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                  <text>General Pierce Manning Butler Young Papers</text>
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                  <text>Keith S. Hebert, Professor of History, Department of History, Auburn University, in cooperation with the &lt;a href="http://bartowhistorymuseum.org/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Bartow History Museum&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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                  <text>Archival collection of papers of Confederate States of America General Pierce Manning Butler Young of Bartow County, Georgia. The papers are owned by the Bartow Histoy Museum in Cartersville, Georgia.  Visit their &lt;a href="http://bartowhistorymuseum.org/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;website&lt;/a&gt; for additional information about their museum exhibits, archival collections, and public programs.</text>
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                  <text>1850-1877</text>
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                  <text>All papers held in this collection are the property of the Bartow History Museum. Any reproduction or publication of these papers must be approved by the &lt;a href="http://bartowhistorymuseum.org/" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Bartow History Museum&lt;/a&gt;.</text>
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                  <text>&lt;br /&gt;General Pierce Manning Butler Young, Confederate States of America, 1836-1896</text>
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                <text>Zion First Missionary Church Cemetery </text>
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                <text>When the Zion First Missionary Church was sold to the African American congregation, the land next to the building found use as a cemetery for the African American congregation. As such, the cemetery is strictly filled with only African American congregants. The cemetery is located next to the Zion Missionary Baptist church in Cherokee, Alabama off of Lee Hwy.</text>
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                <text>Arthur Graves interview by Sam Keiser. November 11 2015</text>
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                <text>Zion First Baptist Missionary Church</text>
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                <text>Zion Church used to be an white Baptist church prior to the Civil War. During the war, the church was used as a hospital by Union troops. After the Civil War, the white parishioners no longer wanted to use the church as it had become defiled. Because of this the church was then sold to an African American congregation that used to meet across the railroad tracks. The original building is still intact though there have been several additions since it was first built.  The color of the bricks can be used as indicators to identify the additions. The darker colored bricks indicate the additions to the church. The church can be found off Lee Hwy in Cherokee, Alabama.</text>
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                <text>Zebulon Pike Morrison was born in Lexington, Virginia in 1818.  He and his wife Bridget had nine children.  He was the sixteenth Mayor of Florence, and served in that capacity from 1880-1890.  Morrison was also an alderman for the city of Florence for thirty years.  In addition, Morrison was an undertaker, and owned a distillery in Florence.  He is probably most well-known for his building efforts.  Wesleyan Hall, the Florence Synodical College, the Elks Building, and Patton Grammar School in Florence were all built by him.  Morrison passed away in 1895 and is buried in Florence Cemetery.  Morrison Avenue in Florence is named for him.  </text>
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                <text>Kayla Scott, University of North Alabama </text>
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                <text>William Lindsey McDonald, A Walk Through The Past: People and Places of Florence and Lauderdale County, Alabama. Bluewater Publications, 2003, p. 34, 89, 91, 274.&#13;
&#13;
Image Courtesy of UNA Collier Library Archives&#13;
&#13;
Jill K. Garret, History of Lauderdale County, Alabama, 1964, 213.&#13;
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                  <text>Collection consists of research materials gathered by Keith S. Hebert, Department of History, Auburn University.  Hebert is writing a history of professional wrestling in the American South.  </text>
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                <text>Advertisement appeared in Charlotte News (North Carolina) on September 24, 1947.  "Jim Crockett your sports promoter since 1933."  </text>
