Thursday, January 28, 2021
Movies with Alabama Connections: One Clear Call [1922]
Tuesday, January 26, 2021
Alabama History & Culture News: January 26 edition
Here's the latest batch of links to just-published Alabama history and culture articles. Most of these items are from newspapers, with others from magazines and TV and radio station websites. Enjoy!
A Century Ago: Tuscaloosa Militiamen Accused Of Lynching Miner ... telephone, the most interesting case in Alabama's history is being tried" ... TUSCALOOSA, AL — The lynching of accused murderer and Walker ... |
Seventh-generation Chambers County resident writes bookOpelika Observer
Hank Aaron, baseball great who became force for civil rights, dies at 86Washington Post
Auburn University dean named chair of Humanities AllianceAlabamaOpelika Observer
Brad Morton's former Rotary Trail studio to become a 3-story office buildingBham Now
What Hollywood Gets Wrong About The SouthWBHM
Tuskegee Airmen Site Is Being Honored With Quarter By US MintHistoricBecause of Them We Can
CVHS to hold discussion on Hank WilliamsValley Times-News
Lurleen Wallace, first woman governor, inaugurated on this day in 1967: Vintage photosAlabama'sal.com
Spenser takes on Epstein-like villain in author's latest thrillerAlabamaal.com
Old Bonneau-Jeter Hardware recognized by CommissionAlabama HistoricalWTVY, Dothan
'Heritage House' approved: Africatown museum to tell story of slave ship and communityal.com
Wednesday, January 20, 2021
Oak Mountain Farm & Wildlife Center
A couple of weeks before Halloween 2020 Dianne and I made another visit to the Oak Mountain State Park Demonstration Farm and the Alabama Wildlife Center. Back in January 2020 I wrote about a visit to the farm with our daughter, son-in-law and grandson. I've also written briefly about the history of the park.
Some comments on this trip are below.
Thursday, January 14, 2021
Alabama Authors 2020, RIP
At least five authors with significant Alabama connections died in 2020. Here's a brief look at each of them.
William Cobb died on February 17. He was born in Eutaw on October 20, 1937, and grew up in Demopolis. He wrote a number of novels, short story collections and plays during his 30-year writing career. In the Encyclopedia of Alabama entry on Cobb, Carey W. Heatherly wrote, "In addition to racial strife, many of Cobb's works are noted for their considerably strange and dark comedic value consistent with the Southern Gothic genre of literature. Cobb's writings center particularly on characters who triumph and maintain their dignity in the face of failure. He received the Alabama Writers' Forum's Harper Lee Award in 2007."
Published in 1992, this novel looks at racial tension in a fictional small town in Alabama.
Ann Bowling Pearson died on June 23. She was born in Montgomery on April 6, 1941. Let me quote from her obituary:
"Ann was educated in what were then Lee County schools, graduating from Auburn High School, in what is now East Samford School. She received her bachelor's degree in English from Auburn University in 1963, her master's from the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, in 1964, and her Ph.D. in English Literature (emphasis in Victorian literature) in 1971, from Auburn University. She taught at Georgia Southwestern State University, in Americus, Georgia, then at Auburn University. For a time, Ann was a humanities librarian at Auburn University. For many years, she had a newspaper column in the Auburn Bulletin, "In Random Order." She also wrote movie reviews for the Opelika-Auburn News. Ann published annual children's Christmas stories in the Bulletin and The Villager, all of which involved cats. She published three crime novels, then partnered with Auburn natives Ralph Draughon, Jr. and Delos Hughes to publish "Lost Auburn, a Village Remembered in Period Photographs." That was followed by "No Place Like Home," co-authored by Draughon, Hughes, and Emily Amason Sparrow. Ann also authored the Auburn section of "Lee County and Her Forbears," by Alexander Nunn. Dr. Pearson was active in many community endeavors. She was a founding member of the Lee County Humane Society and supported its efforts until her death."
Ann Pearson [1941-2020]
Source: Opelika-Auburn News 25 June 2020
On July 8 Brad Watson died at his home in Wyoming. Born in Mississippi on July 24, 1955, he received a Masters in Fine Arts from the University of Alabama and later returned for a period as writer in residence. In 1996 while at that latter post he published Last Days of the Dog Men, a collection of stories that took him ten years to write. He subsequently published another collection, Aliens in the Prime of Their Lives in 2010 and two novels, The Heaven of Mercury in 2002 and Miss Jane in 2016. At the time of his death he was teaching at the University of Wyoming.
Winston Groom, known to many as the author of Forrest Gump, died on September 17 at age 71. Born in Washington, D.C., on March 23, 1943, he grew up in Mobile and spent much of his adult life in the city. After graduating from the University of Alabama and a tour of duty in Vietnam, Groom worked as a reporter in Washington.
