Monday, August 31, 2020

Buck House https://tavm.omeka.net/items/show/515


 According to this 1908 T-News article, the Buck House, for which the carriage house was an outbuilding, ain't as old as the Tuscaloosa Area Virtual Museum claims. The writer in 1908 says it was built by L.V.B. Martin. TAVM says it was built in 1820. L.V.B. Martin wasn't born until nine years later. Martin was law partners with J. H. Fitts. Martin also married Fitts' sister, Susie. Fitts was the Tuscaloosa banker who put together the financing to build Woods Hall during Reconstruction when everybody , INCLUDING THE STATE OF ALABAMA, was flat broke and had no credit. After the Civil War, Martin became a scalawag but he lost his temper with the Radical Republican Federal judge in Mobile so he shot him twice and missed once. (from the November 19, 1908 TUSCALOOSA NEWS)

from the December 30, 1867 RICHMOND DISPATCH


Thursday, August 27, 2020


SALLY SANG


Is it high on the mountain
Or down in the limesink?
Are my days for the highway?
Will they go in a dream?
Will a man come & save me
or must I go under,
Or will my mind answer me
with the words I desire?

But
LIFE ANSWERS NO QUESTIONS THAT COME FROM OUTSIDE IT.
& Life Will Never Tell Us What Comes Further Along
So lay down sweet Sally & love your poor body
'cause a light in the tunnel just might burn your sweet smile.

I'll run like a shorebird
Who's looking for footsteps.
I'll harvest the dark times
I'll fly through the moon

I'll ask all the questions & not expect comment.
I'll live like the old ones and I'll die just like a child.

but
LIFE ANSWERS NO QUESTIONS THAT COME FROM OUTSIDE IT.
& Life Will Never Tell Us What Comes Further Along
So lay down sweet Sally & love your poor body
'cause a light in the tunnel just might burn your sweet smile.

I'll ask all the questions
& not expect comment
I'll live like the old ones
& I'll die like a child.

but
LIFE ANSWERS NO QUESTIONS THAT COME FROM OUTSIDE IT.
& Life Will Never Tell Us What Comes Further Along
So lay down sweet Sally & love your poor body
'cause a light in the tunnel just might burn your sweet smile.

Can't Be Too Fast

Think you got trouble with women;
Southern girls are fun but they're different.
Well, son, don't let your first one be your last.
Learn to walk before you run
Keep your eyes turned toward the sun
You can't be too fast for living
You can't be too fast for living
You can't be too fast for living in The South!

Now you feel somewhat neglected
By the South you feel rejected
Well boy don't let that face begin to pout
Keep on looking toward that sun
Crank your truck & load your gun

You can't be too fast for living
You can't be too fast for living
You can't be too fast for living in The South!

We're just a tribe of mothers & brothers
All sharing each others covers
We're all trying to stay in out of the cold.
While we're singing for our supper
We're trying to help out one another
Get a grip on where it's hard to take hold

Now your worryingzzzzz
just about over
The weight is lifted off of your shoulders
But you still need your booze and you need your grass

Cold white water & boulders
Brought you back home to your brothers
Your indignation seems a part of your past

Here you might scream
Wait a minute!
This is the South
& I'm living in it
Well, I think it's funny and it's true
You don't seem sane anymore
& you just can't find the door

You can't be too fast for living
You can't be too fast for living
You can't bee too fast for living in The South.

You can't be too fast for living
You can't be too fast for living
You can't be too fast for living in the South.


Yes Man: "Don't do it, Governor Folsom! Don't go with her! IT'S A TRAP! IT'S A TRAP!"
Governor Folsom: "Well, boys, y'all know if they bait that trap with nookie, they gonna catch Big Jim ever' time!"

(November, 1974) Alabama Secretary of State Mabel Amos: "George Wallace has never cared about
the people. He's never cared about the state of Alabama. He's never cared about actually running the state government. All he's ever cared about has been  his own political ambition. Governor Wallace just never has paid any attention to doing the work a governor is supposed to do. He gets his kicks out of running for office- whether it's for governor or President or whatever. He thrives on the attention and the adulation he attracts during a campaign; it feeds his ego. But he's never shown the slightest interest in carrying out the duties of his office once he's elected. He's actually the governor in name only. The last REAL governor we had was Jim Folsom (who served two terms, from 1947 to 1951 and from 1955 to 1959). Wallace learned almost everything he knows about politics from Governor Folsom. The thing is that Jim Folsom really cared about the people; George Wallace doesn't care a hang about them."

(November, 1974) James E. Folsom: "I'm against everything George is for today. He's for keepin' people in slavery; I'm against it. He's for protectin' the big interests- the big-money sons of bitches; I'm against it. He's for holdin' down the Black people; I'm against it. He's for sellin' out the interests of the common people; I'm against it."


