Bhamwiki:Common errors: Difference between revisions

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# Likewise, the [[Barber Motorsports Park]] is in the city limits of Birmingham, not [[Leeds]].
# Likewise, the [[Barber Motorsports Park]] is in the city limits of Birmingham, not [[Leeds]].
# [[Erskine Ramsay]] never offered money to parents who named their sons for him. He did once open $100 savings accounts for all those he knew of, and later sometimes sent small gifts to parents who wrote him. (See Baggett, James L. (Winter 2011) "Erskine Ramsay's many namesakes". ''Alabama Heritage''. No. 99, pp. 8-9)
# [[Erskine Ramsay]] never offered money to parents who named their sons for him. He did once open $100 savings accounts for all those he knew of, and later sometimes sent small gifts to parents who wrote him. (See Baggett, James L. (Winter 2011) "Erskine Ramsay's many namesakes". ''Alabama Heritage''. No. 99, pp. 8-9)
# The [[Vulcan Materials Company]], one of the city's largest corporations, is not named for Birmingham's [[Vulcan]], but for the Vulcan Detinning Company of Sewaren, New Jersey, which Birmingham Slag acquired in [[1956]].

Revision as of 20:26, 12 December 2011

This page collects common errors perpetuated by residents and the media:

  1. Bull Connor is often referred to as "police chief". His title was "Public Safety Commissioner" on the Birmingham City Commission, giving him influence over the police and fire departments, which he routinely abused.
  2. Ferd Weil's name is, understandably, often misspelled "Fred".
  3. It is often said that the Birmingham Terminal Station was demolished for Red Mountain Expressway. It was, in fact, demolished for a proposed federal office complex that was never realized, and the vacant site was later used for the expressway, to avoid running through Metropolitan Gardens.
  4. The Birmingham Zoo and Birmingham Botanical Gardens are both in the Birmingham city limits, not Mountain Brook.
  5. Likewise, the Barber Motorsports Park is in the city limits of Birmingham, not Leeds.
  6. Erskine Ramsay never offered money to parents who named their sons for him. He did once open $100 savings accounts for all those he knew of, and later sometimes sent small gifts to parents who wrote him. (See Baggett, James L. (Winter 2011) "Erskine Ramsay's many namesakes". Alabama Heritage. No. 99, pp. 8-9)
  7. The Vulcan Materials Company, one of the city's largest corporations, is not named for Birmingham's Vulcan, but for the Vulcan Detinning Company of Sewaren, New Jersey, which Birmingham Slag acquired in 1956.