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[[Image:Linn Park axis 2006.jpg|right|thumb|375px|Linn Park in 2006]]
[[Image:Linn Park axis 2006.jpg|right|thumb|375px|Linn Park in 2006]]


'''Charles Linn Park''' (formerly '''Central Park''', '''Capitol Park''', and '''Woodrow Wilson Park''') anchors the municipal center of [[downtown Birmingham|downtown]] [[Birmingham]]. It occupies [[Block 21]], bounded by [[20th Street North]] and the [[Birmingham City Hall]] to the west, [[Park Place]] to the south, [[8th Avenue North]], with [[Boutwell Auditorium]] and the [[Birmingham Museum of Art]] to the north, and the [[Linn-Henley Research Library]] and the [[Jefferson County Courthouse]] to the east.
'''Charles Linn Park''' (formerly '''Central Park''', '''Capitol Park''', and '''Woodrow Wilson Park''') anchors the municipal center of [[downtown Birmingham|downtown]] [[Birmingham]]. It occupies [[Block 21]], a 610-foot by 400-foot block bounded by [[20th Street North]] and the [[Birmingham City Hall]] to the west, [[Park Place]] to the south, [[8th Avenue North]], with [[Boutwell Auditorium]] and the [[Birmingham Museum of Art]] to the north, and the [[Linn-Henley Research Library]] and the [[Jefferson County Courthouse]] to the east.


As Birmingham's primary civic space, Linn Park contains numerous monuments and memorials, and hosts several public events such as the [[Birmingham Christmas tree]] lighting ceremony, the [[Magic City Art Connection]], [[Magic City Blues Fest]] and other gatherings. It was also the home of the [[City Stages]] music festival held from [[1989]] to [[2009]].
As Birmingham's primary civic space, Linn Park contains numerous monuments and memorials, and hosts several public events such as the [[Birmingham Christmas tree]] lighting ceremony, the [[Magic City Art Connection]], [[Magic City Blues Fest]] and other gatherings. It was also the home of the [[City Stages]] music festival held from [[1989]] to [[2009]].
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The site was one of three parks included in the [[Elyton Land Company]]'s original plans for [[Birmingham]], as drafted by [[William Barker]]. Labeled "Park" on the original plat, it came to be called "Central Park" as it crowned the central spine of [[20th Street North|20th Street]] and lay midway between "East Park" (now [[Marconi Park]]) and "West Park" (now [[Kelly Ingram Park]]).
The site was one of three parks included in the [[Elyton Land Company]]'s original plans for [[Birmingham]], as drafted by [[William Barker]]. Labeled "Park" on the original plat, it came to be called "Central Park" as it crowned the central spine of [[20th Street North|20th Street]] and lay midway between "East Park" (now [[Marconi Park]]) and "West Park" (now [[Kelly Ingram Park]]).


On [[February 21]], [[1883]] the Elyton Company handed over the park's deed to [[Mayor of Birmingham|Mayor]] [[A. O. Lane]] on the condition that the city reimburse the company for the cost of a newly-installed iron fence and for the costs associated with the conveyance, fund public improvements to the property immediately, and agree to relinquish the site to the State should the city succeed in having the capital moved to Birmingham from Montgomery.
On [[February 21]], [[1883]], in exchange for $90, Elyton Company president [[Henry Caldwell]] handed over the deeds to those three parks to [[Mayor of Birmingham|Mayor]] [[A. O. Lane]], on the condition that the city also reimburse the company for the cost of a newly-installed iron fence and for the costs associated with the conveyance, fund public improvements to the property immediately, and agree to relinquish the site to the State should the city succeed in having the capital moved to Birmingham from Montgomery.


===Monuments===
[[Image:Confederate Soldiers & Sailors Monument.jpg|left|thumb|225px|The [[Confederate Soldiers & Sailors Monument|Confederate Monument]] (1905)]]
[[Image:Confederate Soldiers & Sailors Monument.jpg|left|thumb|225px|The [[Confederate Soldiers & Sailors Monument|Confederate Monument]] (1905)]]
[[File:Woodrow Wilson Park pc.jpg|left|thumb|225px|View of the park from City Hall after 1950]]
[[File:Woodrow Wilson Park pc.jpg|left|thumb|225px|View of the park from City Hall after 1950]]
In [[1886]] [[James Powell]] inserted the name "Capitol Park" into a map being produced by Beers, Ellis and Company for the "[[Atlas of the City of Birmingham and Suburbs]]". The map, published in [[1887]], showed a conjectured T-shaped building just south of the park's center as a stand-in for a future capitol building. Though [[Governor of Alabama|Governor]] [[Joseph Johnston]] briefly conducted state business from a rented store in the city during a yellow fever outbreak in Montgomery, no other steps toward relocating the capital from Montgomery were ever accomplished.
In [[1886]] [[James Powell]] inserted the name "Capitol Park" into a map being produced by Beers, Ellis and Company for the "[[Atlas of the City of Birmingham and Suburbs]]". The map, published in [[1887]], showed a conjectured T-shaped building just south of the park's center as a stand-in for a future capitol building. Though [[Governor of Alabama|Governor]] [[Joseph Johnston]] briefly conducted state business from a rented store in the city during a yellow fever outbreak in Montgomery, no other steps toward relocating the capital from Montgomery were ever accomplished.


