State In Focus: Alabama The CLUI Falls Into The Deep South
In 2005
The Edmund Pettus bridge in Selma, Alabama,
a town that is still steeped in the Southern exotic.
CLUI photo
Every year the Center takes one state to focus
in on and study in depth. For 2005 it was Alabama. This time
the Center’s normal staff of researchers were assisted by a group
of graduate students from the Curatorial Practice Program at
San Francisco’s California College of the Arts.
There still are cotton farms in Alabama, but now the state’s
largest agricultural outputs are forestry products and peanuts.
Chicken is the largest farm product (only Arkansas makes more
“broilers”). Despite its reputation, it is only the 7th poorest
state in the USA in per capita income (it is beat out by Misssissippi,
West Virginia, New Mexico, Arkansas, South Carolina, and Montana).
Alabama has 4.4 million people, 71% of whom are white, 26% are
black. 100 years ago it was about half black. One in six people
(750,000) live in “mobile homes,” whatever that means. It is
also one of most “provincial” places in the USA – people tend
to live near where they were born. As a result, folkways and
localized, regional culture is strong, as frequent flourishes
of unique folk art and crafts attest.
Economically, Alabama is an industrialized state now. Its largest
industry, in financial totals, is automobiles. The north has
some large TVA power plants and dams that spurred federally supported
industry in the 1930’s and 1940’s, such as fertilizers and explosives,
and which laid the foundation for a high-tech industrial belt
that is still strong today, centered around Huntsville. The north
central part of the state has a number of major steel and pipe
manufacturers, though Birmingham’s steel industry no longer dominates
the regional economy (the landscape around the city has many
former – and some active - steel plants). Birmingham, the largest
city in the state, now has a service economy, with the headquarters
of a number of national corporations, such as Healthsouth, Liberty
National Insurance, and the three big southern banks: Amsouth,
Regions, and Southtrust. Birmingham also has the headquarters
for a few major engineering firms, such as Rust International,
Herbert International, BE&K, Brasfield and Gorrie, and Blount
International. These companies, like some of their out of state
competitors Bechtel, KBR, and Fluor, build infrastructure and
industry around the world. Supporting deal-making businesses
such as these is a string of 18 golf courses, spread out from
Huntsville to Mobile.
Other pockets of affluence and industry include a major munitions
plant and arsenal at Anniston; a still active textile industry,
which includes one of the nation’s leading sports clothing manufacturers,
around Alexander City; the State Universities at Tuscaloosa and
Auburn; isolated and periodic massive car plants and wood product
plants; and fancy vacation communities along the shores of Alabama’s
small stretch of coastline. Most of the land of the state is
like the rest of the South: slightly rolling hills with fields
and some forests, scattered with post-war housing, condensing
on the edges of small towns, with gas stations, fast food, and
shopping centers, then a few blocks of a worn, old main street
at the core.
A dramatic walk-through public sculpture
in Kelly Ingram Park. CLUI photo
Selected Points of Interest
in Alabama
Kelly Ingram Park
A cluster of notable civil rights attractions is located next to downtown
Birmingham, around Kelly Ingram Park, a city block sized park that is itself
the site of a major event in the nation’s civil rights struggle. Across from
the park is the 16th Street Baptist Church, a center for the city’s black
community, made famous in 1963 by a KKK bombing that killed four young girls.
Across the street from it is the Birmingham Civil Rights Institute, perhaps
the national museum on the subject of civil rights. The Institute’s primary
function, it seems, is to use its state of the art displays to educate legions
of high school students on the history of the 1950’s and 1960’s movement,
in one of the most unsubtle display environments imagineable. In the park
itself are some sculptures commemorating events that occurred there in 1962,
when the police were sent into the park to arrest protesters who had been
gathering there in response to the imprisonment of Martin Luther King, Jr.,
who had been put in jail for protesting the police beatings of the bus bound
Freedom Riders. At the park, the police were photographed using violent acts,
with dogs, nightsticks, and fire hoses, often against children. These images
and the events they depicted were ultimately to have a positive effect on
civil rights policy at the national level.
Joe Minter’s Yard
Joe Minter is a visionary artist who has created a sculpture park of American
history in his backyard. Using lumber, dolls, lawn ornaments, doors, and
other found materials that he shapes, paints, assembles, and writes on,
Minter has created a walk through “African Village in America,” as he sometimes
call it, a “reclaiming of the telling of history.” The sculptures are like
exhibits in a museum, each telling a different part of a historical story
about civil rights, compassion, and historical and current events, nationally
and locally. There is the unbuilt bridge at Gee’s Bend, and the famous
built bridge at Selma; a memorial to the 2004 tsunami victims; and a commentary
on the 9/11 attacks. Minter usually greets visitors if he can, and helps
to make his park come alive. His place is the last house on the block,
and abuts one of the main historic black graveyards in the city, where
hundreds of tombs buckle with neglect.