Thursday, August 20, 2020



 I have identified 6 demolished buildings in this image. #1 is in the left corner, Prince House #1(University Masonic Club) located where the Shell station now stands on the Strip; #2 is to right of it in the middle of the next block parallel to Huntsville Road, Prince House #2 which was located on 7th Street about half-way down the block west of 15th Avenue; #3 is the large red brick structure at the top right of the image, Verner High School. It was located just east of the intersection of 16th Avenue and Bryant Drive; #4 is Alonzo Hill's Female College near the middle of the image labeled "8" and to the right of the name "East Margin". It was located near the southeast corner of the intersection of Queen City and University; #5 is next door to the girl's college on the corner of Broad(University Boulevard) and East Margin Street (Queen City Boulevard) are the buildings associated with Hill's Corner which included a residence and a Christian Church. #6 is the Buck House, present-day 1818 University Boulevard, on the northeast corner of Broad Street (University Boulevard) and Bear Street(19th Avenue) . A dependency for this house still stands at the intersection of 19th Avenue and University Blvd. I have also identified 14 buildings in this image that are still standing.The 14 buildings still standing in 2019 which are pictured on this 1887 image include #1. Ormond Little House (c. 1835) 325 Queen City. It can be seen as the brick building midway along the left border of the image just to the left of the street name "East Margin". #2 University Club (c. 1834) 421 Queen City is to the right of it. #3. Jones House (c. 1833), 1804 4th Street, on this image is across East Margin from Ormand Little and it was a two-story structure in 1887. #4. Buck Carriage House (c. 1854) 1818 University Boulevard is behind the Buck House in this image that once stood on the northeast corner of "Bear St." (19th Ave.) and "Broad" (Univ. Blvd.) #5. Guild-Verner House (c. 1822) is the red brick building across "Bear St." from the Buck House in this image. #6. Owen-Free House (c. 1826) 1817 3rd Street is a part of a complex of buildings on the right side of the square in this image occupied by #3~Jones House. #7. Moody-Warner House (1822) 1925 8th Street is toward the upper right corner of this image one block above the title "Union Street" (7th St.). #8. Jemison-Brandon-Waugh (c. 1840) 1005 17th Ave. is in the upper right corner of this image. #9. Marmaduke Williams House (c. 1835) 907 17th Ave. is to the left of #8. #10. Foster-Murfee-Caples House (c. 1838) 815 17th Avenue is the large house with the circular drive which is to the left of #9. You can see a line of tenant houses proceeding to the left of #10. To the right of this line of what were originally slave quarters is #11. McEachin-Little House (c. 1842) 709 Queen City. Across the street to the left of #11 is #12. Turner-McAlpin-Fellows House (c. 1840) 621 Queen City Avenue. #13. Jemison-Wilbourne House (c. 1870) 1904 7th Street has not been identified on this image but structures on "Union Street" are present where it should be located on this map. The same thing goes with #14. Palmer-Deal House (c. 1866) 1902 8th Street has not been identified on the image but should be among the structures pictured across the street from #7.Moody-Warner House.



I had a dream come true yesterday and it may be the key to progress in identifying every Tuscaloosa building on artist Henry Wellge's 1887 panoramic map distributed by Tuscaloosa Coal, Iron and Land Company. The identification of two buildings on the southeast corner of University Boulevard and Queen City Avenue may have produced a paradigm shift which will push the identification effort forward. I began posting images of the 1887 panoramic map on Facebook simply to try to get more information from Facebook participants. That has happened from the very beginning and I've done my best to collect and share all the information about each building I receive but what happened yesterday was different. All the information I'd previously received from Facebook members pertained to buildings I had already identified. Yesterday, for the first time, David Veal identified a completely unknown demolished building. David was a member of the YOU MIGHT BE FROM TUSCALOOSA, ALABAMA IF YOU KNOW Facebook group. David believed that during the 20th Century his family members occupied the same buildings depicted on that corner in 1887. I believe he is correct. That corner of Queen City and University across from the U Club was known to Tuscaloosa folks as HILL'S CORNER. After the 230 feet along University and 98+ feet on Queen City was sold in 1910, the buildings were occupied by J.D. Henderson of Henderson Lumber Company. In 1927 Henderson turned the house on the corner over rent free to First Baptist and they ran an early version of the Baptist Student Union out of it. The rectangular building behind the corner house was a Christian Church. In researching this, I discovered that prior to giving Tuscaloosa's streets numbers and assigning address numbers to each house, many city block corners had proper names such as "Dr. Williamson's Corner" and "The Davis-Leach Corner."
1887 Tuscaloosa Map https://www.loc.gov/item/75693080/

Wednesday, August 19, 2020



The Jemison-Brandon-Waugh House was built by William H. Jemison, brother of Robert who built the Jemison House on Greensboro. William sold Thomas Maxwell the farm @ Maxwell Crossing out Highway 69 in 1853. William is buried in Greenwood Cemetery. William's son, Robert Sr.., probably grew up in the house. He moved to Birmingham and developed the Glen Iris Park and East Lake subdivisions. His son, Robert Jr., developed Mountain Brook. This Henry Wellge drawing from the 1887 panoramic map shows the house (notice its three gables) with some of the out buildings along with the Verner's University High School(labeled number 10) , the Marmaduke Williams House(1835), and the Warner-Moody House. All of those are still standing except Verner's University High School which was built by slaves using broken bricks left over from the construction of Bryce.

