1956: Difference between revisions
(→Awards) |
(→Events) |
||
Line 10: | Line 10: | ||
* August: [[St Rose Academy]] was founded in the [[Terence Mackin residence]] on [[Red Mountain]]. | * August: [[St Rose Academy]] was founded in the [[Terence Mackin residence]] on [[Red Mountain]]. | ||
* A labor strike against the local [[Tip-Top Bakery]] was marked by sabotage. | * A labor strike against the local [[Tip-Top Bakery]] was marked by sabotage. | ||
* [[WFHK-AM]] began broadcasting from [[Pell City]]. | |||
===Civil Rights movement=== | ===Civil Rights movement=== |
Revision as of 16:17, 16 May 2009
1956 was the 85th year after the founding of the City of Birmingham.
Events
- Frank P. Samford, Jr commissioned a bronze replica of the Statue of Liberty for the Liberty National Building.
- The Woodlawn High School debate team won the inaugural Barkley Forum tournament in Atlanta.
- Maytown was incorporated.
- March 3: Brothers Billy and Robert Dye and their cousin Dan Brasher disappeared.
- April 15: An F4 tornado killed 25 and injured 200 along a 20 mile path through Pleasant Grove, McDonald Chapel and Trussville.
- May 3: The Birmingham Amateur Radio Club was incorporated with Layton Dorman, president.
- August: St Rose Academy was founded in the Terence Mackin residence on Red Mountain.
- A labor strike against the local Tip-Top Bakery was marked by sabotage.
- WFHK-AM began broadcasting from Pell City.
Civil Rights movement
- February 1: Autherine Lucy enrolled at the University of Alabama. She was expelled a week later for causing disruption.
- April 10: Kenneth Adams, E. L. Vinson & Willis Vinson assaulted singer Nat King Cole on stage during a performance at Municipal Auditorium. They were each sentenced to 180 days in jail.
- May 26: A Montgomery judge banned the NAACP from operating in Alabama.
- June 5: The Alabama Christian Movement for Human Rights was founded by Fred Shuttlesworth at Sardis Baptist Church. Abraham Woods was vice-president.
- Bull Connor was elected to the Birmingham City Commission after a four-year absence.
- December 25: Fred Shuttlesworth's home was bombed. He emerged from the basement unscathed.
- December 26: Fred Shuttlesworth led hundreds of Blacks onto Birmingham busses in defiance of local law. 22 are arrested and Shuttlesworth files a federal lawsuit against the police.
Transitions
- Bull Connor began his second term as Commissioner of Public Safety.
- David F. Friedman began his career in exploitation films by partnering with Kroger Babb.
- Mack Russell succeeded Norris Hadaway as manager of the Alabama Theatre.
- B. Roper Dial succeeded William Hoover as president of The Club.
- The Birmingham Community Chest changed its name to United Appeal.
- WAPI-AM, WAFM-FM, WAPI-TV and the Birmingham News were sold to Samuel Newhouse.
- The Jefferson County Truck Growers Association moved to Finley Avenue.
- Frances and John Carter began teaching at Howard College.
- The University of Montevallo became coeducational.
- The Tutwiler Hotel was purchased by J. Henry Hoffman for $1,250,000.
- Hueytown High School principal Harley F. Gilmore retired.
- E. G. Walker succeeded Ray Acton as Mayor of Homewood.
- Luther Patrick served as delegate to the Democratic National Convention.
- Edwin H. Wood became chief of the Homewood Police Department.
- "Cousin Cliff" Holman's "Tip-Top Clubhouse" became "Cliff's Clubhouse"
Sports
- February 15: The Pittsburgh Pirates and Kansas City A's cancelled an exhibition at Rickwood Field due to segregation ordinances.
- The Birmingham Black Barons played their first season in the new Negro American League.
- December 1: Auburn defeated the Alabama 34-7 in the 1956 Iron Bowl at Legion Field, and finished the season with a 7-3 record.
- Alabama's men's basketball team was SEC champion with a 14-0 league record (21-3 overall).
- October 20: Howard College's final homecoming game at its East Lake campus was won 25-6 by Carson-Newman under steady rain. Viola Beard reigned as queen.
- Milton Graff set a Birmingham Barons single season record for at bats with 653.
- The Magic City Classic ended in a 0-0 tie.
- Virgil Trucks became a relief pitcher for the Detroit Tigers.
Music
- The Birmingham Symphony Orchestra debuted as a fully professional ensemble.
- Hugh Martin and Ralph Blane released the album "Martin and Blane Sing Martin and Blane".
- Tommy Charles released the single "Our Love Affair"/"If You Were Me" on Decca Records.
Births
- July 11: Sela Ward, actress and model
- July 18: Emily Lyons, nurse and 1998 abortion clinic bombing victim
- August 19: Buddy Aydelette, football player and politician
- August 23: Douglas L. Ragland, superintendent of Midfield City Schools
- October 2: Kamau Afrika, community activist
- October 10: Johnny O'Neal, jazz pianist
- December 14: Tony Nathan, football player and coach
- Han Nolan, author
- Melissa Springer, photographer
- Joel Montgomery, Birmingham City Council
- David Cochran, Blount County Commission
- Charles Ridley, peanut vendor
Deaths
- Heman Drummond, mine owner
- Robert and Billy Dye and Dan Brasher (presumed)
- July 30: Baseball player Tommy Sewell
Awards
- Birmingham Woman of the Year: Cecil M. Johnson
- Miss Alabama: Anne Stuart Arial
- Mr Crestwood: Woodrow Wilson
- Guggenheim Fellowship: Roland Frye
- Fulbright Scholarship: John Caldwell Fletcher
- Nolan Harmon was elected a bishop of the Methodist Church
Buildings
Context
The 1956 Winter Games were held in Cortina d'Ampezzo, Italy. The Summer Olympics were in Melbourne, Australia. Elvis Presley had his first hit single, "Heartbreak Hotel". Morocco declared independence from France. My Fair Lady opened on Broadway. Grace Kelly married Prince Rainier of Monaco and Marilyn Monroe married Arthur Miller. "Under God" was added to the Pledge of Allegiance and "In God We Trust" was made the national motto. Yankee Don Larsen pitched a perfect game 5 of the World Series against the Brooklyn Dodgers. President Eisenhower was re-elected, and Japan joined the United Nations.
Notable 1956 births included Mel Gibson, Sugar Ray Leonard, Tom Hanks, Martina Navratilova, Dwight Yoakam, Bo Derek, and Larry Bird. Deaths that year included H. L. Mencken, A. A. Milne, Connie Mack, Jackson Pollock, Bertolt Brecht, Bela Lugosi, Art Tatum, and Tommy Dorsey.
1950s |
<< 1950 1951 1952 1953 1954 1955 1956 1957 1958 1959 >> |
Births - Deaths - Establishments - Events - Works |