Avondale: Difference between revisions

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The new town, incorporated in 1889, was named after the Cincinnati suburb of Avondale, which impressed the members of the company who had travelled there to seek backing for their development. Cincinnati's Avondale, in turn, was named for "Avondale Parish" in Scotland, the site of the Battle of Drumclog between Covenant and Claverhouse in 1679. The name was used in Sir Walter Scott's "Old Mortality". It is of Celtic origin, meaning "river", and thus several small rivers in Britain are so named, including the one in Warwickshire which flows past Shakespeare's Stratford.
The new town, incorporated in 1889, was named after the Cincinnati suburb of Avondale, which impressed the members of the company who had travelled there to seek backing for their development. Cincinnati's Avondale, in turn, was named for "Avondale Parish" in Scotland, the site of the Battle of Drumclog between Covenant and Claverhouse in 1679. The name was used in Sir Walter Scott's "Old Mortality". It is of Celtic origin, meaning "river", and thus several small rivers in Britain are so named, including the one in Warwickshire which flows past Shakespeare's Stratford.


[[Avondale Park]], on the slopes of [[Red Mountain]], enshrined the natural spring. Whether by agreement with King at the time it was purchased, sentiment for preserving open green spaces, or the mere fact that the steep hillside and spring-fed basin would be unsatisfactory for building, the expansive 40 acre park gave Avondale a true recreation spot. Upon Avondale's annexation, it became the largest park in Birmingham. Many landscape improvements, including a nationally-renowned rose garden, were pursued by Mayor [[George Ward]]. In time athletic fields were added. In 1911 cages were erected for a small menagerie of animals that would later become the [[Birmingham Zoo]]. The star attraction was "[[Miss Fancy]]", an erstwhile circus elephant purchased by the [[Birmingham Advertising Club]] as a promotional novelty and then donated to the city.
[[Avondale Park]], a  40-acre preserve on the slopes of [[Red Mountain]], enshrined the natural spring and was, for a while, the largest park in Birmingham. Other features included a wading pool, a pavilion, ballfields, the [[Avondale Villa|Villa]], and an early version of what would become the [[Birmingham Zoo]]. The park's amphitheater hosted a spectacular [[Pageant of Birmingham|pageant]] in celebration of Birmingham's [[Birmingham semicentennial|50th Anniversery]] in [[1931]].  
 
In 1931, a secluded pavilion called "[[Avondale Villa|The Villa]]", and a large amphitheater were constructed. that hosted a spectacular [[Pageant of Birmingham|pageant]] in celebration of Birmingham's [[Birmingham semicentennial|50th Anniversery]] in [[1931]].  


In the 1890 census, 1,000 residents were counted within the borders of the new city. Ten years later that number had tripled, and was closer to 5,000 when it was annexed into Birmingham in 1907.
In the 1890 census, 1,000 residents were counted within the borders of the new city. Ten years later that number had tripled, and was closer to 5,000 when it was annexed into Birmingham in 1907.

Revision as of 19:57, 15 June 2006

Avondale, Alabama began as a small settlement centered on a natural spring on the northern slope of Red Mountain. In 1889 it was incorporated as an independent suburb east of Birmingham with both industrial and residential growth. In 1910, it was annexed into Birmingham. It is currently divided into three separate neighborhoods; North Avondale, East Avondale and South Avondale.

History

A natural spring, called "Big Spring," in what is now Avondale Park was already known to stagecoach travelers in the mid 19th century. Proclaimed as the sweetest waters in the region, It was conveniently located near the junction of Georgia Road and Huntsville Road (present day 5th Avenue South and 41st Street). It was part of a large land grant given to two-time Jefferson County sheriff Abner Killough. In Wilson's Raid of 1865 a brief skirmish erupted between Union soldiers watering their horses at the spring and some of the local guard. The only casualty was an injury suffered from a bullet that hit Mrs Killough, who was sitting on her front porch knitting.

Killough sold the area around the spring to Peyton King, who built his home right alongside it. For a long time the location became known as "King Spring", and was a popular picnic destination for the pioneer residents of Birmingham. In 1872 the Alabama Great Southern Railway extended along the valley a few hundred yards north of the spring. A large railyard with shops and a roundhouse were built around the present 35th Street and provided significant employment in the area until they were superseded by the Finley Yards in the 1910s. Within a few years the Great Southern was joined by the Seaboard Air Line Railway and the Georgia Centrail Railway. Seaboard built a roundhouse and yards in Avondale.

The City of Avondale was founded in 1887 by the Avondale Land Company, which was owned by Benjamin F. Roden, William Morris and --- Sumner. They purchased the land from King, who specified that the 40 rugged acres surrounding the spring remain dedicated as a park. The company financed a mule-drawn streetcar line along 1st Avenue North to the proposed business district on 41st Street.

The new town, incorporated in 1889, was named after the Cincinnati suburb of Avondale, which impressed the members of the company who had travelled there to seek backing for their development. Cincinnati's Avondale, in turn, was named for "Avondale Parish" in Scotland, the site of the Battle of Drumclog between Covenant and Claverhouse in 1679. The name was used in Sir Walter Scott's "Old Mortality". It is of Celtic origin, meaning "river", and thus several small rivers in Britain are so named, including the one in Warwickshire which flows past Shakespeare's Stratford.

Avondale Park, a 40-acre preserve on the slopes of Red Mountain, enshrined the natural spring and was, for a while, the largest park in Birmingham. Other features included a wading pool, a pavilion, ballfields, the Villa, and an early version of what would become the Birmingham Zoo. The park's amphitheater hosted a spectacular pageant in celebration of Birmingham's 50th Anniversery in 1931.

In the 1890 census, 1,000 residents were counted within the borders of the new city. Ten years later that number had tripled, and was closer to 5,000 when it was annexed into Birmingham in 1907.

Avondale's first mayor, serving from 1887 to 1889 was H. F. Dusenberry. He was succeeded by F. D. Daniel, Thomas Hearn Steele, J. R. Ellard, and W. R. Starbuck. Several efforts to secure the annexation of Avondale into Birmingham failed by popular vote. In 1907 the Alabama Legislature enlarged Birmingham's boundary to include Avondale, Woodlawn, East Lake, several small West End communities, and Ensley. This "Greater Birmingham" annexation became effected on January 1, 1910.

As Avondale's commercial district grew, the Spring Branch, which was the spring's outlet, flowing north, adopted two open channels on either side of the street. Movements to improve the street by paving over the stream were frequently disussed, but it was not until Labor Day of 1925 that the street was finally paved and the stream conducted through a storm sewer in the center of the right-of-way.

Avondale Mills was built just outside the limits of the town in 1897 and became one if the area's largest employers. Important manufacturer's in Avondale included the Smith Gin Company (later merged into the Continental Gin Company, and the Avondale Stove and Foundry Company.

References

  • Barnett, Frank Willis. (September 16, 1925) "Spring Street Paving... Community's pride in progress shown." Birmingham News.
  • "Avondale History Colorful" (January 27, 1929) Birmingham News - Age-Herald
  • "Avondale Mayors" (March 6, 1953) Typescript. Birmingham Public Library. Newspaper Vertical File Collection.

External links