Nitrate Village No. 1 Historic District
Colbert County, Alabama; Sheffield, Alabama; Nitrate Village No. 1 Historic District; Woodrow Wilson; Franklin D. Roosevelt; New Deal; National Defense Act; Wilson Dam; Tennessee Valley Authority; National Register of Historic Places; Historical American Engineering Record
The Nitrate Village No. 1 Historic District encompasses 112 family homes, two school buildings and one apartment complex, situated near the south bank of the Tennessee River in Sheffield, Alabama. The village was constructed in 1918 to house workers and their families after President Woodrow Wilson designated Sheffield as the site for a new nitrate plant, where the experimental German "Haber" process would be utilized in an (ultimately unsuccessful) attempt to extract weapons-grade nitrate from the atmosphere.
Designed by the Ewing and Allen architectural firm, and constructed by New York's J.G. White Engineering Corporation, the village street plan has a distinctive "liberty bell" shape, and the unifying architectural aesthetic is similarly distinctive. The village is typical of government-sponsored "planned communities" of the period in that all materials used in its construction were standardized and prefabricated to minimize costs and construction time. Likewise, all of the village's buildings share the same Bungalow-style architecture, with stuccoed walls and terracotta roofs.
Nitrate Village No. 1 was deeded to the city of Sheffield in 1949, and added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1984.
Brian Corrigan, University of North Alabama
National Register of Historic Places, Nitrate Village No. 1 Historic District, Sheffield, Colbert County, Alabama, National Register #84000603.
Historic American Engineering Record, HAER AL-46, http://loc.gov/pictures/item/al1051 (accessed November 9, 2015).
Alabama Cultural Resource Survey
November 9, 2015
text, image
1942-06-12: President Franklin Roosevelt's radio address on the scrap rubber campaign
World War, 1939-1945, Roosevelt, Franklin D.--(Franklin Delano),--1882-1945, Consumer rationing--United States--1940-1950
This sound recording captures a radio address by the President, in which he appealed for support of the scrap rubber campaign. The campaign was held because the Japanese had cut off about 92 percent of the U.S. rubber supply.
Roosevelt, Franklin D.--(Franklin Delano),--1882-1945
United States National Archives: IBM: International Business Machines Corporation Collection, 1935-1945: Sound Recordings of Franklin D. Roosevelt Speeches, 1935 - 1945
Auburn University Libraries
1942-06-12
Coates, Midge
Unrestricted
<a href="http://research.archives.gov/description/2198578">http://research.archives.gov/description/2198578</a>
mp3
English
Sound
200-212B.mp3
United States