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                <text>The generator for WQLT Radio station, which is owned by Big River Broadcasting - founded by Sam Phillips and now under the management of his sons and grandchildren -- is, whimsically perhaps, painted gold and named Elvis for Elvis Presley, who Sam Phillips is credited with discovering. </text>
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Keith S. Hebert</text>
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                <text>Wood Avenue Church of Christ is one of the oldest Churches of Christ in Lauderdale County. The Church of Christ denomination emerged out of the American Restoration Movement, a movement to reestablish America’s Christianity on the teachings of the New Testament and lasted from 1801 to 1906. Restoration followers were known as Stoneites and Campbellites, named after the two prominent leaders of the movement, Barton Stone and Alexander Campbell. Congregations set up by followers of Campbell called themselves Disciples of Christ, while those established by Stoneites were called Churches of Christ. &#13;
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                <text>Jesse Brock, University of North Alabama</text>
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                <text>Text: &#13;
Wayne Kilpatrick, “History of the Church of Christ in Northwest Alabama, 1823-1861,” Journal of Muscle Shoals History Vol. XI (Tennessee Valley Historical Society, 1986): 36. &#13;
  Wayne Kilpatrick, “ History of the Church of Christ in Lauderdale County, 1866-1880,” The Journal of Muscle Shoals History Vol. XI (Tennessee Valley Historical Society, 1986): 67-85.&#13;
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1900s&#13;
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                <text>WLAY-AM (1450 -AM) was one of the first broadcast radio stations in the Shoals. Licensed in 1933 (as WNRA), the station stopped broadcasting in 2014.&#13;
&#13;
The station's original broadcast was a variety format featuring gospel, country, and "race music" by African American artists.&#13;
&#13;
Sam Phillips worked as a disc jockey at WLAY in the 1950s.&#13;
&#13;
As the "Muscle Shoals Sound" developed in the 1960s, WLAY debuted many of the local recordings, many of which are now known worldwide.&#13;
&#13;
Paul Kelly built the studio which is now housed at the Alabama Music Hall of Fame.&#13;
&#13;
 The Alabama Historical Society named the station a Historic Landmark in 2007.&#13;
&#13;
The station was located on Second Street in Muscle Shoals during its heyday. </text>
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                <text>Photographs courtesy of Kevin Self. &#13;
The photograph of the sign is from the 1950s.&#13;
The photographs of the buildings are from the 1990s.&#13;
The reproduction of the logo is circa 1970, courtesy of Kevin Self. </text>
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                <text>	Gravely Springs near Oakland in Lauderdale County was the site of Union General James H. Wilson’s headquarters and camp in the winter of 1865. The final Union raid into Alabama was staged in this camp in the early spring of 1865. In January of 1865, General Wilson began assembling his 22,000 man cavalry. Advanced forces began preparatory raids at the end of February.  On March 22, 1865, General Wilson’s main forces set out on the largest cavalry raid of the Civil War. The raid destroyed the remaining productive industrial capacity of Alabama at Birmingham and Selma. The raid also burned the University of Alabama and captured Montgomery.</text>
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                <text>McDonald, William Lindsey. 2003. Civil War tales of the Tennessee Valley. n.p.: Killen, Ala. : Heart of Dixie Pub. (1812 CR 111, Killen, Ala., 35645), [2003], 2003. UNA Library Catalog, EBSCOhost (accessed April 30, 2015).&#13;
Hubbs, G. Ward. 2008. "Civil War in Alabama." Encyclopedia of Alabama. January 10. Accessed April 15, 2015. http://www.encyclopediaofalabama.org/article/h-1429.</text>
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                <text>Photo from following websites:&#13;
http://www.sonstoglory.com/newsletters/pictures/GravellySpringsHistoricMarker.jpg&#13;
Photo from following websites:&#13;
http://cartweb.geography.ua.edu/lizardtech/iserv/calcrgn?cat=Special%20Topics&amp;item=Civil%20War/CivilWarWilson.sid&amp;wid=500&amp;hei=400&amp;props=item(Name,Description),cat(Name,Description)&amp;style=simple/view-dhtml.xsl&#13;
Photo from following websites:&#13;
https://battleoffranklin.wordpress.com/category/james-h-wilson/&#13;
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Auburn University&#13;
Keith S. Hebert</text>
