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A Stranger’s Guide is the second of the five history galleries and focuses on the period between 1700 and 1830. It presents this period as a travel guide for the first-time visitor, offering advice on the best places to stay, work, spend your leisure time and even highlights the many local people you are likely to encounter, including the likes of John Baskerville and Matthew Boulton. [7]
History of the African-American Voting Rights and Women's Suffrage movements [121] Negro Southern League Museum: Birmingham: Jefferson: History of the Negro Southern League and Baseball in Birmingham [122] North Alabama Railroad Museum: Chase: Madison Features a rolling stock collection, a small train station and a small heritage railroad [123]
US 183 at San Antonio River: Goliad: State Antiquities Landmark, Recorded Texas Historic Landmark, part of Goliad State Park Historic District 8: Old Market House Museum: Old Market House Museum: October 18, 1972
This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Birmingham, Alabama, United States. Latitude and longitude coordinates are provided for many National Register properties and districts; these locations may be seen together in an online map. [1]
A new visitor center was built 2015 and opened in 2016. The furnace site, along a wide strip of land reserved in Birmingham's original city plan for railroads and industry, hosts thousands of students through their education programs per year. The museum is free to visit during their operating hours of Tuesday-Saturday 10:00 A.M to 4:00 P.M.
Arlington Antebellum Home & Gardens, or Arlington Historic House, is a former plantation and 6 acres (24,000 m 2) of landscaped gardens near downtown Birmingham, Alabama, United States. The two-story frame structure was built by enslaved people between 1845–50. Its style is antebellum-era Greek Revival architecture. The house serves as a ...
The Ikon Gallery (grid reference) is an English gallery of contemporary art, located in Brindleyplace, Birmingham. It is housed in the Grade II listed , neo-Gothic former Oozells Street Board School , designed by John Henry Chamberlain in 1877.
The Post Office has moved out of the building, but the structure continues to maintain a prominent presence in the financial/business district of downtown Birmingham. Occupying an entire city block of 5th Avenue, between 18th and 19th Streets, the building is a local landmark and the historic symbol of the Federal presence in Birmingham. [4]