List of Birmingham firsts: Difference between revisions
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* First newspaper: ''[[Birmingham Sun]]'' (weekly in 1871, daily for a brief time in 1872) | * First newspaper: ''[[Birmingham Sun]]'' (weekly in 1871, daily for a brief time in 1872) | ||
* First surviving daily newspaper: ''[[Birmingham Iron Age]]'' (1874) | * First surviving daily newspaper: ''[[Birmingham Iron Age]]'' (1874) | ||
* First "talkie": Newsreel of President Coolidge welcoming Charles Lindbergh to New York, played at the [[Ritz Theatre]] in [[1927]] | |||
==References== | ==References== |
Revision as of 15:51, 14 June 2015
This list is incomplete and may never satisfy any subjective standard for completeness. You can help Bhamwiki by expanding it.
This list of Birmingham firsts is drawn from Bertha Bendall Norton's 1970 book Birmingham's First Magic Century: Were You There?, with a few additions:
People
- First boy born in city: Richard Powell McAnally (November 11, 1871)
- First girl born in city: Mamie Morrow (fall 1871)
- First Birmingham Police Department officers to die in the line of duty: On March 27, 1900 Officers George Kirkley and J. W. Adams were killed in a shootout following a robbery of the Standard Oil office.
- First Birmingham Fire Department firefighters to die in the line of duty: Gip Spruiell and E. B. Huffman were killed when the Birmingham Paper Company building on Morris Avenue collapsed on them during a pre-dawn blaze on July 3, 1905.
Government
- First voting place: 21st Street North and 2nd Alley North
- First Jefferson County Courthouse: 21st Street and 3rd Avenue North
- First Mayor of Birmingham: Robert Henley, sworn in on December 19, 1871
- First Birmingham City Hall: 20th Street, between 1st and 2nd Avenue North
- First post office: 19th Street and 3rd Avenue North
- First public school: Powell School, 24th Street and 6th Avenue North
Retailers
- First "house": William Nabers shop, built in 1869 on what became 1st Avenue North
- First grocery store: Allen's Grocery (present site of Empire Building)
- First dry goods store: F. E. Taylor's Dry Goods (20th Street and 3rd Avenue North)
- First hardware store: R. H. Roberts' (2nd Avenue North)
- First drug store: 20th Street and 3rd Avenue North
- First furniture store: 21st Street and 3rd Avenue North
Services
- First hotel: Relay House (1871, present site of Two North Twentieth)
- First school: Bryant's School, 21st Street and 1st Avenue North
- First train: Alabama Central Railroad conducted by Porter Lewis pulled into Birmingham around 10:00 PM on November 6, 1871
- First hospital: Hillman Hospital
Media
- First newspaper: Birmingham Sun (weekly in 1871, daily for a brief time in 1872)
- First surviving daily newspaper: Birmingham Iron Age (1874)
- First "talkie": Newsreel of President Coolidge welcoming Charles Lindbergh to New York, played at the Ritz Theatre in 1927
References
- Norton, Bertha Bendall (1970) Birmingham's First Magic Century: Were You There?. Birmingham: self-published/Lakeshore Press