parks and Recreation
Chapter 5 Open Space, Parks and Recreation PERSONAL VISION STATEMENTS “An accessible city connected by green spaces.” “Well appointed parks with activities for all ages.” 5.1 CITY OF BIRMINGHAM COMPREHENSIVE PLAN PART II | CHAPTER 5 OPEN SPACE, PARKS AND RECREATION GOALS POLICIES FOR DECISION MAKERS Every resident is within a ten-minute • Assure, to the extent possible, that all communities are conveniently served by city walk of a park, greenway or other parks and recreational facilities. publicly accessible, usable open space. • Continue support for non-city parks that provide recreational amenities and access to nature. City parks and recreation facilities are • Provide recreational facilities and programs suited to the city’s changing population. safe, well-maintained and widely used. • Foster partnerships to improve and maintain park facilities. • Provide adequate, regular funding to maintain a high quality city parks and recreation system. The city’s major natural amenities are • Promote access and enjoyment of the city’s major water features and open spaces. enjoyed by residents and visitors. 5.2 CITY OF BIRMINGHAM COMPREHENSIVE PLAN PART II | CHAPTER 5 OPEN SPACE, PARKS AND RECREATION findings challenges Most residents are within a five to ten minute walk or City-owned parks are unevenly maintained. bicycle ride to a public park. City-owned parks are not consistently programmed City parks are maintained by the Public Works or equipped to maximize their use by neighborhood Department rather than the Parks and Recreation residents. Department. Declining neighborhood populations affect use and Private organizations have partnered with the City to programming in some city parks and recreation areas. -
Copyright by Celeste Evans Griffin 2010
Copyright by Celeste Evans Griffin 2010 The Professional Report Committee for Celeste Evans Griffin Certifies that this is the approved version of the following professional report: Arts-Based Adaptive Reuse Development in Birmingham, Alabama APPROVED BY SUPERVISING COMMITTEE: Supervisor: Bjorn Sletto Michael Oden Arts-Based Adaptive Reuse Development in Birmingham, Alabama by Celeste Evans Griffin, B.A.Psy. Professional Report Presented to the Faculty of the Graduate School of The University of Texas at Austin in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Master of Science in Community and Regional Planning The University of Texas at Austin May 2010 Acknowledgements This report would not have been possible without the dedication of my primary advisor, Dr. Bjorn Sletto. His insight and guidance was invaluable throughout my research and writing process. I would also like to thank Dr. Michael Oden, my secondary advisor, who guided me in the economic and theoretical foundation of this report. Lastly, this report would not have come to fruition without my interviewees, Sara Cannon, David Fleming, Karen Cucinotta, Buddy Palmer, and Alan Hunter, who each provided critical insight into the assets, needs and potential of the arts community in Birmingham, Alabama. iv Abstract Arts-Based Adaptive Reuse Development in Birmingham, Alabama Celeste Evans Griffin, MSCRP The University of Texas at Austin, 2010 Supervisor: Bjorn Sletto This report, situated in Birmingham, Alabama, explores the best strategies for implementing arts-based adaptive reuse development in vacant or available downtown buildings. Through adaptive-reuse, a strategy of repurposing old buildings for new uses, the arts sector in Birmingham can be nurtured and strengthened. -
The Birmingham District Story
I THE BIRMINGHAM DISTRICT STORY: A STUDY OF ALTERNATIVES FOR AN INDUSTRIAL HERITAGE DISTRICT A Study Prepared for the National Park Service Department of the Interior under Cooperative Agreement CA-5000·1·9011 Birmingham Historical Society Birmingham, Alabama February 17, 1993 TABLE OF CONTENTS WHAT IS THE BIRMINGHAM HERITAGE DISTRICT? Tab 1 Preface National Park Service Project Summary The Heritage District Concept Vision, Mission, Objectives A COLLECTION OF SITES The Birmingham District Story - Words, Pictures & Maps Tab 2 Natural and Recreational Resources - A Summary & Maps Tab 3 Cultural Resources - A Summary, Lists & Maps Tab 4 Major Visitor Destinations & Development Opportunities A PARTNERSHIP OF COMMITTED INDIVIDUALS & ORGANIZATIONS Tabs Statements of Significance and Support Birmingham District Steering & Advisory Committees Birmingham District Research & Planning Team Financial Commitment to Industrial