1930: Difference between revisions

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* [[Ben Weil]] founded the [[Mayer Electric Supply|Electric Supply Company]], now [[Mayer Electric Supply]].
* [[Ben Weil]] founded the [[Mayer Electric Supply|Electric Supply Company]], now [[Mayer Electric Supply]].
* [[Bedford Seale]] and [[James Vakakes]] founded the [[Seale Lumber Co.]]
* [[Bedford Seale]] and [[James Vakakes]] founded the [[Seale Lumber Co.]]
* The [[Dixie Fire Brick Co.]] was incorporated.


===Religion===
===Religion===
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===Buildings===
===Buildings===
* [[Five Points Bowling Center]]
* [[Five Points Bowling Center]]
* [[Montevallo High School]]
* [[Mountain Brook Club]]
* [[Mountain Brook Club]]
* [[North Birmingham Elementary School]] addition
* [[North Birmingham Elementary School]] addition
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* [[January 15]]: [[Judy Abroms]], boutique owner
* [[January 15]]: [[Judy Abroms]], boutique owner
* [[February 3]]: [[David Foley]], priest
* [[February 3]]: [[David Foley]], priest
* [[February 7]]: [[Jack Biddle]], former Alabama State Senator and Representative
* [[February 18]]: [[Frank House]], baseball player
* [[February 18]]: [[Frank House]], baseball player
* [[February 23]]: [[Pete Clifford]], Methodist minister and [[Birmingham City Council]] member
* [[February 23]]: [[Pete Clifford]], Methodist minister and [[Birmingham City Council]] member
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* [[March 19]]: [[June Shaw|June Fore Shaw]], pathologist
* [[March 19]]: [[June Shaw|June Fore Shaw]], pathologist
* [[March 31]]: [[Peggy Prickett]], clothier
* [[March 31]]: [[Peggy Prickett]], clothier
* [[April 5]]: [[Nena Biddle]], teacher
* [[April 6]]: [[Bettie Doss]], bookkeeper and wife of [[Raymond Doss]]
* [[May 28]]: [[Douglas E. Jones]], professor of geology and college administrator
* [[May 28]]: [[Douglas E. Jones]], professor of geology and college administrator
* [[June 6]]: [[Warren Crow III]], real estate executive  
* [[June 6]]: [[Warren Crow III]], real estate executive  
* [[June 12]]: [[Jim Nabors]], actor
* [[June 12]]: [[Jim Nabors]], actor
* June 12: [[Frank W. Bromberg]], president of [[National Woodworks]]
* [[June 20]]: [[Bobby Frank Cherry]], church bomber
* [[June 20]]: [[Bobby Frank Cherry]], church bomber
* June 20: [[Thomas Blanton]], church bomber
* June 20: [[Thomas Blanton]], church bomber
* [[June 21]]: [[C. Molton Williams]], real estate and insurance executive
* [[June 26]]: [[Jackie Fargo]], wrestler
* [[June 26]]: [[Jackie Fargo]], wrestler
* [[July 4]]: [[Marion Worth]], country music singer
* [[July 4]]: [[Marion Worth]], country music singer
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* [[July 30]]: [[A. D. King]], pastor and Civil Rights leader
* [[July 30]]: [[A. D. King]], pastor and Civil Rights leader
* [[August 14]]: [[Joseph Schreiber]], choirmaster
* [[August 14]]: [[Joseph Schreiber]], choirmaster
* [[August 17]]: [[Victor Hanson II]], ''[[The Birmingham News|Birmingham News]]'' publisher
* [[August 18]]: [[Gene Bartow]], basketball coach
* [[August 18]]: [[Gene Bartow]], basketball coach
* [[August 24]]: [[John Grenier]], attorney and politician
* [[August 24]]: [[John Grenier]], attorney and politician
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* [[October 7]]: [[Boots Carroll]], actress
* [[October 7]]: [[Boots Carroll]], actress
* [[November 2]]: [[David Orange]], [[Jefferson County Commission]] president
* [[November 2]]: [[David Orange]], [[Jefferson County Commission]] president
* [[December 12]]: [[Solomon Kimerling]], [[Alabama Oxygen Co.]] president
* [[December 13]]: [[Country Boy Eddie]], country singer
* [[December 13]]: [[Country Boy Eddie]], country singer
* [[December 15]]: [[John Claypool]], minister
* [[December 15]]: [[John Claypool]], minister
* [[December 31]]: [[Odetta]], folk singer
* [[December 31]]: [[Odetta]], folk singer
* [[Nelson H. Smith]], pastor and Civil Rights leader
* [[Nelson Smith Jr]], pastor and Civil Rights leader
* [[Charles Brammer]], winemaker
* [[Charles Brammer]], winemaker
* [[Frank Dukes]], pastor and Civil Rights leader
* [[Frank Dukes]], pastor and Civil Rights leader
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* [[Huland Moore]], jewelry repairer
* [[Huland Moore]], jewelry repairer
* [[Bill Myers]], [[List of Birmingham police chiefs|Birmingham Police chief]]
* [[Bill Myers]], [[List of Birmingham police chiefs|Birmingham Police chief]]
* [[J. Walden Retan]], physician
* [[Shorty White]], football coach
* [[Shorty White]], football coach
* [[W. L. Williams, Jr]], attorney
* [[W. L. Williams, Jr]], attorney


