1935
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1935 was the 64th year after the founding of the City of Birmingham.
Events
- The Alabama Highway Patrol was founded with former Jefferson County Sheriff Walter McAdory as its director.
- The United States government purchased the former Trussville Furnace site for the planned Cahaba Homestead Village housing project.
- The North Birmingham Church of God was founded by Herman Drummond.
- WBRC-AM began airing NBC Radio Network programming.
- The Birmingham School of the Bible held its first classes.
- The Personnel Board of Jefferson County was founded.
- Floyd and Lallouise McGraw planted a live Christmas tree at Vincent's Town Hall.
- Frank Hartley Anderson founded the Southern Printmaker's Society.
- Donald Beatty, piloting a Sikorsky S-43, set a speed record for a flight between the continental United States and the Panama Canal Zone.
- Thanksgiving: The Apollo Boys' Choir performed for the Roosevelts at the Little White House in Warm Springs, Georgia.
Business
- The Drummond Company was founded.
- Theodore Swann sold the Swann Chemical Company.
- Walker Mattison took over as manager of the Pickwick Club.
- Glenn Messer sold his interest in the Messer Field airfield.
- The Waters family purchased the Lyric Theatre.
- O'Neal Steel established a service center at its North Avondale plant.
- The Brown-Service Funeral Company purchased the James Van Hoose residence on 20th Street South for its new headquarters.
Sports
- January 1: The 1934 Alabama Crimson Tide football team completed a national championship season by beating Stanford in the Rose Bowl.
- June 23: Legrant Scott hit a record 4 doubles in a game for the Birmingham Barons against the Atlanta Crackers.
- Jim Hayes pitched in seven games for the Washington Senators.
- Wedo Martini finished his Major League career with the Philadelphia A's.
- 1935 Birmingham Barons
- The 1935 Alabama Crimson Tide football team went 6-2-1
- Billy Bancroft succeeded Shorty Propst as coach of the Howard College Bulldogs football team.
- Howard Bailey appeared in one game with the Philadelphia Eagles.
- Rudy York was selected as the Texas League's Most Valuable Player.
Works
- Robert Van de Graaff patented the Van de Graaff generator.
- Mississippi and Rumba, films starring Gail Patrick
Books
- Black to Nature, and With Benefit of Clergy, novels by Octavus Roy Cohen
Buildings
- The Blach's building was extesively remodeled.
- The Carver Theatre opened on 4th Avenue North.
- The Grant's Mill Road bridge over Lake Purdy was constructed.
- The Horton Mill Bridge over the Locust Fork River in Oneonta was completed.
- A Lane Park Arboretum was completed with the planting of 5,000 trees by the Works Progress Administration and Birmingham Federation of Garden Clubs.
- A new Loveman's building was constructed in place of the one destroyed by a 1934 fire.
- The New Ideal building was completed.
- Construction of Smithfield Court housing project began.
- The Tennessee Coal Iron & Railroad Company opened a new Tin Mill at its Fairfield Works.
- A bridge over the John Allen Branch connecting Alabaster and Siluria was completed.
- The Shannon-Wenonah Road Bridge over Little Shades Creek was completed.
Music
- "The Object of My Affection" by the Boswell Sisters
People
- Hugo Black was apponted to the Senate Committee on Education and Labor.
- Sonny Blount studied at Alabama A&M University.
- Octavus Roy Cohen moved to Hollywood to write screenplays.
- Paul Cole retired from the Birmingham Police Department.
- Claude Fore succeeded Knox Wooley as Shelby County Sheriff.
- Betty Lou Gerson began her radio acting career on "Arnold Grimm's Daughter".
- Bibb Graves succeeded Benjamin Miller as Governor of Alabama.
- Birmingham Police Department dispatcher Claude Gray began working at WAPI-AM.
- William Grubb retired from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Alabama.
- Arthur Harman succeeded Oliver Carmichael as President of Alabama College, State College for Women.
