List of Properties in the Alabama Register Is Available Alphabetically
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
A Chronology of the Civil Ríg,Hts Movement in the Deep South, 1955-68
A Chronology of the Civil Ríg,hts Movement in the Deep South, 1955-68 THE MONTGOMERY December l, 1955-Mrs. Rosa L. Parks is BUS BOYCOTT arrested for violating the bus-segregation ordinance in Montgomery, Alabama. December 5, 1955-The Montgomery Bus Boycott begins, and Rev. Martin.Luther King, Jr., 26, is elected president of the Montgomery Improvement Association. December 21, lgsG-Montgomery's buses are integrated, and the Montgomery Im- provement Association calls off its boy- cott after 381 days. January l0-l l, 1957-The Southern Chris- tian Leadership Conference (SCLC) is founded, with Dr. King as president. THE STUDENT February l, 1960-Four black students sit SIT-INS in at the Woolworth's lunch counter in Greensboro, N.C., starting a wavg of stu- dent protest that sweeps the Deep South. April 15, 1960-The Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) is found- ed at Shaw University in Raleigh, N.C. October l9¿7, 1960-Dr. King is jailed during a sit-in at Rich's Department Store in Atlanta and subsequently transferred to a maximum security prison' Democratic presidential nominee John F. Kennedy telephones Mrs. King to express his con- cern dogs, fire hoses, and mass arrests that fill the jails. THE FREEDOM May 4,1961-The Freedom Riders, led by RIDES James Farmer of the Congress of Racial May 10, 1963-Dr. King and Rev. Fred L. Equality (CORE), leave Washington, Shuttlesworth announce that Birming- D.C., by bus. ham's white leaders have agreed to a de- segregation plan. That night King's motel May 14,196l-A white mob burns a Free- is bombed, and blacks riot until dawn. -
By Albert Turner, Jr. Turner, Jr. Oppose Renaming the Edmund
By Albert Turner, Jr. Turner, Jr. Oppose Renaming the Edmund Pettus Bridge As the son of Albert Turner, Sr. one of the leaders of the Bloody Sunday March, I oppose the renaming the Edmund Pettus Bridge. People don't come to Selma to see Edmund Pettus. Nor do they come to glorified him. Former Congressman John Lewis didn't call the Bloody Sunday March. To introduce a local Bill to say only the people of Dallas County should have a vote on renaming the Bridge is an insult to all those other Black-Belt counties residents who came to risk their lives for the right to vote on the Edmund Pettus Bridge in 1965. Some people in Selma have altered enough history about Bloody Sunday and they were not there. It troubles me how the movie "Selma " and other profiteers have distorted the voting rights movement. Ms. Oprah Winfrey did acknowledge the fact the movie was not a documentary, it was fiction. However, others keep trying to alter history that they didn't make," Dallas County residents did not make up a tenth of the people on the bridge on Bloody Sunday. My father who was there shared the accurate account of that historic day. He informed me on a number of occasions that they were scared, and that Dr. King told them not to go forward with the march. The fear that people would be killed because they could not protect them from the mob of Alabama State Troopers that were on hand. They were not there to be famous; they were there fighting for the rights of African Americans to have voting rights and to protest the killing of Jimmie Lee Jackson. -
Plantation Progressive on the Federal Bench: Law, Politics, and the Life of Judge Henry D