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                <text>The National Register nomination covers three houses facing Wilson Park, the only remaining houses from what was once a prominent Florence neighborhood. The houses were built between 1890 and 1918 and represent typical upper middle class residential architecture of the time. The original plans for Florence, as surveyed and plotted by Ferdinand Sannoner, set aside a city block as a “public walk”. This allotment was adjacent to the lot designated for a school and which was subsequently developed as the Florence Synodical Female College, the “public walk” became the City Park complete with gas lighting, cedar plantings, and a bandstand.  Building lots around the park became highly desirable for residential development. During the city’s economic boom from the 1880s through the 1920s, fashionable upper-middle class homes were built around the remaining three sides (north, east, and west) of the park. Over time the college was demolished and the post office and larger park footprint expanded on to the site of the Florence Synodical Female College.  Commercial structures took the place of the late 19th early 20th century residential structures to the east and west leaving only three houses on the north side as a reminder of the earlier neighborhood. &#13;
The house at 209 Tuscaloosa Street was constructed around 1890 and in 1894 became the home of local pharmacist, Charles Morton Southall. The Southall Drug building on Court Street is also on the National Register. The two and a half story asymmetrical frame house has Queen Anne and Shingle style features including a hipped roof, projecting front gable with Tudor revival detailing, a second story clad in wood shingles, and a one story wrap around porch supported by paired round columns on brick piers. &#13;
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The National Register nomination for the Wilson Park houses was written in 1978 and lacks much information that would be required of a current nomination.  It is advised that this nomination be updated.</text>
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                <text>Missy Brown, University of North Alabama</text>
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                <text>Floyd, Warner W. and Sally Moore. “Wilson Park Houses – National Register of Historic Preservation Nomination,” Montgomery: Alabama Historical Commission, 1979.</text>
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Keith S. Hebert</text>
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                <text>Wilson Park was designated as a public walk by Ferdinand Sannoner in his original plan for Florence in 1818. It is a one square block with an area of 2.5 acres. On February 20, 1924, the Board of City Commissioners officially changed its name from City Park to Woodrow Wilson Park in honor of the former U.S. President following his death. The park underwent two renovations, one in 1930 paid for by Mrs. Mary Emily Savage Price and the other one occurring on August 15, 1973.  It was in the 1973 redevelopment that a plaza was constructed with a fountain being donated by the Douglass family and benches incorporated throughout the park. The updates to the park were completed in 1974. </text>
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                <text>United States. Wilson Park Alabama Register of Landmarks and Heritage Nomination Form. Alabama Historical Commission. University of North Alabama Archives.&#13;
&#13;
Image:&#13;
&#13;
University of North Alabama Archives, Postcard Collection, PC22&#13;
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                <text>December 4, 2015 </text>
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Auburn University&#13;
Keith S. Hebert</text>
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University of North Alabama</text>
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                <text>The Wilson Dam Replica is located on the corner of Mobile and Seminary Streets in front of Legends Steakhouse in downtown Florence, Alabama. The replica dam is engraved with each name of the quad cities: Tuscumbia, Muscle Shoals, Sheffield, and Florence, and the year each city became incorporated. </text>
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                <text>Wilson Dam Lake was created from the damming of the Tennessee River by the construction of the Wilson Dam. The lake's normal elevation is 505 feet. The average depth is 97 feet. The distance of the backwater upstream is 17 miles and the area of the surface is 14,500 acres. Much of the flooded land was once farmland used in the Shoals. On the southern edge of the lake there is a leak of water and overflow water flows out into the Tennessee River.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;There are many myths surrounding the area around the dam and lake, most involving the native catfish. The lake is popular for fishing and the size of the fish are often exagerated in reports. Blue catfish often range from 50-80 pounds, but can be as large as 100 pounds.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;The lake was flooded by the TVA, the ones in control of Wilson Dam and the Tennessee River. By building a dam in the area the TVA was able to power the surrounding cities. Another benefit to building the dam and creating the lake was by powering the nitrate plants in Muscle Shoals. These plants provided much needed fertilizer for eroded farmland.</text>
