Birmingham Historical Society: Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 11:14, 18 October 2020
The Birmingham Historical Society (established in 1942) is a non-profit group committed to the preservation of and education about Birmingham's history. The organization is headquartered at Sloss Quarters, part of the Sloss Furnaces National Historic Landmark. The current executive director is Marjorie Longenecker White.
Between 1948 and 1960 the Birmingham Historical Society erected historical markers at various sites around the city, including Walker Memorial Church in Elyton, the site of the O'Brien Opera House, Linn's Folly and the Relay House hotel in downtown Birmingham, the site of the former B. P. Worthington plantation in Lakeview, and the site of the Tuberculosis Sanitorium at present-day English Village in Mountain Brook.
The Historical Society sponsors the publication of original research and the reprinting of primary sources relating to Birmingham's history. From 1960, and again from 1977 to 1987, it published the Journal of the Birmingham Historical Society at irregular intervals. It has also published educational materials for classroom use and to guide tours of the city's historic districts.
Since the 1980s, the Birmingham Historical Society has presented "Preservation Awards" to recognize significant preservation and adaptive re-use projects in the city.
Presidents
- John Henley Jr, 1942
- William Brantley Jr
- Hill Ferguson
- Ormond Summerville
- Frank Lankford, 1960
- George Stuart Jr
- Joseph Farley Jr
- John Henley III
- Richard Bowron
- John Bradley Jr, 1977
- Wyatt Haskell
- James White III
- Samuel Frazier
- Charles Caldwell III, 1987
- Marjorie Longenecker White
External links
- Birmingham Historical Society website
- Birmingham Historical Society publications at archives.alabama.gov