2022
2022 is the 151st year after the founding of the City of Birmingham.
Events
- February 24: The Davis Lake Volunteer Fire Department was created by state law.
- June: Josh, a male African lion, arrived at the Birmingham Zoo.
- June 9–12: The 2022 National Society of Newspaper Columnists Annual Conference was held in Birmingham.
- June 9–12: Magic City Fashion Week was hosted at the Birmingham Museum of Art.
- June 24–26: Magic City Con was held at the Wynfrey Hotel.
- August 6: The John Looney House in Ashville was damaged by fire.
- August 27: The Taste of 4th Avenue Jazz Festival was held in the Historic 4th Avenue District.
- The time capsule set in 2002 at the Concord Center was opened.
Business
- Avadian credit union acquired Citizens State Bank of Vernon, Lamar County.
- Vulcan Imaging Associates acquired Women's Imaging Associates.
- ConcertCare merged with International Development Connection of Chattanooga, Tennessee to form ConcertIDC.
- Landscape Workshop acquired A Cut Above Landscape Management of Columbus, Georgia; the landscape operations of GreenScape Inc. of Memphis, Tennessee; and Bailey’s Lawn Care and Landscaping of Knoxville, Tennessee.
- DeShazo Crane Co. acquired Integrated Machinery Solutions of Azle, Texas.
- Featheringill Capital took over as owner of the company formed by the merger of Eagle Automation of Fort Worth, Texas and VanZandt Controls of Midland, Texas.
- Protective Life Corporation acquired AUL Corp. of Napa, California.
- March: Business Interiors acquired Office Environments.
- March 31: The second election to propose union representation for workers at the Bessemer Amazon Fulfillment Center failed.
- April: OnCentive acquired SyncStream Solutions of New Orleans, Louisiana.
- April: Upstream Rehabilitation acquired Rapid Rehabilitation of Virginia.
- May: Bradford Health Services acquired The Estate at River Bend in Lucedale, Mississippi.
- June: Insured Nomads acquired app developer Peanut Travel.
- June: Upstream Rehabilitation acquired Crescent Physical Therapy of Orangeburg, South Carolina.
- July: Evernest acquired three divisions from Dodson Property Management of Richmond, Virginia.
- July: Adah International acquired North American drone-enabled warehouse inventory systems from doks. Innovation of Kassel, Germany.
Establishments
- February: Vinson Walker and Randal Scott opened Potatoe Potahtoz Perfic Pizza at The Waites.
- Brock's Gap Brewing Co. in Hoover
- Troy Rhone Garden Design opened on Culver Road in Mountain Brook Village.
- March: Lauryn England opened Lady E's Chick'n Cafe on Park Place in downtown Birmingham
- April: Tim Burt opened Parkside on Fifth in the Avondale Marble Works building.
- April: Kareemah Harvill opened Bite restaurant on Pinson Valley Parkway in Tarrant.
- Spring: Fetch Rewards of Madison, Wisconsin opened a regional office in the Parkside District.
- Swaddle Kids opened on 18th Street South Homewood.
- Freddy’s Frozen Custard & Steakburgers opened on Helena Road.
- Redland Rifle Co. opened on U.S. Highway 280.
Disestablishments
- January 6: InCare Technologies was acquired by Thrive of Foxborough, Massachusetts.
- January: The Books-A-Million at Brook Highland Plaza closed.
- March 24: The Hive at Five Points South closed.
- Spring: Macy's at Brookwood Village closed.
- Pack Health was acquired by Quest Diagnostics of Secaucus, New Jersey.
- Lyons & Co. of Florence, Lauderdale County acquired Keep IT Simple.
- Southern Research sold its engineering division to Kratos Defense and Security Solutions of San Diego, California.
- Diversified LLC of Wilmington, Delaware acquired Marca Life Planning of Riverchase.
- April: Crestwood Coffee Company closed.
- Mike's Fine Jewelry closed.
- May 21: Johnny Ray's closed its last location at the Shops of the Colonnade.
- July: DiscoveryBioMed was acquired by Eurofins Discovery of Dundee, Scotland.