Monday, August 17, 2020

Innerarity's Claim

ed. note: The following article is related to Ellicott's Survey of the First U.S. Southern Boundary (1796-1800) because Panton, Leslie and Company, the forerunner of John Forbes and Company, financed the outfitting of the Spanish Boundary Commission which accompanied Ellicott on the survey and confirmed his observations. James Innerarity would have met Ellicott at Panton, Leslie and Co. headquarters in Pensacola in 1799 but his younger brother John Innerarity had not yet arrived.)
INNERARITY'S CLAIM
 The Long Road To the American Acquisition of St. Andrews Bay

 

A title search for any deed to any piece of property in the Panama City area is a strange mosaic of clues to a long story that goes back over two centuries and includes international intrigue, complex individual and international interests, the long delayed settlement of St. Andrews Bay, the preservation of Florida’s public domain and the sovereignty of the United States. The oldest deeds in the Panama City area only go back to 1835 yet Spain turned the land over to the U.S. in 1821 so why did it take Florida’s land hungry pioneers fourteen years to gain title to some of the best unsettled land on the shores of one of the most important and beautiful harbors in all of frontier Florida?



When the federal government tried to settle the Spanish land claims in Florida, they discovered that St. Andrews Bay was part of the largest Spanish land grant in all Florida history which claimed the entire seacoast and all the bayshore from present-day Apalachicola west to East Pass at present-day Destin. The United States always delayed land sales until all Spanish land grants had been legally recorded or invalidated. This particular Spanish land grant was issued in 1818 by the Captain-General of Cuba to the John Forbes & Co., a mercantile firm of Scottish Indian traders based in Pensacola and Mobile who had received a permit from the Spanish to conduct a monopoly on trade with the Southeastern Indians. This huge land grant was compensation for the company’s services to the Spanish government of West Florida and for the losses it incurred during the 1814 British invasion of West Florida during the War of 1812. Until the litigation concerning this Spanish land grant was settled, none of present day Bay County’s land could be placed in the public domain and be offered for sale to Florida’s frontiersmen.


A drawing of the John Forbes and Co. warehouse on the waterfront in Pensacola.
A photograph of the John Forbes & Co. complex on the waterfront in Pensacola 

 John Forbes & Co. deserved some sort of compensation because the Spanish government welcomed the British army and navy into West Florida and allowed them to establish British martial law in Pensacola under which John Forbes and Co. suffered greatly. 

The name, John Forbes & Co., was adopted by the old company of Panton, Leslie & Co., in 1804 when it reorganized after the death of the original Scottish partners, William Panton of Pensacola, Thomas Forbes of the Bahamas and John Leslie of London. The Spanish government confirmed all of the privileges of the old company to the new one. The new principal partners, John Forbes, James Innerarity and John Innerarity were tied to the old partners by kinship but were decidedly more pro-American than the original partners. It is not that the new partners necessarily changed their political allegiances but more importantly, American rule appeared to be inevitable and certainly promised to be better for their business if they were able to sell the land they had acquired from the Indians with the approval of the Spanish government.


James Innerarity, head of Forbes & Co. in Mobile, negotiator of the Forbes Purchase east of the Apalachicola and first American mayor of the City of Mobile
 
John Innerarity, head of Forbes & Co. in Pensacola

 In the spring of 1814, the British navy and marines arrived off the coast of Northwest Florida and in preparation for the invasion and conquest of New Orleans attempted to incite a general slave and Indian uprising similar to the one that had previously gripped Haiti. This proposed slave insurrection along the Gulf Coast was designed to incite terror in the general populace, to target the women and children of the settlers for slaughter and to engage American forces which would otherwise be used in defense of New Orleans.

The British chose to build the fort that would support this war effort at the John Forbes and Co. store on the east bank of the Apalachicola River at Prospect Bluff located about thirty miles north of the present day town of Apalachicola. Even though all of the partners of John Forbes and Co. had been born in Great Britain, they did not welcome the British invasion of their adopted homeland and the British military men considered the John Forbes and Co. partners to be American spies.


A map of the Forbes Purchase showing the location of the Prospect Bluff store on the 1.25 million acres the company received from the Creek Indians in 1804 to clear the Indians' debt to the company.

The Brits picked John Forbes and Co. clean during their one year stay in Northwest Florida. The company’s slaves taken by the British created the greatest monetary loss for the firm but the British also took John Forbes & Co. cattle, horses, mules and gunpowder. The company store at Prospect Bluff was closed and replaced by a fort to protect the Indians and Negroes recruited to the British cause.

