Montgomery
By Karren Pell and Carole King
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About this ebook
Karren Pell
This is Carole King and Karren Pell's first book for The History Press. Their previous three for Arcadia Publishing--Montgomery's Historic Neighborhood, Montgomery Then and Now and Modern Images Montgomery--remain popular. Carole has been the historic properties curator for Landmarks Foundation, managing the collection at Old Alabama Town in Montgomery for thirty years. Karren's bi-monthly live show, The Old Alabama Town Revue, features original songs, and an original monologue called Planet Karren is in its twelfth season. Carole and Karren hope that current residents of Montgomery enjoy learning about their history and that the books also inspire increased interest and investment in historic properties.
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Montgomery - Karren Pell
line.
INTRODUCTION
Perhaps it is the Alabama River, with its constant current, constant movement, that makes Montgomery, Alabama’s capital, a place of change. Often, these changes are not limited to Montgomery but are shared across the spectrum of American society and are part of the nation’s history.
This book begins with a look at Montgomery’s role in World War II as the home of Maxwell Field, then designated as the Southeast Air Corps Training Center, where pilots from all the Allied forces trained. Living accommodations on the base were limited, and the people of Montgomery opened their homes, churches, and hearts to the servicemen and servicewomen. Maxwell and Gunter Air Force Bases continue to be an important part of Montgomery.
The era of prosperity following the war created a busy downtown. Shoppers enjoyed a variety of retail establishments housed in buildings dating from the antebellum period to the first part of the 20th century. Since Montgomery is Alabama’s capital, lawyers and state agencies maintained offices downtown, adding to the bustle on the streets. In the late 1950s, residential and shopping areas developed beyond downtown. Normandale Shopping Center was popular and successful, and many companies maintained stores both downtown and in Normandale. Eastbrook Shopping Center was developed to serve the new neighborhoods on the east side of town. Construction began on Garrett Coliseum, then called the State Coliseum, in 1949. It served to showcase and help support Alabama’s agricultural sector. The venue continues to host the Alabama National Fair, as well as national and local events.
However, not all of Montgomery’s citizens fully partook of postwar prosperity. In his book on Montgomery and World War II, Montgomery in the Good War, Wesley Phillips Newton quotes Montgomery resident John Sawyer, who described the way African Americans were treated when returning to their homes in Montgomery after serving overseas: There was very little effort to show any respect for the Negroes who had served their country.
Change was needed, and change did come. The Reverend Martin Luther King Jr. moved to Montgomery as pastor of the Dexter Avenue Baptist Church in 1954. Reverend King lived with his family in Montgomery until 1960. As president of the Montgomery Improvement Association, Reverend King was a leader in the 1955–1956 Montgomery Bus Boycott. On December 1, 1955, Rosa Parks refused to give up her seat on a downtown Montgomery bus to a white man. Her action has become an iconic moment in American history. The result of which, the Montgomery Bus Boycott, is considered one of the first events of the civil rights movement. The boycott certainly also initiated Reverend King’s role as the civil rights movement’s foremost leader. In 1959, Federal Court Judge Frank Johnson ruled that Montgomery’s segregation of recreational facilities was unconstitutional. Rather than comply, city officials closed all city parks on December 31, 1959; the city commission reopened the parks on February 24, 1965. Dr. King was no longer a resident of Montgomery when he led the 1965 Selma-to-Montgomery Voting Rights March up Dexter Avenue to the Alabama State