Saturday, April 17, 2021

Alabama History & Culture News: April 17 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!



BOOKS: Abandoned Wiregrass: Brian L. Braden
... North Florida, South Georgia and parts of Alabama. Some backroad travelers may literally recognize some of the places photographed for this book.

This project is open to volunteers who want to help find the exact location of all of the people buried in this local cemetery. The Montgomery County .

Author Gregory N. Whitis' book “Nighthope” is a riveting story of a humble trucking executive who ...
His midlife crisis entails moving his family to an Alabama catfish farm, leaving behind unfinished business with a Mexican drug cartel. GREENSBORO, ...

Sweet tea: When did the South start drinking it?
It reveals Alabama's history and culture through 14 iconic foods, dishes and beverages including -- you guessed it -- sweet tea. Drawing on historical ...

THE ALABAMA HISTORIC CEMETERY REGISTER   [PDF]
THE ALABAMA HISTORIC CEMETERY REGISTER. AS OF FEBRUARY 5, 2021. Click on the county name below to go directly to beginning of each ...

Alabama is about to have a new state vegetable: The sweet potato
The idea for a state vegetable came from a group of North Alabama homeschool students who, while researching state history, came across the fact ...

Bernie Madoff's year at the University of Alabama was 'low-key,' classmates say
(WIAT) — For one year, the man behind the biggest investment fraud in American history was a student at the University of Alabama. Bernie Madoff ...

The Auburn family that owns half of Camp Hill's empty units seeks to restore them one by one
In addition to her small business ventures, Emberly is trying to get downtown Camp Hill deemed a historic district by the Alabama Historical Commission, ...


Final football games being played at legendary Legion Field
Best known for its Iron Bowl history, Legion Field hosted Alabama-Auburn every year from 1948 to 1988 and saw many of the greatest games in the ...

Preserving history: Bloody Sunday billy club finds new home at voting rights museum
When Elmore County NAACP President Bobby Mays first got the call about a billy club that was used by an Alabama trooper during Selma's Bloody ...


BPL's Jim Baggett Honored By State Historical Association, University Of Alabama
On Friday, April 9, Birmingham Public Library Archivist Jim Baggett received top honors from both the Alabama Historical Association and the University ...

Michael Donald's 1981 Mobile, Alabama murder to be featured on CNN's 'The People vs. The Klan'
That book gives a detailed account of the murder and the slow-moving investigation that followed. It also covers the court proceedings in detail, with ...

Ray Lambert, D-Day survivor, WWII torch bearer, Alabama native, dies at 100
“I did what I was called to do,” he wrote in his book, “Every Man a Hero,” published shortly before the 75th anniversary. “As a combat medic, my job ...


Book Review: Photographer Andrew Feiler documents the Rosenwald Schools of the Jim Crow ...
John Lewis, who attended a Rosenwald School in a small, whitewashed church building in Pike County, Alabama. Lewis' school lacked running water ...


Thursday, April 15, 2021

Benton County in 1852

Alabama has had several county names that are no longer in use, and Benton is one of them. Let's investigate.

On December 18, 1832, the state legislature created Benton County. The Encyclopedia of Alabama entry notes, "The county was initially named Benton County in honor of Missouri senator Thomas Hart Benton, an arch defender of westward expansion and slavery. After Benton declared himself an opponent of slavery in the 1850s, Alabama supporters of slavery voted to change the county's name to Calhoun in honor of radical secessionist John C. Calhoun."

Benton was an important figure in antebellum American history. He served in the U.S. Senate from 1821 until 1851. During that time he supported what became known as "Manifest Destiny", the idea that the United States should expand all the way to the Pacific Ocean. He supported slavery and owned slaves himself, but after the Mexican-American War he began to oppose it and the domination of slave interests in the nation's political life. After he rejected the Compromise of 1850 as favoring slavery interests, the Missouri legislature refused to re-elect him to the Senate. He did serve a term in the U.S. House before his death in 1858.

