2024: Difference between revisions

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* [[March 23]]: Fall Out Boy's "So Much For (2our) Dust" tour at [[Legacy Arena]].
* [[March 23]]: Fall Out Boy's "So Much For (2our) Dust" tour at [[Legacy Arena]].
* [[March 27]]: Drake's "It's All a Blur" tour with J.Cole was scheduled for [[Legacy Arena]], but was canceled.
* [[March 27]]: Drake's "It's All a Blur" tour with J.Cole was scheduled for [[Legacy Arena]], but was canceled.
* [[April 15]]–[[April 16|16]]: The [[2024 Birmingham Civil Rights Conference]] was held at [[16th Street Baptist Church]].
* [[May 4]]: The [[Birmingham Folk Festival]] was held at [[Avondale Park]].
* [[May 4]]: The [[Birmingham Folk Festival]] was held at [[Avondale Park]].
* [[May 29]]: NF's "Hope" tour at [[Legacy Arena]].
* [[May 29]]: NF's "Hope" tour at [[Legacy Arena]].

Revision as of 08:25, 4 April 2024

Logo for the MLB at Rickwood Field game on June 20, 2024

2024 is the 153rd year after the founding of the City of Birmingham.

Events

Business

Establishments

Disestablishments

Education

Government

Religion

Sports

Professional teams

Individuals

Births

Awards

Graduations

Marriages

Retirements

Deaths

Scott Richards

Works

Books

Buildings

Demolitions

Context

2024 was a presidential election year in the United States. Sports Illustrated ceased publishing. The Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore, Maryland collapsed after being stuck by a container ship.

Notable people who died in 2024 included actors Louis Gossett Jr and Carl Weathers; architect Antoine Predock; comedian Richard Lewis; conductor Seiji Ozawa; film director Norman Jewison; musician Toby Keith; sculptor Richard Serra; former U.S. Senator Joe Lieberman; television host Charles Osgood; and writers John Barth and Howard Waldrop.

2020s
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