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                <text>Sherer, Dennis. "Myths, Legends Surround Historic Wilson Dam." TimesDaily. June 19, 2010. Accessed November 30, 2015. http://www.timesdaily.com/archives/myths-legends-surround-historic-wilson-dam/article_90620d82-e607-5aef-a483-b42a0fe94a40.html.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;span class="selectable"&gt;'Destination Shoals'. 2011. Florence. Florence City. UNA Special Archives.&lt;/span&gt;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;</text>
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                <text>Wilson Dam is a gravity dam spanning the Tennessee River between Lauderdale and Colbert counties in the quad cities area. The dam was originally constructed by the US Army Corps of Engineers between 1918 and 1924. The project was envisioned as a part of the National Defense Act of 1916 during the run up to World War I to provide power for two nitrate plants intended to produce explosives for the war effort. The massive federal program cost $130 million dollars, however the first electrical generation from the plant was not until 1925 long after the end of the war.&#13;
 	Although the properties attracted the attention of notable industrialist Henry Ford, who offered $5 million for them and promised to make the shoals the “Detroit of the South,” they languished in governmental limbo until the New Deal programs of Franklin Roosevelt. Impressed by the potential of the properties, Roosevelt’s team made the dam’s operational model the theme for the TVA’s economic invigoration of the entire Tennessee River region. The model was to incorporate a threefold purpose for each dam; flood control, navigational locks, and hydroelectric power generation.&#13;
	The dam has underwent few significant change in structure since its completion. An expansion of the locking system was completed in 1959 making it the largest single-chamber system in the world at that time. There has also been an additional nine spillways have been added. However, the neoclassical style incorporating elements of ancient Greece and Rome has remained a distinguishing feature for Wilson Dam as the only dam in the TVA system with that architectural style.&#13;
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                <text>Ezzell, Patricia Bernard. 2012. Wilson Dam and Reservoir. June 14. http://www.encyclopediaofalabama.org/face/Article.jsp?id=h-3268.&#13;
History, Alabama. Dept. of Archives and. 2007.&#13;
Lienhard, John H. 2014. No. 2261: Muscle Shoals. January 23. http://www.uh.edu/engines/epi2261.htm.&#13;
TVA. n.d. Wilson Resivor. http://www.tva.gov/sites/wilson.htm.&#13;
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                <text>Photo from following websites:&#13;
http://www.encyclopediaofalabama.org/article/m-3314&#13;
Photo from following websites: http://www.tva.gov/sites/wilson.htm.</text>
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                <text>The site of Willingham Hall, which is located on the University of North Alabama’s campus in Florence, Alabama, and Willingham Hall (One Harrison Plaza) itself have many stories to tell. Willingham Hall is located on the site of what was once private property with a private home, and later, the site of Locust Dell Academy for Girls. The land on which the building is located was first developed in the early 1800s (pre dating Alabama’s statehood, 1819) by an anonymous Florentine. The house was purchased in 1830s by Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas Marcelius  Hentz, an educated couple who moved to Florence from  the Chapel Hill, North Carolina area where he had been a Professor of Modern Languages at the University. Mrs. (Caroline Lee) Hentz was a writer. &#13;
          &#13;
The couple opened the Locust Dell Academy for Girls, which was named for the locust trees on the property,  in 1834.   The Academy was closed “with the coming of the War for Southern Independence.” The Hentzs sold the house which was used as a  private home by various owners until 1871. &#13;
&#13;
Major Henry Wood, for whom Wood Avenue is named and one of the first mayors of Florence, purchased the house in 1871. He owned the house for several years prior to the purchase of the home by the University of North Alabama (which was, at the time, the first state supported teachers college and first co-educational college south of the Ohio River). Shortly after the University acquired the house, &#13;
(around the 1900s), it burned to the ground.&#13;
&#13;
       Willingham Hall, which was located on Morrison Avenue, was built in 1939, with renovations in 1977, and 2007/08. The building was originally used as a dormitory for men and named for Dr. Henry J. Willingham, who was President of the University from 1913 through 1958, when the dorm housed &#13;
women.&#13;
 &#13;
The building, which houses the offices of the English, History and Political Science and Criminal Departments, is a three story, masonry, and steel structure.The building contains 20,464 square feet, 10,827 net assignable.&#13;
