Rock Mountain Fire Lookout Tower: Difference between revisions

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The official name of the '''Rock Mountain Fire Lookout Tower''' is “Tedd Joy” and its state number is 14. Located in west [[Jefferson County]] near [[Bessemer]] and [[McCalla]], it was built by the [[Civilian Conservation Corp]] in [[1941]]. In a ceremony on November 9, [[1943]], it was dedicated to [[Tedd Joy]], a noted conservationist and president of the [[Alabama Wildlife Federation]]. Joy had died the previous year. A granite tablet is embedded in the nearby sandstone cliffs that reads, “In Memory of F.M. (Tedd) Joy 1878 – 1943 Conservationist, Developer, Friend.”
The official name of the '''Rock Mountain Fire Lookout Tower''' is “Tedd Joy” and its state number is 14. Located in west [[Jefferson County]] near [[Bessemer]] and [[McCalla]], it was built by the [[Civilian Conservation Corp]] in [[1941]]. In a ceremony on November 9, [[1943]], it was dedicated to [[Tedd Joy]], a noted conservationist and president of the [[Alabama Wildlife Federation]]. Joy had died the previous year. A granite tablet is embedded in the nearby sandstone cliffs that reads, “In Memory of F.M. (Tedd) Joy 1878 – 1943 Conservationist, Developer, Friend.”



Revision as of 18:14, 17 January 2014

Firetower-large wiki.jpg


The official name of the Rock Mountain Fire Lookout Tower is “Tedd Joy” and its state number is 14. Located in west Jefferson County near Bessemer and McCalla, it was built by the Civilian Conservation Corp in 1941. In a ceremony on November 9, 1943, it was dedicated to Tedd Joy, a noted conservationist and president of the Alabama Wildlife Federation. Joy had died the previous year. A granite tablet is embedded in the nearby sandstone cliffs that reads, “In Memory of F.M. (Tedd) Joy 1878 – 1943 Conservationist, Developer, Friend.”

The 100-foot steel tower stands at the highest point on Rock Mountain, 810 feet above sea level, in an area once designated by the Jefferson County Sportsman’s Association as Tedd Joy Wildlife Sanctuary. The sanctuary encompassed 18,000 acres. The tower was built in one of Alabama’s most inaccessible areas.

The tower was abandoned in the very early 1960s.

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