Pageant of Birmingham: Difference between revisions
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The '''Pageant of Birmingham''' was a gala production performed in celebration of the [[Semicentennial of Birmingham]], on [[October 24]], [[October 26|26]] & [[October 27|27]], [[1921]] at [[Avondale Park]]. | |||
The '''Pageant of Birmingham''' was a gala production performed in celebration of the [[Semicentennial of Birmingham]], on [[October 24]], [[October 26|26]] & [[October 27|27]], [[1921]] at | |||
For the event, a semicircular wooden grandstand was built in the area of the park presently occupied by ballfields, with spectators facing south, overlooking the park's lagoon. Tight rows of parking spaces for automobiles were laid out around the grandstand. | |||
The pageant, written by Wallace Rice and directed by [[Donald Robertson]], dramatized the first arrival of white explorers in Alabama in the 1540s; the election to move the [[Jefferson County Courthouse]] from [[Elyton]] to [[Birmingham]]; the [[Calico Ball]] celebrating the end of the [[1873 cholera epidemic]]; the smelting of [[iron ore]]; and local participation in [[World War I|the Great War]], concluding with a scene of peace and prosperity. | The pageant, written by Wallace Rice and directed by [[Donald Robertson]], dramatized the first arrival of white explorers in Alabama in the 1540s; the election to move the [[Jefferson County Courthouse]] from [[Elyton]] to [[Birmingham]]; the [[Calico Ball]] celebrating the end of the [[1873 cholera epidemic]]; the smelting of [[iron ore]]; and local participation in [[World War I|the Great War]], concluding with a scene of peace and prosperity. | ||
In the final tableau, the figure of Birmingham (played by Mrs William Hood | In the final tableau, the figure of Birmingham (played by Mrs William Hood Jr) greets the figures of Alabama (Mrs Alex Montgomery) and America (Mrs Ed Warner), each seated on a throne with attendants and flanked by torchbearers representing Union and Liberty. The final song is the Star-Spangled Banner, sung with the following lyrics: | ||
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President Warren Harding [[1921 presidential visit|was in attendance]] for the second performance of the pageant, before departing for Camp Benning, Georgia on a midnight train. | President Warren Harding [[1921 presidential visit|was in attendance]] for the second performance of the pageant, before departing for Camp Benning, Georgia on a midnight train. | ||
==Gallery== | |||
<gallery> | |||
Image:1921 Pageant of Birmingham cover.jpg|Cover of the pageant program | |||
File:1921 pageant grandstand plan.png|Layout of the temporary grandstand and parking areas | |||
</gallery> | |||
==References== | ==References== |
Latest revision as of 16:36, 20 September 2020
The Pageant of Birmingham was a gala production performed in celebration of the Semicentennial of Birmingham, on October 24, 26 & 27, 1921 at Avondale Park.
For the event, a semicircular wooden grandstand was built in the area of the park presently occupied by ballfields, with spectators facing south, overlooking the park's lagoon. Tight rows of parking spaces for automobiles were laid out around the grandstand.
The pageant, written by Wallace Rice and directed by Donald Robertson, dramatized the first arrival of white explorers in Alabama in the 1540s; the election to move the Jefferson County Courthouse from Elyton to Birmingham; the Calico Ball celebrating the end of the 1873 cholera epidemic; the smelting of iron ore; and local participation in the Great War, concluding with a scene of peace and prosperity.
In the final tableau, the figure of Birmingham (played by Mrs William Hood Jr) greets the figures of Alabama (Mrs Alex Montgomery) and America (Mrs Ed Warner), each seated on a throne with attendants and flanked by torchbearers representing Union and Liberty. The final song is the Star-Spangled Banner, sung with the following lyrics:
On thy shores, happy throng all the Nations of earth
As thy children stand forth to take part in thy story.
As thine own they have come her in festival mirth
To obey thy commands and to share in thy glory.
'Tis the Many in One thy standard have run—
One at heart, one in peace, under Liberty's sun.
So the star-spangled banner in triumph shall wave
O'er the land of the free and the home of the brave
President Warren Harding was in attendance for the second performance of the pageant, before departing for Camp Benning, Georgia on a midnight train.
Gallery
References
- Rice, Wallace (1921) "The Pageant of Birmingham"
- Holmes, George R. (October 25, 1921). "Crowds Pouring In As Birthday Party Reaches Its Stride." The Birmingham News