When John Forbes retired from the company and moved to Cuba in 1818, he used the move as an opportunity to appeal to a Spanish government superior to the one in Pensacola for the losses the company experienced in West Florida at the hands of the British during the War of 1812. Forbes successfully convinced the Captain-General of Cuba, Don Jose Cienfuegos, to invoke an 1815 royal ordnance meant to increase the population of Puerto Rico to justify giving John Forbes and Co. title to all the land between the Choctawhatchee and the Apalachicola Rivers south of a line running from the mouth of the Choctawhatchee east to the point where Sweetwater Creek enters the Apalachicola River. This grant included over 1.5 million acres of land and encompassed all of present-day Bay County along with the entire seacoast between present-day Apalachicola and Destin.

When you look at I.G. Searcy’s 1829 Florida map, the first American map of the Florida Territory, the entire Washington County portion of the map around St. Andrews Bay is labeled “Innerarity’s Claim”.  This was the Spanish land grant of John Forbes and Co. and the Innerarity brothers of Mobile and Pensacola were in 1829 the controlling partners of John Forbes and Co. These Scottish brothers had taken over John Forbes and Co. after Forbes retirement in 1818 and his subsequent death in 1823.

In the early years of the Florida Territory, land ownership controversies like “Innerarity’s Claim” were the most pressing problems facing the government. On May 22, 1822, Congress created a Board of Commissioners on Land Claims for Florida which validated Spanish land grants of less than 1000 acres. Wealth in Florida was defined by land ownership so administration of the land claims commission as well as the offices associated with the public land system became the road to prosperity for many of the recently arrived Americans who owed their appointments to these offices to their association with Florida’s first territorial governor, General Andrew Jackson. The land claims commission could not rule on a grant as large as “Innerarity’s Claim” so in 1828, Congress passed a law allowing claimants of grants this large to file suit against the United States in the Superior Court of the district where the disputed land was located. With this law, the stage was set for a showdown between the Inneraritys and Andrew Jackson’s cronies who had used Old Hickory’s influence to gain their positions in Florida’s courts and land offices.
 
Richard Keith Call


 Even though he was a partner with James Innerarity in the purchase of property on Santa Rosa Island, lawyer Richard Keith Call was the last person Innerarity needed to see representing the United States when his case came before Judge Henry M. Brackenridge’s Pensacola courtroom in the fall of 1830. Call had been appointed by President Jackson to assist government attorneys in these larger Spanish grant lawsuits. Through service as Florida’s delegate to Congress, two terms as the Florida Territorial governor and as Receiver of Public Monies at the public land office in Tallahassee, Call had become an expert on Spanish land grants and was convinced that all of the Spanish land grants issued in the last days of the regime were frauds. Besides being suspicious, in his commercial role as a land speculator, Call understood that preserving land in the public domain would mean that in the long run it would be cheaper to buy the property at the public land office than from private owners.  In preparing for the case in 1829, Call received a federal commission that paid him to sail to Havana in pursuit of original documents pertaining to the case.

Call was the fifth government official sent to Cuba since 1821 to retrieve Spanish archives of Florida which had been taken out of the country in violation of the 2nd article of the Adams-Onis Treaty in which the U.S. acquired Florida from Spain. This February 22, 1819 treaty required that all documents relating to property were to be left in the possession of “officers of the United States.” For whatever reason, Spanish officials began exporting Florida archives to Havana immediately after the treaty was confirmed and had no intention of turning over one paper to an American official yet holders of Spanish land grants in Florida were constantly presenting original and copied documents from Cuba in Florida courtrooms to support their cases. Men like R.K. Call were convinced that the holders of Spanish land grants were cheating the U.S. government out of land that was rightfully its own and were able to present original and verified supporting documents in Florida courts because they bribed the Spanish officials in Havana in order to get them.

Because Call requested only the documents he needed for his land grant cases and did not demand all of the Florida archives illegally held in Havana be returned to the United States, he was successful in getting original documents and verified copies for the first time after four previous attempts failed to acquire a single piece of paper.

With the documents he desired, Call returned to Pensacola and when the court heard the case, he produced the original document where he showed Judge Brackenridge that the actual date of the land grant had been altered in order to make it conform with the provision in the treaty that made it illegal to make land grants in Florida after January 24, 1818. On the date on the original document a line had been drawn through “March” and the word “January” written above it. So by a matter of days, the company lost the land grant that compensated it for all its wartime losses. This was a catastrophic defeat for John Forbes & Co. but a triumphant defense of the public domain of the United States. Indian title to the land had already been extinguished in 1823 by the American Treaty of Moultrie Creek with the Seminoles so in 1831, Robert Butler, the Surveyor-General of Florida, ordered surveys of the townships surrounding St. Andrews Bay to begin and by 1834, the land of present-day Bay County was being purchased at the Tallahassee land office. For the first time in American History, citizens who had been living on the shores of St. Andrews Bay for decades as squatters were able to exercise their pre-emption rights to the land they had improved and purchase their property for about two bucks an acre.