 &#13;
Willingham Hall was constructed with funds and labor provided by President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s Work Projects Administration.  At the time of construction the building was described as “a three-storied, fireproof building, ‘modern in every way’.” &#13;
&#13;
Willingham Hall is architecturally important to UNA’s campus because it is one of the oldest buildings on campus. The University – under a Green Campus Initiative – updated the building in 2007/2008. Willingham Hall is historically important to UNA’s campus because it was built on the site of one of the fine girls’ academies; it is architecturally important to the campus because it is one of the oldest buildings on campus and was built by the WPA; and it remains academically important because the English, History, Political Science, and Criminal Justice Departments are housed there.</text>
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&#13;
Golden was raised in a farming family in Brewton, Alabama.  At age seven he began singing and performing regularly on his grandfather’s weekly radio show, along with his sister.  From this experience, Golden grew to love harmony, and by the time he was a teenager, he had an appreciation for Country, Gospel, Doo-Wop, and Pop Quartets.  &#13;
&#13;
In 1965, Golden joined with the Oak Ridge Boys, a gospel group that went on to win 10 Dove awards and 5 Grammys.  In 1975, the group switched to country and was awarded Country Music Association Vocal and Instrumental Group of the Year and Best Country Crossover Group of the year.  Golden sang baritone for the Oak Ridge Boys for 22 years, releasing hits such as “Trying to Love Two Women,” “Ozark Mountain Jubilee,” and “Thank God for Kids.”  In 1986 he released a solo album, “American Vagabond,” and in 1987, he left the group.  He toured solo and with his sons Rusty and Chris as The Goldens.  In 1996, Golden rejoined the Oak Ridge Boys.&#13;
&#13;
In 1997, Golden was inducted into the Alabama Music Hall of Fame and received its Life Work Award for Performing Achievement.  In 2011, the Oak Ridge Boys were inducted into The Grand Ole Opry and the Gospel Music Hall of Fame.  They were inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame in 2015.&#13;
&#13;
Click the link to listen.&#13;
&#13;
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OdFghZmdwXk&#13;
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=474Q4oRJPUI&#13;
&#13;
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“William Lee Golden.” Alabama Music Hall of Fame. (2016) http://alamhof.org/inductees/timeline/1997/william-l-golden/ &#13;
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Keith S. Hebert</text>
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                <text>William L. Dawson (September 26, 1899-May 4, 1990)&#13;
&#13;
William Levi Dawson was an African American composer, performer, and music educator from Anniston, Alabama.&#13;
&#13;
Dawson graduated from the Tuskegee Institute with highest honors in 1921. He earned a bachelor of music degree from Horner Institute of Fine Arts in Kansas City, Missouri in 1925. He studied under Felix Borowski at the Chicago Musical College and studied under Adolph Weidig at the American Conservatory, where he earned a master’s degree in music in 1927. Dawson served as first trombonist with the Chicago Civic Orchestra from 1926 to 1930. He won a Chicago Daily News contest for band directors in 1929. Shortly after, he was awarded the Wanamaker Contest prize for the song “Jump Back Honey, Jump Back” and the orchestral composition “Scherzo.” &#13;
&#13;
In 1931, Dawson became director of the School of Music at the Tuskegee Institute. As director, he conducted the 100-voice a cappella choir during its engagement at the opening of the Radio City Music Hall in New York; the choir also performed at Carnegie Hall, the White House and Constitution Hall and completed a series of national and international radio broadcasts. In 1934, the choir made a tour of international and interracial good will to the British Isles, Europe, and the Soviet Union. Years later, the United States State Department sent Dawson to Spain to conduct various choral groups. In 1956, he was awarded an honorary degree of Doctor of Music by the Tuskegee Institute.&#13;
&#13;
Perhaps his greatest achievement was as composer of the Negro Folk Symphony which combined melody and rhythm from Negro spirituals with his own original material. The Negro Folk Symphony was presented by the Philadelphia Symphony Orchestra in 1934. In 1952, Dawson visited seven West African countries, after which he revised the symphony to include rhythm inspired by African influences. He recorded Negro Folk Symphony for Decca Records in 1961. Dawson was a guest conductor for the Kansas City Philharmonic Orchestra in 1966, Wayne State University Glee Club in 1970, and the Baltimore Symphony Orchestra in 1975.&#13;
&#13;
