Birmingham Then and Now®

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Alabama
Alabama Power
Alagasco
Appalachian Mountains
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Avondle Park
Barons
Birmingham
Bright Star
Category1=Non-Fiction
Category=AGP
Category=AJ
Category=AJC
Category=AM
Category=HBJK
Category=HBLW
Category=NHK
Category=WTM
Civil Rights
COP=United Kingdom
Davis statue
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Elys Town
Elyton
Empire Building
Ensley
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Five Points
Harbert
Highlands
Hollywood
Iron Bowl
Jefferson County
John Hand
Joy Young
Kress Building
Language_English
Legion Field
Linn Park
Louise Wooster
Magic City
Martin Luther King
Morris Hotel
Mountain Terrace
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Quinlan Castle
Rainbow Viaduct
Red Diamond
Red Mountain
Regions
Renasant Bank
Rialto Theatre
Richard Massey
Rickwood Field
Sloss Furnaces
softlaunch
Southern Natural Gas
St Vincents
Steel and Iron
Temple Emanu-El
Temple of Sibyl
Terminal Station
Trinity Medical
Tutwiler Hotel
University of Alabama
Vulcan Park
Wachovia
Woodlawn City

Product details

  • ISBN 9781909815056
  • Weight: 950g
  • Dimensions: 279 x 244mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Apr 2014
  • Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
  • Language: English
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A late arrival on the Southern landscape, the city of Birmingham was not incorporated until after the Civil War. In fact, from 1820 to 1871, what is now Birmingham was known as the hamlet of Elyton, a small crossroads set in the rolling foothills of the Appalachian Mountains where several Pony Express and stage routes crossed paths. When two railroads eventually intersected at this point—where, significantly, all the ingredients necessary to make iron existed in close proximity—the region’s growth exploded. Birmingham’s history is not a story of the grace and vanished grandeur of an antebellum past, but rather, a dynamic story of modern American industrialization.

Sites covered include: Hollywood, Alabama State Fairgrounds, Vulcan Park, Mountain Brook Village, The Old Mill, Avondale Park, Highland Park, Woodlawn High, Quinlan Castle, Five Points South, Bottega Favorita, Old Jefferson County Courthouse, Capitol Park, Tutwiler Hotel, Twentieth Street, Louise Wooster Brothel, Alabama Theatre, Kress Department Store, Joy Young Restaurant, Terminal Station, Molton Hotel, Lovemans, Massey Building, Bright Star, Temple of Sibyl, Sloss Furnaces, Red Mountain and Legion Field.

 

 

Alabama native Todd Keith is the author of The Rivers of Alabama and Cahaba: A Gift for Generations, as well as Old Cahawba, a history of Alabama’s first state capital. He has written for magazines such as National Geographic Traveler, Coastal Living, and Robb Report. In his role as a senior contributor for Executive Traveler magazine, he has covered destinations as varied as Iceland, Argentina, South Africa, Switzerland, and Mongolia. Keith’s latest endeavor is Thicket, a lifestyle magazine about his home state. He lives in Birmingham with his wife, Julie, and two sons, Collins and Fletcher.

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