1913
1913 was the 42nd year after the founding of the city of Birmingham.
Events
- February 6: The Rotary Club of Birmingham was chartered.
- June 11: Buffalo Bill’s Wild West and Pawnee Bill’s Far East paraded through downtown Birmingham and put on shows at Smith's Park.
- July 24: Donald Kenney and Christopher Gustin died during an initiation ceremony at Birmingham Lodge No. 432, Loyal Order of Moose.
- October 1: The USS Birmingham (CL-2) was recommissioned and sent to carry officials of the Panama-Pacific Exposition on a South American tour.
- October 10–18: The 1913 Alabama State Fair took place.
- November 18: 24 miners were killed in the 1913 Acton No. 2 Mine explosion.
- The Avondale Regional Library joined the Birmingham Public Library system.
- The Birmingham Public Library Board succeeded the Birmingham Public Library Association.
- The city of Brent was incorporated.
- Calera Lodge No. 445 began meeting at the Bondurant and Burke Drug Store.
- Miss Fancy was purchased from a failed circus by the Birmingham Advertising Club and displayed in Avondale Park.
- A tornado damaged St Andrew's Episcopal Church.
Business
- February 21: The dormant Oxmoor Furnaces were put back into blast to supply iron for World War I.
- August 3: The Birmingham Railway, Light & Power Company began servicing the No. 7 Wylam-Bush Hills streetcar line.
- December 23: The Birmingham, Selma & Pensacola Railroad was acquired by Birmingham, Selma & Mobile Railroad.
- The Birmingham Tidewater Railway began passenger service between Ensley and East Lake.
- Hand picks supplanted mechanical coal cutters at the Brookside mine.
- Browdy's delicatessen opened.
- A. H. Cather founded the A. H. Cather Publishing Company in Birmingham.
- H. M. Newsome purchased the Bonita Theater, later rebuilding it as the Rialto.
- The Oak Hill Memorial Association took over management of Oak Hill Cemetery.
- Ranson & Son Grocery opened.
- George Crawford and Robert Jemison, Jr began planning construction of the Tutwiler Hotel.
Education
- John Wesley Gilbert succeeded William A. Bell as president of Miles College.
- Howard College admitted its first female students.
Government
- Franklin Glass was appointed to fill the vacant seat left by the death of Senator Joseph Johnston, but was not confirmed. Francis White was seated in 1914.
- George Huddleston, Sr succeeded Oscar Underwood as Representative for the 9th Congressional District of Alabama.
- George Ward succeeded Culpepper Exum as President of the Birmingham City Commission.
Religion
- Henry Edmonds became pastor of South Highland Presbyterian Church.
- A. Feinsilver succeeded J. T. Loeb as rabbi of Knesseth Israel Congregation.
- Adna Moore became pastor of the Pilgrim Church.
- St Joseph's Catholic Church was established in Ensley.
- St Stanislaus Parish was established in Wylam.
Sports
- 1913 Birmingham Barons
- The 8-0 Auburn Tigers won the Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Association football championship.
- Guy Tutwiler played his final season for the Detroit Tigers.
- Lonnie Noojin played his final season in the minor leagues.
- Howard College went 5-3-1 under coach Lonnie Noojin.
- Harry Coveleski recorded a Southern Association-leading 28 victories for the Chattanooga Lookouts
Individuals
- Lee Bidgood was appointed to the economics faculty of the University of Alabama.
- Patti Ruffner Jacobs addressed the annual convention of the National Woman's Suffrage Association in Washington D. C.
- Lloyd Noland was hired by the Tennessee Coal Iron and Railroad Company to reorganized their employee health department.
- Dean William B. Oliver left his position with the University of Alabama School of Law.
- Former mayor of Ensley D. F. Sugg was appointed the city's postmaster.
- Actor Henry Walthall signed a contract with Reliance-Majestic Studios in Los Angeles, California.