John Forbes and Co. was more successful with their lawsuit against the U.S. pertaining to their Spanish land grant east of the Apalachicola. They lost their suit in the Superior Court of Middle Florida but appealed that decision to the Supreme Court of the United States. In his last case as Chief Justice, John Marshall overturned the lower court’s decision and found for that the company’s title to the 1.2 million acres between the Apalachicola River and the St. Marks River to be perfectly legal. In 1835, the Apalachicola Land Co. was formed to promote land sales and the legacy of this old company comes down to us to this day when we look north from the bridge that spans the mouth of the Apalachicola River and see that the first three streets we find in the town of Apalachicola are Forbes Street, Leslie Street and Panton Street, the names of the three founders of the firm that would become John Forbes and Company. If R. K. Call had not found the fraudulent date on the original Forbes grant to the land between the Apalachicola and the Choctawhatchee, the main streets of Panama City might also have been named for the original founders of John Forbes and Co.  Forbes Street in present day downtown Apalachicola  Leslie Street in present day downtown Apalachicola  Panton Street (sign misspelled) in present day downtown Apalachicola
A model of the Forbes and Co. warehouse in present day Pensacola

Sunday, August 16, 2020

REVISED MANLY AND SLAVERY



I'd never heard of Mrs. J.L. Dagg until this past week. Had no idea Tuscaloosa had their own Harriet Beecher Stowe (author of UNCLE TOM'S CABIN) but this Dagg woman is at the top of the list when it comes to listing WAYS IN WHICH FEMALES STARTED THE CIVIL WAR. (maybe it's the same thing that Reverend Dr. Dagg attributed as the reason for his coming to T-town: DIVINE PROVIDENCE!)

The formation of the Southern Baptist Convention in 1844 and the formation of the Southern Rights political party were two of the most important factors in destroying the Union and putting the entire South on the path to a devastating war that nobody down here was prepared to fight. Both have their origins in Tuscaloosa. In fact, HILL'S CORNER, the 230 by 98 foot lot on the southeast corner of Queen City and University was adjoining the THE ALABAMA FEMALE ATHENEUM where a rumor was hatched which culminated in secession of the states.

from SLAVERY AND THE UNIVERSITY (2019):

In 1844 tensions rose in the Baptist Triennial Convention, a national organization designed to support missions. Northern Baptists argued that slavery was a sin, while southerners defended their peculiar institution. In the midst of this tension, Manly’s nomination to office in the convention was defeated by northerners who raised objections to him based on the story and other information that they claimed to have about him as a slave owner. His honor slighted, Manly wrote to a Northern Baptist who had objected to his nomination and learned that the wife of John L. Dagg, a renowned Southern Baptist theologian, minister, and president of Mercer University, had said that Manly would often “go out of a morning, take off his coat, and whip, severely, every negro about his premises, just for the sake of exercise.” Stunned, Manly carefully asked Dagg about it but was unable to receive satisfaction. He then turned to another means of restoring his honor: he challenged the right of Northern Baptists to question his rights as a slave owner. Manly wrote the “Alabama Resolutions,” which asked the Triennial Convention to state its official position on the question of slavery, demanding to know if the convention—now controlled by a northern majority on its board—would appoint slaveholders to be officers or missionaries. Although he insisted that he had “kept my private griefs to myself,” Manly’s honor had been insulted. When the Triennial Convention responded by saying that they could not appoint a slave owner, the southerners walked out and in May 1845 created the Southern Baptist Convention. Manly had defended his honor, and he had defended his right to punish and sell his slaves.

Saturday, August 15, 2020

1st survey of the city of tuscaloosa

 To commemorate the 200th anniversary of the first survey of the town of Tuscaloosa next year, I propose that a historic marker be placed on that small triangular block at the intersection of Queen City and 21st Avenue across from the old location of Sam Jackson's. Here's my attempt at a text:

On October 4, 1816, the Choctaw Indians extinguished their title to this property when they signed a treaty which ceded all of their remaining land east of the Tombigbee River to the United States. On March 3, 1817,the U.S. Congress reserved from public land sale this Section 22 of Township 21 South, Range 10 West(Huntsville Meridian) . Queen City Avenue runs north to south along the eastern margin line of the land section. This approximately 640 acres was first surveyed for streets, blocks and lots in 1821. With only a few alterations, the present layout of the original city has been preserved for 200 years. (from the April 4, 1920 TUSCALOOSA NEWS~ "section 21 of township 22" should read SECTION 22 OF TOWNSHIP 21. Clinton gets it right later in the same article. Notice that many of Clinton's  "experts" on local history are former slaves.)

Friday, August 14, 2020

Manly & slavery


 I'd never heard of Mrs. J.L. Dagg until this past week. Had no idea Tuscaloosa had their own Harriet Beecher Stowe (author of UNCLE TOM'S CABIN) but this Dagg woman is at the top of the list when it comes to listing WAYS IN WHICH FEMALES STARTED THE CIVIL WAR.

