shows the home of Wellington Prude McAdory, M.D., in 1910. The structure was located at the corner of 11th Avenue and 25th Street.
Sunday, May 4, 2014
Birmingham Photo of the Day (9): McAdory Home & Infirmary
This photo from the Birmingham Public Library's Digital Collections
Thursday, May 1, 2014
Birmingham Photo of the Day (8): Alabama Theatre, 1927
Here's another photo of the Alabama Theatre from the Birmingham Public Library's Digital Collections.
This view shows the theater under construction in 1927; signs in the window give a December 26 opening date. Also shown are more of those neat cars they had in the past!
Monday, April 28, 2014
Alabama Libraries in 1851
[This post is one of a series I'm doing on the history of libraries and books in Alabama.]
In 1851 Charles Coffin Jewett published one of the early inventories of public libraries in the United States. At the time Jewett was Librarian and Assistant Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution; he moved to the Boston Public Library as Superintendent in 1858 and worked there until his death a decade later.
The report, Notices of Public Libraries in the United States of America, was issued as an appendix to the 1850 report of the Smithsonian’s Board of Regents. In some 200 pages Jewett gives state-by-state library listings and descriptions. Listings are organized by town within each state. In his “Preliminary Remarks”, Jewett tells the reader:
As might be expected, Jewett found through his tedious methods of circulars and private correspondence only a few libraries in Alabama at that time. His first entry for the state, under “La Grange”, says simply “College Library—3,000 vols.” He refers of course to LaGrange College, the state’s first chartered college established in 1830; the site is located eight miles southeast of Muscle Shoals. The college was burned in April 1863.
In 1851 Charles Coffin Jewett published one of the early inventories of public libraries in the United States. At the time Jewett was Librarian and Assistant Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution; he moved to the Boston Public Library as Superintendent in 1858 and worked there until his death a decade later.
The report, Notices of Public Libraries in the United States of America, was issued as an appendix to the 1850 report of the Smithsonian’s Board of Regents. In some 200 pages Jewett gives state-by-state library listings and descriptions. Listings are organized by town within each state. In his “Preliminary Remarks”, Jewett tells the reader:
As might be expected, Jewett found through his tedious methods of circulars and private correspondence only a few libraries in Alabama at that time. His first entry for the state, under “La Grange”, says simply “College Library—3,000 vols.” He refers of course to LaGrange College, the state’s first chartered college established in 1830; the site is located eight miles southeast of Muscle Shoals. The college was burned in April 1863.
From that brief entry Jewett moves on to Howard College,
founded in Marion in 1842, with a library containing 1500 volumes. “It is
opened once a week for half an hour”, he notes. Organized by Alabama Baptists
and chartered in 1841, Howard was moved to the East Lake area of Birmingham in
1887 and finally to its present location in Homewood in 1957 and renamed Samford University in
1965.
In
Mobile Jewett located the library of the Franklin Society, founded in January
1835. “The library contains 1,454 volumes, with a few coins and maps….The
library and reading-room are open daily for the use of members of the society
and subscribers to the reading-room.”
In Spring Hill Jewett found the state’s second largest
library of the time, that of the Catholic college holding 4,000 volumes. The
school was founded twenty years before Jewett’s report was published. He gives
no other library details.
The original main building of Spring
Hill College, built in 1831.
Source: Wikipedia
Source: Wikipedia
Jewett’s
longest entry is the last, as expected the University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa
with 7,123 volumes. This figure included the 4,500 volumes in the “Rotundo” and
two student libraries containing 2,623 volumes. He notes an annual circulation
of some 800 volumes, a “stated annual appropriation of $200” and two extra $500
appropriations within the past five years.
“The library is opened twice a week, and kept open about an hour each
time.”
The Rotunda in 1859, one of seven UA buildings existing when the school
opened in 1831.
Source: Encyclopedia of Alabama
Source: Encyclopedia of Alabama
Jewett also mentions the two library catalogs
that had been prepared by Richard Furman and Wilson G. Richardson. He notes
that Richardson’s effort “is on the plan of the catalogue of Brown University
Library.” In 1841 Jewett became librarian at Brown, reorganized its library and
published a catalog in two parts: an alphabetical description of items and an
alphabetical index of subjects.
Thus
Jewett found six “public libraries” in Alabama ca. 1850; he seems to have
missed the one in Huntsville and probably others. By way of comparison, he
found eight in Georgia, four in Mississippi and three in Florida.
This document is
available at Google Books
ALABAMA LIBRARIES PRIOR TO WORLD WAR I: A CHRONOLOGY IN PROGRESS
ALABAMA LIBRARIES PRIOR TO WORLD WAR I: A CHRONOLOGY IN PROGRESS
Saturday, April 26, 2014
Birmingham Photo of the Day (7): Alabama Theatre, 1959
This photo of the Alabama Theatre on July 15, 1959 is from the Birmingham Public Library's Digital Collections.
I wonder what kind of business Goldstein's Furs did during an Alabama summer. The film people are lining up to see was Audrey Hepburn's latest, The Nun's Story.
Thursday, April 24, 2014
Birmingham Photo of the Day (6): Age-Herald Building, 1910
This 1910 photo of the Birmingham Age-Herald newspaper building on Fifth Avenue is from the Birmingham Public Library Digital Collections.
Monday, April 21, 2014
Dispensary at the Edgewater Mine, July 1946
Large coal mining operations were often self-contained communities in the U.S., and the Edgewater Mine in western Jefferson County was no exception.
