2013: Difference between revisions

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* December: [[McEnally's Mercantile]] opened in [[Clay]].
* December: [[McEnally's Mercantile]] opened in [[Clay]].
* December: The [[Alabama Biscuit Company]] opened in [[Cahaba Heights]].
* December: The [[Alabama Biscuit Company]] opened in [[Cahaba Heights]].
* [[Andy Beck]] and [[Rich Shannon]] founded [[Viper Imaging]].
* [[Jefferson County Veterans Treatment Court]]
* [[Red Mountain Makers]] was founded.
* [[Red Mountain Makers]] was founded.
* [[Will Wright]] and [[Mazi Rasulnia]] founded [[Pack Health]] at the [[Innovation Depot]].
* [[Carey Fountain]] founded [[DoReMe Media Group]].
* [[Shegun Otulana]] founded [[Therapy Brands|TheraNest]].
* [[Toshimi Hira|Toshimi]] and [[Vanessa Hira]] opened [[La Catrina]] at the [[Pinnacle at Tutwiler Farm]] in [[Trussville]]
* [[Jegil Dugger]] founded [[PYE]].
* [[Daxko]] software engineers [[Trent Kocurek]] and [[Adam Aldrich]] founded [[Airship]].


====Disestablishments====
====Disestablishments====
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* [[August 8]]: Judge [[Joseph Boohaker]] ordered the closure of [[New Woman All Women Health Care]].
* [[August 8]]: Judge [[Joseph Boohaker]] ordered the closure of [[New Woman All Women Health Care]].
* [[August 16]]: [[Pike's Hickory Pit]] closed.
* [[August 16]]: [[Pike's Hickory Pit]] closed.
* [[August 31]]: [[Marty's]] closed.
* [[August 31]]: [[Marty's PM|Marty's]] closed.
* [[Metro Bar]] closed.
* [[Metro Bar]] closed.
* [[December 15]]: The [[Eastwood K-Mart]] closed.
* [[December 15]]: The [[Eastwood K-Mart]] closed.
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=== Government ===
=== Government ===
* [[January 15]]: [[2013 State of the City address]].
* [[January 15]]: [[2013 State of the City address]].
* [[March 19]]: [[Governor of Alabama|Governor]] [[Robert Bentley]] signed Act 2013-67 creating the [[Alabama Law Enforcement Agency]].
* [[May 14]]: The [[Birmingham City Council]] passed the "[[Kevin Felder ordinance]]" establishing stiff security and reporting requirements for nightclubs.
* [[May 14]]: The [[Birmingham City Council]] passed the "[[Kevin Felder ordinance]]" establishing stiff security and reporting requirements for nightclubs.
* The [[Jefferson Rehabilitation and Health Center]] in [[Ketona]] was sold to Tara Jane, LLC, of Orchard Park, New York
* The [[Jefferson Rehabilitation and Health Center]] in [[Ketona]] was sold to Tara Jane, LLC, of Orchard Park, New York
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* [[January 24]]: The [[Shades Valley Family YMCA]] renovations had their official ribbon-cutting ceremony.
* [[January 24]]: The [[Shades Valley Family YMCA]] renovations had their official ribbon-cutting ceremony.
* [[September 1]]: [[Rachel Lindley]] began her tenure as news director for [[WBHM-FM]].
* [[September 1]]: [[Rachel Lindley]] began her tenure as news director for [[WBHM-FM]].
* [[Julian Maha]] founded [[KultureCity]].


