Thursday, March 3, 2022

Alabama History & Culture News: March 3 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. Some articles may be behind a paywall. Enjoy!


NEW RELEASES: 6 local authors with page-turning books you don't want to miss | Bham Now
These local authors are heating up the book charts in Birmingham. ... “This is not just an Alabama story, it's an international story.


Autherine Lucy Foster, first Black student at University of Alabama, dies at 92 - The Washington Post
“I asked the Lord to give me the strength — if I must give my life — to give it freely,” she later recalled, according to Nora Sayre's book “Previous ...

Autherine Lucy Foster, First Black Student at U. of Alabama, Dies at 92 - The New York Times
Growing up as the youngest of 10 children in an Alabama farm family, she simply wanted to get the best education her state could offer. She obtained a ...


City, UA group partner to do cemetery repairs - The Brewton Standard
State officials acknowledged the historical significance of Union Cemetery for our area by adding it to the Alabama Historic Cemetery Register on ...


Autherine Lucy Foster, first Black student at the University of Alabama, dies at 92 - CBS 42
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (WIAT) — Autherine Lucy Foster, the first Black Student to enroll at the University of Alabama, has died. She was 92 years old.


Alabama's Hidden History: Rev. Lorenzo Bonner - WVUA 23
By WVUA 23 Digital Reporter Kyrsten Eller. WVUA 23 and the Murphy African-American Museum honor Rev. Lorenzo Bonner. Bonner is the senior pastor ...

Alabama's Hidden History: Melvin Jones-Conley - WVUA 23
By WVUA 23 Digital Reporter Kyrsten Eller. WVUA 23 and the Murphy African-American Museum honor Mister Melvin Jones-Conley.


The 50 Legends of the Alabama Sports Writers Association
Pruett was the first person in ASWA history to win the Herby Kirby Award for story of year, the Bill Shelton Award, be named to the Hall of Fame, and ...

Netflix's 'Inventing Anna' has a major Alabama connection | Miami Herald
Inventing Anna,” the new hit series on Netflix, has viewers obsessed with the real-life saga of Anna Sorokin, a con artist who duped the ...


Birmingham students write and produce “My Voice Will Cry Out”, an original Black History ...
Significance of Black History Month. Odessa Woolfolk addressing Huffman High School students on February 25, 2022. (United Way of Central Alabama).


Proposed cultural center in Auburn to highlight Black history, contributions to city - Alabama ...
A Rosenwald school in Midway, Alabama. ... It would include a museum space focused on the city's Black history and provide a special events venue ...


Inside one of Alabama's only Black history high school classes: What is taught? - al.com
The class, “History of Us,” began in 2019 at Central High School, where University of Alabama Associate Professor John Giggie and graduate student ...

He died Dec. 21, 2021, at the age of 92 and was buried in a private graveside service at Oak Hill Cemetery in Birmingham. A Birmingham native, Oliver ...


READ MORE: This Montgomery tour guide brings Alabama history to life ... At the time, the city planned to relocate the statue Sim's burial ground ...

Alabamian's work honored with Library of America volume| DON NOBLE - Tuscaloosa News
Albert Murray, an Alabama native, was an extraordinary man and truly ... recently examined by Ben Raines in his book on the slave ship Clotilda.


Art created by current, former inmates on display - Shelton Herald
... at the the Alabama Department of Archives and History in Montgomery. ... Participants in Auburn University's Alabama Prison Arts + Education ...

Writer turns to Wiregrass roots for new novel | Local News | dothaneagle.com
Raised in Southeast Alabama, Tom Miller chose to set his post-World War II ... “I was trained as a historian and have tried to present historical ...


PHOTOS: Alabama honors Autherine Lucy Foster - Montgomery Advertiser
The University of Alabama unveiled a historic marker honoring Autherine Lucy Foster, the first black student admitted to an all-white college in ...


Auburn legend Lionel "Little Train" James passes away | News | waaytv.com
James was inducted into the Alabama Sports Hall of Fame in 2006. One of the most popular players in Auburn football history, James weighed 150 ...

Saturday, February 26, 2022

Alabama History & Culture News: February 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. Some articles may be behind a paywall. Enjoy!



Distinguished Lecture Series presenting Patti Callahan Henry
She is the recipient of The Christy Award 2019 Book of the Year winner, The Harper Lee Distinguished Writer of the Year for 2020 and the Alabama ...


UNA releases book about most influential women alumni - YouTube
The University of North Alabama has released a book featuring some of the most influential women in campus history.News 19 is North Alabama's News ...