Benton had practiced law in Tennessee beginning in 1805, and served a term in the state senate. Andrew Jackson noticed him and appointed him lieutenant colonel and aide to represent him in Washington during the War of 1812 Benton wanted to see action, and the two ended up brawling in 1813; Jackson was wounded. In 1815 Benton moved to the new Missouri Territory. 

Benton, a town on the Alabama River in Lowndes County is also named after Thomas Hart Benton to honor his efforts in the Creek War. His later apostasy on slavery did not trigger a name change. A post office was established there in 1833, and the town incorporated in 1964. Bill Traylor, the famed African-American self taught artist was born in the town around 1853; he died in 1949. 

The map below of Benton County in 1852 was created by Jerry A. Daniel in 1975. The name was changed on January 29, 1858, a few months before Benton died on April 10. 



Created in 1975 by Jerry A. Daniel

Source: Jacksonville State University Digital Commons




Thomas Hart Benton [1782-1858] 

Photograph taken by Mathew Brady sometime between 1844 and 1858. Brady later became famous for his Civil War photos. 

Source: Wikipedia



Friday, April 9, 2021

Sara Henderson Hay, Poet

Last year for National Poetry Month  I wrote a couple of blog posts about  anthologies of poems by Alabama authors. One focused on Alabama Poetry published in 1945 and edited by Louise Crenshaw Ray. Another looked at the Anthology of Alabama Poetry 1928 published by the Alabama Writers Conclave. In this post for the annual poetry celebration, I want to discuss a particular poet with state connections, Sara Henderson Hay.

She was born on November 13, 1906 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, but grew up in Anniston. Her parents were Daisy Henderson [Baker] Hay and Ralph Watson Hay. The 1940 U.S. Census gives Daisy's birthplace as Alabama and the year as about 1878; she died in Anniston on August 27, 1966. Ralph was also born in Pittsburgh on February 9, 1873, and died there on February 23, 1938. Hay's parents were married in Anniston on November 15, 1905.

The family seems to have done a lot of back-and-forth between Pennsylvania and Alabama. According to his Find-A-Grave listing, her father was a superintendent with Samuel W. Hay's Sons , & Manufacturers Light & Heat Co. and salesman with Oil Well Supply Co., all in Pittsburgh. Ralph's father was Samuel W. Hay, so presumably that one was the family business. Since Anniston had many metal and pipe industries, Ralph may have lived in both places and travelled back and forth for business interests. 

Sara received her education before college in Anniston. In the 1880's one of Anniston's founders Samuel Noble established two private schools affiliated with the Episcopal Church, Noble Institutes for Boys and Girls. Established in 1886, the Noble Institute for Girls was located at the corner of 11th Street and Leighton Avenue.  The boarding school closed in 1914, and the building later burned. The day school, which Hay presumably attended, closed in 1922. In that same year a new brick Anniston High School opened, which Hay attended. 

At age 10 she had published a poem about golf in Judge Magazine and in high school published in the Anniston Star newspaper. She continued writing and publishing poetry while in college. She left Anniston to enroll at Brenau College in Georgia from 1926 until 1928, then moved to New York City and graduated from Columbia University in 1931. 

Hay worked in the Rare Book Department at Charles Scribner's Sons publisher from 1935 until 1942. After Columbia she had started with the company  as a secretary in the editorial offices and then worked in the firm's bookstore. During this period her poems began to appear in various magazine and anthologies. While there she was an editor on Stevenson's Home Book of Shakespeare Quotations, published by Scribner's in 1937. 

In 1935 while at Scribner's Hay was able to tour Europe as secretary to Gladys Baker, a syndicated newspaper columnist. Baker had moved to the Magic City in 1926 to begin working for the Birmingham News. Small world, isn't it? I've yet to discover how the two women met, but on the tour they met with Pope Pius XI, Mussolini, Ataturk and other notables. 