Dawson was inducted into the Alabama Arts Hall of Fame in 1975 and the Alabama Music Hall of Fame in 1989 and received the Alabama Arts Award in 1980. He received honorary doctorates from Lincoln University in 1978 and Ithaca College in 1982. In 1983, Dawson received the Alumni Merit Award from Tuskegee Institute, at age 90.&#13;
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                <text>“William Levi Dawson.” Alabama Music Hall of Fame. (2016) &lt;http://alamhof.org/inductees/timeline/1989/william-levi-dawson/&gt;  </text>
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                <text>National Register of Historic Places&#13;
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Architecture</text>
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                <text>National Register of Historic Places property - William Kroger House - south side of Smithsonia – Rhodesville Road about 4 miles northeast of Smithsonia&#13;
&#13;
The actual construction date of the William Kroger House is unknown but stylistic details place construction around 1830. The property is significant as an example of an early housing style in northern Alabama and for its association with early settlement patterns in the same area.  The story and a half brick gable end house was built for William and Martha Kroger, both native of Virginia, with simple lines in a style that became known as a “tidewater cottage”. Martha’s family’s migration is known and entails time in Tennessee before the settlement in Alabama. This was a common settlement pattern during the early 19th century and often included Alabama as only a temporary residence before moving on to Mississippi or Texas in search of better land. The section of Lauderdale County where William and Martha Kroger settled is known as the “Colbert Reserve” or “the Bend” west of Florence in a fertile area north of the Tennessee River.  The property also contains a historic board and batten outbuilding and a small overgrown plantation cemetery southwest of the house.&#13;
Tidewater cottages in the Tennessee Valley of this configuration also followed migratory patterns to earlier settlement areas in Virginia and Maryland. Robert Gamble in Historic Architecture of Alabama states that the 19th century versions of the style, like those in the Tennessee Valley of North Alabama, tend to have smaller chimneys and a shallower roof pitch than the colonial examples in Virginia and Maryland. Tidewater cottages are identified by their simplicity and their height to length ratio (double cube) with the house being twice as long as it is high. The Kroger House is a brick double pile form with the depth ratio mimicking that of the front elevation. Another example of the Tidewater cottage form in Lauderdale County can be found in the Peter F. Armistead house on Waterloo Road 3 miles west of Florence.&#13;
The property was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1986 as part of a “Tidewater Cottages in the Tennessee Valley” thematic nomination. More information about the house can be found on the website of the Alabama Historical Commission or the National Register data base of the National Park Service.&#13;
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                <text>Missy Brown, University of North Alabama</text>
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                <text>National Register nomination (#86001542)</text>
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                <text>When the East Alabama Male College opened its doors in 1859, William James Samford was one of the first eighty students to enroll. When the Civil War broke out in 1861, Samford enlisted as a private in the Confederate Army where he was soon promoted to Lieutenant. Serving primarily in the western theater of operations, he campaigned in Tennessee and Kentucky before he was captured at Baker's Creek, Mississippi in 1863. He then spent eighteen months in prison at the prisoner-of-war camp on Johnson's Island in Lake Erie where he met his former professor William F. Slaton.&#13;
&#13;
After the war, he returned to Auburn for a year to farm and study law under his father, after which he served in both houses of the Alabama legislature and eventually in Congress where he appropriated money for the reconstruction of Old Main Hall which had burned to the ground in 1887. He became the 31st Governor of Alabama in 1900. The newly reconstructed building was named Samford Hall in his honor in 1929.</text>
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                <text>&lt;a href="http://encyclopediaofalabama.org/face/Article.jsp?id=h-2015" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer noopener"&gt;Encyclopedia of Alabama: William J Samford&lt;/a&gt;</text>