Alabama Law Scholarly Commons Working Papers Faculty Scholarship 3-10-2008 Plantation Progressive on the Federal Bench: Law, Politics, and the Life of Judge Henry D. Clayton Paul Pruitt University of Alabama - School of Law, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarship.law.ua.edu/fac_working_papers Recommended Citation Paul Pruitt, Plantation Progressive on the Federal Bench: Law, Politics, and the Life of Judge Henry D. Clayton, (2008). Available at: https://scholarship.law.ua.edu/fac_working_papers/624 This Working Paper is brought to you for free and open access by the Faculty Scholarship at Alabama Law Scholarly Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Working Papers by an authorized administrator of Alabama Law Scholarly Commons. THE UNIVERSITY OF ALABAMA SCHOOL OF LAW Plantation Progressive on the Federal Bench: Law, Politics, and the Life of Judge Henry D. Clayton Paul M. Pruitt, Jr. Revised from Southern Studies, Volume XIV (Fall-Winter 2007), 85-139 This paper can be downloaded without charge from the Social Science Research Network Electronic Paper Collection: http://ssrn.com/abstract=1104005 Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1104005 1 Plantation Progressive on the Federal Bench: Law, Politics, and the Life of Judge Henry D. Clayton* Note: This is a lightly revised version of an article previously published in Southern Studies, XIV (Fall-Winter 2007), 85-139. I. Preface From the fall of 1901 to the spring of 1914, Thomas Goode Jones was judge of Alabama’s Middle and Northern districts.1 A former governor, Jones had been a well- known figure in Alabama before receiving judicial appointment from President Theodore Roosevelt. -
Bibb Graves Gets Brighter JSU Administration Hosts Annual Holiday Lighting Ceremony
Jacksonville State University’s Student-Published IN THIS Newspaper since 1934 ISSUE: The Art Exhibition starts, film project Chanticleer debuted today WEATHER: Sunny, High 56, Low 32 Thursday, December 3, 2015 Bibb Graves gets brighter JSU administration hosts annual holiday lighting ceremony Lauren Jackson Staff Reporter The JSU campus became much brighter after the an- nual JSU in Lights on Mon- day, November 30. The traditional event marks the official start of the holiday season across campus as it attracted students, faculty and community members alike to the decorated front steps of Bibb Graves Hall. The event started with a performance by the Christ- mas hat adorned JSU Cham- ber Singers. Featuring Christmas carols, the group performed on the front steps surrounded by bright poin- settias, garland and several unlit Christmas trees. “It was an honor that President Beehler invited Chamber Lauren Jackson/The Chanticleer Singers to sing,” said Jessie JSU Chamber Singers perform on the front steps of Bibb Graves on Monday as part of the JSU in Lights event. Hill, a member of Chamber Singers and a Junior at JSU. hosted their annual toy drive spreading Christmas cheer man Forum. of the community together, In addition to enjoying as well. “Everyone brought all around,” said Destiny The toy drive is a service and helps make Christmas the holiday cheer, the SGA gifts for children and is Jordan, a member of Fresh- project that helps bring all Please see LIGHTS, page 2 Griffin’s Jewelers in Jacksonville DEPARTMENT SPOTLIGHT opens under new ownership Secondary Education Lauren Jackson prepares students to be Staff Reporter future educators of Ala. -
Lift Every Voice
CHAPTER SEVEN Selma, Alabama, June 1985: Building Bridges from the Bottom Up W HolJT," ROfe Sanden ha<l warned me when the picked me up from the airport in Montgomery in Iune 1985, a wtek prior ro the flnt day of trial. •s.!ma Clln change you, M Rote wlrispem:l. ~selma changes people's u~.. It ch1Jl8fd my life." Rose was remindi.rlg me of the nffii to mnlln COI\Mded to the paasion and indlgn&don that gave the dvil rights movoment its nrength and its reaillenar. By the m.ld- 1~ th<e dvil ris)lo movement was in danRer of sua:umbing ro empty plmi~es and JYIOflll lndifferenca in the Wiute House and Congress, where a few fmOOth phrases about voting rightl resembled the obliga tory nondanominational pnyer. • meaningless sesture In which the words carry no Jubs~ance. "Watch out, • Rose repeated, smiling this time despite the heat. It wa6 one of t:hoae 'ultry, heavy Alabema summer afttrnoont. I oould feel my forehead already slistening with sweat. /U we dtovu &om the airport to Selma, Rose wos expla.ining her dedsion to •m.lc there. R0$4! was guided by a romantic vision that peid tribute to Selma u a site of historic struggle. 1\ut her life wu hardly the stu!f of f.mtasy. Her deli· nitlon of a S®Cnsfullifc meant a:mtinuing that~ At live f.eot five, Rose Sanders is a duvith of ~ergy and enrhusi um. One of htr most strllcing c:hanctemtics is her voice. If sounds perpetually hotne, almost grawlly, as if driven by an inner urgency and paseion. -