According to the Encyclopedia of Alabama, the Tennessee Coal, Iron and Railroad [TCI] entered the Birmingham area in late 1886. "In addition to [its] Tennessee holdings, TCI now owned 76,000 acres of coal land, 460 coke ovens, two blast furnaces, and 13,000 acres of land that included the Red Mountain ore seam. The company moved its headquarters to Birmingham in 1895." In other words, TCI was a mighty player in central Alabama and would remain so for decades. In this area we are living with the results today.
The current unincorporated community of Edgewater is a perfect example. Located north of Pleasant Grove, Edgewater began as a TCI coal mine opened in 1911. At first state convict lease system prisoners were used, and their mined coal was hauled by railroad to the coke ovens at the company's Ensley Works.
In about a year TCI ended its use of prisoners, hoping to attract better, more dedicated workers and their families. A modern village soon opened near the mine that included houses, schools, churches, recreation facilities and modern sanitation methods. TCI trucks picked up garbage on a regular basis. Recreational activities included baseball leagues and regular community dances. Segregated facilities were created for black and white workers and families.
This kind of corporate paternalism was common in other industries as well. My maternal grandfather, John Miller Shores, was a longtime Methodist minister in the North Alabama Conference. One of his postings over the years was the Methodist Church associated with the giant Avondale Mill textile operation in Sylacauga.
The Edgewater Mine thrived during the World Wars, but changes continued to occur. The schools were sold to Jefferson County in 1932. At its height the mine employed over 1200 workers and produced more than 800,000 tons of coal a year. The mine closed in 1962.
The BhamWiki web site gives many more details on the mining operation and the community that survives today.
Below are some photographs from the U.S. National Archives. The first is the company store at Edgewater. The rest are views outside and inside of the dispensary, which provided medical care, supplies and drugs onsite.
In 1913 TCI hired Dr. Lloyd Noland to run its health and sanitation efforts, which became elaborate at the mines and resulted in the building of the hospital in Fairfield eventually named after him.
Edgewater Mine Company Store in July, 1946. The photo is from the U.S. National Archives.
The exterior and interior photos below of the dispensary at Edgewater are also from the U.S. National Archives.
According to the Encyclopedia of Alabama, the Tennessee Coal, Iron and Railroad [TCI] entered the Birmingham area in late 1886. "In addition to [its] Tennessee holdings, TCI now owned 76,000 acres of coal land, 460 coke ovens, two blast furnaces, and 13,000 acres of land that included the Red Mountain ore seam. The company moved its headquarters to Birmingham in 1895." In other words, TCI was a mighty player in central Alabama and would remain so for decades. In this area we are living with the results today.
The current unincorporated community of Edgewater is a perfect example. Located north of Pleasant Grove, Edgewater began as a TCI coal mine opened in 1911. At first state convict lease system prisoners were used, and their mined coal was hauled by railroad to the coke ovens at the company's Ensley Works.
In about a year TCI ended its use of prisoners, hoping to attract better, more dedicated workers and their families. A modern village soon opened near the mine that included houses, schools, churches, recreation facilities and modern sanitation methods. TCI trucks picked up garbage on a regular basis. Recreational activities included baseball leagues and regular community dances. Segregated facilities were created for black and white workers and families.
This kind of corporate paternalism was common in other industries as well. My maternal grandfather, John Miller Shores, was a longtime Methodist minister in the North Alabama Conference. One of his postings over the years was the Methodist Church associated with the giant Avondale Mill textile operation in Sylacauga.
The Edgewater Mine thrived during the World Wars, but changes continued to occur. The schools were sold to Jefferson County in 1932. At its height the mine employed over 1200 workers and produced more than 800,000 tons of coal a year. The mine closed in 1962.
The BhamWiki web site gives many more details on the mining operation and the community that survives today.
Below are some photographs from the U.S. National Archives. The first is the company store at Edgewater. The rest are views outside and inside of the dispensary, which provided medical care, supplies and drugs onsite.
In 1913 TCI hired Dr. Lloyd Noland to run its health and sanitation efforts, which became elaborate at the mines and resulted in the building of the hospital in Fairfield eventually named after him.
Edgewater Mine Company Store in July, 1946. The photo is from the U.S. National Archives.
The exterior and interior photos below of the dispensary at Edgewater are also from the U.S. National Archives.
Friday, April 18, 2014
Alabama Ruin: Clanton Drive-In Theater
We hadn't gone far when we passed this Great Alabama Ruin, the former Clanton Drive-In, located at 3404 7th Street North. We looked at each other, both saying wow!, so I turned around. The photos below were taken by my son and reveal what we saw on that hot summer day.
At the time this theater opened, the only places to watch a movie on a big screen were probably way up in big bad Birmingham or way down in Montgomery. After all, the only Over-the-Mountain community developed at that time was Vestavia. Wonder when the first movie theater opened there? Small town movie theaters were not unknown back in the day, however.
No indication is given on the Cinema Treasures site as to when the drive-in closed. At some point S&H Mobile Homes opened there, and it closed in 2010. The only signs left of the original use are the screen, the empty marquee and the flat field for cars. We can only imagine the building that housed projection equipment, the snack bar and restrooms, and all of the poles for the little sound boxes to be hung on car windows.
Some 86 open movie theaters in Alabama are currently listed on the Cinema Treasures site; a few are drive-ins. The site also lists 361 closed theaters in the state; many of those are drive-ins. That number includes the Whitesburg Drive-In in Huntsville, opened in 1949, closed in 1979, and since demolished. At least the people who watched drive-in movies in Clanton still have something tangible left in addition to their memories.
On his LiveJournal site, J.J. MacCrimmon provides a number of photographs of this drive-in that he took in 2011.
Anyone having more info about this site should feel free to comment below!
There I am, probably pointing out the obvious.
Here I am again, trying to grin in the heat.
Another view of that field of dreams.
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