1959: Difference between revisions

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* The [[Birmingham Zoo|Jimmy Morgan Zoo]] traded a pair of Siberian Tiger cubs for a pair of Siamese "black panthers" (melanistic leopards).
* The [[Birmingham Zoo|Jimmy Morgan Zoo]] traded a pair of Siberian Tiger cubs for a pair of Siamese "black panthers" (melanistic leopards).
* [[Mama Petite]], a hippopotamus, was captured and brought to the Jimmy Morgan Zoo.
* [[Mama Petite]], a hippopotamus, was captured and brought to the Jimmy Morgan Zoo.
* [[Mountain Brook]] established its own [[Mountain Brook Schools|school system]].
* The end of the [[Vestavia Hills Shopping Center]] grand opening events featured an appearance of Esther Williams.
* The end of the [[Vestavia Hills Shopping Center]] grand opening events featured an appearance of Esther Williams.


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* The first [[Catfish King]] restaurant opened.
* The first [[Catfish King]] restaurant opened.
* The [[Coffee Cup Restaurant]] was established.
* The [[Coffee Cup Restaurant]] was established.
* Metal fabricator [[Cullman Products Corporation]] was founded.
* [[Fife's Restaurant]] opened.
* [[Fife's Restaurant]] opened.
* [[Jefferson Federal Savings and Loan Association]] opened its [[Roebuck Shopping Center]] branch.
* [[Jefferson Federal Savings and Loan Association]] opened its [[Roebuck Shopping Center]] branch.
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* [[February 5]]: Women's clothier [[New Williams]] opened their [[Five Points West]] location.
* [[February 5]]: Women's clothier [[New Williams]] opened their [[Five Points West]] location.
* [[Pioneer Cafeteria]] opened its first location on [[Parkway East]] near the [[Gadsden Highway]].
* [[Pioneer Cafeteria]] opened its first location on [[Parkway East]] near the [[Gadsden Highway]].
* [[Sam Pizitz|Sam]] and [[Isadore Pizitz]] sold the [[Pizitz]] chain to [[John S. Jemison and Associates]].
* [[Sam Pizitz|Sam]] and [[Isadore Pizitz]] sold the [[Pizitz of Tuscaloosa]] chain to [[John S. Jemison and Associates]].
* The first [[Sherer's Drive-In]] opened near [[Jasper]].
* The first [[Sherer's Drive-In]] opened near [[Jasper]].
* The J.W. Valentine Company purchased the [[Buck Creek Mill|Siluria Mills]].
* The J.W. Valentine Company purchased the [[Buck Creek Mill|Siluria Mills]].
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===Education===
===Education===
* [[Kermit Johnson]] became superintendent of the [[Jefferson County Board of Education]].
* [[Mountain Brook]] established its own [[Mountain Brook Schools|school system]].
* The [[UAB School of Medicine]] founded its division of gastroenterology with [[Basil Hirschowitz]] as director.
* The [[UAB School of Medicine]] founded its division of gastroenterology with [[Basil Hirschowitz]] as director.


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==Individuals==
==Individuals==
* [[Tom Briskey]] was forced out as directory of the [[Birmingham Zoo]].
* [[Mitty Collier]] won Al Benson's talent show for six straight weeks, gaining a slot on a bill with B. B. King and Etta James as a prize.
* [[Kenneth Daniel]] was promoted to vice-president for engineering and purchases of [[American Cast Iron Pipe Company|ACIPCO]].
* [[Kenneth Daniel]] was promoted to vice-president for engineering and purchases of [[American Cast Iron Pipe Company|ACIPCO]].
* [[Cooper Green]] was promoted to Executive Vice President of [[Alabama Power]] and joined the company's Board of Directors.
* [[Cooper Green]] was promoted to Executive Vice President of [[Alabama Power]] and joined the company's Board of Directors.
* [[Bob Moody]] took the job as a conceptual artist for NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center.
* Architect [[William Poole]] joined the firm of [[Mims and Gaunt|Pembleton and Mims]] as an associate.
* Architect [[William Poole]] joined the firm of [[Mims and Gaunt|Pembleton and Mims]] as an associate.
* [[William Powell]] left the U.S. Army Reserves.
* [[William Powell]] left the U.S. Army Reserves.
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* [[Mack Russell]] left Birmingham for Atlanta after a promotion by Wilby-Kincey.
* [[Mack Russell]] left Birmingham for Atlanta after a promotion by Wilby-Kincey.
* [[Ezra Sims]] made his professional debut on a Composers Forum program in New York.
* [[Ezra Sims]] made his professional debut on a Composers Forum program in New York.
* [[Ted Tibbs]] accepted a position at [[Samford University|Howard College]].
* [[Jim Woodward]] joined the [[Bessemer Police Department]].