Hay resumed work at Scribner's, continued writing poetry and published poetry and fiction reviews for the Saturday Review of Literature. In 1939 her second book was published by Alfred A. Knopf, another major New York publisher. I have included a number of images from This, My Letter below, including two from her "To My Small Son" series about an imaginary child. 

In 1938 and 1940 she recorded 28 of her poems at the City College of New York; they are listed at that link. In 1953 they were copied for the Archive of Recorded Poetry and Literature at the Library of Congress. 

During the 1950's and 1960's Hay continued to publish collections of poetry. The Delicate Balance [Scribner] appeared in 1951 and The Stone and the Shell [University of Pittsburgh Press] in 1959. In 1963 Doubleday published The Story Hour; see some comments about it below. Doubleday also published her final book The Footing on the Earth in 1966.

The 1951 collection The Delicate Balance won the Edna St. Vincent Millay Memorial Award from the Poetry Society of America. The Kentucky Poetry Review published an issue devoted to her work in 1980. 

Hay was married twice. Her first husband was Raymond Holden [1894-1972], a novelist, poet and publisher she married in 1937. Hay was the third of his four wives and the union apparently did not last long. On January 27, 1951, she married Nikolai Lopatnikoff, and they remained together until his death in 1976. He was a composer, and you can see a photo of him in the classroom taken by famed photographer W. Eugene Smith here. He taught music composition at Carnegie-Mellon University in Pittsburgh from 1945 until 1969. I have found no indication that Hay had any children. 

Sara Henderson Hay died on July 7, 1987, in Pittsburgh. Her death was covered by the New York Times. She and her second husband are buried in Homewood Cemetery in that city. 


I have found these two items of scholarship on Hay's work:

Joyce, Christa Mastrangelo. "Contemporary Women Poets and the Fairy Tale." Fairy Tales Reimagined: Essays on New Retellings (2009): 31-43.

Wilson, Dorothy Ann. Irony and Satire in the Poetry of Sara Henderson Hay. Diss. Indiana State College (Pa.), 1964.

I also found an essay by Alabama's eighth poet laureate, Helen F. Blackshear, "The Poetry of Sara Henderson Hay" in her collection Southern Smorgasbord [1982]. 


Images and some more commentary are below. I have included many from Hay's second poetry collection, since that is the only book of hers I own. I've also included one related to a mystery I've yet to solve. 















 I looked at Ancestry.com and found a Michael Actis-Grand in the 1930 U.S. Census. He was 37, living in Yonkers, New York. His profession? He was a hair dresser who owned a beauty shop. Could this be the Michael of this dedication?










Hay was obviously still married to Holden when this book was published. 





















As this page demonstrates, by 1939 Hay's poems had appeared in a wide variety of publications. 




I can sympathize with the situation in this sonnet. Once when very young our daughter Becca acted like this "Beloved Sphinx" as Dianne and I, her brother, the photographer and other parents and children waiting tried to coax a smile from her. 













This collection contains fairy tales retold in sonnet form. The foreword is by poet Miller Williams. Reprinted from the 1963 Doubleday edition.





This special issue of Sagetrieb published in 2000 featured Hay on the cover in a photo taken in 1973. 




Alabama marriage certificate for Willa Baker Hay. Note the address as 1124 Quintard Avenue in Anniston, the same location identified below as Hay's "childhood home" and listed in various sources as her mother Daisy's residence for some years.

 In one obituary for Ralph Hay his children are listed as "Ray H. Holden; Willa Baker Hay". Just a simple error? Yet here's a marriage certificate for Willa listing her parents as Sara's parents and the Quintard address [see below]. At this time, June 1939, Sara was in New York City still working for Scribner's. 

And what about Ray? Beats me; by this time I gave up in confusion. More research is required to sort all this out. 



."

