Thursday, September 10, 2020

Alabama History & Culture News: September 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!



New museum to highlight Colony's history
Alexander had the murals created for Alabama's Bicentennial celebration and that project has led her to working on a genealogy and history center for ...

'Without your help, we're history': Alabama, Lyric Theatres in dire need of financial support
A pair of Alabama's most cherished historic theaters need help, and fast. Birmingham Landmarks, Inc., the nonprofit organization that owns and ...

Exhibit at Florence-Lauderdale Public Library dives into history of Alabama landmark Supreme ...
Alabama Bicentennial is hosting the free exhibit which features eight landmark Supreme Court cases that either changed or redefined civil rights in the ...


Hiking with Hailey: Wetumpka Impact Crater
... is the site of one of the greatest natural disasters in Alabama history? ... “The crater, to me, is like Alabama's Disney Land, and it could be, because ...

Physically closed to audiences, Playhouse bringing 'Alabama Story' online to viewers
Kenneth Jones' play “Alabama Story,” opens with the characters inviting one another to “Tell me a story.” Telling stories is the foundation of theater ...


Clotilda, Africatown efforts poised to move forward
She praised local activists who served as stewards for the history of ... of the Clotilda, where the Alabama Historical Commission will lead the way.

The history and mystery of Alabama's Sand Island Light
A lighthouse located in Alabama's Mobile Bay nearly suffered the fate it was designed to prevent for ships: Slipping beneath the waves and never ...


Gravestone in shape of whiskey bottle in the Clayton Cemetery in Barbour County, Alabama.
Gravestone in shape of whiskey bottle in the Clayton Cemetery in Barbour County, Alabama. Description, The stone marks the grave of W. T. Mullen, ...


"Nathaniel Jackson and Matilda Hicks, who was born into slavery, came from Alabama in 1857," she said. "They were significant players in the ...

Victory over Japan: 75 years ago, Alabama man witnessed history
Victory over Japan: 75 years ago, Alabama man witnessed history. Updated Sep 02, 2020; Posted Sep 02, 2020. Russell Brakefield. U.S. Navy ...


Preservation Society awarded Legend and Lore grant celebrating Hatton folklore
A Legends and Lore historical marker will soon be erected to celebrate local folklore and history of the Town of Hatton on Alabama 101 thanks to ...

Everything You Need to Know About Netflix's The Devil All the Time
Though the novel is set in Ohio and West Virginia, the film was shot in Alabama. "It was a challenging shoot just because there were so many locations ...

First Black Mayor Elected in the City of Linden
From the West Alabama Newsroom–. The city of Linden has elected the first black mayor — in the city's 150 year history. Long-time Linden City ...


Former Wenonah football coach Ronald Cheatham has died
... football for 30 years, compiling a 172-136 record from 1989-2018, according to the Alabama High School Football Historical Society website. He led ...


Chadwick Boseman's '42,' filmed in Alabama, coming back to movie theaters
“I knew the story as like ... a history book text, like this is what you need to know about Black history,” Boseman said during a 2013 interview. The actor ...



Wednesday, September 9, 2020

The Federal Theatre Project in Alabama

The Federal Theatre Project was a New Deal program designed to promote new and classical theatrical productions and provide work for playwrights, actors, musicians, directors and others during the Great Depression. Plays and musicals were produced in many cities across the country, including Birmingham. The program began on August 27, 1935, and was cancelled June 30, 1939. 

Here's Wikipedia's summation of the project, which was driven by the vision of director Hallie Flanagan:

"Within a year the Federal Theatre Project employed 15,000 men and women,[7]:174 paying them $23.86 a week.[8] During its nearly four years of existence it played to 30 million people in more than 200 theaters nationwide[7]:174 — renting many that had been shuttered — as well as parks, schools, churches, clubs, factories, hospitals and closed-off streets.[3]:40 Its productions totalled approximately 1,200, not including its radio programs.[4]:432 Because the Federal Theatre was created to employ and train people, not to generate revenue, no provision was made for the receipt of money when the project began. At its conclusion, 65 percent of its productions were still presented free of charge.[4]:434 The total cost of the Federal Theatre Project was $46 million.[3]:40"

Very little has been written about the project in Alabama, which closed in January 1937 when its personnel were transferred to Georgia. The Alabama Mosaic site has about 34 articles mostly from contemporary newspapers via the Birmingham Public Library. Some of those are below with comments. 