===Sports===
===Sports===
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* [[January 14]]: [[Jeremy Littleton]] was appointed chief of [[Montevallo Police Department]].
* [[January 14]]: [[Jeremy Littleton]] was appointed chief of [[Montevallo Police Department]].
* [[February 8]]: [[Ray Watts]] succeeded [[Richard Marchase]] as [[List of UAB presidents|President]] of [[UAB]].
* [[February 8]]: [[Ray Watts]] succeeded [[Richard Marchase]] as [[List of UAB presidents|President]] of [[UAB]].
* [[march 28]]:  Former Alabama State Trooper commander [[Keith Kelley]] was sentenced in federal court for a [[2007]] sexual misconduct case in [[Pelham]].
* [[May 6]]: Attorney [[Jim Porter]] became president of the National Rifle Association.
* [[May 6]]: Attorney [[Jim Porter]] became president of the National Rifle Association.
* [[August 2]]: Former [[JCCEO]] director [[Gayle Cunningham]] and her daughter, [[Kelli Caulfield]], pleaded guilty to theft from JCCEO accounts.
* [[August 2]]: Former [[JCCEO]] director [[Gayle Cunningham]] and her daughter, [[Kelli Caulfield]], pleaded guilty to theft from JCCEO accounts.
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* [[May 17]]: [[Moody Duff]], Deputy Chief for the [[Birmingham Police Department]]
* [[May 17]]: [[Moody Duff]], Deputy Chief for the [[Birmingham Police Department]]
* September: [[Frank Topping]], Director of Institutional Advancement, Planning, and Development at [[Miles College]]
* September: [[Frank Topping]], Director of Institutional Advancement, Planning, and Development at [[Miles College]]
* December: [[Suzanne Durham]] retired from [[YWCA Central Alabama]]
* [[December 31]]: [[Samuetta Drew]], Chief of Operations for [[Birmingham City Schools]]
* [[December 31]]: [[Samuetta Drew]], Chief of Operations for [[Birmingham City Schools]]
* [[John L. Carroll]], dean of the [[Cumberland School of Law]]
* [[John L. Carroll]], dean of the [[Cumberland School of Law]]
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[[Image:Virgil Trucks.jpg|right|thumb|125px|Virgil Trucks (1917-2013)]]
[[Image:Virgil Trucks.jpg|right|thumb|125px|Virgil Trucks (1917-2013)]]
[[Image:Maxine Parker.jpg|right|thumb|125px|Maxine Parker (1944-2013)]]
[[Image:Maxine Parker.jpg|right|thumb|125px|Maxine Parker (1944-2013)]]
* [[January 9]]: [[Alfred Jaffe]], business owner
* [[January 17]]: [[James Hood]], integrated the [[University of Alabama]]
* [[January 17]]: [[James Hood]], integrated the [[University of Alabama]]
* [[January 19]]: [[Russell Yarbrough]], [[Birmingham City Council]] member
* [[January 19]]: [[Russell Yarbrough]], [[Birmingham City Council]] member
* [[January 19]]: [[UAB]] physician [[Basil Hirschowitz]]
* [[January 23]]: [[Doug Waits]], [[Birmingham-Southern College]] biology professor
* [[January 23]]: [[Doug Waits]], [[Birmingham-Southern College]] biology professor
* [[January 27]]: [[Henry David DeBardeleben]], TV and film producer
* [[January 27]]: [[Henry David DeBardeleben]], TV and film producer
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* [[July 1]]: [[Frank Parsons]], attorney and [[1979 Birmingham mayoral election|1979 mayoral candidate]]
* [[July 1]]: [[Frank Parsons]], attorney and [[1979 Birmingham mayoral election|1979 mayoral candidate]]
* [[July 4]]: [[Errol Milliard]], Army combat engineer, killed by rocket-propelled grenade in Afghanistan
* [[July 4]]: [[Errol Milliard]], Army combat engineer, killed by rocket-propelled grenade in Afghanistan
* [[July 22]]: [[Hugo Black, Jr]], attorney
* [[July 5]]: [[Virginia Liles]], art history professor and college administrator
* [[July 22]]: [[Hugo Black Jr]], attorney
* [[July 29]]: [[Ed Sprague]], building supplier
* [[July 29]]: [[Ed Sprague]], building supplier
* [[August 2]]: [[Bill Tant]], diving instructor and promoter
* [[August 2]]: [[Bill Tant]], diving instructor and promoter
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* [[September 23]]: [[Tat Bailey]], electrician and landscape artist
* [[September 23]]: [[Tat Bailey]], electrician and landscape artist
* [[September 27]]: [[Caldwell Marks]], co-founder of [[Motion Industries]]
* [[September 27]]: [[Caldwell Marks]], co-founder of [[Motion Industries]]
* [[September 29]]: [[W. L. Williams, Jr]], attorney
* [[September 29]]: [[W. L. Williams Jr]], attorney
* [[October 15]]: [[Murray Kidd]], architect
* [[October 15]]: [[Murray Kidd]], architect
* [[October 23]]: [[Melvin Miller]], former [[Birmingham Park and Recreation Board]] director
* [[October 23]]: [[Melvin Miller]], former [[Birmingham Park and Recreation Board]] director
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* October 24: [[Dewey White]], pediatrician and state legislator
* October 24: [[Dewey White]], pediatrician and state legislator
* [[October 28]]: [[Adolphus Bell]], blues musician
* [[October 28]]: [[Adolphus Bell]], blues musician
* [[November 8]]: [[Bob Scranton]], former [[Birmingham Barons]] executive
* [[November 9]]: [[Robert Brissie]], [[Jefferson County Medical Examiner]]
* [[November 9]]: [[Robert Brissie]], [[Jefferson County Medical Examiner]]
* November 9: [[Dave McDaniel]], radio host and sportscaster
* November 9: [[Dave McDaniel]], radio host and sportscaster
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* ''Mickey and Willie: Mantle and Mays, the Parallel Lives of Baseball’s Golden Age'' by [[Allen Barra]]
* ''Mickey and Willie: Mantle and Mays, the Parallel Lives of Baseball’s Golden Age'' by [[Allen Barra]]
* ''[[When Winning Was Everything: Alabama Football Players in World War II]]'' by [[Paul Bryant Jr]] and [[Delbert Reed]]
* ''[[When Winning Was Everything: Alabama Football Players in World War II]]'' by [[Paul Bryant Jr]] and [[Delbert Reed]]
* ''[[In Love with Defeat: The Making of a Southern Liberal]]'', autobiography by [[Brandy Ayers]]
* ''[[The Tragic City: Birmingham 1963-2013|The Tragic City]]'' by "Paul Kersey" ([[Michael J. Thompson]])