Alabama author prepares fourth book in popular 'Maysa Brown' series
Alabama author prepares fourth book in popular 'Maysa Brown' series Hugh Hardy Jr. authors the "Maysa Brown" series of books. (contributed).

Righting a Wrong: State boosts preservation of Black history - WBRC
The racial justice protests of June 2020 found their way to the steps of the Alabama Department of Archives and History. In fact, you can find a ...

(Solomon Crenshaw Jr. / Alabama NewsCenter). Phyllis Palmer remembers laughing when her brother talked about being buried at Elmwood Cemetery.

Visit Historic Mooresville, the north Alabama town where two U.S. Presidents spent time - WAFF
It's no secret Alabama has a rich history, but did you know that two U.S. presidents and a film crew spent time in Mooresville, Alabama?

“Albert Murray: Collected Essays & Memoirs” By - Alabama Public Radio
The first five volumes were books by Melville, Hawthorne, Whitman, Stowe and Twain. There are over 300 volumes now, and Albert Murray is, ...


Alabama's first Black doctors and their lasting legacies - al.com
#BlackHistoryMonth and we begin with a weeklong examination of stories pulled from the book "The Colored Baptists of #Alabama."


You won't believe the history behind Hart's Fried Chicken - al.com
The oldest of 11 children, L.S. Hartzog was born in Barbour County, Alabama, and grew up on a farm. Robert says his Uncle Hot only went to school ...


G.W. Carver Interpretive Museum preserving history since 2000 - WTVY
“There is lots of powerful history here in Alabama and especially in the surrounding areas and this is why we have this space,” Jones said.

Historical Markers: Indian Treaty Boundary Line | News | unionspringsherald.com
This included Georgia and most of Central Alabama, to the United States Government. Major General Andrew Jackson continued to Louisiana and defeated ...


Cleon Jones, an Africatown resident and famed, retired New York Mets outfielder, helps guide the volunteers during the cemetery cleanup. (Alabama ...


Answer Man: Where can I find information about old Dothan postcards? | Local News ...
This vintage postcard shows the Dothan Opera House at 115 N. St. Andrews St. ALABAMA DEPARTMENT OF ARCHIVES AND HISTORY POSTCARD COLLECTION.


Lynching, KKK, segregation: Tuscaloosa civil rights history marked
Capitol Park (2800 Sixth St.): A building once stood in Capitol Park that served as a meeting area for the Alabama Legislature.


New history of Pickens County Baptists highlights 300 years of church life in West Alabama ...
The book, “Studies in the History of the Pickens Baptist Association of West Alabama,” includes Farley's writings about Baptist work in the region ...


PFC Bill Morrison will be interred at the Alabama State Veterans Memorial Cemetery in Spanish Fort.


History Demands We Preserve the Wreck of America's Last Slave Ship - TIME
The ship is the key to that history, for all Americans. But the Alabama Historical Commission has yet to promise to the Clotilda descendants that the ...


Auburn University, Alabama Extension unveil historical marker recognizing Alfa centennial
Auburn University and the Alabama Cooperative Extension System celebrated the Alabama Farmers Federationand#8217;s recent centennial celebration ...


"It's a great day to be in Birmingham, Alabama"—notes from the Secretary of the Interior's ...
Birmingham had a special visitor this past week! Learn about Secretary Deb Haaland's visit + check out progress on the historic A.G. Gaston Motel!


'Architecture as an artifact': Auburn professors scan 3D digital reconstructions of historic ...
As the ashy paint that clings to the outside of the buildings across Alabama peel more and more with every passing year, two Auburn University ...


Georgia Gilmore, the Alabama Cook Who Fueled the Civil Rights Movement | Mental Floss
Georgia Gilmore and the “Club From Nowhere”. Georgia Gilmore preparing a box lunch.The Montgomery Advisor/Alabama Department of Archives and History, ...

Thursday, February 24, 2022

That Time Miss America Played Miss Alabama

Ok, let's see if we can sort this confusion out.

The silent film The American Venus is a romantic comedy set in the midst of a beauty pageant. Filming was done at the actual Miss America contest held in the Million Dollar Pier Ballroom in Atlantic City, New Jersey, on September 11, 1925. Additional filming for the Paramount Pictures release was done in Astoria Studios on Long Island, in Greenwich, Connecticut, and supposedly a "swimming hole" in Ocala, Florida. Unfortunately, the film is now lost. More about the film can be found here.

