2023: Difference between revisions

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* August: [[STIX]] restaurant at the [[Riverchase Galleria]] reopened with new owners.
* August: [[STIX]] restaurant at the [[Riverchase Galleria]] reopened with new owners.
* Fall: [[Tracy Delaney]] opened [[Maple Avenue Coffee House]] in [[Trussville]].
* Fall: [[Tracy Delaney]] opened [[Maple Avenue Coffee House]] in [[Trussville]].
* [[Therita Lawler]] and [[Michelle Jones]] founded [[Lawler-Jones Real Estate & Development]]
* [[November 4]]: [[Donald Band|Donald]] and [[Erica Band]] opened [[Big Doon's BBQ]] in [[Hueytown]].
* [[November 4]]: [[Donald Band|Donald]] and [[Erica Band]] opened [[Big Doon's BBQ]] in [[Hueytown]].
* [[December 30]]: [[April Curry|April]] and [[Derrick Curry]] opened the [[I Do Wedding Chapel]] at 9433 [[Parkway East]].
* [[December 30]]: [[April Curry|April]] and [[Derrick Curry]] opened the [[I Do Wedding Chapel]] at 9433 [[Parkway East]].
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* December: [[U.S. Steel]] announced that it would be acquired by Nippon Steel of Tokyo, Japan.
* December: [[U.S. Steel]] announced that it would be acquired by Nippon Steel of Tokyo, Japan.
* December: The [[UAB Proton Therapy Center]] closed.
* December: The [[UAB Proton Therapy Center]] closed.
* December: [[Club Duquette]] in [[Woodlawn]] closed.
* [[December 22]]: [[Smoke House Steak & Seafood Restaurant]] closed.
* [[December 22]]: [[Smoke House Steak & Seafood Restaurant]] closed.
* [[December 29]]: [[Dondi & Shell's Food Oasis]] in [[Helena]] closed.
* [[December 29]]: [[Dondi & Shell's Food Oasis]] in [[Helena]] closed.
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===Religion===
===Religion===
* [[May 11]]: The [[North Alabama Conference of the United Methodist Church]] accepted the disaffiliation of 135 churches.
* [[May 11]]: The [[North Alabama Conference of the United Methodist Church]] accepted the disaffiliation of 132 churches.


===Sports===
===Sports===
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* [[November 22]]: [[Steve Gilmer]], antiques dealer
* [[November 22]]: [[Steve Gilmer]], antiques dealer
* November: [[Bob (bobcat)]], [[Birmingham Zoo]] animal
* November: [[Bob (bobcat)]], [[Birmingham Zoo]] animal
* [[December 1]]: [[Ezekiel Hameen]], restaurateur  
* [[December 1]]: [[Ezekiel Hameen]], restaurateur
* December 1: [Mary Allen Jolley]], political activist
* [[December 3]]: [[Carol Nunnelley]], journalist
* [[December 3]]: [[Carol Nunnelley]], journalist
* [[December 5]]: [[David Ullrich]], [[Birmingham-Southern College]] English professor
* [[December 5]]: [[David Ullrich]], [[Birmingham-Southern College]] English professor
* [[December 18]]: [[William Flippo]], former [[Gardendale]] city councilman  
* [[December 18]]: [[William Flippo]], former [[Gardendale]] city councilman  
* [[December 23]]: [[Jill Madajczyk]], [[City of Birmingham]] chief compliance officer
* [[December 23]]: [[Jill Madajczyk]], [[City of Birmingham]] chief compliance officer
* [[December 29]]: Historian [[Kermit Dooley]]
** [[List of homicides in 2023]]
** [[List of homicides in 2023]]



Latest revision as of 15:07, 19 April 2024

2023 was the 152nd year after the founding of the City of Birmingham.

Events

Business

Establishments

Disestablishments

Final front page of The Birmingham News, published February 26, 2023
Lloyd's Restaurant in Inverness closed on October 15, 2023

Education

Government

Religion

Sports

Professional teams

Individuals

Births

Awards

Graduations

Marriages

Retirements

Deaths

Catherine Burks-Brooks
Country Boy Eddie
Karl Seitz

Works

Books

Buildings

UAB Science & Engineering Complex

Demolitions

Context

In 2023 Ukraine continued to defend itself against Russian invaders. The United States ended its "national emergency" relating to the COVID-19 pandemic. Retailers Tuesday Morning and Bed, Bath & Beyond went into bankruptcy liquidation. Former President Donald Trump was indicted by grand juries in Washington D.C.; New York City; and Atlanta, Georgia. Wildfires in Maui, Hawaii killed nearly 100 people. Hamas' Al-Qassam Brigades carried out a massive terrorist strike in Israel, provoking a devastating war of retaliation in Gaza. In December Pope Francis formally approved the blessing of same-sex marriages.

Notable people who died in 2023 include actors Alan Arkin, Richard Belzer, Andre Braugher, Ryan O'Neal, Lance Reddick, Paul Reubens, Richard Roundtree, Suzanne Somers, Chaim Topol, Cindy Williams, Treat Williams, and Raquel Welch; architect Rafael Viñoly; authors Martin Amis, Milan Kundera and Cormac McCarthy; basektball coach Bobby Knight; bomber Ted Kaczynski; cartoonists Al Jaffee and Sam Gross; comedian Barry Humphries; film director William Friedkin; former First Lady Rosalynn Carter; football player Jim Brown; hockey player Bobby Hull; game show host Bob Barker; musicians Burt Bacharach, Jeff Beck, Harry Belafonte, Tony Bennett, Jimmy Buffett, Bobby Caldwell, David Crosby, Astrud Gilberto, Gordon Lightfoot, Sinéad O'Connor, Lisa Marie Presley, Wayne Shorter, and Tina Turner; poet Charles Simic; photographer Kwame Brathwaite; former U.S. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger; U.S. senator Dianne Feinstein; U.S. Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O'Connor; sculptor Fernando Botero; television hosts Pat Robertson and Jerry Springer; television producer Norman Lear; and wrestler Hossein "The Iron Sheik" Khosrow.

2020s
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