The Edmund Pettus bridge in Selma, as recreated
at Joe Minter’s yard in Birmingham. CLUI photo
Wade Quarry
Wade Sand & Gravel Co. operates a quarry amidst the ruins of a steel
plant of the kind that once made Birmingham the industrial center of the
new South. The hulking forms of the coke ovens and coal elevators, which
are the only remains of a much larger complex once owned by Republic Steel,
share space with the active conveyors and grey rock piles of the quarry.
Amidst the mixture of industrial forms are a number of artworks, as the Wade
family, who own this hyper-industrialized land, has established an informal
residence program for artists to work at the site. The town of Thomasville,
next to the plant site, was the company town built for the plant workers,
and has identical but incongruous houses, designed originally for a plant
in Pennsylvania. The homes are privately owned now.
Ruins of Republic Steel at the Wade Quarry,
Birmingham. CLUI photo
Sloss Furnace
The Sloss Furnace is a former pig iron plant near downtown Birmingham that
used to supply iron for the pipe industry of Alabama. It has been turned
into a preserved landmark, open to the public. The impressive remains of
two large blast furnaces, as well as the tunnels, corridors, chambers and
galleries around them, are open to exploration. One of the furnace areas
is still used for creative iron casting projects. Concerts and other public
events are held at Sloss as well, and the annual Halloween “haunted factory”
experience is superlative. Sloss is one of the few remnants America’s formidable
iron and steel industries that is truly open to the public.
State Court House
The State Court House in Montgomery, Alabama’s capital, was made famous by the
controversy that emerged around a two and a half ton stone monument with a
tablet listing the Ten Commandments, which was placed in a prominent spot in
the lobby of the building, in 2001. The separation of church and state issues
it raised divided the nation, and was a national media story for a few years,
as court cases battled it out. The National Guard was even called it to protect
the monument at some point. The monument is currently in storage, out of public
view, though its former prominent location in the lobby is an obvious vacancy.
A “temporary” display about the controversy
in the lobby lists the Ten Commandments, and blocks a plaque,
mounted in the wall, that depicts the U.S. Bill of Rights. CLUI
photo
Hank Williams Museum
The singer Hank Williams has several attractions devoted to
him in Alabama, his home state. These include his boyhood
home in Georgiana; the restored Kowaliga cabin where he wrote
“Your Cheatin’ Heart;” a statue of him in a park across from
where his funeral was held in Montgomery; and his grave,
in Oakwood Cemetery. His career in the national limelight
lasted for just a few years, yet this sickly, southern white
guy had nearly as much impact on American popular music as
Elvis. He brought the blues to country music, and died alone,
of an overdose of alcohol and pills, in the back seat of
his Cadillac at the age of 29. The Hank Williams Museum in
Montgomery displays that Cadillac, along with the contents
of the suitcase he had with him, and the light blue suit
he was wearing at the time of his death.
Hank Williams Museum, Montgomery.
CLUI photo
Gee’s Bend
One celebrated remote place in Alabama is Gee’s Bend (famous at least in the
arts and crafts worlds). It was here that, due to the isolation and creativity
of its denizens, a unique form of quilt patterning emerged, based on African
traditions, yet cut, literally, from American cloth. Composed of about
fifty of the women of the community, the quilters collective at Gee’s Bend
has had their work shown in museums around the country. Most of the quilters
are direct descendents of slaves who were brought to work on what started
out as Mr. Gee’s plantation, on a bend on the Alabama River. Though today
Gee’s Bend is officially called Boykin, it is still remote, located at
the end of what remains one of the longest dead-end roads in the state.
Bryant-Denny Stadium
Arguably, college football may be more avidly followed in Alabama than any
other state. The temple of the sport is the state university stadium in Tuscaloosa.
The Bryant-Denny Stadium is home of the University of Alabama football team,
ominously named The Crimson Tide. Built in 1929, the colossal stadium holds
83,818 people. It was originally named after a university president (George
Hutchenson Denny), but in 1975 the Alabama state legislature renamed the
stadium “Bryant-Denny Stadium” to commemorate the accomplishments of the
team’s coach Paul W. “Bear” Bryant. Bryant achieved legendary status in football
by leading Alabama to the national championship six times, and setting the
record as the (up to that time) most successful coach in college football
history with a record of 323 wins out of 424 games. Bryant, who coached at
Alabama for 25 years, is no doubt the primary reason for Alabaman college
football zeal. A museum dedicated to Bear Bryant is located a few blocks
from the stadium.
