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123 entries match your criteria. Entries 101 through 123 are listed. ⊲ Previous 100                                              

 
 

Birmingham Civil Rights Heritage Trail Historical Markers

Over 100 markers throughout downtown, are at significant locations along the 1963 Civil Rights march routes. Designed as a self-guided tour, the trail speaks to the valor of both common people and to the spiritual leaders who spearheaded the fight against segregation and other forms of racism.
 
The Bad Guy paired marker image, Touch for more information
By Mark Hilton
The Bad Guy paired marker
101 Alabama, Jefferson County, Birmingham — B11 — The Bad GuyMarch Route to Retail — Birmingham Civil Rights Heritage Trail —
A key player in the Birmingham civil rights drama was Public Safety Commissioner Theophilus Eugene Connor. He earned the nickname "Bull” because of his booming voice as a radio sports announcer. White voters who supported his politics of racial . . . Map (db m187780) HM
102 Alabama, Jefferson County, Birmingham — E2 — The Boy Becomes a ManMarch Route Towards a Purposeful Life — Birmingham Civil Rights Heritage Trail —
Young Fred loved pulling pranks with the aid of his younger siblings and friends. He enjoyed going to church every Sunday and began teaching Sunday School. Because he was so mischievous, his siblings could hardly believe that his secret goal was . . . Map (db m187630) HM
103 Alabama, Jefferson County, Birmingham — A5 — The Children's CrusadeMarch Route to Government — Birmingham Civil Rights Heritage Trail —
After nearly a month, “Project C” seemed on the verge of collapse. The presence of Dr. King and the SCLC did not rally Black Birmingham behind the Movement as leaders hoped. The media began to lose interest and the White community basically . . . Map (db m187840) HM
104 Alabama, Jefferson County, Birmingham — B7 — The Defiant OneMarch Route to Retail — Birmingham Civil Rights Heritage Trail —
Rev. Bevel and his team worked with popular disc jockeys "Tall Paul” Dudley White and Shelley “The Playboy" Stewart, whose jive talk on the radio was actually a secret code that told young foot soldiers when it was time to "move out.” Despite . . . Map (db m187770) HM
105 Alabama, Jefferson County, Birmingham — F6 — The First Bethel BombingMarch Route for Moral Justice — Birmingham Civil Rights Heritage Trail —
In November 1956, the U.S. Supreme Court outlawed segregated buses in Montgomery, handing the bus boycott and the growing Civil Rights Movement a major victory. As a result, Rev. Shuttlesworth led the ACMHR to target Birmingham's segregated . . . Map (db m189098) HM
106 Alabama, Jefferson County, Birmingham — C15 — The Fraternal Hotel BuildingDestination — Birmingham Civil Rights Heritage Trail —
Built 1925, 1616-1622 4th Ave. N. Located in the Historic Fourth Avenue Business District next to the taxi stand and Colored Masonic Temple, this building housed one of Birmingham's few hotels for Black travelers. It also housed restaurants . . . Map (db m188186) HM
107 Alabama, Jefferson County, Birmingham — A8 — The Good Friday MarchMarch Route to Government — Birmingham Civil Rights Heritage Trail —
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., hoped to gain more national attention for the Birmingham campaign by planning marches during Holy Week - on Palm Sunday, Good Friday and Easter Sunday. But "Bull” Connor created serious problems for King. Connor got a . . . Map (db m187834) HM
108 Alabama, Jefferson County, Birmingham — D1 — The Importance of Being EducatedMarch Route for Education — Birmingham Civil Rights Heritage Trail —
Thirteen years after the American Civil War, the U.S. Supreme Court began to uphold Jim Crow segregation laws that kept African Ameri- cans from enjoying their 14th Amendment rights. Its famous Plessy v. Ferguson decision in 1896 supported a . . . Map (db m187632) HM
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109 Alabama, Jefferson County, Birmingham — F7 — The Movement ContinuesMarch Route for Moral Justice — Birmingham Civil Rights Heritage Trail —
The Christmas night bombing by White terrorists was intended to kill Rev. Shuttlesworth, or at the very least, to scare him into leaving town and his new organization. A police officer who came to the bornbed house and church told Rev. . . . Map (db m189105) HM
110 Alabama, Jefferson County, Birmingham — F12 — The Movement's Fearless LeaderMarch Route for Moral Justice — Birmingham Civil Rights Heritage Trail —
In late 1958 and the summer of 1959, a series of articles in Time magazine and the New York Times addressed the dangers Black church leaders and others involved in the Movement faced as angry pro-segregation Whites took more and more violent . . . Map (db m189131) HM
111 Alabama, Jefferson County, Birmingham — B5 — The New StrategyMarch Route to Retail — Birmingham Civil Rights Heritage Trail —
By the end of April 1963, the national media and local Whites were losing interest in “Project C.” Fewer Blacks volunteered to be arrested at downtown stores and lunch counters. So, Rev. James Bevel, a field Secretary with the SCLC, turned to a . . . Map (db m187765) HM