This Anniston newspaper article notes Hay's visit in 1950 to the city to visit her mother in her childhood home at 1124 Quintard Avenue. She also gave a talk to the European Study Club. 

Source: Anniston Star 22 October 1950 








Thursday, April 8, 2021

Alabama History & Culture News: April 8 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!

Alabama tax created for veteran Confederate soldiers could preserve South's Black history
the pamphlet reads. The park is run by the Alabama Historical Commission. The move to establish the park was made in the build up of the centennial of ...

Could the Confederate Memorial Park be a future home for Alabama's displaced monuments?
The veterans' home modern history. The state closed the home Oct. 31, 1939, 81 years ago, by Legislative act, and the five remaining widows were ...

Creek Indians Study Tour Planned for June
Contributed by Charles Mitchell. A Creek Indians in Alabama study tour with the Lee County Historical Society and Chattahoochee Valley Historical ...

History preserved in Herald files
The monthly Historical Preservation report was presented at the Union ... In February 59 years ago, the Alabama Alcoholic Beverage Control Board, ...

National Aeronautic Association honors Tuskegee Airmen
... staff” trained at Tuskegee Army Airfield in Alabama, according to History.com. Tuskegee Airmen flew Curtiss P–40 Warhawks, Bell P–39 Airacobras, ...

Blakeley re-enactment set Saturday
BLAKELEY – The Battle of Blakeley being re-enacted Saturday played a major role in local, state and national historyHistoric Blakeley State Park ...

Daughter's hair challenges inspire educator to write book
I am really excited about getting it finished because I am an HBCU graduate (Alabama A&M University) and I love everything about HBCUs and the ...

5 ways to celebrate National Poetry Month in Birmingham
... April 11, 7PM: All Around Alabama Inaugural Reading: Jason McCall, ... Check out books like Ashley M. Jones' Magic City Gospel, Emma Bolden's ...

“When Stars Rain Down” By: Angela Jackson-Brown
1930s Small-Town South Setting for Dramatic Novel ... Don Noble's newest book is Alabama Noir, a collection of original stories by Winston Groom, ...

Alabama lawyer Bryan Stevenson to appear at Lincoln Center
Wynton Marsalis will be the musical director. Stevenson founded the Montgomery-based Equal Justice Initiative and wrote the best-selling book “Just ...

'A man with the human touch:' Legendary Alabama sports writer Bill Lumpkin dies at 92
“In the rich history of Alabama sports writing, Bill Lumpkin is easily on the Mount Rushmore,” said talk show host and former Post-Herald columnist ...


Smiths Station celebrates two decades through new city clock
On April 2, city officials led by Mayor F.L. “Bubba” Copeland unveiled a city clock that will honor history while looking to the future. Nestled between ...

Babe Ruth and Chadwick Boseman? Alabama HS baseball team 'connected with greatness' at ...
And he knew the park's rich history. “I asked them,” Gray said, “if they knew about Hank Aaron and Willie Mays and the Negro League baseball. They ...

Push continues to memorialize civil rights martyr Viola Liuzzo in her hometown of California, Pa.
She chalks that up to a combination of no historical markers in the area to ... was in the KKK car that shot at her in Alabama and did nothing to stop her murder. ... has the blessing of Mary Liuzzo Lilleboe, Viola's 73-year-old daughter.

Montgomery's long abandoned Grove Court Apartments to be redeveloped
MONTGOMERY, Ala. (WSFA) - The historic Grove Court Apartments in downtown Montgomery are getting a much-needed makeover after being ...


Luverne Football's Legendary Coach Glenn Daniel Dies at 95
... took the job, which paid him $2,100 a year, “because I had a family to take care of,” he said in the book, “Tales from Alabama Prep Football” in 2000.

'A Better Life For Their Children' Looks At The History Of The Rosenwald Schools
He becomes an educator, and he's the founding principal of the historically Black college in Tuskegee, Alabama, known as Tuskegee Institute,” said ...