By the time the Beers map was printed, the lots surrounding the park were built up with large fashionable houses, many in the ornate and complex Queen Anne style with effusions of brightly-painted wood porches, balconies, turrets, oriels, gables and bays. A large cast-iron [[Hudgins' Fountain|fountain]], donated to the city in the 1880s by [[T. L. Hudgins]], was moved to the park in [[1891]]. An obelisk-style [[Confederate Soldiers & Sailors Monument]] was erected between [[1894]] and [[1905]] at the park's southern end. In [[1904]] and [[1908]] two monuments sculpted by [[GIuseppi Moretti]] were dedicated at Capitol Park, the first to physician [[William Elias B. Davis statue|William Elias B. Davis]] and the second to school teacher [[Mary Cahalan statue|Mary Cahalan]]. The city constructed various curvilinear sidewalks connecting to those points of interest and planted trees between them.
By the time the Beers map was printed, the lots surrounding the park were built up with large fashionable houses, many in the ornate and complex Queen Anne style with effusions of brightly-painted wood porches, balconies, turrets, oriels, gables and bays.
 
===Monuments===
A large cast-iron [[Hudgins' Fountain|fountain]], donated to the city in the 1880s by [[T. L. Hudgins]], was moved to the park in [[1891]]. An obelisk-style [[Confederate Soldiers & Sailors Monument]] was erected between [[1894]] and [[1905]] at the park's southern end. In [[1904]] and [[1908]] two monuments sculpted by [[GIuseppi Moretti]] were dedicated at Capitol Park, the first to physician [[William Elias B. Davis statue|William Elias B. Davis]] and the second to school teacher [[Mary Cahalan statue|Mary Cahalan]]. The city constructed various curvilinear sidewalks connecting to those points of interest and planted trees between them.


The rather haphazard result was described thus by visitor Julian Street in [[1917]]:
The rather haphazard result was described thus by visitor Julian Street in [[1917]]:
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Several magnolia trees, donated by a nursery, were used to line the 7th Avenue and Short 20th Street edges of the park.
Several magnolia trees, donated by a nursery, were used to line the 7th Avenue and Short 20th Street edges of the park.


Over the years the planting bed closest to City Hall has been used to create a "[[Floral Map of Alabama]]" depicting the outline of the state with its major rivers and cities planted with contrasting-color flowers. At some point the map was modified with a central Confederate battle flag design.
Over the years the planting bed closest to City Hall has been used to create a "[[Floral Map of Alabama]]" depicting the outline of the state with its major rivers and cities planted with contrasting-color flowers.


===1980s renovation===
===1980s renovation===
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In [[2015]] the city ended the practice of waiving fees for public services related to events held at the park. The [[Magic City Art Connection]], notified of the policy change only weeks in advance, began charging a $5 admission for adults.
In [[2015]] the city ended the practice of waiving fees for public services related to events held at the park. The [[Magic City Art Connection]], notified of the policy change only weeks in advance, began charging a $5 admission for adults.


===Timeline ===
Linn Park, specifically the Confederate Memorial, became a target for vandalism during the [[2020 George Floyd protests]]. On the evening of [[May 31]] a large group, many of whom had attended an earlier protest at [[Kelly Ingram Park]], answered a call by speaker [[Jermaine Johnson]] to meet him at Linn Park to take down the memorial. Efforts to topple the 52-foot obelisk using hand tools and rope tied to a pick-up truck failed and some, prepared with spray paint and crowbars, turned their attention to the statue of Linn, who had attempted to run blockades on behalf of the Confederacy before becoming a banker and investor in Birmingham. The [[Spirit of the American Doughboy]] statue and the [[Thomas Jefferson statue]] in the park were also damaged before Mayor [[Randall Woodfin]] arrived at the scene and asked the crowd to disperse, promising to remove the Confederate Memorial himself within 24 hours. In fact Woodfin made good on that promise as crews arrived the next night to dismantle and haul away the monument.
* 1870s: An [[Alabama Mineral Exposition Building]] was built to showcase the region's mineral wealth for visitors to the city.
 