 The formation of the Southern Baptist Convention in 1844 and the formation of the Southern Rights political party were two of the most important factors in destroying the Union and putting the entire South on the path to a devastating war that nobody down here was prepared to fight. Both have their origins in Tuscaloosa. In fact, HILL'S CORNER, the 200 by 98 foot lot on the southeast corner of Queen City and University was adjoining  the THE ALABAMA FEMALE ATHENEUM where a rumor was hatched which culminated in secession of the states.


from SLAVERY AND THE UNIVERSITY (2019):

In 1844 tensions rose in the Baptist Triennial Convention, a national organization designed to support missions. Northern Baptists argued that slavery was a sin, while southerners defended their peculiar institution. In the midst of this tension, Manly’s nomination to office in the convention was defeated by northerners who raised objections to him based on the story and other information that they claimed to have about him as a slave owner. His honor slighted, Manly wrote to a Northern Baptist who had objected to his nomination and learned that the wife of John L. Dagg, a renowned Southern Baptist theologian, minister, and president of Mercer University, had said that Manly would often “go out of a morning, take off his coat, and whip, severely, every negro about his premises, just for the sake of exercise.” Stunned, Manly carefully asked Dagg about it but was unable to receive satisfaction. He then turned to another means of restoring his honor: he challenged the right of Northern Baptists to question his rights as a slave owner. Manly wrote the “Alabama Resolutions,” which asked the Triennial Convention to state its official position on the question of slavery, demanding to know if the convention—now controlled by a northern majority on its board—would appoint slaveholders to be officers or missionaries. Although he insisted that he had “kept my private griefs to myself,” Manly’s honor had been insulted. When the Triennial Convention responded by saying that they could not appoint a slave owner, the southerners walked out and in May 1845 created the Southern Baptist Convention. Manly had defended his honor, and he had defended his right to punish and sell his slaves.



https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_L._Dagg

 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basil_Manly_Sr.

Manly and Foreign Mission Board

Indian Queen

 "We all know that the publication of Harriet Beecher Stowe's book called 'Uncle Tom's Cabin' in 1853 was regarded by a large element as the main factor in bringing on the war. And another school of writers for a generation past have contended that Yancey's fire-eating oratory, so to speak, and leadership in the South was responsible for this, the greatest calamity that befell the human race up till that period of time. And as stated above, was in evidence that night. He was there in all his glory. So that it is just possible that the old-time Tuscaloosa folks were correct in claiming that THE MUSTARD SEED OF SECESSION WAS SOWN THAT NIGHT IN THE RECEPTION ROOMS OF THE OLD INDIAN QUEEN." ~ Thomas Clinton in the May 17, 1925 TUSCALOOSA NEWS

Thursday, August 13, 2020

steve holland

Hill's Corner

 I had a dream come true yesterday and it may be the key to progress in identifying every Tuscaloosa building on artist Henry Wellge's 1887 panoramic map distributed by Tuscaloosa Coal, Iron and Land Company. The identification of two buildings on the southeast corner of University Boulevard and Queen City Avenue may have produced a paradigm shift which will push the identification effort forward. I began posting images of the 1887 panoramic map on Facebook simply to try to get more information from Facebook participants. That has happened from the very beginning and I've done my best to collect and share all the information about each building I receive but what happened yesterday was different. All the information I'd previously received from Facebook members pertained to buildings I had already identified. Yesterday, for the first time, David Veal identified a completely unknown demolished building.  David was a member of the YOU MIGHT BE FROM TUSCALOOSA, ALABAMA IF YOU KNOW Facebook group. David believed that during the 20th Century his family members occupied the same buildings depicted on that corner in 1887. I believe he is correct. That corner of Queen City and University across from the U Club was known to Tuscaloosa folks as HILL'S CORNER. After the 230 feet along University and 98+ feet on Queen City  was sold in 1910, the buildings were occupied by J.D. Henderson of Henderson Lumber Company. In 1927 Henderson turned the house on the corner over rent free to First Baptist and they ran an early version of the Baptist Student Union out of it. The rectangular building behind the corner house was a Christian Church. In researching this, I discovered that prior to giving Tuscaloosa's streets numbers and assigning address numbers to each house, many city block corners had proper names such as "Dr. Williamson's Corner" and "The Davis-Leach Corner."

October 23, 1908 Tuscaloosa News





    


Tuscaloosa HIgh Coach Paul Burnum halftime talk to his team during the Senn of Chicago game is described in the December 2012 issue of the newsletter of The Robert E. Rodes Camp of the SCV. It was reprinted by permission from an article by James N. Harris in The Old Southern Times Magazine: "Coach Burnum walked into the dressing room , 'I'm just so ashamed to put you out there against those players from the big city, they are going to whip you; and these are the Grandsons of the men who came South and wrecked the University and raped your Grandmothers.' Halfback Dwight Deal took in what Coach had said. His Grandfather had told him about an Easter  morning in April 1865 when Yankee invaders came to their home and ate Easter eggs that were cooked for him and his sister. His Grandfather told him that when the soldiers left, they took his 13 year old brother with them and did not hear from him until the next day when he had been turned loose. 'Ok,' Coach Burnum said 'Let's go see what you can do.' "   (from the December 12, 2012 TUSCALOOSA NEWS)