Births
- January 10: Haywood Henry, jazz saxophonist
- January 31: Don Hutson, football player
- February 14: Mel Allen, sports announcer
- March 12: Loulie Jean Norman, operatic soprano
- March 13: Tat Bailey, electrician and landscape artist
- April 1: Buster Bray, baseball player
- June 20: Al Gallodoro, saxophone player
- July 1: Wedo Martini, baseball player
- July 16: George Seibels, Mayor of Birmingham
- August 17: Rudy York, baseball player
- September 11: Paul "Bear" Bryant, football coach
- September 30: Cholly Atkins, Motown choreographer
- October 13: Kenneth Daniel, ACIPCO president
- September 14: Nina Miglionico, Birmingham City Council president
- October 27: Robert Waldrop, Mayor of Homewood
- December 20: Carl Elliott, U. S. congressman
- Frank Bettencourt, musician and bandleader
- Jack Brazleton, comptroller and aviator
- Ninette Griffith, fashion director at Loveman's
- Jessie Johnson, daughter of Crawford and Caroline Johnson.
- Nelson Weaver, real estate developer
- Nell Williams, socialite and murder victim
Awards
- Tom Stewart was admitted to the Alabama Bar.
- Octavus Roy Cohen was admitted to the South Carolina Bar.
Graduations
- Kirkman O'Neal graduated from the U. S. Naval Academy.
Retirements
- Isaac McAdory retired as Superintendent of Education for Jefferson County
Deaths
- May 16: Louise Wooster, madame
- July 24: Donald Kenney and Christopher Gustin died during an initiation ceremony at Birmingham Lodge No. 432, Loyal Order of Moose.
- August 8: Joseph Johnston, Governor of Alabama and U.S. Senator
- August 15: James Powers, president of the University of Alabama.
- November 26: Rufus Cobb, Governor of Alabama
- Charles Drennen, physician
Works
Buildings
- Bethel African Methodist Episcopal Church, Rosedale
- Comer Building on 2nd Avenue North
- Ensley First United Methodist Church
- Addition to Hillman Hospital on 20th Street South
- Howell-Porter House
- Pythian Temple (Alabama Penny Savings Bank building)
- Ridgely Apartments (now the Tutwiler Hotel)
- Trianon Theatre
- The Roden Hotel was begun, but construction was halted and the steel frame demolished for scrap.
- Rebie Hall was destroyed by fire.
- Sterling Foster residence on Niazuma Avenue
Context
The year 1913 saw the ratification of the 16th and 17th amendments, allowing income taxes and the direct election of senators. Woodrow Wilson succeeded William Taft as President. King George I of Greece was assassinated. The First Balkan War ended. Stravinsky's "The Rite of Spring" caused riots at its Paris debut. The Second Balkan War began and ended. Harry Brearley invented stainless steel. The Panama Canal was completed. The Lincoln Highway, the first American trans-continental automobile road was dedicated. Ford introduced the moving assembly line. The all-purpose zipper was perfected. The Mona Lisa, recovered in Italy after a bold theft, was returned to France. Winston and Salem, North Carolina officially merged.
Notable fiction published in 1913 included The Patchwork Girl of Oz by L. Frank Baum, 'The Poison Belt by Arthur Conan Doyle, Der Tunnel by Bernhard Kellermann, Sons and Lovers by D. H. Lawrence, The Valley of the Moon by Jack London , Eldorado by Baroness Orczy, and Pollyanna by Eleanor H. Porter. Non-fiction included the final volume of Principia Mathematica by Alfred North Whitehead and Bertrand Russell.
Notable music released in 1913 included "Ballin' The Jack" by Chris Smith and James Henry Burris; "Danny Boy" (now set to the music of "Londonderry Air") by Frederick Weatherly; "El Cóndor Pasa" by Daniel Alomía Robles; "On the Old Fall River Line" by Harry Von Tilzer, William Jerome & Andrew B. Sterling; "The Trail Of The Lonesome Pine" by Harry Carroll and Ballard MacDonald; and "You Made Me Love You" by James V. Monaco and Joseph McCarthy.
Notable births in 1913 included those of presidents Gerald Ford and Richard Nixon, actors Lloyd Bridges, Hedy Lamarr, Vivien Leigh and Danny Kaye, author Albert Camus, civil rights figure Rosa Parks, labor leader Jimmy Hoffa, designer Oleg Cassini, bandleader Woody Herman, coach Vince Lombardi, and athlete Jesse Owens.
Deaths included those of abolitionist Harriet Tubman, financier J. P. Morgan, emperor Menelik II of Ethiopia, and retailer Aaron Montgomery Ward.
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