* [[January 17]], [[1883]]: The [[Birmingham Board of Aldermen]] approved a contract to take ownership of the the three originally-planned parks from the [[Elyton Land Company]] for a nominal price of $20 plus reimbursement of $90 for recent fencing.
In early August activist [[Frank Matthews]] made a public call to the [[Birmingham Parks & Recreation Board]] to rename the park in honor of [[Alabama Christian Movement for Human Rights]] founder [[Fred Shuttlesworth]] and the late [[John Lewis]], a Troy native and [[Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee|veteran]] of the [[Civil Rights Movement]] who was serving his 17th term in the U.S. House of Representatives when he died on July 17, 2020. The board voted unanimously to proceed with the suggestion during their [[August 7]] meeting.
* [[February 21]], 1883: Deeds were issued to the [[City of Birmingham]] for the three parks.
 
* [[March 8]], 1883: The city's deeds were recorded by the [[Jefferson County Probate Court]].
===2020s Re-Visioning===
* 1883: The [[Manufacturing Exposition of 1883]] used the exposition building.
In [[2022]] [[REV Birmingham]] began convening for a "Re-Visioning" process, using $350,000 in funds provided by the [[Friends of Linn Park]] and the [[Philip Morris Fund for Design Arts]] at the [[Community Foundation of Greater Birmingham]]. OJB Landscape Architecture of Houston, Texas and Trahan Architects of New Orleans, Louisiana were hired to collect community input in collaboration with [[CBG Strategies]], [[Macknally Land Design]], and [[KHAFRA]] civil engineers. Other community partners included the [[Birmingham Park and Recreation Board]], the [[Mayor's Office of Social Justice and Racial Equity]], and the [[Birmingham Museum of Art]]. [[Kelleigh Gamble]] and [[Anne Rygiel]], co-chairs of the Neighborhood Housing and Homelessness subcommittee of Mayor [[Randall Woodfin]]'s transition team, also participated in the process.
* [[November 24]], 1883: A mob broke [[Lewis Houston]] out of the [[Jefferson County Courthouse (1875)|Jefferson County Jail]] and [[List of Jefferson County lynchings|lynched]] him from a pine tree in the park.
 
* [[1884]]: [[James Garrett]] planted four [[gingko]] trees in the park.
After a public workshops and several surveys, Re-Vision Linn Park arrived at a short list of desired amenities for the park, including community space, a shade structure, a park café, and children's play area. A setting for [[Equal Justice Initiative]]'s [[Jefferson County Memorial Project|Jefferson County Memorial]] to lynching victims was also part of the program. The team prepared three design concepts for further discussion, which was combined into a single proposal revealed on [[October 4]].
* [[1885]]: The former Exposition Building was replaced with a larger, 3-story structure.
 
