ALABAMA
            


Postal Abbreviation: AL
              Natives: Alabamian
            
Population 2020: 5,024,279
              Legal Driving Age: 16
              Age of Majority: 19
            Median Age: 39.1
State Song: “Alabama”
              Lyrics: Julia S. Tutwiler
              Music: Edna Glockel Gussen
Median Household Income:$46.472
            
Capital: Montgomery
Entered Union..... Dec. 14, 1819 (22th)
Present Constitution Adopted: 1901
Nickname: Yellowhammer State
              Heart of Dixie
Motto: 
              “Audemus jura nostra defendere” 
              (We dare defend our rights)
Origin of Name: 
              Possibly from Choctaw Indians (means "thicket-clearers" or "vegetation-gatherers)
AGRICULTURE: 
            cattle, chickens, cotton, dairy 
            eggs, fruit, peanuts, soybeans, 
            vegetables, wood.
MINING: bauxite, clay, cola, 
            natural gas, petroleum, sand, shale
MANUFACTURING: chemicals, 
            clothing, electronics, food 
            processing, furniture, lumber and 
            wood products, metal, paper 
            products, textiles.

Total Area: 52,423 sq. miles
          Land area: 50,750 sq. miles
          Water Area: 1,673 sq. miles
          Geographic Center: Chilton County, 12 mi. 
          SW of Clanton
  Highest Point: Cheaha Mountain (2,405 ft.)
  Lowest Point: Gulf of Mexico (sea level)
  Highest Recorded Temp.c: 112˚ F (9/5/1925)
  Lowest Recorded Temp.: -27˚ F (1/30/1966)
Alabama has a mild climate and rich soil. Most of the northern part of the state is covered with forested hills. Moving south, the hills give way to rolling grasslands and farmlands. The southern part of the state is marked by the Mobile Bay bayous. The southern border of the state is Mobile Bay.
Birmingham, 209,880
          Montgomery, 198,218
          Mobile, 189,572; 
          Huntsville, 197,318; 
          Tuscaloosa,101,113; 
          Hoover, 85,108; 
          Dothan,68,247; 
          Decatur, 55,683; 
          Auburn, 53,380; 
        Madison, 42,938
1540 Hernando de Soto arrived in Alabama from Florida. 
          --Spaniards defeat local Indains at the Battle of Mauvilla. 
  1559 Tristan de Luna established a settlement on Mobile Bay. 
  1702 The French found Fort Louis de la Mobile the first French settlement. 
  1711 Fort Louis was moved to the present day Mobile. 
  1719 The French brought the first African slaves to Alabama. 
  1763 Treaty of Paris Ends  Under terms France ceded all the land east of the 
          Mississippi to England thus Alabama became an English territory. 
  1811 Mobile Centinel is published
  1813 Americans defeat the Spanish garrison at Mobile
  1814 General Andrew Jackson defeated the Creek Indians at the Battle of 
          Horseshoe Bend. 
  1817 Congress passed a law establishing Alabama territory 
  1818 The first territorial legislature met. 
  1819 Alabama was admitted to the Union as the 22d state.
  1830 The Choctaw Indians ceded their remaining land and they begin their 
          migration to Oklahoma. 
  1836 The  Cherokees were forced to migrate to Oklahoma
  1861 Alabama voted on secession.  The Provisional government of the 
          Confederate States met in Montgomery in February 1861 and it adopted a 
          constitution.
  1864 Admiral David Farragut defeated the Confederates at the Battle of Mobile 
          Bay. 
  1865 the state adopted a new constitution. 
  1876 Federal troops were withdrawn from Alabama.
  1881 Booker T Washington opened the Tuskegee Institute. 
  1925 The first radio station WBRC was established in Birmingham.  In 
  1931 Eight black youths were convicted and sentenced to death at the Scottsboro 
          Trail. 
  1951 Rosa Parks refused to give up her seat on a bus to white passengers and 
          that precipitated the black boycott of the buses. 
  1956 the Supreme Court ruled the states segregation laws unconstitutional.   In
  1963 George Wallace became governor and announced that he would defy 
          federal integration laws.  In June 
  1964 Two Blacks students enrolled at the University of Alabama in opposition of 
          Governor Wallace. 
  1965 Martin Luther King and 25,000 followers march from Montgomery to 
        Selma.
Hank Aaron
          Hugo Black
          Helen Keller
          Coretta Scott King
          Condoleeza Rice
          George Wallace

1) Horseshoe Bend National Military Park
  Andrew Jackson Defeated the Creek Indians here in the Battle of Horseshoe Creek.  This effectively ended the Creek Wars.  Today there is a three mile loop road that runs through the battlefield.  There is a museum with period weapons, and information on the battle.
2) Russell Cave- National Monument
  Approximately 8,000 years ago Indians settled in a cave in Northern Alabama.  The relics of their life were found in Russel cave.  Today visitors can visit main chamber that measures 107 feet wide, 258 deep, with a 29 foot ceiling.
3) Tuskegee Institute National Historic Site
  In 1881 Booker T. Washington the African American Educator founded the Tuskegee Institute the first institution of higher learning dedicated to vocational teaching of African Americans.  Today the school is a fully accredited college with 5,000 students and staff.  On the campus is the George Washington Carver Museum, which celebrates the life of Carver, the African American scientist who worked at the Institute