- July: Lexicon Inc. of Little Rock, Arkansas acquired Universal Limited of Trussville.
- July: Zoe's Kitchen closed its SoHo Square location in Homewood.
- July: Superior Grill closed.
- July 31: Taproot Cafe
- July 31: Abhi restaurant closed its location at The Summit.
- July 31: The Cajun Boys & Our Poboys locations in Chelsea and on Valleydale Road closed.
- Bayer Properties sold its real estate management portfolio to Centennial of Dallas, Texas.
Education
- Samford University received a $100 million bequest from the estate of Marvin Mann (class of 1954), to fund scholarships.
Government
- March 21–25: A "disproportionate" number of Birmingham Police Department employees called in sick, in an apparently organized protest against staffing shortages, too-modest pay raises, and diminishment of pension benefits.
- March 30: The City of Birmingham filed a lawsuit against Trane U.S. Inc. over claims made as part of its 2-year contract with SRS Inc. of Gallatin, Tennessee to perform energy upgrades and install Trane HVAC equipment in 125 city-owned buildings beginning in 2016.
- May: Birmingham Xpress rapid transit system began operation.
- May 24: The 2022 primary elections were held.
- June 21: Runoffs were held in the 2022 primary elections.
- July 12: 2022 Chelsea property tax referendum was held.
- November 8: The 2022 general election was held.
Religion
Sports
- April 16: The USFL kicked off with the 2022 Birmingham Stallions defeating the New Jersey Generals 28-24 at Protective Stadium.
- April 16: The Savannah Bananas baseball team sold out a performance at Rickwood Field.
- May 25–29: 2022 SWAC Baseball Tournament was held at Regions Field
- July 10: Trey Mullinax earned his first PGA Tour victory by winning the Barbasol Championship
- July 7–17: The 2022 World Games were held in Birmingham.
- Magic City Classic
- November 26: 2022 Iron Bowl
- The Auburn Tigers, Alabama Crimson Tide, UAB Blazers and Jacksonville State Gamecocks were all invited to the 2022 NCAA Men's Basketball tournament. None advanced beyond the round of 32.
Professional teams
- 2022 Birmingham Barons (Minor League Baseball, Double-A South)
- 2022 Birmingham Legion FC (USL Championship)
- 2022 Birmingham Squadron (NBA G League)
- 2022 Birmingham Stallions (USFL)
Individuals
- January 13: Robert Evans succeeded Sean Calhoun as head football coach at Vestavia Hills High School.
- January 7: Janae Pierre left WBHM-FM to host a podcast for New York Public Radio.
- January 28: Patrick Smith resigned as chief of the Birmingham Police Department. Scott Thurmond was appointed acting chief.
- March 1: Kamau Witherspoon succeeded Kelly Caruso as CEO of Shipt.
- April 1: Jennifer Gray succeeded Jera Stribling as executive director of the Joseph S. Bruno Charitable Foundation.
- June 1: Maria Rodriguez Shirey succeeded Doreen Harper as dean of the UAB School of Nursing.
- July: Bill Rowley was named executive director of Shelby Humane.
Births
Awards
- Timothy Hontzas and Adam Evans were announced as semifinalists for "Best Chef: South", Johnny's Restaurant as a semifinalist for "Outstanding Hospitality" and Golden Age Wine as a semifinalist for "Outstanding Wine Program" by the James Beard Foundation.
- June 13: Adam Evans of Automatic Seafood and Oysters won the James Beard Foundation Award for "Best Chef in the South".
- Alabama Business Hall of Fame: Walter Batson Jr, F. Dixon Brooke Jr, Ronald Bruno, Grayson Hall, Alexis Herman, Michael Mouron,, William Propst, and C. Kemmons Wilson Jr.
Graduations
Marriages
Retirements
- Jera Stribling retired as executive director of the Joseph S. Bruno Charitable Foundation.
- Van Phillips retired as principal of Center Point High School.
- Abdul Kallon retired from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Alabama.
- Dave Clark resigned from Amazon.com Inc.
- Bill Clark resigned from the UAB Blazers football team.