* [[1886]]: The Exposition Building was forced into service as classrooms for students from [[Powell School]], displaced by a fire.
==See Also==
* [[1891]]: [[Hudgins' fountain]] was moved to the park and the Exposition Building was demolished.
* [[Timeline of Linn Park history]]
* [[April 26]], [[1894]]: The cornerstone for the [[Confederate Soldiers & Sailors Monument]] was laid.
* [[July 6]], [[1895]]: [[Fred Grambs]] led his [[Grambs Military Band]] in a concert for 2,000 listeners.
* [[May 17]], [[1900]]: The citizens of Birmingham accepted the gift of a Spanish 8-foot gun captured in Panama by the United States. The gun was later contributed to a city-wide scrap drive.
* [[December 14]]<!--or March 14-->, [[1904]]: The [[William Elias B. Davis statue]] was dedicated.
* [[April 26]], [[1905]]: The completed [[Confederate Soldiers & Sailors Monument]] was dedicated.
* [[October 24]], [[1905]]: President Theodore Roosevelt [[1905 Presidential visit|delivered a speech]] from a platform in front of the Confederate monument.
* [[1908]]: The [[Mary Cahalan statue]] was dedicated.
* [[April 6]], [[1909]]: A [[List of ballooning events|two-balloon race]] launched from the park to celebrate the opening of the new [[Birmingham Terminal Station]].
* [[April 24]], [[1913]]: "Chief Potlatch" passed a peace pipe and presented a hatchet to be buried as part of the [[1913 Potlatch]] to heal dissension among city leaders.
* [[1914]]: The city sponsored nightly "photo-play" (cinema) screenings in the park.
* [[May 16]]-[[May 18|18]], [[1916]]: The [[1916 Reunion of the United Confederate Veterans]] included several events around the Confederate Memorial and an encampment of the "Orphan's Brigade" of Kentucky.
* During [[World War I]] Sundays at the park were highlighted by "community sings" in an 800-seat wooden amphitheater.
* [[December 3]], [[1918]]: The park was officially renamed for Woodrow Wilson.
* [[1920]]: A tree was planted in the park in memory of [[World War I]] aviator [[Arthur Roberts|Arthur Meredyth Roberts]].
* [[1921]]: President [[1921 Presidential visit|Warren G. Harding]] delivered a landmark speech on race relations during the [[Semicentennial of Birmingham]]
* 1921: A [[Fashion-Industrial Exposition]] was staged inside a temporary [[Exposition Building (1921)|Exposition Building]] during the [[Semicentennial of Birmingham]]
* [[November 11]], [[1923]]: The [[Spirit of the American Doughboy]] was dedicated as a [[World War I]] memorial.
* [[1927]]: The [[Linn-Henley Research Library|Birmingham Public Library]] opened.
* 1927: A stone [[Zero mile marker]] was placed in the park.
* [[1931]]: The [[Jefferson County Courthouse]] was completed.
* [[1932]]: The [[Old Elyton Chapter]] of the [[Daughters of the American Revolution]] planted an oak tree in memory of president George Washington in the southeast quadrant of the park.
* [[1937]]<!--or 1957-->: The [[Revolutionary War Veterans Memorial]] was moved to the park from [[Five Points South]].
* [[1938]]: The first [[Sidewalk Art Show]] was held.
* [[1944]]: The pedestal for the [[Memorial to the Spanish American War]] was erected.
* [[June 2]], [[1946]]: The [[Memorial to the Spanish American War]] was dedicated.
* [[December 4]], [[1948]]: The burial of an actual hatchet in the park by the presidents of the Student Government Associations of the [[University of Alabama]] and [[Auburn University]] preceded the renewal of the annual [[Iron Bowl]] football rivalry in [[Birmingham]] after a 40-year intermission.
* [[1950]]: The [[Birmingham City Hall]] opened.
* [[February 10]], [[1951]]: "[[To Strengthen the Arm of Liberty]]", an 8-foot-4-inch pressed copper replica of the Statue of Liberty, was dedicated on a limestone plinth in the park's central reflecting pool. It was donated by Boy Scouts' [[Birmingham Area Council]].
* [[May 3]], [[1959]]: The [[Birmingham Museum of Art]] opened in the [[Oscar Wells Memorial Building]] facing the park.
* [[1959]]: A [[Birmingham Christmas trees|live Christmas tree]] was planted in the park.
* [[March 15]], [[1969]]: The [[Eternal Flame of Freedom]] was dedicated.
* [[May 3]], [[1976]]: [[List of presidential visits|President]] Gerald Ford delivered an address at Wilson Park.
* [[October 31]], [[1981]]: [[Willie Mays Day]] was celebrated with a parade around the park.
* [[February 4]], [[1983]]: The "[[Friends of Charles Linn Park|Friends of Woodrow Wilson Park]]" was incorporated as a non-profit.
* [[October 4]], [[1988]]: The renovated Linn Park was dedicated.
* [[June 16]]–[[June 18|18]], [[1989]]: The first [[City Stages]] festival was held.
* [[May 4]], [[1992]]: More than 700 people gathered at the park to protest white nationalist activity in the region, following the [[List of Birmingham homicides in 1992|April 18 murder]] of Benny Rembert by members of [[Bill Riccio]]'s [[Aryan National Front]].
* [[2005]]: ''American Idol'' finalist [[Taylor Hicks]] performed a mini-concert for home-town fans which was filmed for the television program.
* [[November 11]], [[2007]]: The [[Raymond Weeks Memorial]] was dedicated.
* [[2013]]:  A [[Charles Linn statue|bronze statue]] of [[Charles Linn]], sculpted by [[Branko Medenica]], was installed at the park.
* [[July 1]], [[2015]]: The [[Birmingham Board of Parks and Recreation]] voted to pursue removal of the [[Confederate Soldiers & Sailors Monument]] from park property.
* [[October 23]], [[2015]]: A [[Nina Miglionico statue]] was dedicated near [[Birmingham City Hall]].
* [[June 13]], [[2016]]: [[Women of Soul]] collided with [[2016 Vigil for Orlando|a candlelight vigil]]  for the victims of the Orlando nightclub shooting in [[Linn Park]].