I recently read an article by John R. Poole, "Making a Tree from Thirst: Acquiescence and Defiance in the Federal Theatre Project in Birmingham, Alabama" published in Theatre History Studies 21: 27-42, 2001. In it Poole discusses the only black project in the Deep South, which happened to operate in Birmingham. Several plays originated in this unit, and I'll also discuss some below the relevant newspaper articles. Poole wrote his dissertation, cited at the end with some other materials, on the project in Georgia and Alabama.  

Before its demise the Federal Theatre Project became the subject of Congressional criticism and investigation. Many of the productions addressed, sometimes  graphically, racial and labor injustices and other problematic topics. A few of the Birmingham plays fit that profile as noted below.

What also happened is that for some intense months in 1936 a lot of theater was produced in Birmingham involving both white and black actors and audiences and in some cases tough subjects. 




Jefferson Theater on 2nd Avenue North around 1903. Most of Birmingham's "white" plays were produced here.

Source: BhamWiki


Industrial High School [now Parker]. Most plays of the "Negro" unit were produced here. 

Source: BhamWiki


Birmingham Post 31 March 1936

Source: Birmingham Public Library Digital Collections via Alabama Mosaic 


"Home in Glory" a "symphonic drama" was written by Clyde Limbaugh, the white director of the Negro Repertory Theater, the first federal project in Birmingham. The previous year Limbaugh had participated in "Roll Sweet Chariot" a project presented at Legion Field. Rehearsals for "Home" took place at the Y.W.C.A. for blacks since the play about black life in Shelby County featured 26 black actors and a chorus of 100. As noted below, the production took place at Municipal Auditorium on two nights in mid-April. There was apparently a third performance; according to Limbaugh, in total 2500 people attended. 




Source: Birmingham Public Library Digital Collections


Birmingham Post 2 April 1936

Source: Birmingham Public Library Digital Collections via Alabama Mosaic

During this period Limbaugh was also busy with projects outside the Federal Theater, including this "minstrel" show with an all black cast staged at the Industrial High School. 


Birmingham Post 24 April 1936

Source: Birmingham Public Library Digital Collections via Alabama Mosaic 

This article gives us some details on the Federal Theater Project for white professionals and audiences in Birmingham. The plan was to pay $75 a month "be it for villainy, heroism, or plain butlering." The first production to open about May 12 will be "After Dark" by Dion Bousicault, "an old-fashioned melodrama with plenty of asides." Director Verner Haldene was previously with the Montgomery Little Theater, and had taken over April 23 from Ivan Paul of the Federal Theater's Washington office. The play's 25 actors included veterans of the Birmingham Little Theater. Performances were planned for Tuesday through Saturday nights with a Saturday matinee; prices ranged from 20 to 40 cents. The company was large enough to support one always in Birmingham and another touring the state. 


Birmingham Age-Herald 12 May 1936 

Source: Birmingham Public Library Digital Collections via Alabama Mosaic




Birmingham Post 13 May 1936

Source: Birmingham Public Library Digital Collections via Alabama Mosaic


Birmingham News 24 June 1936

Source: Birmingham Public Library Digital Collections via Alabama Mosaic

This article sums up the season as presenting a "series of successful play", ending with a second week of "Chalk Dust" that "deals with educational problems in these trying times." Optimism ran high; the piece notes rehearsals will take place over the summer for the fall season. 



Birmingham News 9 July 1936

Source: Birmingham Public Library Digital Collections via Alabama Mosaic 

Noted here is "Swamp Mud", the second production of the Birmingham "Colored Unit." The venue was Industrial High School, with Clyde Limbaugh the director and Wallace Pritchett the musical arranger. The play, set among prisoners in the south Georgia swamps, included works songs and spirituals sung by a choir of 200 voices. Seating was available for both blacks and whites. 






Birmingham Post 9 July 1936

Source: Birmingham Public Library Digital Collections via Alabama Mosaic

We learn here that "Swamp Mud" had been first presented by a group in Ann Arbor, Michigan. The symphonic drama featured an "invisible choir. 