==See Also==
==See Also==

Latest revision as of 15:56, 25 September 2023

2013 was the 142nd year after the founding of the City of Birmingham.

Events

50 Years Forward logo

Business

Establishments

Disestablishments

Education

Government

Nonprofits

Sports

Individuals

Births

Awards

Marriages

Retirements

Deaths

Marty Eagle (1941-2013)
Hardrock Gunter (1925-2013)
Virgil Trucks (1917-2013)
Maxine Parker (1944-2013)
See also List of Birmingham homicides in 2013 and List of homicides in 2013

Works

Regions Field

Buildings

Demolitions

Books

See Also

Context

In 2013, a meteor exploded over the Russian city of Chelyabinsk, injuring 1,491 people and damaging over 4,300 buildings. Benedict XVI resigned as pope. Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio of Argentina was elected the 266th pope, whereupon he took the name Francis. Two Chechen Islamist brothers exploded two bombs at the Boston Marathon, killing 3 and injuring 264 others. An eight-story commercial building collapsed in Savar Upazila near the Bangladeshi capital of Dhaka, leaving 1,129 dead and 2,500 injured. Edward Snowden disclosed operations engaged by a U.S. government mass surveillance program to news publications and fled the country, later being granted temporary asylum in Russia.

Croatia became the 28th member of the European Union. Amid mass protests across Egypt, President Mohamed Morsi was deposed in a military coup d'état. Islamic militants attacked the Westgate shopping mall in Nairobi, killing at least 62 civilians and wounding over 170. Typhoon Haiyan "Yolanda", one of the strongest tropical cyclones on record, hit the Philippines and Vietnam, causing devastation with at least 6,149 dead. Chinese spacecraft Chang'e 3, carrying the Yutu rover, became the first spacecraft to "soft"-land on the Moon since 1976.

The top-grossing films of 2013 were The Hunger Games: Catching Fire, Iron Man 3, Despicable Me 2, Frozen, and Man of Steel.

Television series that ended in 2013 included 30 Rock, Hoarders, CSI: NY, The Office, Futurama (again), Burn Notice, Dexter, Breaking Bad, and What Not to Wear.

Top pop music hits in 2013 included "Blurred Lines" by Robin Thicke featuring T.I. and Pharrell, "Royals" by Lorde, "Thrift Shop" by Macklemore and Ryan Lewis featuring Wanz, "Harlem Shake" by Baauer, and "Can't Hold Us" by Macklemore and Ryan Lewis featuring Ray Dalton. Daft Punk's "Get Lucky" featuring Pharrell Williams took Grammy Awards for Record of the Year and Best Pop Duo/Group Performance, while their album Random Access Memories took Album of the Year, Best Dance/Electronica Album, and Best Engineered Album, Non-Classical. Song of the Year went to "Royals" by Lorde. Best New Artist was a tie, going to Macklemore and Ryan Lewis.

Notable births in 2013 included Prince George of Cambridge. Notable deaths included singer Patti Page, former New York mayor Ed Koch, physicist Donald A. Glaser, President of Venezuela Hugo Chávez, film critic Roger Ebert, former U.K. prime minister Margaret Thatcher, comedian Jonathan Winters, country music singer George Jones, singer and actress Deanna Durbin, actress Jean Stapleton, swimmer and actress Esther Williams, author Richard Matheson, media personality David Frost, writer Frederik Pohl, engineer Ray Dolby, author Tom Clancy, astronaut Scott Carpenter, actress Marcia Wallace, musician Lou Reed, actor Paul Walker, actor Peter O'Toole, and actor James Avery.

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