1899
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1899 was the 28th year after the founding of the City of Birmingham.
Events
- February: A blizzard caused the cancellation of Mardi Gras festivities.
- February 12: Ensley was incorporated.
- February 21: Five miners were killed in the 1899 Blocton No. 2 Mine explosion.
- February 23: The Alabama legislature revoked the 1897 incorporation of Rosedale.
- June 1: An Anti-Spitting Law went into effect in Birmingham.
- The Agricultural and Mechanical College of Alabama was renamed the Alabama Polytechnic Institute.
- Brookside suffered a typhoid outbreak and was struck by a tornado.
- Cunningham Hospital opened.
- Mel Drennen became Mayor of Birmingham.
- McElwain School was organized.
- A temporary school board was selected to plan a new building for Moore School.
- A. H. Parker was re-hired as a 7th grade instructor at the Lane School.
- Joseph Riley Smith donated $5,000 toward the construction of St Vincent's Hospital.
- The Tuxedo Park community was platted.
- Ragland and Warrior was incorporated.
Business
- March 3: Birmingham Southern Railroad was organized.
- May 16: Andrew Beard was granted a patent (no. 624,901) for railcar coupling.
- November 23: The first heat of steel was tapped at the Ensley Works.
- Truman Aldrich became a vice-president of the Birmingham Machinery and Foundry Company.
- The Birmingham Board of Trade was formed.
- T. G. Bush became president of the Shelby Iron Company.
- A. L. Fulenwider and Henry Badham sold the O'Brien Opera House to Joseph R. Smith, Jr and Charles J. Smith for $75,000.
- The Grasselli Chemical Company acquired a 100-acre parcel near Hillman for a new chemical works.
- William Pettiford became president of the Alabama Penny Savings Bank.
- Louis Pizitz founded the Louis Pizitz Dry Goods Company.
- John Rountree added The Dixie Manufacturer to his magazine holdings.
- The Tennessee Coal, Iron and Railroad Company purchased the Ensley Land Company.
- The the United States Cast Iron Pipe and Foundry Company was formed out of the merger of 12 companies and 14 plants located in eight states.
- Rick Woodward became general superintendent of Woodward Iron Company.
Religion
- The Knesseth Israel Congregation was organized.
- The Salvation Army Birmingham Area Command was established.
- Charles Brooks became pastor of St Mark's Episcopal Church.
Sports
- April 1: The Birmingham Golf Club course opened for play.
- The Alabama Crimson Tide football team resumed play after a ban on student athletes traveling away from campus was lifted.
Works
Buildings
- Avondale Elementary School expansion
- The first Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church, Rosedale church building
- The Briary house
- Loveman, Joseph and Loeb building expansion
Individuals
- Lucille Douglass and Ulysses Mason moved to Birmingham.
- Charles Ferguson became a solicitor to the 10th Judicial Circuit of Alabama.
- Hill Ferguson left the Birmingham Age-Herald to join the insurance firm of Louis V. Clark & Company.
- Charles B. Glenn became principal of Paul Hayne School.
- Richard McNally married the former Nellie Farinas.
- Louis Pizitz married the former Minnie Smolian.
- Wallace Rayfield became director of the Architectural and Mechanical Drawing Department at Tuskegee Industrial and Normal Institute.
- Junius L. Walthall became Shelby County Sheriff.
- Charles Whelan, Jr became Birmingham City Physician.
Births
- November 13: Howard Hill, archer
- November 22: Howell Vines, writer
- R. C. Foster, miner and singer
Graduations
- Wallace Rayfield, bachelor of architecture from Columbia University
- Elizabeth White, from Birmingham Medical College
Context
In 1899, Spanish rule ended in Cuba. The United States took possession of Wake Island. The Philippine-American War began. The First Hague Peace Conference took place. The Second Boer War began. The Bronx Zoo opened in New York City.
Notable births in 1899 included those of Al Capone, Gloria Swanson, Walter Lantz, Duke Ellington, Fred Astaire, E. B. White, James Cagney, Ernest Hemingway, Alfred Hitchcock, Noel Coward, and Humphrey Bogart. Notable deaths included those of Johann Strauss II, Robert G. Ingersoll, Charles Alfred Pillsbury, William H. Webb, and Dwight L. Moody.
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