Monday, August 10, 2020

from the August 19, 1933 DOTHAN EAGLE



from the February 9, 1922 DOTHAN EAGLE




from the March 20, 1922 DOTHAN EAGLE



from the March 20, 1922 DOTHAN EAGLE





from the May 6, 1937 WIREGRASS FARMER



Saturday, August 9, 2020 will forever be imprinted in my memory. Yesterday I discovered my key to unlocking more of the secrets contained in DEVIL MAKE A THIRD and it's all because I ran into the word "Longboy" while scanning old Eagles. "Longboy" wasn't just a nickname that Dougie Bailey used for a police officer in his novel. It was also the nickname of well-known Dothan police officer, J.E. "Longboy" Draughon, who was the grandfather of my DHS classmate Dothan High Senior '67, Deborah Draughon.

Officer Longboy Taylor of the Aven Police Department is introduced in Chapter 22 of the novel. While Buck is trying to convince a visiting evangelist to leave Aven or get a 60-day jail sentence for not paying the city for a $2000 tent revival license (Buck, mayor of Aven and Judge of the Aven Municipal Court made up the amount of the fine on the spot while talking to the evangelist) , he sends his brother Jeff off  to City Hall to get Chief Tobe and Officer Longboy.

By the time Jeff brings the policemen back to the scene in the city buggy, Buck is close to getting Reverend Huff to leave town. Officer Longboy has no lines in the novel. All he does is "snikker" and whispers in Chief Tobe's ear something that causes Tobe to laugh so hard that Buck looks over and asks Jeff what was so funny.

What was funny was Longboy had whispered something to Tobe concerning the huge Westcott automobile that had just arrived in Aven. It had been purchased along with a new wardrobe by Buck's new child bride, Lota Kyle (wedding occurs in Chapter 21) . Buck had not seen Lota's pretentious new vehicle or her new flashy wardrobe complete with feather boa which Buck, after getting over his rage at Lota,  later described as making his new wife look like "Mrs. God" to the citizens of Aven.

All of the episodes in Chapter 22  foreshadow many of the events that follow in the remaining chapters of the novel. This literary device of FORESHADOWING adds so much depth to a novel and my discovery of Dougie Bailey's use of these subtle hints to the reader about what's to come in his novel has given me another key to unlocking more of the secrets concealed in the Forward, 33 chapters, 7 Interludes and original ending of a work of fiction that mirrors Dothan's story. Here we have even more evidence of Dougie Bailey's ignored, overlooked, dismissed and discounted genius.

Sunday, August 09, 2020

Son, remember how in my story DOWN TO THE BANKS OF THE WARRIOR, the little boy,  "John", asks his Daddy, "Daddy, why do people always say, 'God help me' ?" 
Well, this was the daily devotional for yesterday, August 7, from "Strength For Service to God and Country", a book written by preachers in 1942 and given to draftees the first time they went back to church after being drafted. Each devotional is oriented to appeal to an enlisted G.I. stuck in a foxhole. (I can tell you so much about this little book and all of it related to Abingdon, Maryland, a few miles from our place in Aberdeen. The book was printed by the Abingdon-Cokesbury Press. Cokesbury College in Abingdon was the first Methodist college on the face of the Earth and the man who named the State of Alabama and sponsored the statehood legislation, Charles Tait, went to school there and later taught @ Cokesbury before returning to Georgia.) 

Read Ps. 91  August 7

HOW DOES GOD HELP US?
"He shall call upon me, and I will answer him." ~ Ps. 91:15

Thirty years ago an American boy was studying theology in the University of Berlin. Having learned that the external world is governed by immutable laws, he had tried in vain to solve the riddle of divine aid: How can God help us? Then one November afternoon as he was walking down a side street in Berlin the wisdom he had been seeking flashed into his mind. That moment of illumination was one of the great moments in his life.  If he closes his eyes today he can still see, in clear memory, that little Berlin street- a fruit store, a tailor shop, a shoemaker's window and at the end of the street a purple and white sign above a subway station.

Those surroundings-and into the boy's mind flashed this wisdom: "God helps us, not by changing our external situation, but by changing our inner life. He leaves our external situation just as it is, makes no effort to perform a miracle there. But into our mind He thrusts new wisdom; with our heart He rouses new courage. THIS IS GOD'S HELP. It is a change, not in the world without, but in the world within." Gradually that new wisdom became the core of that boy's religious faith. For the past thirty years that faith has been to him a source of unfailing strength. He is now trying to share that faith with you. For he knows that to you as well as to him it can be "the victory that  overcomes the world."