==Gallery==
==Gallery==
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* "[https://cdm16044.contentdm.oclc.org/digital/collection/p4017coll2/id/12019 Woodrow Wilson Park, Central & Capitol]" unsigned typescript (n.d.) from the collection of [[M. R. Henckell]] - via {{BPLDC}}
* "[https://cdm16044.contentdm.oclc.org/digital/collection/p4017coll2/id/12019 Woodrow Wilson Park, Central & Capitol]" unsigned typescript (n.d.) from the collection of [[M. R. Henckell]] - via {{BPLDC}}
* Garret, Harry (June 25, 1947) "[https://cdm16044.contentdm.oclc.org/digital/collection/p4017coll2/id/12027 Woodrow Wilson Park, Purchased For $30, Scene Of Many Events Through The Years]" ''[[Birmingham Post]]'' - via {{BPLDC}}
* Garret, Harry (June 25, 1947) "[https://cdm16044.contentdm.oclc.org/digital/collection/p4017coll2/id/12027 Woodrow Wilson Park, Purchased For $30, Scene Of Many Events Through The Years]" ''[[Birmingham Post]]'' - via {{BPLDC}}
* "[https://cdm16044.contentdm.oclc.org/digital/collection/p4017coll2/id/12027 Flower Lecture Proceeds Will Beautify City]" (December 4, 1949) {{BN}} - via {{BPLDC}}
* "[http://cdm16044.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p4017coll2/id/32 3 parks 'given' to city are now worth $2 million]" (August 18, 1958) {{BPH}} - via {{BPLDC}}
* "[http://cdm16044.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p4017coll2/id/32 3 parks 'given' to city are now worth $2 million]" (August 18, 1958) {{BPH}} - via {{BPLDC}}
* Buchanan, John (July 16, 1968) "Birmingham's 15th Annual Independence Day Celebration." ''The Congressional Record'', 90th Congress. 2nd Session. Vol. 114, Part 16, p. 21642
* White, Marjorie Longenecker, ed. (1980) ''Downtown Birmingham: Architectural and Historical Walking Tour Guide'', second edition. Birmingham: Birmingham Historical Society
* White, Marjorie Longenecker, ed. (1980) ''Downtown Birmingham: Architectural and Historical Walking Tour Guide'', second edition. Birmingham: Birmingham Historical Society
* Ellis, Holly (February 1985) "Money pushes park plans closer to goal." ''[[Magic City News]]'', Vol. 2, No. 5
* Ellis, Holly (February 1985) "Money pushes park plans closer to goal." ''[[Magic City News]]'', Vol. 2, No. 5
Line 153: Line 114:
* {{Shelby-2009}}
* {{Shelby-2009}}
* {{Fazio-2010}}
* {{Fazio-2010}}
* Beahm, Anna (August 7, 2020) "Birmingham’s Linn Park could honor civil rights leaders after board OK." {{BN}}
* Jefferson County Memorial Project (2021) ''[https://issuu.com/jcmproject/docs/jcmp_2021_fellows_report_-_linn_park/2 Contested Terrain: A Historical Walk Through Birmingham's Linn Park]"
* Robinson, Carol (July 21, 2021) "1 person suffers minor injuries when tree falls in Linn Park." {{BN}}
* Parker, Illyshia (May 10, 2022) "Planning and design for Re-Vision Linn Park is underway." {{BBJ}}
* Parker, Illyshia (September 28, 2022) "Renderings reveal potential plans for Linn Park." {{BBJ}}
* Garrison, Greg (October 4, 2022) "Birmingham will mow Linn Park with robots." {{BN}}


==External links==
==External links==

Latest revision as of 11:34, 8 February 2024

This article is about the current downtown park. For the first park in Birmingham, see Linn's Park. There is also a Lynn Park in East Lake.
Linn Park in 2006

Charles Linn Park (formerly Central Park, Capitol Park, and Woodrow Wilson Park) anchors the municipal center of downtown Birmingham. It occupies Block 21, a 610-foot by 400-foot block bounded by 20th Street North and the Birmingham City Hall to the west, Park Place to the south, 8th Avenue North, with Boutwell Auditorium and the Birmingham Museum of Art to the north, and the Linn-Henley Research Library and the Jefferson County Courthouse to the east.