Heritage Preservation ALTERNATIVES FOR DISTRICT ORGANIZATION Tab 6 Issues for Organizing the District Alternatives for District Organization CONCLUSIONS, EARLY ACTION, COST ESTIMATES, SITE SPECIFIC Tab 7 DEVELOPMENTS, ECONOMIC IMPACT OF A HERITAGE DISTRICT APPENDICES Tab 8 Study Process, Background, and Public Participation Recent Developments in Heritage Area and Greenway Planning The Economic Impact of Heritage Tourism Visitor Center Site Selection Analysis Proposed Cultural Resource Studies Issues and Opportunities for Organizing the Birmingham Industrial Heritage District Index r 3 PREFACE This study is an unprecedented exploration of this metropolitan area founded on geology, organized along industrial transportation systems, developed with New South enthusiasm and layered with physical and cultural strata particular to time and place. It views as whole a sprawling territory usually described as fragmented. It traces historical sequence and connections only just beginning to be understood. -
Teaching African American Discourse: Lessons of a Recovering Segregationist
Teaching African American Discourse: Lessons of a Recovering Segregationist Calvin M. Logue1 In the early 1970s at the University of Georgia I developed and taught a course in “Black Rhetoric” seven times. (Later we were fortunate to engage an African Amer- ican professor to adopt and further develop the class.) The first challenge, after compiling a working prospectus, was getting the course approved. At this time there was no Black Studies program at the Uni- versity of Georgia, only isolated courses in such disciplines as history, sociology, and probably literature. After submitting a proposed syllabus and extensive reading list to the Curriculum Committee of the College of Arts and Sciences, sometime later I was called before those representatives from the sciences, social sciences, fine arts, and humanities to explain why Black rhetoric should be studied at a univer- sity. A professor asked, “Are you going to teach our students to speak like Stokely Carmichael?,” one of the many advocates included in the syllabus. Eventually the proposal was approved. Looking back on that time, over forty years ago, I was probably among a num- ber of white teachers feeling increasingly concerned and guilty about the long sea- son of abuse experienced by African Americans in the United States in general and my southland in particular. We were presenting and hearing papers at conventions on the need for African American studies and the difficulty of accessing copies of speeches, writings, and other materials by African American activists that could be made available feasibly to students. Thinking about it now, my efforts in the classroom at the time, when contrasted with the dangers confronted by African Americans daily and when sitting-in restaurants, marching in hostile streets, con- fronting police dogs and fire hoses, and being jailed, were tame indeed. -
Local's Guide Events Calendar
BIRMINGHAM,BIRMINGHAM, ALAL LOCAL’S EVENTS MUST-TRY BEACH SUMMER GUIDE CALENDAR COCKTAIL BAG SOUND TRACK Insider picks for the What to do and where to Summer’s new drink— Your new summer The Southern-bred best places to eat, go from Memorial Day a Pimm’s Cup meets style essentials—all songs you’ll listen to on drink, and cool off to Labor Day an Old Fashioned made in the South repeat all season BIRMINGHAM, AL I DON’T LEAVE HOME WITHOUT a LOCAL’S GUIDE swimsuit. The opportunity for swimming pops up in a second in the South this time of year. Shaia’s has some killer trunks and towels. shaias.com ONE NEW REstaURANT totally DUQUET TE worth THE BUZZ IS Bettola’s new sister restaurant, Vittoria Macelleria. The atmosphere cannot be beat. It feels like a real European bistro. JOHNSTON 205/731-6499 MUSIcian, @rebelkinG I’D BEAR A BRAIN FREEZE FOR the Thai iced-coffee-flavored shaved ice from Ono Ice. I Know IT’S SUMMER IN THE city facebook.com/onoicebham WHEN all the critters are swimming in the Cahaba MY SUMMER playlist INCLUDES River by the Grants Mill local artists such as Road Bridge. Sanders Bohlke, The cahabariversociety.org Green Seed, Shaheed and DJ Supreme, Preston I’M catching THE SUNSET at Lovinggood, Dead Fingers, the 22nd Street viaduct BEiTTHEMEANS—there’s [downtown]. You get so much great music amazing views of the happening here right now. skyline, train tracks below, and the Vulcan statue. I FIND SHADE at Ruffner Moun- MY PERFECT SUMMER day tain. -
The Louisiana Work of Margaret Stones