Fall 2018 Fact Book
Fall 2018 Fact Book 2018 Jacksonville State University Fact Book Jacksonville State University Office of Institutional Research and Effectiveness 700 Pelham Road North 307 Bibb Graves Hall Jacksonville, Alabama 36265 Phone: 256-782-8142 www.jsu.edu View the Fact Book Online at: http://www.jsu.edu/oira/factbook/index.html Jacksonville State University 1 2018 Fact Book Jacksonville State University 2 2018 Fact Book Table of Contents General Information Enrollment by Ethnicity/Level 37 History 4 Enrollment by Gender 37 JSU Presidents 4 Enrollment by Level 37 Economic Impact on East Central Alabama 4 Age Distribution of Students 38 Accreditation Statement 4 Average Age by Level and Year 38 University Strategic Plan 5 Enrollment by Alabama Counties of Origin, Fall Fall 2018 Fast Facts 6 Semester 2014 - 2018 39 Enrollment by Alabama County-Map 41 Administration 7 Enrollment by Georgia County-Map 42 University Administration 9 Enrollment by State and Year 43 Board of Trustees 13 Enrollment by Southeastern U.S. Region-Map 44 President’s Cabinet 13 Undergraduate Enrollment-Dashboard 45 University Executive Council 13 Graduate Enrollment-Dashboard 46 Online Distance Education Admissions 15 Enrollment-Dashboard 47 In-State Fall Tuition, Room and Board 17 International Enrollment-Dashboard 48 Office ofAdmissions Applied/Accepted/Enrolled 17 Average ACT Scores of Full-Time, Credit Hour Production 49 First-Time Freshmen (Fall Terms) 17 Credit Hour Production and Sections Offered First-Time Freshmen-Dashboard 18 By Faculty Status 51 First-Time Freshmen -
History of ALDOT
Module 1 Read Ahead History of ALDOT Module 1: History of ALDOT Objectives After attending the training in Module 1, participants will be able to: • understand the history of ALDOT from birth out of corrections in 1911 until today. • identify the many changes that have occurred throughout the history of ALDOT. • understand the many reorganizations of areas, regions, divisions, and bureaus. Early History of ALDOT In 1911, the State Highway Commission was created under Governor Emmet O’Neal’s Administration (1911-1915). The State Highway Commission consisted of five commissioners and three regular employees. The State Highway Commission was organized along with an Oyster Commission and was initially housed in the cloak room of the Senate Chamber in the Alabma State Capitol. The first five Alabama State Highway Commission Members were Robert E. Spragins, Chairman, of Huntsville; John Craft of Mobile who later became Chairman of the 2nd Commission; V. B. Atkins of Selma; G.N. Mitcham, Professor of Civil Engineering at Auburn University; and Eugene A. Smith, State Geologist at the University of Alabama. Regular Members of the Commission were W.S. Keller, State Highway Engineer who had experience at the County Engineer level; Robert P. Boyd, Assistant State Highway Engineer who had experience at the County Engineer level; and C.L. Rabb, Clerk. Earliest Years Early highway executives in 1911 shared some of the same financial woes as their current counterparts. The Financial Act of 1911 appropriated $154,000 from the State Convict Fund. The Act allowed the funds to be used for construction of roads and for the overhead expenses of the state executives. -
A Civil Rights Lawyer's Story: Selma and Beyond Part 1 Oral History: Brian K. Landsberg Professor Emeritus Mcgeorge School Of
