2021: Difference between revisions
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===Government=== | ===Government=== | ||
* [[January 26]]: [[2021 Birmingham Board of Education special election]] | * [[January 26]]: [[2021 Birmingham Board of Education special election]] | ||
* [[February 2]]: The [[2021 Alabama legislative session]] began. | |||
* [[August 24]]: [[2021 Birmingham municipal election]] | |||
===Religion=== | ===Religion=== |
Revision as of 09:49, 3 February 2021
2021 is the 150th year after the founding of the City of Birmingham.
Events
- January 25: A deadly tornado struck Fultondale and Center Point.
- April 12–14: The Frontier Conference 2021, originally scheduled for April 2020, was held at the Lyric Theatre.
Business
- 1st quarter: SouthFirst Bank of Sylacauga merged with FirstBanc of Talladega.
- Heiche opened an advanced metal coating facility at the Jasper Industrial Park.
Establishments
- January 6: Cook Out opened at 2411 3rd Avenue South.
- January 25: Buc-ee's opened in Leeds.
Disestablishments
- January: My Supply Chain Group was acquired by NTT DATA Business Solutions of Bielefeld, Germany.
- January: Magnolia Meadows Golf Course in Columbiana closed.
Education
Government
- January 26: 2021 Birmingham Board of Education special election
- February 2: The 2021 Alabama legislative session began.
- August 24: 2021 Birmingham municipal election
Religion
Sports
Individuals
- Chuck Holmes became executive director of the Alabama Humanities Alliance.
- January 11: Cornell Wesley began his term as head of the Birmingham Department of Innovation and Economic Opportunity.
Births
Awards
Graduations
Marriages
Retirements
- John Owen retired as chief operating officer of Regions Bank.
- Photographer Joe Songer retired from al.com.
Deaths
- January 1: Mike Coppage, former Birmingham Police chief and Alabama Department of Public Safety director
- January 3: Bill Stewart, professor of political science
- January 3: Joann Bashinsky, Golden Flake heiress
- January 10: Derrick Johnson, Huffman High School coach
- January 10: Corbin Day, chair of Jemison Investment Company
- January 16: Scotty McCallum, UAB president and Vestavia Hill mayor
- January 16: Leon Edwards, Edwards Chevrolet president
- January 20: Sonny Penhale, Helena mayor
- January 21: Marc Phillips, musician and music minister
- January 28: Sammy Wilson, Clanton city council
Works
Books
- Shaking the Gates of Hell, family memoir by John Archibald
Buildings
- Asian Passage at the Birmingham Zoo
- Birmingham VA Mental Health Clinic on Crestwood Boulevard
- Buc-ee's travel stop in Leeds
- The Citizen "micro-unit" apartments on 18th Street South
- Hilton Tapestry Collection in Homewood
- Hoover Fire Station No. 11 in Trace Crossings
- Jones Valley Trail extension to Avondale
- Motion Industries area fluid power shop, hose & rubber shop, and engineering department
- Protective Stadium at the BJCC
- The Railyard "micro-unit" apartments on 1st Avenue South
- Tarrant City Hall
- The Birmingham Police Real Time Crime Center on the 4th floor of Birmingham Police Headquarters
Demolitions
Context
In 2021 insurrectionists stormed the U.S. Capitol, disrupting Congress's certification of the 2020 presidential election. For inciting the mob, President Trump was impeached for a second time.
Notable people who died in 2021 included actors Hal Holbrook, Cloris Leachman and Cicely Tyson; baseball hall of famers Hank Aaron and Don Sutton; basketball coach John Chaney; magician Mark Wilson; and radio/television interviewer Larry King.
2020s |
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