Author Harold Courlander had a long career as novelist and anthropologist, publishing 35 books and plays and many scholarly articles. He died in 1996. 
 


Arthur K. Akers [1886-1980] was a Birmingham writer who published several dozen stories in various magazines between 1910 and 1936. Some featured stereotypical African-American characters and dialect. You can see a list of them here and here.




Birmingham Post 5 November 1936 

Source: Birmingham Public Library Digital Collections via Alabama Mosaic

The Birmingham Federal Theater Project will suspend performances until after Christmas, and hopefully take its successful production of "It Can't Happen Here" on a state tour. That play, based on the 1935 Sinclair Lewis novel, had premiered on October 27 in 21 theaters in 17 states. The company also plans to begin work on "Altars of Steel" a play by Thomas Hall-Rogers about the development of the steel industry in Birmingham. That play was produced in Atlanta the following year to great controversy; see references below. 

 


Birmingham News 16 May 1971

Source: Birmingham Public Library Digital Collections via Alabama Mosaic


This article provides some more interesting details. The Jefferson Theater remained "dark and deserted" after the theater project left in 1936 and was finally torn down in 1947. There's also an anecdote from Federal Theater Project national director Hallie Flanagan's testimony before the U.S. House committee about subversive influence in the productions around the country. U.S. Representative Joe Starnes of Alabama wanted to know if the 16th century English playwright Christopher Marlowe was a communist. 




FURTHER REFERENCES

Flanagan, Hallie (1940). Arena: The Story of the Federal Theatre. New York: Duell, Sloan and Pearce.

Ralph T. Jones, ‘Altars of Steel Highly Praised as Best Drama Ever Presented Here,” Atlanta Constitution, April 2, 1937, 11

John McGee, Federal Theatre of the South: A Supplement to the Federal Theatre National Bulletin, Quarterly Bulletin 1, no. 2 (October 1936),

John Russell Poole, The Federal Theatre Project in Georgia and Alabama: An Historical Analysis of Government Theatre in the Deep South (PhD Diss., University of Georgia, Athens, 1995)

Mildred Seydell, “Altars of Steel Aids Communism with Tax Money,” Atlanta Georgian, April 4, 1937, 4D







Wednesday, September 2, 2020

Alabama Photos of the Day: Gayfers

At mom's in Huntsville I recently came across the small jewelry box shown below, now being used to hold a few photographic slides [remember those?]. Naturally I thought, "There's a blog post in that..." And here we are...

Alabama marriage records show that Englishman Charles John Gayfer married Caroline Lurbeck in Mobile on April 11, 1871. Later in that decade he opened a dry goods store at 20 North Joachim. He soon partnered with A.N. Edmondson, and they relocated to 103 Dauphin at the corner with Conception. A move to St. Emmanuel in 1919 became the final downtown location of Gayfer's. 

Charles died in Mobile on December 7, 1915; he is buried in Pine Crest Cemetery. By that time the store had 150 employees and around $500,000 in annual sales. The business continued to thrive, and in the 1950's it was purchased by Mercantile Stores Company, a department store chain operating under various names. The new owners soon expanded the Gayfer's brand beyond Mobile. By 1969 stores had opened in Pensacola, Biloxi, Mississippi, and Tuscaloosa. 

The apostrophe in the name disappeared in 1970. That same year a Montgomery Fair store [the one where Rosa Parks had once worked] became a Gayfers and a store opened in Jackson, Mississippi, and a second one in Pensacola. The flagship store in downtown Mobile closed in 1985 and moved to West Mobile. By the early 1990's Gayfers was one of the largest southeastern department store chains. 

In 1998 the end arrived. The Dillards chain purchased Mercantile and the Gayfers brand came to an end. The name had a good run. 

In the 2001 book Mobile: Photographs from the William E. Wilson Collection by Marilyn Culpepper you can see Wilson's photograph of Gayfer's taken around 1900. At that time the store occupied the first floor and the Fidelia Club operated upstairs. 

A recent article by John Sharp, "‘I Wish for Gayfers’: Memories of beloved Mobile department store surface as redevelopment evolves" can be found here




A drawing of what became the Gayfer's store that opened on St. Emanual in 1919. This one remained the downtown location until the move to West Mobile in 1985. 