A treatment site at the “largest chemical
waste dump in America.” CLUI photo
Emelle Hazardous Waste Mound
Waste Management Incorporated’s Emelle Treatment Facility, located in the remote
Sumter County, in western Alabama, is one of the largest toxic waste dumps
in the United States. At its peak, the facility received almost 800,000
tons of waste per year, coming mostly from US states outside of Alabama,
and military bases overseas. Though the landfill is lined, and a leachate
filtration system helps to keep toxic materials on site, some tests have
reported traces of water contamination in nearby towns. Protestors argue
that the location of the facility is a product of “environmental racism.”
Sumter County is one of the country’s most impoverished regions with one-third
of the residents living below the poverty level and over 90 percent of
the residents in the area are black. In the 1990s, a state tax on waste
deposits and a series of federal regulations resulted in a 85 percent decline
in the amount of waste buried at the landfill each year. The site is still
accepting wastes, and will have to maintain the collection on site for
decades, if not centuries, to come.
Old Cahawba
Old Cahawba is a complex and mysteriously evocative place, an encapsulation
of much of the state’s history, and a place that is, apparently, a place
to leave. It began as a major Native American village, with a palisade wall
and a large mound inside. Briefly, it was Alabama’s state capital (1820-1826).
Before the Civil War, it was a thriving river town, a major distribution
point for cotton shipped down the Alabama River from the fertile “black belt”
to the port of Mobile. Some thought that it would become a port town as popular
as New York City, but with its constant flooding and lack of connecting railroads
the city could not survive. It became a ghost town shortly after the Civil
War. Today all that remains in Cahawba are several old street signs, an abandoned
plantation home, a few slave quarters, and bits of rubble outlining where
homes and businesses once stood, marked by interpretive plaques. Abandoned
trailer-homes indicate the last attempt by individuals to inhabit Old Cahawba,
fishermen and hunters from the late 1980s, who have, like the other former
denizens, mysteriously departed.
Static display at U.S. Space and Rocket
Center. CLUI photo
U.S. Space and Rocket Center
Soon after World War II, rocket research at the Redstone Arsenal, near Huntsville,
transformed the landscape and economy of northern Alabama, making the region
one of the world’s most important centers for space technology. Today, the
results of these federally supported activities has created a belt of affluence,
based on high tech industries. The center of the space programs in the region
is NASA’s George C. Marshall Space Flight Center, established by the federal
government in 1958 to develop rockets for space travel, and to continue the
research of rocket pioneer Werner von Braun, who directed the Center for
many years, and who first moved his lab to the arsenal grounds from Texas
in the 1940s. It is still one of NASA’s primary laboratory complexes, and
houses activities related to propulsion technology, space travel, and space
station habitation. Extensive displays at the U.S. Space and Rocket Center,
the large visitors center created by NASA, with local foundations and business
interests, include over 1,500 pieces of rocket and space hardware, models,
dioramas, interactive kiosks, and films that depict and describe the official
story of the American conquest of space, and the role that the Marshall Space
Flight Center and Werner von Braun had in making this possible.
Rural Studio’s Community Center in Mason’s
Bend. CLUI photo
Rural Studio at Mason’s Bend
Mason’s Bend is a small community surrounded by the vast fields of Hale County,
one of the poorest counties in the United States. This is where the late
Samuel Mockbee started Rural Studio, a hands-on architecture workshop for
graduate students at Auburn University. Since 1993, Rural Studio students
have designed and built houses and other structures with the families of
Mason’s Bend. The buildings are imaginatively designed, and are built with
unconventional, inexpensive, and recycled materials (the church in Mason’s
Bend is made out of rammed earth, with a shimmering wall of car windshields
that cascade from the roof to the ground). Though the idea of bringing
innovative, contemporary architecture to areas like Mason’s Bend is an
important aspect of Rural Studio, the success of their projects are ultimately
measured by how much they honor, involve, and benefit the people they are
created for. Mockbee’s dream of this “architecture of decency” lives on
through the continued expansion of Rural Studio, which has completed internationally
acclaimed projects with several other communities in Hale County and beyond.
Though based at Auburn University, on the other side of the state, the
“campus” for Rural Studio is a few miles down the road from Mason’s Bend,
along the main street through Newbern.
Rural Studio students at work in the rural
studio in Newbern. CLUI photo
Thanks to the members of the Curatorial
Practice Program class at CCA, Kathleen Brennan, Kalia Brook,
Alex Burke, Joyce Grimm, Audrey Marrs, Jessica Martin, Nancy
Meyer, Dina Pugh, Aislinn Race, and Roopesh Sitharan for assisting
with the Center’s Focus on Alabama, and for helping to enrich
the Center’s Land Use Database, one state at a time!