Deaths
- January 2: Maxine McNair, retired teacher
- January 2: Fred Dyess, antiques dealer
- January 7: Victor Hanson II, Birmingham News publisher
- January 11: Tanya Canada, Mayor of Dodge City
- January 15: Rickey Powell, vocalist and actor
- January 23: Bettie Doss, bookkeeper and wife of Raymond Doss
- January 26: Jim Hilyer, first head coach of the UAB Blazers football team.
- January 29: Sam Lay, blues drummer
- February 1: Tyrez Garner, muralist
- February 4: Santonio Beard, former Alabama football player
- February 10: D. C. Moon, punk musician
- February 12: Dave Roddy, WSGN-AM announcer
- February 15: Danny Crowson, Shelby County District Court judge
- February 26: Navari Jones, drummer
- March 9: David Wheeler, Alabama House of Representatives
- March 23: Ozilene Cartee, elementary school principal
- April 8: James Tuohy, Episcopal priest
- April 8: Ricko a black rhinoceros
- April 12: Ron Alexander musician and music teacher
- April 20: Johnathan Quinn, former president of Central Alabama Pride
- May 8: Ray Scott, founder of BASS
- May 15: Phil Dodd, former police chief in Homewood
- May 20: Pat Farmer, former UAB Art Gallery director
- June 5: Chad Allinder, Jefferson County Sheriff's Office
- June 10: Charles Walton, photographer and artist
- June 13: Christophe Nicolet, cell biologist, artist and set-builder
- June 18: Ed Khan, Jefferson County Department of Health
- July: Christy Turnipseed, artist
- July: John McDavid, communications engineer
- July 8: De Martenson, attorney
- July 12: Steve Raley, truck driver and TikTok celebrity
- July 16: Mickey Rooney Jr, former Mouseketeer
- July 18: Akili, African lion at the Birmingham Zoo
- July 31: Gabby Hulgan, skeet-shooting champion
Works
Books
- January 4: White Bull, poems by Elizabeth Hughey
Buildings
- January 25: Hoover Fire Station No. 11 in Trace Crossings was dedicated
- April 11: Ground was broken for the Altec / Styslinger Genomic Medicine and Data Sciences Building
- A. G. Gaston Motel restaurant renovations
- Alabama Aerospace & Aviation High School
- Replacement for Ramsay-McCormack building
- Powell Avenue Steam Plant
- Birmingham Realty Co. Warehouse
- 20 Midtown phase 3
- 2323 2nd Avenue South
- Carver Theatre (renovations)
- Citywalk BHAM
- Grandview Physicians Plaza II
- Hampton Inn & Suites by Hilton - Fultondale
- Legacy Arena renovation and expansion
- The Marshall
- Mountain Brook Junior High School expansion
- Parkside on Dolly Ridge
- Tower on Tenth, redevelopment of the Building Trades Tower
- Tributary Rise apartments
- Watco Safe Performance Center expansion in Fairfield
- Way Station for AIDS Alabama in Smithfield
- Woodlawn High School football stadium & fieldhouse
Demolitions
- January: Quinlan Castle
- Southtown Court
- July 4: Julia Tutwiler Hall (1968)
- July: Carraway Hospital
- August 1: Vestavia Hills acquired the former Howard Johnson's Motor Lodge for demolition and redevelopment.
- August 6: The John Looney House in Ashville was damaged by fire.
Context
A volcanic eruption at Hunga Tonga on January 15 caused tsunami flooding across the Pacific. The U.S. Supreme Court reversed its 1973 decision in Roe v. Wade. NASA's James Webb Space Telescope began transmitting its first images.
Notable people who died in 2022 included actors Louie Anderson, James Caan, Tony Dow, Ray Liotta, Nichelle Nichols, Sidney Poitier, Paul Sorvino and William Hurt; anthropologist Richard Leakey; basketball player Bill Russell; comedian Gilbert Gottfried; film director Peter Bogdanovich; football coach Dan Reeves; former Japanese prime minister Shinzo Abe; manga artist Kazuki Takahashi; musicians Naomi Judd, Meat Loaf, and Vangelis; and former U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright.
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