As Birmingham's primary civic space, Linn Park contains numerous monuments and memorials, and hosts several public events such as the Birmingham Christmas tree lighting ceremony, the Magic City Art Connection, Magic City Blues Fest and other gatherings. It was also the home of the City Stages music festival held from 1989 to 2009.

History

Capitol Park with the 1870s Alabama Mineral Exposition Building, seen in Henry Wellge's 1885 Bird's Eye view of Birmingham
View of Capitol Park in 1900, showing Hudgins' fountain.

The site was one of three parks included in the Elyton Land Company's original plans for Birmingham, as drafted by William Barker. Labeled "Park" on the original plat, it came to be called "Central Park" as it crowned the central spine of 20th Street and lay midway between "East Park" (now Marconi Park) and "West Park" (now Kelly Ingram Park).

On February 21, 1883, in exchange for $90, Elyton Company president Henry Caldwell handed over the deeds to those three parks to Mayor A. O. Lane, on the condition that the city also reimburse the company for the cost of a newly-installed iron fence and for the costs associated with the conveyance, fund public improvements to the property immediately, and agree to relinquish the site to the State should the city succeed in having the capital moved to Birmingham from Montgomery.

View of the park from City Hall after 1950

In 1886 James Powell inserted the name "Capitol Park" into a map being produced by Beers, Ellis and Company for the "Atlas of the City of Birmingham and Suburbs". The map, published in 1887, showed a conjectured T-shaped building just south of the park's center as a stand-in for a future capitol building. Though Governor Joseph Johnston briefly conducted state business from a rented store in the city during a yellow fever outbreak in Montgomery, no other steps toward relocating the capital from Montgomery were ever accomplished.

By the time the Beers map was printed, the lots surrounding the park were built up with large fashionable houses, many in the ornate and complex Queen Anne style with effusions of brightly-painted wood porches, balconies, turrets, oriels, gables and bays.

Monuments

A large cast-iron fountain, donated to the city in the 1880s by T. L. Hudgins, was moved to the park in 1891. An obelisk-style Confederate Soldiers & Sailors Monument was erected between 1894 and 1905 at the park's southern end. In 1904 and 1908 two monuments sculpted by GIuseppi Moretti were dedicated at Capitol Park, the first to physician William Elias B. Davis and the second to school teacher Mary Cahalan. The city constructed various curvilinear sidewalks connecting to those points of interest and planted trees between them.

The rather haphazard result was described thus by visitor Julian Street in 1917:

"[N]ot far from the majestic Tutwiler Hotel, and the imposing apartment building called the Ridgely, the front of which occupies a full block, is a park so ill kept that it would be a disgrace to the city but for the obvious fact that the city is growing and wide-awake, and will, of course, attend to the park when it can find the time. Here are, I believe, the only public monuments Birmingham contains. One is a Confederate monument in the form of an obelisk, and the other two are statues erected in memory of Mary A. Cahalan, for many years principal of the Powell School, and of William Elias B. Davis, a distinguished surgeon. Workers in these fields are too seldom honored in this way, and the spirit which prompted the erection of these monuments is particularly creditable; sad to say, however, both effigies are wretchedly placed and are in themselves exceedingly poor things. Art is something, indeed, about which Birmingham has much to learn.

On December 3, 1918 the park was officially renamed for Woodrow Wilson, then in his second term as President and the spokesman of the terms of peace following World War I. The honor was likely bestowed in combined admiration for his handling of the war and its conclusion, as well as for his Democratic party alliegiance. Specifically he supported the Southern Democrats who were increasingly concerned about Federal interference in the enforcement of Jim Crow laws requiring racial segregation. The Commisison then in power was headed by nativist Nathaniel Barrett, who rode the support of the "True Americans" into office in 1917. The new name was not always recognized. in his "Love Story of Vulcan and Electra", published in the Birmingham Post in 1921, Dr. B. U. L. Conner continued to use the name "Capitol Park".

The "City Plan of Birmingham", commissioned from Warren Manning in 1914 by George Ward's City Commission, was finally published in 1919. The plan, which was never adopted, did include a "Civic Center Memorial" scheme, largely the work of local associate Frank Hartley Anderson. The "City Beautiful"-type proposal, like others inspired by the World's Columbian Exposition held in Chicago in 1893, imagined a group of neo-classical buildings in a heroic scale arrayed symmetrically around the park's open space. A central pole would fly the "flag of freedom" and a 450-foot floodlit "Memorial Tower" would hold aloft a bright beacon which could be used to signal important news to the entire city, presumably by Morse code. Manning, himself, was skeptical of the civic center idea. Nevertheless, it was published alongside his comprehensive regional plan, and was perhaps the most nearly-realized of the plan's recommendations.