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                <text>Erected in 1888 on the foundation of Old Main Hall (which burned down in 1887), William J. Samford Hall is one of Auburn University’s most easily recognizable buildings. Bruce and Morgan Architectural Firm fashioned the four-story Italianate-style structure after Old Main Hall, with one distinguishing characteristic – a majestic clock tower that rose many feet above the building’s roof. Old Main Hall’s cornerstone is still visible at the base of the northeast corner of Samford Hall. During the late nineteenth century, Samford Hall housed Alabama Agricultural and Mechanical College’s administration, classrooms, and library. In 1909, Samford Hall’s library, which operated out of three cramped rooms on the second floor, moved to the new Carnegie-endowed facility across campus. In 1929, the Board of Trustees officially named the building Samford Hall in honor of William J. Samford, Alabama’s thirty-first governor. Auburn University renovated the building in 1971 and replaced the original clock in 1995. Today the building functions solely as the headquarters of Auburn University’s administration. The building is located at 182 South College Street, Auburn University.</text>
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                <text>Image Source: http://family.auburn.edu/profiles/blogs/the-best-free-services-auburn-students-should-be-taking-advantage&#13;
&#13;
Text Sources: Auburn University Libraries, http://www.lib.auburn.edu/arch/buildings/samford_hall1.htm&#13;
&#13;
The Heritage of Lee County Book Committee, The Heritage of Lee County, Alabama (Clanton, AL: Heritage Publishing Consultants, 2000), 74.</text>
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                <text>The William Bowen House at 1145 Wildwood Park Road was built in 1949 and nominated to the National Register for its significance to architecture. The one story two bedroom Lustron House is a metal prefabricated house clad in enameled steel in two foot by two foot panels. The side gable roof is also covered in enameled steel panels designed to look like tile. The interior wall and ceiling also covered in the enameled panels are original as are the built in bookshelves, vanity, and closets. At the time of the National Register nomination in 2000 most of the interior was unchanged.&#13;
The Lustron Corporation manufactured prefabricated steel and enameled paneled homes to meet the housing demands created by returning soldiers from World War II.  The Columbus, Ohio based company operated between 1946 and 1950 and built 2,495 houses in a retooled Curtis-Wright airplane parts factory. The closed system factory constructed all 3,000 components of the house from steel and packaged the parts directly on specialized truck beds designed to hold and deliver one Lustron House. &#13;
Lustron Houses, like the automobile they so closely resembled, were sold by local franchised dealers. The company had no problem recruiting dealers and provided the nationwide network with a training and education center. Building crews were offered training at the Lustron Service School in Columbus. Dealers did suffer from territory disrupts, funding sources, local building code inconsistencies, and slow order delivery. In 1950 with accolades and praise from homeowners and the architectural and building community, financial problems and slow production rates forced the Lustron  Corporation to close.&#13;
In Alabama Lustron Houses are closely associated with the local North Alabama South Tennessee dealer, the Southern Sash Company. The Southern Sash Company’s parent company Union Aluminum of Sheffield produced the aluminum frame windows for the Lustron Corporation. Company records as of December 31, 1949 displayed shipments for 15 houses in Alabama.  The 2000 multi-property nomination for Lustron Houses in Alabama lists 9 surviving houses – 5 of which are in the Muscle Shoals area; 2 in Sheffield and 3 in Florence. All the houses in Florence are the most common plan, the two bedroom deluxe Westchester plan.&#13;
This property was listed individually on the National Register of Historic Places in 2000 for its significance in terms of architecture and engineering.  The same year Nomiit was also listed as part of a multiple property nomination “Lustron Houses in Alabama”. Information for this Omeka entry was found in the individual and multi-property nomination.</text>
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                <text>Missy Brown, University of North Alabama</text>
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                <text>Ford, Gene A., Susan Enzweiler and Trina Binkley. “Bowen, William House – Lustron House”. National Register of Historic Places. Montgomery: Alabama Historic Commission, 2000.&#13;
Ford, Gene A., Trina Binkley. “Lustron Houses in Alabama.” National Register of Historic Places Multiple Property Nomination. Montgomery: Alabama Historical Commission, 2000.&#13;
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Auburn University&#13;
Keith S. Hebert</text>
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University of North Alabama</text>
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                <text>William Basil Wood was born on October 31, 1820.  Wood was a LaGrange College graduate, and practiced law in Florence before the Civil War.  Wood served as a colonel of the 16th Alabama Infantry Regiment and was recommended for promotion to brigadier general, but worked as President of the Military Court when he was assigned to General James Longstreet’s Corps.  &#13;
