1963: Difference between revisions

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* The long-running "[[Sunday School Hour]]" radio program debuted on [[WFHK-AM]].
* The long-running "[[Sunday School Hour]]" radio program debuted on [[WFHK-AM]].
* [[Laura Knox]] founded the [[Southern Danceworks|Birmingham Creative Dance Group]].
* [[Laura Knox]] founded the [[Southern Danceworks|Birmingham Creative Dance Group]].
* [[March 5]]: [[1963 Birmingham City Council election]]
* [[March 31]]–[[April 26]]: The [[1963 Birmingham Transit strike]].
* [[July 24]]: Major storms left thousands without power.
* [[December 31]]: A [[List of snowfalls|rare snowfall]] brought 8 inches to Birmingham.
* [[December 31]]: A [[List of snowfalls|rare snowfall]] brought 8 inches to Birmingham.


===Business===
===Business===
* [[July 2]]: The [[Bank for Savings and Trust]] and [[Birmingham Trust National Bank]] approved their merger.
* [[Edgewood Hardware]] opened.
* [[Edgewood Hardware]] opened.
* [[Fob James]] founded Diversified Products Inc.
* [[Fob James]] founded Diversified Products Inc.
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* [[Ruby Ansley]] founded [[Ruby Ansley Interiors]]
* [[Ruby Ansley]] founded [[Ruby Ansley Interiors]]
* [[Steiner Bank]] moved from the 1890 [[Steiner Building]] to modern offices at 1920 [[3rd Avenue North]].
* [[Steiner Bank]] moved from the 1890 [[Steiner Building]] to modern offices at 1920 [[3rd Avenue North]].
* [[City Federal Savings & Loan]] moved into the former [[City Federal Building|Comer Building]].


===Civil Rights Movement===
===Civil Rights Movement===
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* [[April 11]]: The [[Birmingham Public Library]] board voted to desegregate the city's public libraries.
* [[April 11]]: The [[Birmingham Public Library]] board voted to desegregate the city's public libraries.
* [[June 11]]: Governor [[George Wallace]] made his "[[stand in the schoolhouse door]]" to prevent integration of the [[University of Alabama]]. [[Vivian Malone]] and [[James Hood]] registered later that day.
* [[June 11]]: Governor [[George Wallace]] made his "[[stand in the schoolhouse door]]" to prevent integration of the [[University of Alabama]]. [[Vivian Malone]] and [[James Hood]] registered later that day.
* July: The [[Birmingham City Council]] reopened [[List of Birmingham parks|the public parks]] to all comers. They had been closed since [[January 1]], [[1962]] in defiance of a court order to desegregate.
* [[July 23]]: The [[Birmingham City Council]] repealed its [[Segregation laws|segregation ordinances]] and reopened [[Birmingham City Parks|city parks]].
* [[September 10]]: [[Birmingham City Schools]] were integrated by National Guardsmen under orders from President Kennedy.
* [[September 10]]: [[Birmingham City Schools]] were integrated by National Guardsmen under orders from President Kennedy.
* [[September 15]]: [[16th Street Baptist Church]] was [[1963 church bombing|bombed]] in an act of terror. (See also [[Bombingham#1963|Bombingham]])
* [[September 15]]: [[16th Street Baptist Church]] was [[1963 church bombing|bombed]] in an act of terror. (See also [[Bombingham#1963|Bombingham]])


===Government===
===Government===
* April: The [[Mayor-Council Act]] instituted a new form of government for Birmingham and the first [[Birmingham City Council]] was elected.
* [[January 14]]: [[George Wallace]] was sworn in as [[Governor of Alabama]].
* [[March 5]]: The [[1963 Birmingham mayoral election]], the first held under the [[Mayor-Council Act]], results in a runoff between [[Albert Boutwell]] and [[Bull Connor]]. (See also: [[1963 Birmingham City Council election]])
* [[April 2]]: [[Albert Boutwell]] defeated [[Bull Connor]] to become [[Mayor of Birmingham]].
* [[April 17]]: The newly-sworn in [[Birmingham City Council]] attempted to assume power, but the [[Birmingham City Commission]] members refused to cede their positions.
* [[April 23]]: Judge [[J. Edgar Bowron]] ruled that Mayor Boutwell and the City Council are the legal government of Birmingham.
* [[May 23]]: The [[Alabama Supreme Court]] upheld Bowron's ruling in favor of the Mayor-Council government.
* [[July 19]]: [[Albert Boutwell]] presented a [[1964 Birmingham budget]] of just over $15 million.
* The [[9th Congressional District of Alabama]] was eliminated, with [[George Huddleston, Jr]] serving the last term as representative.
* The [[9th Congressional District of Alabama]] was eliminated, with [[George Huddleston, Jr]] serving the last term as representative.
* The [[Regional Planning Commission]] was created.
* The [[Regional Planning Commission]] was created.
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* New classrooms at [[Minor High School]]
* New classrooms at [[Minor High School]]
* 6-story, 50 room addition to the [[University Place Apartments|Guest House Motor Inn]]
* 6-story, 50 room addition to the [[University Place Apartments|Guest House Motor Inn]]
* First contracts were signed for construction of the [[Red Mountain Expressway]]


==People==
==People==

Revision as of 17:20, 1 January 2013

1963 was the 92nd year after the founding of the City of Birmingham.

Events

Business

Civil Rights Movement

Main article: Civil Rights movement

Government

Sports

Works

Music

  • Angels and Demons at Play, Sun Ra and his Myth Science Arkestra
  • When Sun Comes Out, Sun Ra and his Myth Science Arkestra

Buildings

People

Births

Marriages

Offices

Awards

Graduations

Deaths

See also List of Birmingham homicides in 1963

Context

A watershed in the civil rights movement occurred in 1963 when Birmingham Civil Rights Movement leader Fred Shuttlesworth requested that Martin Luther King, Jr. and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) come to Birmingham to help end segregation. Together they launched "Project C" (for "Confrontation"), a massive assault on the Jim Crow system. During April and May daily sit-ins and mass marches were met with police repression, tear gas, attack dogs, and arrests. More than 3,000 people were arrested during these protests, many of the children. These protests were ultimately successful, leading not only to desegregation of public accommodations in Birmingham but also the Civil Rights Act of 1964.

While imprisoned for having taken part in a nonviolent protest, Dr. King wrote the now famous Letter from Birmingham Jail, a defining treatise in his cause against segregation. Birmingham is also known for a bombing which occurred later that year, in which four black girls were killed by a bomb planted at the 16th Street Baptist Church. The event would inspire the African-American poet Dudley Randall's opus, The Ballad of Birmingham, as well as jazz musician John Coltrane's song, "Alabama."

1960s
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