Rose Avenue: Difference between revisions

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'''Rose Avenue''' was the original name for the portion of what is now [[11th Avenue South]] between [[21st Street South|21st]] and [[22nd Street South|22nd Streets South]] (then [[Sycamore Street]]).  At the time, the street now known as [[11th Court South]] was 11th Avenue.
'''Rose Avenue''' was the original name for the portion of what is now [[11th Avenue South]] between [[21st Street South|21st]] and [[22nd Street South|22nd Streets South]] (then [[Sycamore Street]]).  At the time, the street now known as [[11th Court South]] was 11th Avenue.


A parsonage for [[South Highland Presbyterian Church]] was located on Rose Avenue.
A parsonage for [[South Highland Presbyterian Church]] was located on Rose Avenue. Architect [[S. Scott Joy]] built his [[S. Scott Joy residence (11th Avenue South)|second Birmingham residence]] on the avenue's intersection with [[21st Place South]] ([[Eula Place]]).


== References ==
== References ==

Latest revision as of 22:41, 17 June 2015

Rose Avenue was the original name for the portion of what is now 11th Avenue South between 21st and 22nd Streets South (then Sycamore Street). At the time, the street now known as 11th Court South was 11th Avenue.

A parsonage for South Highland Presbyterian Church was located on Rose Avenue. Architect S. Scott Joy built his second Birmingham residence on the avenue's intersection with 21st Place South (Eula Place).

References

  • Cram, George F. (1898). "Birmingham" from Cram's Universal Atlas, Geographical, Astronomical and Historical. Accessed via Historical Maps of Jefferson County on April 8, 2010.