UAB history journal for student scholarship wins a national award
The annual Vulcan Historical Review was honored in the 2020 Gerald D. Nash History Graduate Online Journal Competition. The University of Alabama ..


Friday, April 2, 2021

Truman Capote and MM

I've written before about a link between Alabama and Marilyn Monroe, a very tenuous one via photographer John Vachon. You can read about it here. In this post let's examine a connection that's a bit more solid. Sort of....

Truman Capote's relationships to Alabama are well known. Although born in 1924 in New Orleans to parents who were both from our state, he moved to New York with his mother in 1931. During that decade he spent long periods with relatives in Monroeville, include a three-year stretch. His cousin Sook would later appear in some of his writings, as he would turn up as Dill in his friend Harper Lee's To Kill a Mockingbird.

Capote's Alabama days would appear in such writings as the novel The Grass Harp and stories "A Christmas Memory" and "The Thanksgiving Visitor." One of his best known works, however, would be influenced by both his time in New York City and family memories--the short novel Breakfast at Tiffany's first published in the November 1958 issue of Esquire. In it the unnamed narrator, a writer, tells us about his encounters with Holly Golightly, a neighbor in his apartment building and the other people in her life.

The piece was filmed in 1961 with Audrey Hepburn as Holly and George Peppard as the writer, now named Paul Varjak. Hepburn was nominated for a Best Actress Oscar, one of five the film received. Oscars were awarded for Best Original Score and the song "Moon River". The movie has become a romantic classic.

Although the shy Hepburn made the outgoing Holly a memorable character, she was not Capote's choice for the role. He wanted Marilyn Monroe. The screenplay by George Axelrod was first tailored for Monroe, but her advisor Lee Strasberg told her the character was too much like a prostitute--Capote called Holly an American geisha--and she turned it down. The part was also offered to Shirley MacLaine; she, too, didn't want it. The prim Hepburn got the part and made it her own. Capote felt betrayed by Paramount Studios, which had purchased the film rights. 

Speculations around the "what ifs" of Hollywood casting are always fun. What if George Raft had accepted the offer to play Sam Spade in the 1941 Maltese Falcon, and Humphrey Bogart had missed out? What if Monroe had played Holly?

Apparently Capote put a lot of his mother into the character of Holly. Lillie Mae and his father Archulus Persons divorced when he was four. She later left Alabama for New York City and married Jose Capote, who would adopt Truman while they all lived on Park Avenue. There are striking similarities between the beautiful, mercurial Lillie Mae and the beautiful and mercurial Holly. The character is from the rural South--Texas--and her real name as revealed late in the book is Lulamae. There are other similarities between the lives of  real people in Capote's early life and fictional characters in the book. 

Capote and Monroe were introduced early in her career by film director John Huston. The writer remained bitter about Paramount's casting of Hepburn. He called the movie a "mawkish Valentine" that "made me want to throw up." Capote further declared, "It's the most miscast film I've ever seen." All of this bile despite acknowledging, "Audrey is an old friend, and one of my favorite people, but she was just wrong for that part." Years later talk of a remake surfaced, and Capote said Jodie Foster would be good for the part--another "what if" of Hollywood casting. 

Something about Monroe's combination of intelligence, sexiness and yet child-like emotions made her seem right for Holly in Capote's mind. And after all, he wrote the book. Monroe once gave him a teddy bear with "I love you" on it. Near the end of his life he returned the favor and wrote a profile of the actress for Interview magazine entitled "A Beautiful Child." 

The photographs below were taken in 1955 at El Morroco, one of Manhattan's most popular nightclubs from the 1930's until the late 1950's. 


Some quotes and other information above came from the following two books:

Clarke, Gerald. Capote: A Biography. 1988, pp. 269, 516

Schultz, William Todd. Tiny Terror: Why Truman Capote [Almost] Wrote Answered Prayers. 2011, pp. 55,58, 131