By 1976 he had begun writing full time, producing three novels from 1978 until 1984. He also wrote his first non-fiction book during this time, Conversations with the Enemy: The Story of PFC Robert Garwood done with Duncan Spencer. In 1985 he returned to Mobile; Forrest Gump was published the following year. He wrote three more novels, Gone the Sun [1988] which is set in Alabama; Such A Pretty, Pretty Girl [1999], a crime thriller set in Los Angeles; and El Paso [2016].
Between 1995 and 2018 Groom published 13 works of non-fiction. These titles ranged in subject matter from University of Alabama football to the Civil War and World War II. He was also inducted into the Alabama Writers Hall of Fame in 2018.
Sunday, January 10, 2021
Alabama History & Culture News: January 10 edition
Here's the latest batch of links to just-published Alabama history and culture articles. Most of these items are from newspapers, with others from magazines and TV and radio station websites. Enjoy!
DON NOBLE: Classic British novel re-envisioned in Mountain Brook is full of surprises ... three Alabama novelists have struck out in new directions with really astonishing results. Patti Callahan Henry, famous for women's novels often set ... [Jane Eyre] |
14-year-old Mobile student writes and publishes book Guyton says “'Black Queen' of course is a fictional book about an African American slave named Betty Anthony from Tuskegee, Alabama. She was ... |
"Stars Fell on Alabama" movie Taylor Hicks, an Alabama native and former “American Idol” winner, ... "I think of the movie as a flip book, or postcards with images of the South," says ... |
"Exploding Hushpuppies - More Stories from Home" with Leslie Anne Tarabella Available in hard cover, soft cover, audio and E-Book ... Living on the Gulf Coast of Alabama where she raised two sons with her husband Robert, ... |
Local 14-year-old writes and publishes book Guyton says, “Black Queen, of course, is a fictional book about an African-American slave named Betty Anthony from Tuskegee, Alabama. She was ... |
US Mint quarter honors Alabama's Tuskegee Airmen National Historic Site U.S. Mint quarter honors Alabama's Tuskegee Airmen National Historic Site. By Alabama NewsCenter Staff. January 5, 2021. U.S. Mint quarter honors ... |
Lynching marker to expose Alabama county's brutal, racist history Community organizers hope to install a historic marker outside the Lee County Courthouse to raise awareness about the lynchings of Black people by ... |
Harold Franklin became Auburn University's first Black student on this day in 1964 19, 2020, said Keith Hebert, associate professor of history at Auburn, the ... He instead wrote a thesis about Alabama State College, the historically ... |
DON NOBLE: Stunning book showcases Alabama's natural wonders DON NOBLE: Stunning book showcases Alabama's natural wonders. The Tuscaloosa News. Ben Raines is on his way to becoming a household name ... |
The New York Times and the Smithsonian Institute will offer tours of Alabama's civil rights landmarks Tracing Birmingham's history in the Civil Rights Movement. Sponsor. 16th Street Baptist Church will be featured in the New York Times civil rights tours ... |
Here are Alabama's 2020 Entertainers of the Year Although she's won four Grammys in the past, as the frontwoman of Athens band Alabama Shakes, the recognition for “Jaime,” named in honor of ... |
Hank Williams died on New Year's Day 1953, Montgomery funeral drew 20000 mourners As people across his native Alabama picked up their morning newspapers that first ... Montgomery, Alabama - Family at Hank Williams memorial unveiling. ... city blocks as the funeral procession carried Hank to Oakwood Cemetery. |
Former Lowndes County District Judge Ted Bozeman dies MONTGOMERY, Ala. (WSFA) ... There will be a private family graveside service at the Alabama National Cemetery in Montevallo. Copyright 2020 ... |
Montgomery graduate starts University of Alabama groundbreaking publication Montgomery graduate starts University of Alabama groundbreaking ... compelling visuals and inventive features with history and campus culture. |
Alabama photographer creates 'Portraits of Honor' for state's World War II veterans "When people hear that (Feezel's story), they just kind of perk up and say that's an important moment in history," noted Rease. Rease donated the portrait ... |
Search in Africatown: Researchers to look for graves of former slaves and descendants from the ... A historic marker at Africatown's Old Plateau Cemetery recognizes the ... of South Alabama for a cultural resource study that includes excavation and ... |
Courtland Library receives local author's books Each book details the lives of historic Alabama figures—like former Gov. Guy Hunt, legendary football coach Paul “Bear” Bryant, and Alabama's Miss ... |
Statue of former slave who founded Alabama A&M now stands in downtown Huntsville Joseph Lee, Director of AAMU Community Development Corporation, once said, “If you really look at the history of African Americans in the state of ... |