Anderson, working with local architects William Warren and Eugene Knight, elaborated on the Civic Center idea with a plan published in the Birmingham News in 1921. Perhaps betraying the interests of Robert Jemison Jr, the plan placed the 1913 Ridgely Apartments at a prominent corner of the park, which would be extended to 6th Avenue North. The north end of the park would house a City Hall and Court House, with a massive 450-foot "Memorial Tower" occupying a "Court D'Honneur" between them. The park itself was indicated with parterres and automobile lots, with a 110-foot flagpole in the center and the existing Confederate monument pushed southward to anchor its southern end. Hill Ferguson, then an associate of Jemison's, pushed hard for the realization of the plan and succeeded in securing the endorsements of the Birmingham Chamber of Commerce and the Birmingham Real Estate Exchange. He was also successful in lobbying the city to purchase property around the park.

The publication of the Manning plan coincided with the Chamber of Commerce's proposal for a Municipal Auditorium. A bond sale for the purpose of building such a structure passed in 1918. By the time construction began in 1924 a site at the northwestern corner of Wilson Park had been selected and secured. A World War I memorial, donated to the American Legion, Birmingham Post No. 1 by the city's Greek-American citizens, was displayed prominently at the front entrance.

Civic Center plans

Erskine Ramsay's 1924 proposal for a Civic Center

Landscape architect W. B. Marquis visited the city in July 1924 on behalf of the Olmsted Brothers, who had been commissioned by the Birmingham Board of Parks and Recreation to prepare a comprehensive plan for "A Park System for Birmingham." Marquis' report on Capitol Park [sic] noted that it was "very probable that it will become the center of a group of civic buildings." He continued:

As one approaches from the south, the profile of 20th St. is very pleasant and and is almost equally so as one approaches from the north. It seems rather obvious that this park should be developed as formally as possible taking into consideration the existing trees, some of which are very good. There is very little else of value in it. The Confederate Monument located on the axis of 20th St. at the south end of the park probably must be retained although there may be some possibility of changing its position. There are three other monuments, one of a Doctor, one to the soldiers of the late war, erected by the American Legion, and another of a well-known school teacher…The Confederate Monument is not unpleasant in design but the other three are all mediocre.

Marquis mentions hope expressed by parks superintendent Charles Connell that the Mary Cahalan statue could be moved onto the grounds of the Powell School. That August, Miller & Martin architects, working on a design for the Jefferson County Courthouse, advised Connell that in their present scheme, they would relocate the Confederate Monument to one end of a terrace in front of the new building, with a War Monument to balance it on the other end.

With the auditorium under construction, a revised Civic Center plan, attributed to Mel Drennen and Erskine Ramsay and probably delineated by William Welton, appeared in the September 28, 1924 edition of the Birmingham News. This plan indicated the auditorium site and was the first to show the proposed locations for the Birmingham Public Library, Jefferson County Courthouse, and Birmingham City Hall as they were effected in 1927, 1931 and 1950, respectively. The library board had hoped to build closer to the center of the park and only reluctantly accepted relegation to a corner after the Olmsted Brothers, then engaged in a plan for A Park System for Birmingham, ruled in favor of preserving the open space. A compromise solution, requiring the abandonment of East 20th Street, was accepted. The specific sites indicated for an armory, museum, art gallery, and school administration building were not used, although the Birmingham Museum of Art (1959) and Birmingham Board of Education Building (1965) were constructed later on other sites facing the park.

Along with the construction of the Courthouse in 1926-1931, landscape architect William Kessler provided designs for improvements to the park which were executed by Works Progress Administration crews. Kessler's scheme introduced broad axial paths dividing the park into quadrants. The east-west axis was marked with four reflecting pools between the center cross-axis and the courthouse. Large flower beds on terraces stepped down toward Short 20th Street.

Several new large trees were planted in the park at that time. Most of the new arrivals were elms, but one of them, a large Gingko on the western side of the park, stood as a "representative of the world's oldest species of trees." A March 10, 1932 Birmingham Post account of the plantings noted that, "Because of the lack of space, it was not possible to lay out these trees in a symmetrical design, but they have been placed in the most advantageous points possible."