The AllMovie site has these comments:

"The physical attributes of lovely leading lady Esther Ralston are amply displayed in American Venus. This satire of beauty contests gets under way when two competing cosmetic companies seek the endorsement of the winner of the American Venus pageant (Ralston, of course). Complication ensue when it appears that our heroine's contest win was rigged. This plot point mirrored a real-life occurrence in 1925, when it was alleged that the Miss America pageant had been fixed; apparently it hadn't, since Miss America herself, Fay Lanphier, makes a cameo appearance in American Venus. Of more interest historically is the presence in the supporting cast of cult favorite Louise Brooks, not to mention the Technicolor bathing-beauty scenes."

The 87 minute film, released on January 31, 1926, is notable for several reasons. The winner of the 1925 Miss America contest, Fay Lanphier [1905-1959] appears as--wait for it--Miss Alabama. A surviving trailer viewable on YouTube announces "an eye feast of beautiful women" and "75 Atlantic City bathing beauties" and "a galaxy of glorious girls". The American Venus was a success, playing around the country for two years. All that pulchritude did bother the usual suspects, who tut-tutted about too much visible skin.   

Lanphier never made another movie; her contract with Paramount was cancelled. However, this one aided the careers of two other actresses. Esther Ralston moved into leading lady roles. Louise Brooks appeared in the first credited role of her brief but spectacular career. 

The 1925 Miss America has a couple of firsts to be noted. Lanphier was the first Miss California to win the crown and also the first Miss America to star in a feature film. More on Lanphier can be found here. She married her high school sweetheart, had two daughters, and died in 1959 aged 53. 

So why did the real Miss California and Miss America play Miss Alabama in the film? 

Who knows? The real Miss Alabama in 1925 was Nellie Kincaid, who competed in Atlantic City as Miss Birmingham. In those days many contestants held local and not statewide titles. I have been unable for certain to find information on Miss Kincaid. A quick search at Ancestry.com did turn up in the 1930 U.S. Census a Nellie M. Kincaid. She was living with her parents Elijah and Margaret and younger brother Edward at 144 57th Street South. Her occupation? Actress. She was 21 years old, which would have put her at 16 for the Miss America pageant if she was indeed that Kincaid. 

Lanphier can be seen in the first three photographs below; Kincaid is visible in the final one. 




Poster for the film; source is Wikipedia



Lobby card for the film; source is Wikipedia





Source: Wikipedia






Source: "Surviving Pieces of Lost Silent Films" on YouTube 
[The American Venus trailer is the second item, after a fragment of Cleopatra]



Contestants in the 1925 Miss America pageant. Nellie Kincaid, Miss Birmingham, is the sixth from the right in the upper row. If you follow the link below, you can see a much larger version of this photo. You can also see her in the portion below. 

Source: Wikipedia








Friday, February 18, 2022

Remembering Joe Moudry (1947-2021)

For this post I'm reprinting with his permission a piece Bill Plott wrote about our friend Joe Moudry and which originally appeared as noted below in a mailing of the Southern Fandom Press Alliance. 

I first met Joe in the early 1980's when Dianne and I were in Tuscaloosa working on master's degrees in library science. At that time Joe worked at UA's Gorgas Library where we spent many hours. I ran into Joe again a few times after I began working as a medical librarian at UAB. At some point several years ago I met Bill Plott who told me about the luncheons at Taste of Thailand in Hoover, and I was able to attend some of those. 

I'll let Bill tell the rest of the story. The next time you eat at Taste of Thailand [and if you haven't been, go] think of that small band of friends sharing many meals there amid much talk of science fiction and fantasy matters, among other things.

R.I.P., Joe. 



Joe told daughter Leigh Harwell it was the best birthday he ever had.

And it was a grand occasion for most of us, too. But even with the Stage 4 cancer diagnosis we did not think for a moment that a Sunday afternoon luncheon in Hoover, Ala., at Taste of Thailand restaurant near the end of the September would be the last time we ever saw our friend. The end on Saturday, October 16 was sudden and totally unexpected.

On Friday night, Oct. 15, Leigh said Joe was lucid and conversational with the hospice nurse. Indeed, he handled all of the paperwork himself. She called him when she got home. He put his phone on speaker and she followed him discoursing on removing the bottle cap and taking his pre-bed pain medication. They talked for a while, and then he said he was ready to go to sleep. He had his pillows and cats arranged suitably. They exchanged declarations of love.