A Civil Rights Lawyer’s Story: Selma and Beyond Part 1 Oral History: Brian K. Landsberg Professor Emeritus McGeorge School of Law Interviewed by Mary Louise Frampton Director, Aoki Center for Critical Race and Nation Studies University of California, Davis July 13, 2018 Mary Louise Frampton: I'm Mary Louise Frampton and today, I'm interviewing Professor Brian Landsberg, a civil rights icon, and now a law professor at McGeorge School of Law. Brian, I'd like to begin by going back to January 1965. And you have just started your new job at the Civil Rights Division... Brian Landsberg: 1964. Frampton: '64, thank you. And you are a boy from Sacramento, you're fresh out of law school at Boalt Hall. You've been briefly to London for an internship and you've landed in Tuscaloosa. Tell me what you remember about those first days? Landsberg: Well, very first days, I spent my time with my head in a microfilm machine looking at voting... voter registration applications. And then I was told to fly to Tuscaloosa, so I landed there on Southern Airways and was met by my colleague Carl Gabel who drove me to the Holiday Inn in Tuscaloosa. And in those days, the Holiday Inns had bellhops. And we went up to our room and called in to Washington, DC, which we were required to do pretty regularly, and then went downstairs to get some dinner and the bellhop, who was African-American, came up to us and said, "You'd probably want to know that they're listening in on your calls at the desk." Frampton: How did that make you feel? Landsberg: It told me right from the start that anything I said or did in Alabama was likely to be heard by what you might call the potential defendants. -
Jacksonville State University Buildings Abercrombie Hall
file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/pritchett/Desktop/file.txt JACKSONVILLE STATE UNIVERSITY BUILDINGS ABERCROMBIE HALL – John W. Abercrombie, State Board of Education Member (later became President of the University of Alabama) ANDERS HALL/ROUND HOUSE – James Marvin Anders, Head of the History Department (see old yearbook 1965) AYERS HALL – Harry Ayers, publisher of the Anniston Star and grandfather of Brant Ayers BIBB GRAVES HALL – Bibb Graves, Governor of Alabama BREWER HALL – Albert Brewer, Governor of Alabama CROW HALL – R. (Ross) Liston Crow, worked in Business Office and retired as Treasurer CURTISS HALL – Miss Ada Curtiss, music teacher DAUGETTE HALL – Clarence Daugette, President of JSU, see pictures in Lobby DIXON HALL – Frank Dixon, Governor of Alabama JACK HOPPER DINING HALL – Jack Hopper, Vice President of JSU LEONE COLE AUDITORIUM – Leone Pruett Cole, first wife of President Houston Cole MASON HALL – Walter A. Mason, Head of the Music Department McCLURE CHAPEL – Leon McClure, Professor of Geography at JSU LUTTRELL HALL – Maude Luttrell, Professor of English at JSU PANNELL HALL – Henry Clifton Pannell, Principal of Normal High School in Jacksonville PATTERSON HALL – John Patterson, Governor of Alabama (Typewriter comment blank) PETE MATHEWS COLISEUM – Pete Mathews, Trustee of JSU and State Senator (Typewriter comment blank) RAMONA WOOD HALL – Ramona Wood, first wife of a dean of the college (before mid-1960’s), Head Librarian ROWE HALL – Charles Rowe, Vice President of JSU SALLS Hall – Coach Don Salls, Football coach at JSU file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/pritchett/Desktop/file.txt (1 of 3)8/23/2012 11:19:12 AM file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/pritchett/Desktop/file.txt SELF HALL – Ruben Self, Head of the Education Department and may have been a dean of education SPARKMAN HALL – Ivo Hall Sparkman, wife of Senator John Sparkman (US Senator) WALLACE HALL – Lurleen Wallace, Governor of Alabama Information can be found in The First Hundred Years: The History of Jacksonville State University, 1883-1983 by Effie White Sawyer. -
Regional Administrator Bell Honored