Magnolia grandiflora The Laurel Tree of Carolina Publication of the Southern Garden Catesby’s NaturalM History, 1743 agnoliaHistory Society Vol. XXXI I No. 2 Spring-Summer 2019 The Louisiana Work of Margaret Stones By Randy Harelson, New Roads, Louisiana cuttings in water, work- The world-renowned botanical artist Margaret Stones ing quickly died in her native country, Australia, in December 2018 at to complete a the age of 98. Days before she passed away she turned the drawing while pages of the new folio edition of Native Flora of Louisiana: the specimen Watercolor Drawings by Margaret Stones, published by LSU remained Press in November. She appeared delighted by the book fresh and as depicting her intricate artwork created more than thirty- it opened five years earlier. its buds or 2018). (LSU Press, Elsie Margaret Stones, born in 1920 in Colac, unfurled its Australia, developed her interest in drawing and painting new leaves. as a child. Her focus on plants was heightened during a Clearly this prolonged illness—pulmonary tuberculosis—which kept style of work- her in bed for eighteen months as a young woman. Friends ing required a and family, knowing her keen interest and training in art, time-sensitive brought her wildflowers to draw and paint to help pass process of Stones Margaret of Louisiana by Flora Native the time. No doubt this period of confinement helped her plant selection From develop her remarkable skills of seeing and depicting the that make her Native Flora of Louisiana, Folio Edition. complex detail of living plants. A showing of her paintings large body of in Melbourne helped form her determination to move— artwork remarkable, especially when her subjects moved on her own—to London to pursue her art and expand her beyond Kew Gardens, which was a short walk from her knowledge of plants. -
Seibels, George, Jr
BIRMINGHAM PUBLIC LIBRARY Department of Archives and Manuscripts Seibels, George, Jr. Papers, 1963-1975 Biography: George G. Seibels, Jr., the first Republican Mayor of Birmingham, Alabama, was born in 1912 in Coronado, California. He was the son of Rear Admiral George G. Seibels of Montgomery, Alabama and great-grandson of George Goldthwaite, a chief justice of the Alabama Supreme Court and a United States Senator. Seibels grew up in Virginia and graduated the University of Virginia with a degree in history in 1937. While at Virginia, he was the intramural light-heavy weight boxing champion for three years, and after graduation, spent one year playing professional football. Seibels moved to Birmingham in 1938 to work in the insurance business. In December of 1941, he enlisted in the United States Navy and was commissioned an officer in 1942, rising to the rank of Lieutenant. He served on anti-submarine duty and on a combat minesweeper in the North African and Mediterranean Theatres, participating in the assault on Italy. Returning to Birmingham after the war, Seibels co-chaired the committee responsible for the Vulcan statue’s Safety Torch. He received the Distinguished Service Award from the Alabama Jaycees for traffic safety promotion. In 1947 Birmingham won first place in the Jaycees National Safety Award contest with Seibels as Chairman of the local Traffic Safety Committee. The George G. Seibels Traffic Safety Award is now given annually by the Jaycees to the Traffic Safety Chairman whose city has had the best traffic safety program. Seibels was elected to the Birmingham City Council in 1963, served as Mayor of Birmingham from 1967 to 1975, and represented Jefferson County in the Alabama legislature from 1978 to 1990. -
Alabama Properties Listed on the National Register Of
ALABAMA PROPERTIES LISTED ON THE NATIONAL REGISTER OF HISTORIC PLACES As of February 19, 2019 KEY: C - Contributing CC - Conditionally Contributing DOE Determination of Eligibility HABS - Historic American Buildings Survey MPS - Multiple Property Submission MRA - Multiple Resource Nomination NC Noncontributing NHL - National Historic Landmark TR - Thematic Resource Nomination Click on the county name below to go directly to beginning of each county listing in this document. Autauga Baldwin Barbour Bibb Blount Bullock Butler Calhoun Chambers Cherokee Chilton Choctaw Clarke Clay Cleburne Coffee Colbert Conecuh Coosa Covington Crenshaw Cullman Dale Dallas Dekalb Elmore Escambia Etowah Fayette Franklin Geneva Greene Hale Henry Houston Jackson Jefferson Lamar Lauderdale Lawrence Lee Limestone Lowndes Macon Madison Marengo Marion Marshall Mobile