Source: Alabama Dept. of Archives and History




Entrance to Gayfers at Wiregrass Commons Mall, Dothan, 20 April 1988





Teenagers modelling back-to-school clothes in the Mobile Gayfers on July 19, 1977. The young woman in the middle is holding a copy of Seventeen magazine.

Source: Alabama Dept. of Archives and History





Tuesday, September 1, 2020

Alabama History & Culture News: September 1 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!


Local history: Watertown hosted Booker T. Washington
Local history: Watertown hosted Booker T. Washington ... about the connection between a historically Black university in Alabama, and a small city in ...

Huntsville sites herald women's suffrage
Nevertheless, this mural can serve as a teaser in opening vital community conversations about the true history of Alabama's sexist and racist past.


Monroeville, Alabama, the inspiration for 'To Kill a Mockingbird', has elected its first Black mayor
It also garnered national attention with the release of the film and book “Just Mercy” — which tells the story of Walter McMillian, a Black man from ...


'Classic Restaurants of Montgomery' a fun taste of city's past
Copies may be ordered through the Old Alabama Town website, www.oldalabamatown.com. Click on “Events” and follow through to find book ...

Montgomery's history includes tasty tales from the culinary trail
For about a hundred years — a period that began just before Alabama and ... King and Pell, who partnered for the new book “Classic Restaurants of ...


Racism denied Auburn's first Black student a master's degree. Then, at 86, he returned.
He'd teach history — at Alabama State University, North Carolina A&T State University, Tuskegee Institute and Talladega College — until his retirement ...


Local author's book selected for national festival
The Alabama Center for the Book has selected “The Night the Forest Came to Town,” by Homewood author Charles Ghigna to be featured as the ...


The unveiling of Elba's Alabama Legacy Project bronze marker will be held Tuesday, Sept. 1, at 10 a.m., at the Evergreen Cemetery. This will be near ...


Who knew? Oak Mountain State Park could have been a National Park + other fun facts
“Oak Mountain State Park was going to be Alabama's “Little Smoky ... First, a little bit about Lauren Muncher, who gave me a historical and natural tour ...

Elba City Council gives go ahead to Masonic Lodge #170 for historical marker to be placed in ...
During Monday evening's meeting, Kelley said the Alabama State Archives office had approved the Lodge to receive one of its historical markers.


After her epic debut novel on slavery's descendants, Yaa Gyasi wrote even closer to home
If you buy books linked on our site, The Times may earn a commission from ... to make sense of the traumas of her childhood back in Alabama: the death of her ... Combining them in one book “gave me this rich landscape in which to ...

Pleasant Grove makes history; elects first Blacks to council
Pleasant Grove makes history; elects first Blacks to council. Updated 11:23 ... Alabama Rep. Merika ... He tweeted: “In Pleasant Grove AL now. Great to ...


(Charles Hay is also on record as an 11-year-old Confederate soldier from Alabama.) “I can't state this as historical record and I haven't been able to ...


Spirit of Steel: music of the Mines, Railroads and Mills of the Birmingham District
The music created during this period of Alabama history provides a glimpse at the lives of the men and their families at this time. All OLLI programs are ...

Alabama Century & Heritage Farm Applications Due Aug. 28
The purpose of both programs is to recognize family farms that have played a significant role in Alabama's history. adai. A Century Farm is one that has ...



Alabama Jazz Hall of Fame Museum. Birmingham, The Carver Theatre, black history The Alabama Jazz Hall of Fame Museum in the historic Carver ...

Tuscaloosa's Bamastuff Recognized in National Register of Historic Places
It was a day for the history books for three Alabama properties. Literally. Three more Alabama properties were recently added to the National Register of ...




'Lovecraft Country' and the dark history of Alabama's 'sundown towns'
In his 1934 book “Stars Fell on Alabama,” author Carl Carmer described seeing the sign while visiting Cullman. Carmer asked his caddy, Henry, as to ...

Art of history: Preserving African American dioramas
The director of the Legacy Museum at Alabama's Tuskegee University, she describes the scene as the moment of emancipation. "It's a moment that is ...


History made in Central Alabama as Pell City elects 1st black woman to city council
History made across Central Alabama from Tuesday, August 25 elections. Ivy Mcdaniel is the first black woman elected to Pell City's council. She will ...