List of nicknames for Birmingham: Difference between revisions
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(New page: This is a '''list of nicknames for Birmingham''': * The Magic City, the city's most recognized nickname, refers to its rapid growth, first used by James Powell in 1873 * [[Ste...) |
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* [[City of Perpetual Promise]], referring to the areas vast resources and the bottlenecks of poor leadership in exploiting them, used in a [[1937]] ''Harpers'' magazine article. | * [[City of Perpetual Promise]], referring to the areas vast resources and the bottlenecks of poor leadership in exploiting them, used in a [[1937]] ''Harpers'' magazine article. | ||
* [[Bad Birmingham]], referring to violence and lawlessness in Birmingham's boom period in the late 19th and early 20th century | * [[Bad Birmingham]], referring to violence and lawlessness in Birmingham's boom period in the late 19th and early 20th century | ||
* "Inland Metropolis" used in a [[1909]] promotional book | |||
* "Mineral City of the South" used in a [[1909]] promotional book | |||
* [[Murder Capital of the World]], in use at least by [[1931]] to refer to the rampant violence in Birmingham | * [[Murder Capital of the World]], in use at least by [[1931]] to refer to the rampant violence in Birmingham | ||
* [[Rabies Capital of North America]], used in the early 20th century due to frequent fatal attacks by rabid dogs | * [[Rabies Capital of North America]], used in the early 20th century due to frequent fatal attacks by rabid dogs | ||
{{expand list}} | {{expand list}} |
Revision as of 18:36, 30 March 2014
This is a list of nicknames for Birmingham:
- The Magic City, the city's most recognized nickname, refers to its rapid growth, first used by James Powell in 1873
- Steel City, referring to the city's major industrial product
- Pittsburgh of the South, comparing the city's industrial economy to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
- Bombingham, referring to the string of unsolved racially-motivated bombing cases which began in 1947, in use before 1963
- City of Perpetual Promise, referring to the areas vast resources and the bottlenecks of poor leadership in exploiting them, used in a 1937 Harpers magazine article.
- Bad Birmingham, referring to violence and lawlessness in Birmingham's boom period in the late 19th and early 20th century
- "Inland Metropolis" used in a 1909 promotional book
- "Mineral City of the South" used in a 1909 promotional book
- Murder Capital of the World, in use at least by 1931 to refer to the rampant violence in Birmingham
- Rabies Capital of North America, used in the early 20th century due to frequent fatal attacks by rabid dogs
This list is incomplete and may never satisfy any subjective standard for completeness. You can help Bhamwiki by expanding it.