1919: Difference between revisions

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* [[January 1]]: The City of [[Fairfield]] was incorporated.
* [[January 1]]: The City of [[Fairfield]] was incorporated.
* [[January 2]]: A [[List of snowfalls|rare snowfall]] brought 5.5 inches to Birmingham.
* [[January 2]]: A [[List of snowfalls|rare snowfall]] brought 5.5 inches to Birmingham.
* [[February 28]]: The [[USS Osmond Ingram]] was launched at Quincy, Massachusetts.
* [[April 29]]: 22 miners were killed in the [[1919 Majestic Mine explosion]].
* [[April 29]]: 22 miners were killed in the [[1919 Majestic Mine explosion]].
* [[May 10]]: A [[1919 veterans parade|huge parade]] was held to welcome the returning veterans of [[World War I]]'s [[Rainbow Division]] recently arrived in [[Birmingham]].
* [[May 10]]: A [[1919 veterans parade|huge parade]] was held to welcome the returning veterans of [[World War I]]'s [[Rainbow Division]] recently arrived in [[Birmingham]].
* [[May 28]]: The Town of [[Boyles]] was incorporated.
* [[August 1]]: The [[Birmingham Branch of the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta]] opened in the [[Jefferson County Bank Building]].
* [[August 1]]: The [[Birmingham Branch of the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta]] opened in the [[Jefferson County Bank Building]].
* October: [[Engine No. 4018]] was built at the Lima Locomotive Works in Lima, Ohio
* October: [[Engine No. 4018]] was built at the Lima Locomotive Works in Lima, Ohio
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* [[Unity of Birmingham]] was founded as a prayer group led by [[Elsie Carr]].
* [[Unity of Birmingham]] was founded as a prayer group led by [[Elsie Carr]].
* [[Birmingham City Schools]] began using the platoon system at [[South Highland School]].
* [[Birmingham City Schools]] began using the platoon system at [[South Highland School]].
* [[Alley School]] was closed for three years.


===Business===
===Business===
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* The [[Trussville Furnace]] closed in the spring.
* The [[Trussville Furnace]] closed in the spring.
* The [[United Mine Workers of Alabama]] led a strike in [[Wylam]]
* The [[United Mine Workers of Alabama]] led a strike in [[Wylam]]
* [[Joy Young]] opened on [[20th Street North|20th Street]].
* [[Joy Young Restaurant]] opened on [[20th Street North|20th Street]].
* [[George Covollos|George]] and [[Annie Covollos]] closed the [[Wylam Cafe]] and moved downtown.
* [[George Covollos|George]] and [[Annie Covollos]] closed the [[Wylam Cafe]] and moved downtown.
* [[ACIPCO]] acquired the [[Beggs Pipe Foundry]].
* [[ACIPCO]] acquired the [[Beggs Pipe Foundry]].
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===Births===
===Births===
[[Image:George Wallace.jpg|right|thumb|325px|George Wallace in 1968]]
* [[January 15]]: [[Tod Griffin]], actor
* [[January 15]]: [[Tod Griffin]], actor
* [[February 21]]: [[Louis Oberdorfer]], attorney
* [[February 21]]: [[Louis Oberdorfer]], attorney
* [[March 2]]: [[Alpha Robertson]], educator
* [[March 17]]: [[Nat King Cole]], entertainer
* [[March 17]]: [[Nat King Cole]], entertainer
* [[March 18]]: [[Joe Domnanovich]], football player
* [[March 18]]: [[Joe Domnanovich]], football player
* [[April 1]]: [[Willie Patterson]], [[Birmingham Black Barons]] player
* [[April 1]]: [[Willie Patterson]], [[Birmingham Black Barons]] player
* [[April 25]]: [[Don Cummings]], [[Tuskegee Airmen|Tuskegee Airman]]
* [[April 25]]: [[Irene Jordan]], operatic soprani
* April 25: [[Don Cummings]], [[Tuskegee Airmen|Tuskegee Airman]]
* [[June 24]]: [[Nora Ezell]], quilter
* [[June 24]]: [[Nora Ezell]], quilter
* [[June 25]]: [[Cheater Sanfilippo]], speed shop owner
* [[June 29]]: [[Happy Wilson]], country singer
* [[June 29]]: [[Happy Wilson]], country singer
* [[August 14]]: [[Carl Salter]], artist
* [[August 14]]: [[Carl Salter]], artist
* [[August 25]]: [[George Wallace]], [[List of Governors of Alabama|Governor of Alabama]]
* [[August 25]]: [[George Wallace]], [[List of Governors of Alabama|Governor of Alabama]]
* [[August 28]]: [[Marvin Bass]], football coach
* [[August 28]]: [[Marvin Bass]], football coach
* [[September 5]]: [[Joseph Campbell]], ''[[Birmingham News]]'' editor
* September 5: [[Eason Balch]], attorney
* [[September 21]]: [[Marvin Harper]], preservationist
* [[September 21]]: [[Marvin Harper]], preservationist
* [[September 23]]: [[Clettus Atkinson]], newspaper columnist
* [[September 23]]: [[Clettus Atkinson]], newspaper columnist
* [[September 24]]: [[Samuel Burr]], attorney
* [[September 24]]: [[Samuel Burr]], attorney
* [[October 4]]: [[A. E. Burgess]], highway contractor
* [[October 4]]: [[A. E. Burgess]], highway contractor
* [[October 7]]: [[Bob Wood]], sporting goods dealer
* [[November 2]]: [[Sloan Bashinsky Sr]], business executive
* [[November 2]]: [[Sloan Bashinsky Sr]], business executive
* [[November 6]]: [[Benny Marshall]], sports columnist
* [[November 6]]: [[Benny Marshall]], sports columnist
* [[December 22]]: [[Aaron Aronov]], real estate developer
* [[Willie Clark]], railroad worker and civic volunteer
* [[Willie Clark]], railroad worker and civic volunteer
* [[Troy Ingram]], Klan leader and bomb maker
* [[Troy Ingram]], Klan leader and bomb maker
* [[Harry Lipson Jr]], University of Alabama marketing professor
* [[Harry Lipson Jr]], University of Alabama marketing professor
* [[Ossie Ware Mitchell]], [[Birmingham Board of Education]] president
* [[George M. Murray]], Episcopal Bishop of Alabama
* [[George M. Murray]], Episcopal Bishop of Alabama
* [[E. C. Overton]], optometrist and [[Birmingham City Council]] member
* [[E. C. Overton]], optometrist and [[Birmingham City Council]] member
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===Marriages===
===Marriages===
* [[April 30]]: [[Elizabeth Pearson|Elizabeth Price Jones]] to [[John Pearson]].
* [[April 30]]: [[Elizabeth Pearson|Elizabeth Price Jones]] to [[John Pearson]].
* [[November 19]]: [[Esther Gelders|Esther Frank]] to [[Joseph Gelders]].