112 Alabama, Jefferson County, Birmingham — A4 — The Palm Sunday MarchMarch Route to Government — Birmingham Civil Rights Heritage Trail —
Ministers in 60 Black churches across the city played key roles in the Birmingham Movement. In the mass meetings, ministers fired up their working-class members and encouraged commitment to the struggle against segregation with revival-style . . . Map (db m187529) HM
113 Alabama, Jefferson County, Birmingham — H22 — The Price of FreedomMarch Route for Fair Housing — Birmingham Civil Rights Heritage Trail —
August 1963 The Shores daughters said their father handled civil rights cases across Alabama and across the South. As he advanced the African American struggle against unfair segregation through the courts, angry White militants turned . . . Map (db m189189) HM
114 Alabama, Jefferson County, Birmingham — H4 — The Push for Fair HousingMarch Route for Fair Housing — Birmingham Civil Rights Heritage Trail —
1937 Starting in the 1920s, demand for all housing in Birmingham increased year after year as the population grew. Residential areas zoned for "Negroes,” however, remained the same. By the 1940s, surging Black demand and a postwar . . . Map (db m189168) HM
115 Alabama, Jefferson County, Birmingham — A12 — The Right to VoteMarch Route to Government — Birmingham Civil Rights Heritage Trail —
Another strategy of “Project C” was voter registration for Birmingham Blacks. At the time, only 12,000 of 150,000 voting-age African-Americans in Jefferson County could vote. White state and local officials used such methods as reading tests and . . . Map (db m187708) HM
116 Alabama, Jefferson County, Birmingham — D7 — The Schoolhouse Stand at AlabamaMarch Route for Education — Birmingham Civil Rights Heritage Trail —
Southern governors, mayors and elected officials employed every means to resist public school integration, even famously using armed state guards to block Black students from entering. For example, Arkansas Gov. Orval Faubus called the Arkansas . . . Map (db m187680) HM
117 Alabama, Jefferson County, Birmingham — F11 — The Second Bethel BombingMarch Route for Moral Justice — Birmingham Civil Rights Heritage Trail —
June 1958 Rev. Shuttlesworth called 1958 “a year of harassment” as terrorist violence against the ACMHR's movement grew worse. Bethel Baptist Deacon James Revis offered his home near the new parsonage as a guardhouse. Other men from the . . . Map (db m189119) HM
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118 Alabama, Jefferson County, Birmingham — A13 — The Stand for FreedomMarch Route to Government — Birmingham Civil Rights Heritage Trail —
"Bull” Connor's police force still tried in vain to stop the marches to City-Hall. The number of well-organized protestors overwhelmed the police. Some marchers actually made it to Woodrow Wilson Park (now Linn Park) that connects City Hall and . . . Map (db m187706) HM
119 Alabama, Jefferson County, Birmingham — F5 — The Working Class & Mass MeetingsMarch Route for Moral Justice — Birmingham Civil Rights Heritage Trail —
The "sudden" emergence of the ACMHR ministers left White leaders "dumbfounded” and deeply concerned about how they could be controlled. At first, they called Rev. Shuttlesworth and his fellow ministers “radicals” and “Communists," "outsiders” who . . . Map (db m189084) HM
120 Alabama, Jefferson County, Birmingham — C21 — Trailways Bus StationDestination — Birmingham Civil Rights Heritage Trail —
Built in the 1940S, 4th Ave. N. & 19th St. N. On Mother's Day in 1961, the Freedom Riders, Black and White members of the Congress for Racial Equality (CORE), arrived at Birmingham's Trailways bus station. Though integrated . . . Map (db m187994) HM
121 Alabama, Jefferson County, Birmingham — H3 — Urban Renewal, Urban RemovalMarch Route for Fair Housing — Birmingham Civil Rights Heritage Trail —
1936 Slum clearance became another facial zoning Weapon. City health officials described. "Negro quarters” as the unsanitary source of diseases that threatened community health: Civic leaders used this reasoning to win millions in federal . . . Map (db m189164) HM
122 Alabama, Jefferson County, Birmingham — C28-C27 — Vance Federal Building(Included the Post Office) — Birmingham Civil Rights Heritage Trail —
C28 Side Built 1921, 1800 5th Ave. N. Lawyers like Arthur Shores and Thurgood Marshall (shown with Autherine Lucy, the first Black student to integrate the University of Alabama) filed numerous lawsuits challenging racial . . . Map (db m188003) HM
123 Alabama, Jefferson County, Birmingham — B14 — Woman in Paddy WagonMarch Route to Retail — Birmingham Civil Rights Heritage Trail —
For seven years before the 1963 Birmingham Campaign, Rev. Shuttlesworth and other leaders of the ACMHR taught masses of Black citizens how to take direct but non-violent actions to gain first-class American citizenship. Inspired by faith, these . . . Map (db m187787) HM

123 entries matched your criteria. Entries 101 through 123 are listed above. ⊲ Previous 100
 
 
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May. 4, 2024