- Thomas Knight succeeded Hugh Merrill as Lieutenant Governor of Alabama.
- Abraham Mesch succeeded E. M. Levi as rabbi of Temple Beth-El.
- Fred McDuff succeeded James Hawkins as Jefferson County Sheriff.
- Harry Pembleton was hired as a staff architect for the Federal Housing Administration.
- Capers Satterlee was appointed rector of St Andrew's Episcopal Church.
- Charles Whelan, Jr was appointed to the United States Parole Commission.
- Big Joe Williams signed with Bluebird Records in St Louis, Missouri.
Births
- February 14: Robert Miller, 9th Episcopal Bishop of Alabama
- February 14: Sandra Sokol, art collector
- March 2: Gene Stallings, Alabama Crimson Tide football coach
- June 9: Kirkwood Balton, businessman
- June 24: Charlie Dees, baseball player
- October 20: Miller Gorrie, construction magnate
- October 28: Baseball player Bob Veale
- December 17: George Lindsey, actor
- December 24: Cecil Whitmire, president of Birmingham Landmarks
- Doug Barfield, Auburn Tigers football head coach
- Robert Carter, Alabama State University professor
- Chriss Doss, former Jefferson County Commission president
- Henry Emfinger, historian, museum founder
- Cleveland Hammonds, Birmingham City Schools superintendent
- Rollie Hill, mechanic and "Cookie Man"
- Roland Ingram, Jr, physician
- Jake Reiss III, bookseller
- Nolan Shivers, 49-year veteran of the Birmingham Police Department
- Charles Townsend, former principal of Jackson-Olin High School
Marriages
- July 3: Vet Boswell to John Paul Jones
- Martha Belle Hilton to James F. Sulzby, Jr
Awards
Graduations
- Writer Margaret Walker earned a bachelor of arts at the University of Chicago.
- Football player Don Hutson graduated from the University of Alabama.
- Architect Helen Davis graduated from the Alabama Polytechnic Institute.
- Architect Hugh Stubbins graduated from Harvard University.
- Restauranteur John Holcomb, Jr earned his bachelor of science in chemical engineering at the Georgia Institute of Technology
Deaths
- February: Giuseppe Moretti, sculptor
- Patti Ruffner Jacobs, suffragist leader
- Lucille Douglass, artist and printmaker
Context
Amelia Earhart became the first person to fly solo from Hawaii to California. The FBI killed the Barker Gang, including Ma Barker, in a shootout. Porky Pig made his debut in a Looney Tunes cartoon. Adolf Hitler announced German rearmament in violation of the Versailles Treaty. Persia was renamed Iran. The Dust Bowl continued to plague the western United States. The Works Progress Administration (WPA) was created. Babe Ruth appeared in his last career baseball game. Alcoholics Anonymous was founded. James J. Braddock defeated Max Baer at Madison Square Garden Bowl to win the heavyweight boxing championship of the world. The board game Monopoly was first released. The Congress of Industrial Organizations (CIO) was created.
Notable 1935 births include Elvis Presley, Sonny Bono, Bob Denver, Jimmy Swaggart, Dudley Moore, Lee Meriwether, Ron Paul, Geraldine Ferraro, Jerry Lee Lewis, and Julie Andrews. Notable deaths in 1935 included Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr., T. E. Lawrence (Lawrence of Arabia), Will Rogers, Wiley Post, Huey Long, and Walter Liggett. The Nobel Peace Prize went to Carl von Ossietzky. The top films were Mutiny on the Bounty, Becky Sharp, Top Hat, and The Littlest Rebel. Mutiny on the Bounty was Best Picture at the Academy Awards. Top hit songs included Fred Astaire & Ginger Rogers' "Cheek to Cheek", Shirley Temple's "On The Good Ship Lollipop", the Dorsey Brothers' "Lullaby of Broadway", Cole Porter's "You're the Top", and Bing Crosby's "Silent Night, Holy Night".
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