===Graduations===
===Graduations===
* [[Richmond Beatty]], Ph.D in American Literature at Vanderbilt University
* [[Richmond Beatty]], PhD in American Literature at Vanderbilt University
* [[Carl Elliott]] from Vina High School
* [[Carl Elliott]] from Vina High School
* [[William Bradford Huie]] from the [[University of Alabama]]
* [[William Bradford Huie]] from the [[University of Alabama]]
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* [[June 20]]: [[Zachariah Nabers Jr]], investor
* [[June 20]]: [[Zachariah Nabers Jr]], investor
* [[August 15]]: [[Guy Tutwiler]], baseball player
* [[August 15]]: [[Guy Tutwiler]], baseball player
* [[September 24]]: [[Moses Ullman]], attorney
* [[November 9]]: [[Edley Oden]], distiller
* [[November 13]]: [[Rosa Zinszer]], furniture dealer
* [[November 18]]: [[Harvey Woodward]], real estate heir
* [[November 18]]: [[Harvey Woodward]], real estate heir
* December: [[Joseph Bishop]], miner
* December: [[Joseph Bishop]], miner

Revision as of 17:10, 15 March 2024

1930 was the 59th year after the founding of the city of Birmingham.

Events

Business

Religion

Sports

Works

Buildings

Music

Individuals

Births

Graduations

Marriages

Deaths

Context

In 1930, the Great Depression continued. The dwarf planet Pluto was discovered. Mahatma Gandhi led the Dandi Salt March protesting the British-imposed salt tax. The first frozen foods of Clarence Birdseye went on sale in Springfield, Massachusetts. Turkish cities Constantinople and Angora officially became Istanbul and Ankara. Twinkies, Neoprene, and the chocolate chip cookie were invented. The Shadow debuted on radio. Betty Boop debuted in Dizzy Dishes. Karl Landsteiner won the Nobel Prize for Medicine for his earlier discovery of human blood types and work in blood transfusions.

Books published in 1930 included As I Lay Dying by William Faulkner, The Maltese Falcon by Dashiell Hammett, The Little Engine That Could by Watty Piper, and 1066 and All That by W. C. Sellar and R. J. Yeatman. The Nobel Prize for Literature went to Sinclair Lewis.

Songs published in 1930 included "Georgia on My Mind" by Hoagy Carmichael & Stuart Gorrell and "I Got Rhythm" by George & Ira Gershwin. Top hits included "Happy Days Are Here Again" by Charles King and "Puttin' On The Ritz" by Harry Richman.

All Quiet on the Western Front was the top-grossing film and won Academy Awards for Best Picture and Best Director (Lewis Milestone). Other top-grossing films included Whoopee!, Hell's Angels, Animal Crackers, and Feet First. George Arliss took the Best Actor award and Norma Shearer was Best Actress.

Notable births in 1930 included film and television executive Roy E. Disney, astronaut Buzz Aldrin, singer Bobby “Blue” Bland, actor Gene Hackman, televangelist Pat Robertson, composer and lyricist Stephen Sondheim, actor Steve McQueen, Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O'Connor, German Chancellor Helmut Kohl, film director Richard Donner, politician Harvey Milk, actor Clint Eastwood, billionaire Ross Perot, businessman George Steinbrenner, astronaut Neil Armstrong, musician Don Ho, actor Sean Connery, entrepreneur Warren Buffett, and musician Ray Charles. Notable deaths included writer D. H. Lawrence; President William Howard Taft; writer Sir Arthur Conan Doyle; actor Lon Chaney, Sr; and industrialist Herbert Henry Dow.

1930s
<< 1930 1931 1932 1933 1934 1935 1936 1937 1938 1939 >>
Births - Deaths - Establishments - Events - Works