===Births===
===Births===
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* [[John Claypool]] from the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary with a doctorate of theology.
* [[John Claypool]] from the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary with a doctorate of theology.
* [[John Cross]] from Virginia Union University with a master's of divinity.
* [[John Cross]] from Virginia Union University with a master's of divinity.
* [[Charles Crowder]] from [[Auburn University]] with a bachelor's degree.
* [[Ted Galloway]] from the University of Alabama with a bachelor's degree.
* [[Gail Godwin]] from the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill with a B.A. in journalism.
* [[Gail Godwin]] from the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill with a B.A. in journalism.
* [[Douglas E. Jones]] with a Ph. D. from Louisiana State University.
* [[A. D. King]] from Morehouse College.
* [[A. D. King]] from Morehouse College.
* [[Dannetta K. Thornton Owens]] from Fisk University with a bachelor's degree in modern foreign languages.
* [[Dannetta K. Thornton Owens]] from Fisk University with a bachelor's degree in modern foreign languages.
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===Marriages===
===Marriages===
* Choreographer [[Richard Englund]] to ballerina [[Gage Bush Englund|Gage Bush]].
* Choreographer [[Richard Englund]] to ballerina [[Gage Bush Englund|Gage Bush]].
* [[Cleveland Hammonds]] to the former Yvonne Parks.


===Awards===
===Awards===
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* [[Miss Alabama]]: [[Betty Lindstrom]]
* [[Miss Alabama]]: [[Betty Lindstrom]]
* [[Mr Crestwood]]: [[Carl Salter]]
* [[Mr Crestwood]]: [[Carl Salter]]
* [[Monday Morning Quarterback Club]] Coach of the Year: [[Thompson Reynolds]]


[[Image:Octavus Roy Cohen.jpg|right|thumb|150px|Octavus Roy Cohen]]
[[Image:Octavus Roy Cohen.jpg|right|thumb|150px|Octavus Roy Cohen]]
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* [[June 24]]: [[Jimmy Hitchcock]], football and baseball player
* [[June 24]]: [[Jimmy Hitchcock]], football and baseball player
* [[December 1]]: [[Avery Parrish]], jazz pianist
* [[December 1]]: [[Avery Parrish]], jazz pianist
* [[Toney Carnaggio]], restaurateur
* [[E. E. Forbes]], businessman
* [[E. E. Forbes]], businessman
* [[Louis Pizitz]], merchant
* [[Louis Pizitz]], merchant


==Works==
==Works==
* ''My Eyes Have Seen'' album by [[Odetta]]
* ''Porgy and Bess'' film, featuring the singing voice of [[Loulie Jean Norman]]
* ''Porgy and Bess'' film, featuring the singing voice of [[Loulie Jean Norman]]


<!--===Books===-->
===Books===
* ''The Americanization of Emily E.P. Dutton'' by [[William Bradford Huie]]
* ''Wolf Whistle and Other Stories'' by William Bradford Huie
 
===Buildings===
===Buildings===
[[Image:PilgrimConglBirminghamAL.png|right|thumb||Pilgrim Congregational Church's 1959 "blue roof" building on Montclair Road]]
[[Image:PilgrimConglBirminghamAL.png|right|thumb||Pilgrim Congregational Church's 1959 "blue roof" building on Montclair Road]]
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* [[John's City Diner|John's Restaurant]] renovations and remodeling
* [[John's City Diner|John's Restaurant]] renovations and remodeling
* [[Kessler Building]] renovations
* [[Kessler Building]] renovations
* [[Charles W. Ireland Sculpture Garden|Memorial Garden]] at the rear of the [[Birmingham Museum of Art]]
* [[Oliver Elementary School]]
* [[Oliver Elementary School]]
* [[Ollie's Barbecue]] addition
* [[Ollie's Barbecue]] addition
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* Seibert Hall at [[Samford University]]
* Seibert Hall at [[Samford University]]
* [[Shelby Baptist Medical Center|Shelby Memorial Hospital]]
* [[Shelby Baptist Medical Center|Shelby Memorial Hospital]]
* [[Unitarian Universalist Church of Birmingham]] (original location)
* [[Vestavia Hills Shopping Center]]
* [[Vestavia Hills Shopping Center]]
* [[Vulcan]]'s pedestal repairs
* [[Vulcan]]'s pedestal repairs
* Oscar Wells Memorial Building for the [[Birmingham Museum of Art]]
* Oscar Wells Memorial Building for the [[Birmingham Museum of Art]]
=== Music ===
* "Are You Willing, Willie?" by [[Marion Worth]]
* "Handy Man" by [[Jimmy Jones (singer)|Jimmy Jones]]
* ''My Eyes Have Seen'' album by [[Odetta]]


== Gallery ==
== Gallery ==

Revision as of 12:59, 12 September 2012

1959 was the 88th year after the founding of the city of Birmingham.