A marble Zero mile marker was also placed in the park by the Alabama Motorists Association in 1927, signifying the point from which distances to Birmingham were calculated.

Mid-century developments

The block west of Short 20th Street finally became the site for a new Birmingham City Hall which opened in 1950. That same year, the Boy Scouts' Birmingham Area Council donated "To Strengthen the Arm of Liberty", a pressed copper replica of the Statue of Liberty, which was displayed on a limestone plinth in the central reflecting pool. In 1963 a proposal for a "Venus fountain" was made, but never realized.

Several magnolia trees, donated by a nursery, were used to line the 7th Avenue and Short 20th Street edges of the park.

Over the years the planting bed closest to City Hall has been used to create a "Floral Map of Alabama" depicting the outline of the state with its major rivers and cities planted with contrasting-color flowers.

1980s renovation

Watercolor by Bob Moody for the 1980s renovation of Linn Park

In 1982 the "Friends of Woodrow Wilson Park" began raising funds for renovations and improvements in the park. Landscape architects Nimrod Long & Associates preserved and enhanced Kessler's axial scheme with a new central fountain, pavements, benches, steps, low walls, and a metal gazebo. In 1985 the project was budgeted at $1.5 million, of which $600,000 was set aside by the city, $400,000 by Jefferson County, and $250,000 raised through private donations. Tentative plans then included a concert stage and six pushcarts to be rented by food vendors. Ultimately, the project cost was increased to $2.5 million, split between private donations and public funds. Brasfield & Gorrie served as general contractor. When the park was rededicated on October 4, 1988, it was renamed again to honor Charles Linn. Linn was a pioneer industrialist and banker, who created the first landscaped park in the city and promoted the planting of trees to beautify 20th Street. A statue of Linn was added to the park in 2013.

A 2011 rally at Linn Park opposing the Beason-Hammon Alabama Taxpayer and Citizen Protection Act

In 2015 the city ended the practice of waiving fees for public services related to events held at the park. The Magic City Art Connection, notified of the policy change only weeks in advance, began charging a $5 admission for adults.

Linn Park, specifically the Confederate Memorial, became a target for vandalism during the 2020 George Floyd protests. On the evening of May 31 a large group, many of whom had attended an earlier protest at Kelly Ingram Park, answered a call by speaker Jermaine Johnson to meet him at Linn Park to take down the memorial. Efforts to topple the 52-foot obelisk using hand tools and rope tied to a pick-up truck failed and some, prepared with spray paint and crowbars, turned their attention to the statue of Linn, who had attempted to run blockades on behalf of the Confederacy before becoming a banker and investor in Birmingham. The Spirit of the American Doughboy statue and the Thomas Jefferson statue in the park were also damaged before Mayor Randall Woodfin arrived at the scene and asked the crowd to disperse, promising to remove the Confederate Memorial himself within 24 hours. In fact Woodfin made good on that promise as crews arrived the next night to dismantle and haul away the monument.

In early August activist Frank Matthews made a public call to the Birmingham Parks & Recreation Board to rename the park in honor of Alabama Christian Movement for Human Rights founder Fred Shuttlesworth and the late John Lewis, a Troy native and veteran of the Civil Rights Movement who was serving his 17th term in the U.S. House of Representatives when he died on July 17, 2020. The board voted unanimously to proceed with the suggestion during their August 7 meeting.

2020s Re-Visioning

In 2022 REV Birmingham began convening for a "Re-Visioning" process, using $350,000 in funds provided by the Friends of Linn Park and the Philip Morris Fund for Design Arts at the Community Foundation of Greater Birmingham. OJB Landscape Architecture of Houston, Texas and Trahan Architects of New Orleans, Louisiana were hired to collect community input in collaboration with CBG Strategies, Macknally Land Design, and KHAFRA civil engineers. Other community partners included the Birmingham Park and Recreation Board, the Mayor's Office of Social Justice and Racial Equity, and the Birmingham Museum of Art. Kelleigh Gamble and Anne Rygiel, co-chairs of the Neighborhood Housing and Homelessness subcommittee of Mayor Randall Woodfin's transition team, also participated in the process.

After a public workshops and several surveys, Re-Vision Linn Park arrived at a short list of desired amenities for the park, including community space, a shade structure, a park café, and children's play area. A setting for Equal Justice Initiative's Jefferson County Memorial to lynching victims was also part of the program. The team prepared three design concepts for further discussion, which was combined into a single proposal revealed on October 4.

See Also

Gallery

References

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