Nina Miglionico

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Nina Miglionico (born 1914 in Birmingham)


Miglionico graduated from the University of Alabama School of Law in 1936 and, failing to get an offer from an established firm, opened her own practice with partner Samuel Rumore. She is thought to be the he first woman in Alabama to have established her own firm.

In 1958 she took up the presidency of the National Association of Women Lawyers, and was appointed by President Kennedy to serve on the Presidential Commission on the Status of Women.

In 1963 she ran for a seat on the newly-established Birmingham City Council. She earned a place in the run-off ballot and campaigned against organized opposition from the Ku Klux Klan and White Citizens Council who faulted her support for integration and reconciliation and vilified her Catholicism and Italian ethnicity. She won the seat, however, and became the first woman elected to the city's government.

In the spring of 1965, shortly before her re-election to a second term, Miglionico's father discovered a bomb consisting of 38 sticks of dynamite on the front porch of their home on Essex Road. Undaunted, she continued to serve the city through a total of six terms on the council, earning loyal supporters while remaining a target of extemists. As late as 1974 her front yard was defaced by burning crosses. That same year she ran as a Democratic candidate for U. S. Congress.

In 1978 to 1981 Miglionico presided over the City Council and remained in office until 1985, when she retired from electoral politics.

In 1979, Miglionico was appointed by Governor Fob James to a 16-member working party that drafted a proposed state constitution that was approved by the state legislature in 1983. The Alabama Supreme Court, however, ruled that the idea of replacing the entire 1901 constitution by amendment was itself unconstitutional.

In 1985, while president of the Birmingham Park and Recreation Board she supported the idea of letting another city build a new stadium for the Birmingham Barons rather than have Birmingham continue to fund amenities that serve the entire region.

In June 1999 a resolution to dedicate the city's Multi-Modal Transportation Center on Morris Avenue as "Nina Station" in recognition of her achievements was submitted and withdrawn without a vote.

In July 2006 fellow former Councilor John Katapodis proposed renaming Caldwell Park for her. The Park and Recreation Board has asked for input from the Highland Park neighborhood before acting on the proposal.

References

  • Ramsey, LaVerne D. (1995) "Nina Miglionico: Lawyer/Politician" in M. Abigail Toffel, ed. Women Who Made a Difference in Alabama. Birmingham: League of Women Voters of Greater Birmingham.
  • Kelly, Mark (March 24, 2004) "Civic Visionary: The long service of "Miss Nina" Miglionico" Birmingham Weekly
  • Bryant, Joseph D. (July 10, 2006) "Rename Caldwell Park, ex-councilman says." Birmingham News.