After two attempts to reach him on Saturday morning, Leigh quickly loaded daughters

Charlotte and Evelyn in the car and headed fearfully from Trussville to Hoover. At the townhouse, she hustled the girls into the TV room and went to check on Joe. He was on his side appearing to be asleep. And indeed he was, but it was the long sleep.

It was as peaceful a passage as one could have without friends and family present.

Fortunately for Leigh, longtime friend from UAB Mike Oakes, who had been in Oxford, was only about an hour from Birmingham, with his girlfriend. Alarmed by the initial report that Joe was in hospice, Mike and Patrice decided to go to Birmingham on Saturday morning. They were just minutes away when Leigh reached him with news of Joe’s death. A godsend. Patrice entertained Joe’s granddaughters while Mike assisted Leigh with contacting hospice and the funeral home.

She related all of this to me on Saturday afternoon.

***



If it was the best birthday ever, Joe would have been equally pleased at Leigh’s organization of his memorial service: Halloween afternoon.

“He always loved everything spooky,” she said. “I think he would love the idea of having his memorial service on Halloween. It was his favorite holiday.”

Indeed.

The service was at Trinity Episcopal Church in Bessemer, Ala. The minister, Rev. Dr. Ruth LaMonte, had baptized the grandchildren and possibly been pastor to Joe’s mother, Evelyn, who is credited with gifting him with a love of reading. The homily contained lot about Joe that was not commonly known. For example, he was an acolyte as teenager and once considered the priesthood. I learned at the birthday party and again this day that he was a spelunker. He had been a trumpet player in the University of Alabama’s Million Dollar Band under Col. Carlton Butler. Joe had told me some great stories about the band at football games. Like at LSU where Butler told them to lock arms as they left the buses and go straight to their on-ground destination. And at Georgia Tech where drunk frat boys tried to toss empty whisky bottles into the tubas as if they were basketball goals.

After his service in the Peace Corps he was a psychologist at Bryce Hospital for a time, then gravitated to the Amelia Gayle Gorgas Library at UA. He eventually earned a master’s degree in library science and was mentored by the great Glenn House, who developed the book arts program at UA. Like George Inzer, another mutual connection. Glenn and his family were good friends of mine.

I was among those who spoke and recounted how our friendship grew from George Inzer’s funeral. Rev. LaMonte concluded with a reading of T.S. Eliot’s poem, “McCavvity the Mystery Cat.” Joe would have loved that, also.

Leigh, who had done a marvelous job with her brother Ben’s memorial service last spring and Joe’s surprise birthday party, scored again with this one. I’m not sure how she selected Trinity Episcopal Church but it dates to 1887, surviving in a neighborhood that is predominantly black now. It has been five years since they had a pastor. Services are now conducted by rotating priests. Donald Jay Howton, administrator and local newspaper columnist, said a good Sunday turnout these days is about 15 people. “But we won’t close. We will still be here if there are only five of us,” he said.

Perhaps there is something almost fannish in that – a small apa [amateur press association] hanging on in changing world.

***

I can’t believe I only really knew Joe Moudry for eight years. It was like Nancy said, “I feel like we’ve known Joe forever.” She and/or Atticus occasionally joined us for the monthly luncheons. I think Joe enjoyed their company as much as mine, especially Atticus.

I first met Joe around 1975 when he accompanied Meade Frierson to my house in Tuscaloosa to buy my modest collection of science fiction fanzines, books and magazines. The only things I remember in particular were a copy the Arkham House edition of Ray Bradbury’s Dark Carnival, given to me by Al Andrews, and the Stf & Fantasy Song Book collection of filk songs. I did not see Joe again until 2013.

Around 1982 George Inzer joined the faculty at the University of Montevallo. He contacted me and told me he was involved in fandom, which I had been out of for years. We sat around my kitchen table one night looking at photos of fans and authors that I somehow had held onto over the years. It was a pleasant evening and George became a friend, but it did not motivate me to look into returning to fandom.

I left UM in 1990. I think George left sometime about then, also. He went to Tuscaloosa to work on a master’s degree, later moved back to Birmingham near his parents. He died there on July 12, 2013.

I do not recall if it was an email or a phone call, but Joe contacted me, suggesting we share a ride to North Birmingham for George’s funeral service. He and George had been friends in a once thriving Birmingham fan group. So, our connection was more through a mutual friend rather than each other. We met at Taste of Thailand in Hoover on July 18 and a friendship was born. The conversation on that ride to and from the funeral revealed many common interests.

Despite the sadness of the occasion, we quickly developed a rapport that needed to continue.