Monroe Montgomery Morgan Perry Pickens Pike Randolph Russell St. Clair Shelby Sumter Talladega Tallapoosa Tuscaloosa Walker Washington Wilcox Winston AUTAUGA COUNTY BELL HOUSE Listed: 2/12/99 550 Upper Kingston Road 1893 Structures: 4 DANIEL PRATT HISTORIC DISTRICT Listed: 8/30/84 Roughly bounded by Northington Road, 1st, 6th, Bridge, & Court Streets - Prattville 1836-1930 Structures: 224 (192 C, 32 NC) LASSITER HOMEPLACE Listed: 7/17/97 Autauga County 15, 0.5 mi North of junction of Alabama 14 and County Road 15 - Autaugaville Vicinity c. 1825 Structures: 7 (4 C, 3 NC) MONTGOMERY-JANES-WHITTAKER HOUSE Listed: 10/25/74 (Buena Vista) HABS Reynolds Mill Road, three miles South of downtown Prattville Prattville 1821-1822 Structures: 1 MOUNT SINAI SCHOOL Listed: 11/29/01 (The Rosenwald School Building Fund and Associated Buildings MPS) 1820 County Road 57 - Prattville 1919-1937, 1950 Structures: 1 Return to Page 1 This listing is intended to be used as a guide only. -
To FF Birmingham, AL Outbound Exchange May 27-June 3, 2016
to FF Birmingham, AL Outbound Exchange May 27-June 3, 2016 Limited to 15 ambassadors Activities: Tours of the Civil Rights Museum, the National Historic Landmark Sloss Furnace, and Arlington House (Antebellum mansion) among other activities. See schedule. Cost: $130 to Birmingham plus FFI fee of $70 and FFD fee of $25. Total $225 It is about 640 miles (2-day) drive from Dallas and some people may be driving and carpooling. Price of transportation not included. To apply: Complete the Application Form (also available on Home page of our website) and send with final payment check of $225 made to Friendship Force Dallas to Mary Williams, 9229 Flickering Shadow Dr., Dallas TX 75243 Final payment of balance – due now. Questions: 214-505-7924 / [email protected] www.friendshipforcedallas.org Additional information about Birmingham from ED Vicki Smith: Birmingham is a city in a real state of change. Our downtown area was DEAD and dangerous for many years but in the last two years it has done a huge turn around and is coming alive with newly restored theaters, a new park, a new baseball field, fantastic restaurants, etc, so I would like to show you as much of our downtown area as we can manage to fit in. We are very proud of it. If there are those interested, we could go to Tuscaloosa which is about a 45 min drive to see the Univ of AL and perhaps tour the field and go to the Bryant Museum. Since we have just won another national championship, men might like to make that jaunt. -
Vive Vulcan! Acknowledgements
SAVE OUR CITY SYMBOL Activities for Students of All Ages BIRMINGHAM HISTORICAL SOCIETY 1999 TABLE OF CONTENTS Acknowledgements Introduction Recent Support for the Restoration of Vulcan & His Park A Vision for Vulcan Important Principles for Vulcan Park Activities 1. The Resume of a Man of Iron 14. Triumph at the Fair 2. Birmingham at the Turn 15. Vital Stats of the 20th Century 16. The Red Mountain Revival 3. The Big Idea 17. National Park Service Documentation 4. The Art Scene 18. Restoring the Statue 5. Time Line 19. A Vision for Vulcan 6. Colossi of the Ancient World 20. American Landmarks 7. Map of the Ancient World 21. Tallest American Monument 8. Vulcan's Family 22. Vulcan's Global Family 9. Moretti to the Rescue 23. Quiz 10. Recipe for Sloss No. 2 Pig Iron 24. Word Search 11. The Foundrymen's Challenge 25. Questions 12. Casting the Colossus 26. Glossary 13. Meet Me in St. Louis Teacher Materials A. Overview Insert: Picture Page, B. Activity Ideas The Birmingham News-Age Herald, Sunday, C. Questions & Answers October 31, 1937 D. Quiz & Answers E. Word Search Key F Map of the Ancient World Key Birmingham Historical Society VIVE VULCAN! ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS This publication was made possible by many individuals and institutions: Birmingham Historical Society's Vulcan and His Times by Philip A. Morris, author; Marjorie L. White, editor, served as cornerstone for this volume. Marjorie L. White, editor Beverly Miller, Advent Day School teacher, her students and Abbey Miller, activity planning Martha Boyer, Jefferson County Schools, lesson planning Carolanne Roberts, Resume of an Iron Man John Schnorrenberg, research on colossi Karyn Emison, researcher, lesson planning Scott Fuller, illustrator and graphic designer Proofreaders: Cathy Adams, Lee Brewer, Ashani Morgan, Rhonda Dowling, Karyn Emison, Hugh Rushing, Joe Strickland Vive Vulcan Committee, review, comment and distribution: Lillie S.M.