===Deaths===
===Deaths===
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* [[March 26]]: [[Agnes Nicholson]], last person buried at [[Elyton Cemetery]]
* [[March 26]]: [[Agnes Nicholson]], last person buried at [[Elyton Cemetery]]
* [[April 7]]: [[Margaret Ward]], called the "Mother of Birmingham"
* [[April 7]]: [[Margaret Ward]], called the "Mother of Birmingham"
* [[April 29]]:  22 miners were killed in the [[1919 Majestic Mine explosion]].
* April 29: [[Lizzie Molton]]
* [[April 30]]: [[Henry Gray]], former [[Lieutenant Governor of Alabama|Lieutenant Governor]]
* [[April 30]]: [[Henry Gray]], former [[Lieutenant Governor of Alabama|Lieutenant Governor]]
* [[July 22]]: [[Edwin Taliaferro]], attorney
* [[September 30]]: [[Jean Galatoire]], chef and restaurateur
* [[September 30]]: [[Jean Galatoire]], chef and restaurateur



Latest revision as of 08:34, 22 March 2024

1919 was the 48th year after the founding of the city of Birmingham and the 100th anniversary of Alabama's statehood.

Events

Business

Sports

Individuals

Births

George Wallace in 1968

Marriages

Deaths

Works

Books

Buildings

Context

1919 marked the end of World War I and saw the founding of the League of Nations. It was the year of the first Miss America pageant. Atatürk began the Turkish war of independence in 1919. The 18th amendment (Prohibition) was ratified and the 19th amendment (Women's suffrage) passed the legislature. The American Communist Party was established. The Cincinnati Reds were handed the World Series championship in the "Black Sox" scandal.

Notable births in 1919 included novelist J. D. Salinger, actor Robert Stack, journalist Andy Rooney, comedian Ernie Kovacs, musician Ross Bagdasarian Sr, actor Red Buttons, actress Eva Gabor, musician Tennessee Ernie Ford, actor Jack Palance, musician Pete Seeger, singer Liberace, actress and dancer Betty Garrett, inventor Ed Yost, mountaineer Sir Edmund Hillary, economist James M. Buchanan, writer Frederik Pohl, and chemist William Lipscomb. Notable deaths included former president Theodore Roosevelt, businessman Frank Winfield Woolworth, author L. Frank Baum, businessman Henry J. Heinz, businessman and philanthropist Andrew Carnegie, and painter Pierre-Auguste Renoir.

1910s
<< 1910 1911 1912 1913 1914 1915 1916 1917 1918 1919 >>
Births - Deaths - Establishments - Events - Works