Events

Business

Civil Rights Movement

Education

Government

Non-profits

Religion

Alabama Crimson Tide logo 1959-1993.png

Sports

Individuals

Births

Mike Anderson
Emanuel Ford
Daniel Wallace

Graduations

Marriages

Awards

Octavus Roy Cohen

Deaths

Works

Books

  • The Americanization of Emily E.P. Dutton by William Bradford Huie
  • Wolf Whistle and Other Stories by William Bradford Huie

Buildings

Pilgrim Congregational Church's 1959 "blue roof" building on Montclair Road

Music

Gallery

Context

In 1959, Alaska and Hawaii were admitted as the 49th & 50th states. The Cuban Revolution ended with Fidel Castro's 26th of July Movement taking power. A chartered plane carrying musicians Buddy Holly, Ritchie Valens, and the Big Bopper and pilot Roger Peterson crashed, killing all aboard. American Airlines Flight 320, departing New York City, crashed into the East River, killing 65 of the 73 people on board. Lee Petty won the first Daytona 500. The Barbie doll debuted. NASA announced its selection of seven military pilots to become the first U.S. astronauts. The Saint Lawrence Seaway opened. Explorer 6 sent the first picture of Earth from orbit. The Antarctic Treaty sets aside Antarctica as a scientific preserve and bans military activity on that continent. Pantyhose debuted on the open market.

Notable books published in 1959 included The Elements of Style by William Strunk Jr. and E. B. White, Psycho by Robert Bloch, Cat Among the Pigeons by Agatha Christie, The Manchurian Candidate by Richard Condon, Goldfinger by Ian Fleming, Starship Troopers by Robert A. Heinlein, The Haunting of Hill House by Shirley Jackson, A Separate Peace by John Knowles, The Ugly American by William J. Lederer and Eugene L. Burdick, The Sirens of Titan by Kurt Vonnegut, Goodbye, Columbus by Philip Roth which won the National Book Award for Fiction, and Advise and Consent by Allen Drury which won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction. New drama that debuted included A Raisin in the Sun by Lorraine Hansberry.

The top music hits of 1959 included "Stagger Lee" by Lloyd Price, "Venus" by Frankie Avalon, "Come Softly to Me" by The Fleetwoods, "The Battle of New Orleans" by Johnny Horton which won Grammy Awards for both Song of the Year and Best Country & Western Performance, "Lonely Boy" by Paul Anka, "The Three Bells" by The Browns, and "Mack the Knife" by Bobby Darin which won Record of the Year. Bobby Darin was also named Best New Artist. Album of the Year went to Frank Sinatra for Come Dance with Me!, who also netted the Grammy for Best Vocal Performance, Male. Ella Fitzgerald won Best Vocal Performance, Female.

Top grossing films in 1959 included Ben-Hur, Sleeping Beauty (re-release), Some Like It Hot, Imitation of Life, and Operation Petticoat. Ben-Hur won Best Picture, Best Director (William Wyler), and Best Actor (Charlton Heston) at the Academy Awards. Best Actress went to Simone Signoret for Room at the Top.

Television shows that debuted in 1959 included Rawhide, The Bell Telephone Hour, Bonanza, The Twilight Zone, Dennis the Menace, Hawaiian Eye, and The Untouchables. Long-running shows that ended included Your Hit Parade, Dragnet, and Mickey Mouse Club.

Notable births in 1959 included actor Clancy Brown; NASCAR driver Mark Martin; tennis player John McEnroe; actor Tom Arnold; rapper Flavor Flav; singer Irene Cara; actor David Hyde Pierce; musician Brian Setzer; actress Emma Thompson; singer Sheena Easton; video game designer Peter Molyneux; singer Morrissey; wrestler Kevin Nash; actor Kevin Spacey; basketball player Magic Johnson; spiritualist David Koresh; actor Jason Alexander; actor Jack Wagner; television personality and producer Simon Cowell; singer Marie Osmond; Sarah, Duchess of York; comedy musician "Weird Al" Yankovic; television host Nancy Grace; singer Bryan Adams; and comedian Tracey Ullman.

Notable deaths included film director Cecil B. DeMille, musicians The Big Bopper, Buddy Holly, & Ritchie Valens, comedian Lou Costello, writer Raymond Chandler, architect Frank Lloyd Wright, actor George Reeves, actress Ethel Barrymore, singer Billie Holiday, writer Preston Sturges, sculptor Jacob Epstein, actor Errol Flynn, boxer Max Baer, and tennis player Molla Mallory.

1950s
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Births - Deaths - Establishments - Events - Works