Thus came our monthly luncheons at Taste of Thailand, Joe’s favorite restaurant. I had returned to fandom the previous summer after attending DeepSouthCon50 in Huntsville, Ala. I had rejoined SFPA shortly after the con. The conversation that brought us together also spurred Joe into returning to SFPA, a move that further strengthened our friendship.

The luncheon sessions were filled with SF and fannish talk. I had been away for so very long. Joe did much to bring me up to date on fannish happenings, not so much on current fiction as he was so focused on his love of Lovecraft, Philip K. Dick, and Weird Tales. Still, he introduced me to Joe Lansdale, Harry Turtledove, C. J. Cherryh, and a few others. He brought me into Fictionmags, an online chat group composed largely of writers, authors and collectors. It has become one of the most rewarding things in my internet experience.

The luncheon sessions soon acquired a traditional ending. Our “dessert” was a trip to 2nd & Charles about a mile away. 2nd & Charles is a used (mostly) media store affiliated with Books-A-Million. It is a warehouse-like building filled with books, comics, DVDs, vinyl, and spin-off merchandise from all things of fannish interest.

I do not remember the first time I took Atticus to 2nd & Charles, but it immediately became his favorite store. It fit perfectly with the occasions he joined the luncheon. He and Joe were simpatico immediately. They would sometimes have detailed discussions on esoteric aspects of Harry Potter while I ate my basil chicken and sipped a beer. Joe loved hanging out with Atticus. And he and Nancy could have some conversations about jazz and music where I was also an outsider. No matter.

Through the luncheons I came to know several of Joe’s former colleagues at the University of Alabama-Birmingham. Most notably was Mike Oakes, whose cosplay effort earned him the nickname of “the Klingon.” They were longtime friends and Mike has been like an uncle to Leigh. He helped her move and provided needed friendship on other occasions such as the sad event above. I also met Clay Boyce, another UAB staffer, who is very active in community theater. He and Atticus got to talk plays a time or two. And A.J. Wright, another retired UAB librarian whose “Alabama Yesterdays” blog contains tons of fascinating information of Alabama history, pulp writers and other pop culture goodies.

In addition to 2nd & Chares, the luncheons usually featured a private media exchange. I gave Joe copies of Alter-Ego and Comics Revue that I had finished reading. He brought books sometimes and DVDs almost every time. Joe was convinced that Blue-Ray was of such a superior quality that he was always upgrading his film collection and passing ordinary DVDs on to me or Mike. We were grateful and not nearly as discriminating.

Some of those disks proved timely this year. Among them a copy of Nosferatu.

Joe’s generosity with DVDs affected Atticus just as much as they did me. In the late fall of last year, an episode of Gravity Falls contained a reference to Nosferatu. Atticus said he wanted to watch the disk that Joe had given us. Then, he paused and said he wanted to wait until Halloween. He did not forget. On the first of October, as we were digging out the Halloween decorations, he proclaimed October to be Spooky Month and it would begin with Nosferatu.

It was followed by all of the classic 1930s black and white horror films. We watched Frankenstein, The Wolfman, Dracula and The Invisible Man. At Atticus’s urging I ordered Son of Frankenstein because he said we needed that for the “canon.” Joe was in our thoughts with film.

For the record, Atticus did not find Nosferatu as scary as he anticipated. I found the creature quite chilling myself. When I told Joe what was going on, he was delighted, not only for Spooky Month itself but also because he provided most of the disks that would be viewed.

That was part of my last conversation with Joe. It came on October 7. He seemed at peace and mentioned several things about the disposal of his collection, some of which might involve my assistance. Of course, I told him he need do nothing more than ask. As with my friend Chuck Bethea two years ago, the final conversation was fun and enjoyable, like old times, like nothing was going to change. What more could we want?

Damn COVID-19 for stealing a year and a half of those wonderful monthly get-togethers. Mike Oakes has suggested that we continue to have them, and I’m all for it. We can toast Joe, talk science fiction movies, and go to 2nd & Charles if work schedules for Mike and others permit.

But alas, it will not fill that void left by Joe’s passing. I will so miss not being able to get him on the phone after I’ve read a book or watched a movie with Atticus, things Joe always enjoyed discussing.

R.I.P., my friend.





Remembering Joe Moudry, a publication for the 344th Mailing of the Southern Fandom Press Alliance. Produced by Bill Plott, 190 Crestview Circle, Montevallo, AL 355115, wjplott@aol.com,. 205-908-8703. Banshee Press Publication No. 100.