11th Avenue United Methodist Church: Difference between revisions

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[[File:1903 11th Ave Methodist rendering.jpg|right|thumb|1903 rendering for 11th Avenue Methodist Church]]
#REDIRECT [[The Church at Ross Bridge]]
[[Image:11th Avenue Methodist Church.jpg|right|thumb|375px|11th Avenue UMC in June 2009]]
The '''11th Avenue United Methodist Church''', located on the northeast corner of [[12th Street South|12th Street]] and [[11th Avenue South]] was one of three churches built in the same neighborhood of [[Southside]] in the early 20th century. Along with [[2nd Presbyterian Church]] and [[St Andrew's Episcopal Church]], the three served the growing southwest area of [[Birmingham]] as the city's population was spreading out from the old downtown.
 
The church was organized by a hundred people on [[December 8]], [[1903]] as '''11th Avenue Methodist Episcopal Church, South'''. It met in a frame building before constructing a $25,000 gray stone building in [[1904]], while [[W. E. Morris]] was pastor. Like many United Methodist Churches, 11th Avenue UMC was built of heavy stone, "for the ages". A tall belltower on the corner and turret roof on the opposite side of the narthex were either never completed or later removed.
 
Changing demographics and the development of [[UAB]] meant that many congregants had moved away from the area, but, as late as the early 1970s, the church was committed to remaining in place and reaching out to its neighbors with day care and evening educational classes. The size of the congregation, however, dwindled to the point that, in the 1990s the church closed its doors and sold the building to [[HealthSouth]]. The remaining members founded [[Aldersgate United Methodist Church]] in [[Oxmoor Valley]]. The Southside building was boarded up and remained vacant.
 
[[UAB]] acquired the property when it purchased HealthSouth's [[UAB Hospital-Highlands|southside hospital]] in April [[2006]]. Former Birmingham City Council member [[John Katopodis]] claimed that the building had been promised to him, but UAB took possession after a settlement was reached.
 
In December, 2006 UAB officials made plans to re-roof the deteriorating structure to help preserve its condition for possible future re-use. In [[2008]] the roof was found to still be caving in and the university had made no decision about future use of the property. In February [[2009]] UAB announced that it would demolish the building in order to construct a parking deck adjacent to its planned [[UAB Art Institute]]. Demolition took place in August [[2009]].
 
==Pastors==
* [[W. E. Morris]], [[1904]]
* [[Weyman Crumpton]], [[1971]]
 
==References==
* "Year Has Been Conspicuous For New Church Buildings" (July 1, 1903) {{BN}}, p. 33
* Casson, Barbara (October 8, 1971) "[http://bplonline.cdmhost.com/u?/p4017coll2,985 Coordination lack seems to hurt groups' efforts on Southside]." ''Birmingham Post-Herald'', via Birmingham Public Library Digital Collections
* "Century of Worship: The Story of Service to God and Man, First United Methodist Church, Birmingham, Alabama" (1972) Birmingham, AL: First United Methodist Church
* Coman, Victoria L. (December 22, 2006) "Forlorn Southside church gets assist". ''Birmingham News''
* DeButts, Jimmy (June 27, 2008) "UAB completes city property deal with HealthSouth." ''Birmingham Business Journal''
* DeButts, Jimmy (February 20, 2009) "UAB tearing down landmark church to build parking deck." ''Birmingham Business Journal''
 
==External links==
* [http://www.flickr.com/photos/8200094@N06/sets/72157621824803521/ Demolition photos] on Flickr.com
 
[[Category:Former Methodist churches]]
[[Category:1903 establishments]]
[[Category:1904 buildings]]
[[Category:Former UAB buildings]]
[[Category:12th Street South]]
[[Category:11th Avenue South]]
[[Category:2009 demolitions]]

Latest revision as of 18:07, 16 July 2022