	Besides being a lawyer, Wood served as circuit court judge and a Methodist minister after the war.  Wood was instrumental in the movement of La Grange College from Leighton to Florence in 1855.  Wood was also one of the first historians of Lauderdale County.&#13;
	William Basil Wood passed away on April 3, 1891.  He is buried in the Florence Cemetery along with his wife, Sarah.  Wood Avenue in Florence is named in his honor.  &#13;
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                <text>William Lindsey McDonald, A Walk Through The Past: People and Places of Florence and Lauderdale County, Alabama. (Bluewater Publications, 2003), 45-46.  &#13;
&#13;
Jill K. Garret, History of Lauderdale County, Alabama, 1964, 228.&#13;
&#13;
Image Courtesy of Collier Library Archives </text>
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                <text>1820-1891&#13;
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Auburn University&#13;
Keith S. Hebert</text>
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University of North Alabama</text>
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                <text>In the early 1830s, William Barnard, a mixed-race Creek Indian, built a log cabin on 640 acres of land in what is now western Lee County. Barnard was an influential leader of the Creeks in western Georgia and served under U.S. militia general John Floyd in the First Creek War.  Though he fought on the side of the United States in that conflict, Barnard was forced off of his Georgia property by the terms of subsequent treaties.  The land upon which the cabin was built was granted to Barnard for his service in the First Creek War, for which he was also was granted the rank of major.  Just before his death in 1833, Barnard recorded the first deed at the new Chambers County Courthouse, stipulating the division of his home, property and slaves between his twelve children upon his death.  Barnard's son John, the executor of the deed, was likely defrauded of his inheritance by the court, and moved to the Indian Territory with the rest of the family. &#13;
&#13;
The property then passed through a succession of white owners and fell into disrepair.  The cabin was donated by its last owner, Newell Floyd, to the Lee County Historical Society, of which Floyd is a member.  The cabin was moved from its original site to Pioneer Park in Loachapoka, and is currently undergoing restoration. The home was added to the Alabama Register of Landmarks and Heritage in 1996.  Located near the original site is a cemetery containing the remains of the Kinnebrew family and the site of Fort Henderson, a militia fort built to protect against Creek attacks.  </text>
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                <text>Text: Jeannette Frandsen and Newell Floyd, "Barnard-Newell Log Cabin," Trails in History: Official Newsletter of the Lee County Historical Society, Vol. 46, No. 2, April, 2013,  4-6.  http://www.leecountyhistoricalsociety.org/trails/TrailsV46n2april13.pdf&#13;
&#13;
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                <text>This image is the property of the Auburn University Libraries and is intended for non-commercial use. Users of the image are asked to acknowledge the Auburn University Libraries. For information about obtaining high-resolution copies of this and other images in this collection, please contact the Auburn University Libraries Special Collections &amp; Archives Department at archive@auburn.edu or (334) 844-1732.</text>
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                <text>Library of Congress (Historic American Buildings Survey): http://www.loc.gov/item/al0418/</text>
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                <text>Spring Hill -- Mobile County -- Alabama ; 76 South McGregor Avenue, Spring Hill, Mobile County, AL (just off Old Shell Road, 9 miles from Mobile)</text>
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Southern History&#13;
Sports Entertainment</text>
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              <description>An account of the resource</description>
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                  <text>Collection consists of research materials gathered by Keith S. Hebert, Department of History, Auburn University.  Hebert is writing a history of professional wrestling in the American South.  </text>
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                <text>Will Demonstrate Famous Scissor Lock Here</text>
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                <text>Visit Florence, "Tom's Wall,"http://www.visitflorenceal.com/things_to_do/toms-wall/ (Accessed April 28, 2015)</text>
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            <name>Date</name>
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