MEDIA ADVISORY PRESS OFFICE Release Date: February 14, 2019 Contact: [email protected] Release Number: 19-7 Follow us on Twitter, Facebook, Blogs & Instagram SBA Regional Administrator Ashley D. Bell Honored with Historic Drum Major for Justice Award in Marion, AL RA Bell recognized for his contribution & activism in promoting economic development within the African American small business communities across the Southeast ATLANTA, GA- – On Sunday, February 17th, Ashley D. Bell, regional administrator of the U.S. Small Business Administration and advocate for the Southeast Region’s nearly 7 million small businesses, will receive a most prestigious award by the Perry County Civic League. Bell will be honored with the Drum Major for Justice Award by Albert Turner, President of the Perry County Civic League. The award recognizes Regional Administrator Bell’s dedication to serving in his capacity to help strengthen the economies amongst our nation’s African American-owned small businesses. He has been successful with delivering SBA products and services to untapped areas through his Rural Strong Initiative, which has allowed the SBA to reach rural, often low income areas across the Southeast that often include many minority-owned small businesses. The Drum Major for Justice Award is an incredible honor that has been shared amongst many leaders that have helped to shape history. The award has been presented to Dr. Martin L. King, Jr. (1966), Governor Don Siegelman (1999), Rev. Jesse Jackson (1988), Senator Bobby Singleton (2010), Mr. Luther Winn (2013), Mrs. Coretta Scott King (2000), and Mr. Dick Gregory (2011) to name a few over 53 years of making this award. -
North & South, SCLC Internal Newsletter, Febuary, 1967
au.. T_/1 -~~-~S;.;:o;..;;u;.:;th:.;:.. c;:..;.fiJ Chrisban Lc9.deJ•ship_,9onferep~ Staff News , February, 1967 SCLC MOVES A HEAD ON NEW IDEAS AND PROGRAMS In addition to our regular traditional ac.tivities like the CHi zenship Education Program, voter registration and direct action. SCLC js rr:oving mto some new a reas of work. We're p utllng new emphasis on ~. conomrc development and housing, through s uch projects as Albert Turner's orgartizing of evicted tenant farmers , the Grenada co- operative super- rna rket, and se.U-help housing. Here IS a new rt~ por.·t on the work of SCLC Evicted Alabama Farmer~ Rally Togeth~ For many mombs. whHe poht1cians and Lando'rmers in the ten-county Alabama Black Belt have been driving sh;net:roppmg Negr o families off the J.a.nd. The excuse IS that the white farms are beccnung mechanized a.nd gomg into new types of far m1ng. But the real reason ~ says SCLC' s Albert Turner, is that "the politicians are planning to drive us out of tWs area so they can bema von.ng maj ority," Now the Negro farmers a!'.~ 'fightJng back by organi~ing co-operative efforts. SCLC and other groups, including the South ern Regional Council, the Nati onal Sharecroppers Fund and the Citizens Crusade Aga)nst Poverly, got together with the farmers to form the Southwes t Alabama Co- Ope mbve Associa1i on. Federal officials and farm experts have helped Vldth pla!UJl ng. The crue1 evictions can bul).lnet:-ang on tho w1ute folks. -
Alabama Historical Commission
ALABAMA 468 S. Perry Street Montgomery, Alabama 36130-0900 HISTORICAL Voice: (334)242-3184 Fax: (334)262-1083 COMMISSION ahc.alabama.gov The State Historic Preservation Office THE ALABAMA REGISTER OF LANDMARKS & HERITAGE AS OF JANUARY 25, 2017 All Alabama properties listed in the National Register of Historic Places are automatically considered listed in the Alabama Register of Landmarks & Heritage. However, they will not appear on this list unless the property was first listed in the Alabama Register. To see a list of National Register properties in Alabama, click here. 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^ ^Digital pdf files are available for these counties. Click on name of listing. AUTAUGA COUNTY Autaugaville Historic District, Autaugaville c. 1840s-1949 Listed: 10/7/98 Bell House, 550 Upper Kingston Road, Prattville (NRHP) c. 1893 Listed: 10/7/98 Gin Shop Hill Water Tank c. 1900 Listed: 1/31/78 Johnson, Billy, Place, Deatsville c. 1888 Listed: 7/29/92 Johnson-Rawlinson House, Pine Flat Community c. 1867-70 Listed: 10/4/96 Lamar Estate Family Home and Statesville School Site, Mulberry vicinity c.