PRAYER

Teach us, O God,
To serve Thee as Thou deservest-
To give and not count the cost,
To fight and not heed the wounds,
To toil and not ask for rest,
To labor and not seek for any reward
Save that of knowing we have done Thy will. Amen

James Gordon Gilkey, South Congregational Church, Springfield, Massachusetts.
James Gordon Gilkey http://onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu/webbin/book/lookupname?key=Gilkey%2C%20James%20Gordon%2C%201889-

DOWN TO THE BANKS OF THE WARRIOR by Robert Register

The odors as we walk down the hill from River Road change with each step. John is the first to notice the tiny toads hurriedly jumping away from our muddy trail. There are no footprints. John and I are the first ones to come down since the flood.

Creek warriors fought the Choctaws for this riverbank. The Muskogee Nation claimed as far west as the east bank of the Tombigbee but they were lucky just to get Choctaw permission to stay on the east bank of the Warrior. A few city blocks from the river birch log upon which I sit, Chief Eufaula humbly made his farewell address to the Alabama legislature in 1836. He was about to take a long walk to Oklahoma.

Bald eagles once nested on this riverbank. Maybe they will nest here again. Maybe one day we can sit in a restaurant on the crest of River Hill, clink a few ice cubes together and watch the sun go down through eagle's wings.

There are no boats on the river this afternoon. I sit here and supervise my son's Tarzan tricks. He is climbing upon the leaning trunk of an old willow tree that stretches out over the water. I make him climb down and then wade out to check the bottom for trash. He points to the willow limbs above him and asks,"Can we build a tree house there?" I don't answer him.

He walks over to me and exclaims,"Daddy, look what that beaver did! He tore down that whole tree with his teeth!"

"What kind of tree is this?," I ask.

"I don't know. I sure don't know."

"Look at the bark."

He peels some off and says,"It seems like it's paper."

I say,"It's named after a place we used to take you when you were a little boy."

"River Birch?"

"Yeah."

John goes back to the willow tree and again climbs out over the river. He counts his footsteps. After twenty-eight steps he asks,"Should I go any farther?"

I don't answer. He goes out three more steps. "You're gonna bust your butt!," I yell.

"I'm not trying to. You know how I learned to climb so good?"

"How?"

"I watched Discovery Channel."

"What does the Discovery Channel have to do with climbing?"

"The monkeys. But I don't climb exactly like them. I move slowly."

I hear the traffic on River Road. The noise never went away. The novelty of the Black Warrior caused me to ignore it for awhile. I wonder how many people think about the river as they drive by.

My son had now penetrated the sandy peninsula that juts out into the Warrior here at the mouth of Marr's Creek. He is building a fort with logs deposited by June's high water. John returns with a piece of driftwood. "Look at this cool piece of driftwood, Dad."

I have now changed my desk. I did this by moving my clipboard from the beaver-downed river birch to the leaning willow. My son prepares to climb out on the willow once more. He needs to get by me. "Daddy! Daddy! Excuse me, Dad," he says politely.

I move back over to the river birch and John climbs all the way out to the very end of the tree. He calls to me,"Hey,Dad, look at me!" He gathers leaves in his hands and drops them into the water. "Daddy, why do people always say, 'God help me' ?"

"Well, 'God help me' is just a part of it. What they mean to say is, 'God, help me to do it.' 'It' being whatever they're trying to accomplish."

"I don't get it."

"Let me put it to you another way: God helps those who help themselves."

"So you have to try to do something before God can help you to do something."

"Rome wasn't built in a day."

"Oh, I get it. That's what we pray for each morning."

"That's right son." I sit on my river birch and John sits on his willow branch. Both of us look out over the river.

I yell, "Let's go, Buddy."

"Dad, will you bring me here tomorrow?"

"I don't know, son. We'll see. We'll see."

Friday, August 07, 2020

  Old BAMA chums reminiscing about HALF A CENTURY AGO...
"Weren't there times during the semester when folks with their stacks of cards would stand in line in order to get to the computer terminals?"
"If they had stacks of cards, they would have been waiting for an operator to take the cards and run them through the card reader which read them and put the program into a queue to be run. If you could get to a terminal, you didn't need cards. Once your deck had been read, you would wait for some length of time that could be anywhere from ten minutes to overnight, depending on how busy the machine was. It was THE computer for the campus, meaning it also ran payroll and every other administrative data processing function. If you had an assignment to turn in and it was time to run payroll, tough luck--student jobs had to wait.

Oh man, this is bringing back memories. Punching the cards was a nightmare, because most programming languages had some kind of strict requirement for placement of code in columns. One mistake, not just in alignment but any kind of typo, not caught before the job was run, and whatever length of time you had waited for turnaround was wasted, because the machine would just puke up the whole thing.

And then there was the fun of dropping your 150-card COBOL deck and trying to put the cards back in order...I think I need a drink...."



https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Punched_card?fbclid=IwAR3j_Q76WnCz5TfwYfwoXtco0WrMWQFDiB5hgOe2M-sNMarredKW7a5z28o

Thursday, August 06, 2020


 BATTLE SCARS nuns during the Civil War


https://www.mobt3ath.com/uplode/book/book-62020.pdf

Monday, August 03, 2020