The Alabama Symphony Orchestra can trace its roots to a volunteer ensemble in Birmingham in 1921. The current name was adopted in 1979; financial difficulties forced bankruptcy in the early 1990s. The Orchestra has operated in the black since a 1997 reorganization.
Friday, January 12, 2024
There's a Ticket Stub for That: Concerts
The Alabama Symphony Orchestra can trace its roots to a volunteer ensemble in Birmingham in 1921. The current name was adopted in 1979; financial difficulties forced bankruptcy in the early 1990s. The Orchestra has operated in the black since a 1997 reorganization.
Thursday, January 4, 2024
What's Coming to the Blog in 2024?
Who knows?
For several years now I've been writing these "What's Coming" posts. You can read the 2023 post with links to earlier ones here. I include a wish list of topics I hope to cover, and look at past lists to see which ones I managed to write and which I didn't. There's more wishing than achievement in these lists, but here we are for 2024. I don't think I've written a single post from the 2023 list, so let's move on.
I should note I'm pushing very close to 900 articles on this blog--only two or three more to go. I started this thing in March 2014, so its tenth anniversary is also coming up. These thoughts are making me tired....
One piece I really hope to do this year is a look at the career of R.G. Armstrong. Alabama has produced at least three very prolific film & TV actors. One was Henry Walthall, a Shelby County native who appeared in dozens of silent and sound films--including the notorious The Birth of a Nation--before his death in 1936. I plan a post on him soon, too. Another was Huntsville native Harry Townes, who made numerous appearances mostly on television between the late 1940s and late 1980s. I've written about him here. R.G. Armstrong had many performances on film and television, ranging from series such as Gunsmoke, Laramie, Rawhide, Daniel Boone and The Andy Griffith Show to movies such as El Dorado, Children of the Corn and Reds.
I'd also like to write a piece on Livingston Press, an independent publisher based at the University of West Alabama. Over recent decades the press has published dozens of books of fiction, non-fiction and poetry, many of them by Alabama authors. The guiding force behind the operation is Joe Taylor, an author himself and retired professor from the university.
Then there's a 1987 pamphlet in my collection about the Five Points South area in Birmingham. Fifty businesses and historical sites are listed, and I'm curious as to which ones are still around.
I really should do an item on Louisa Shepard, the first female to receive an MD in Alabama. Since this took place before the Civil War, she was unable to establish a practice, so she married and moved to Texas. Nevertheless, she is also the first female MD in the southern U.S. and one of the earliest in the country.
Just for fun, I'd like to do another entry in the "Empty Project: Alabama" series I recently started. So much emptiness....And I'm sure there will be more blog posts on fascinating photos, postcards and family memorabilia that I come across.
Saturday, December 30, 2023
Birmingham Postcard: The Redmont Hotel
As its BhamWiki entry notes, the Redmont Hotel opened in May 1925 with 250 rooms in the 14-story building. The Redmont is the oldest hotel still operating in the city, and today is part of the Hilton Curio Collection.
The back of this card tells us "The Redmont, Corner 5th Ave. and 21st St., Birmingham's newest hotel, 225 Rooms / 225 Baths, Circulating Ice Water. Direction / Dinkler Hotel Company, Dispensers of True-Southern Hospitality." Thus it was printed soon after the Redmont opened.
Louis Jacob Dinkler, a Nashville native, opened his first hotel in Macon, Georgia, in 1914. Other Dinkler hotels in Alabama included the original Tutwiler, opened in 1914 and which Dinkler was operating by 1926; and the Jefferson Davis in Montgomery. The Tutwiler was demolished in 1974. At one time the chain advertised it offered 3000 rooms around the South.
The BhamWiki resource has an extensive history of the Redmont, including the November 1, 1934, shootout between robbers and Birmingham police. On December 8, 1986, the Birmingham Post-Herald published an article by Mitch Mendelson about the first-class hotels for travelers in the city, the Redmont and the Wynfrey.
Thursday, December 21, 2023
The Empty Project: Alabama (1)
"I can't live without empty chairs."
-Karl Kraus
For some time now I've been photographing scenes without people inside the "built environment", as they say. Make of these photos what you will.
What is emptiness, anyway??
UAB Highlands, August 11, 2023
June 29, 2023
Thursday, December 14, 2023
Alabama Photo: Huntsville Female College
In my never-ending project to look at every single image on Alabama Mosaic, I came across the one below recently. The photograph shows a number of young women standing in front of what is labelled the Huntsville Female College.
The Methodist Church opened the school in 1851. The institution was one of several for girls that opened in the city before the Civil War. Sara McKay's School was founded in 1819, the year Alabama became a state. The Monte Sano Female Seminary followed on February 18, 1830; it closed in December 1833. Soon after the Huntsville Female Seminary opened on Randolph Street in January 5, 1831, and lasted until 1875 when it closed due to financial problems.
As seen in the photograph, the Female College's building was three stories high and featured dumb waiters for wood, coal and sweeping. Each floor had fresh water, and gas fixtures in the rooms. The school was also located on Randolph Avenue.
On Tuesday morning, January 8, 1895, the building caught fire and burned through most of the afternoon. Some of the girls' trunks as well as 12 of 20 pianos were saved. Insurance paid over $29,000 but much more would have been needed to rebuild. Rev. A.B. Jones, the principal, led a fundraising effort but it was unsuccessful. The lot was eventually subdivided and cottages built.
Below are some other materials related to the college. Several post-Civil War catalogs for the college can be found here.
Friday, December 8, 2023
Punt, Bama, Punt! Auburn Does It 17-16
As the most recent one demonstrated, the annual Iron Bowl football contest between Auburn University and the University of Alabama can have all kinds of craziness. That was certainly true for the 1972 contest, the immortal "Punt, Bama, Punt!" game. As my brother Richard and I continue to clean out mom and dad's house in Huntsville, we keep encountering all sorts of interesting things, and this blog post is about one of them.
The sound recording seen below was mailed to Auburn University alumni in 1973 as a fund raiser for the university's foundation. In the game played December 2, 1972, Alabama was undefeated, ranked 2nd in the nation and a two-touchdown favorite over Auburn. With less than 10 minutes left in the game, the score was 16-3 with Alabama leading when the Crimson Tide had to punt. Auburn player Bill Newton blocked and teammate David Langner ran the ball back for a touchdown. Several minutes later, Alabama had to punt again, Newton again blocked it, and Langner again returned it for a touchdown. Langner intercepted an Alabama pass to seal Auburn's victory. See the Wikipedia entry "Punt Bama Punt" for more details about the game. This item has a portion of the official Auburn Football Network broadcast with Gary Sanders and Gusty Yearout. |
Friday, December 1, 2023
Alabama Book: End of the Rainbow
I've written several blog posts in the past few years about Alabama-related books that have become victims of the downsizing of my personal library. That effort continues at greater speed, and I came across this title just the other day. So here we are.