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Montgomery in the Good War: Portrait of a Southern City, 1939–1946 (U of Alabama Press, 2000). Rogers, William Warren. Confederate Home Front: Montgomery During the Civil War (University of Alabama Press, 2001). Williams, Clanton W. "Early Ante-Bellum Montgomery: A Black-Belt Constituency." Journal of Southern History 7.4 (1941): 495-525.
The Society engages in a number of outreach programs to bring Missouri's history to the public. Such programs are the Missouri History in Performance theatre, the Missouri History Speakers' Bureau, and the Missouri Conference on History. The collection of the Society, concerning pamphlets, books, and state publications, is over 460,000 items.
Montgomery records highest homicides total. [33] 2021 - Montgomery records highest homicide rate in history. At 77 homicides. 2023 - On August 6, 2023, a violent brawl largely along racial lines occurs when three White men attack a Black co-captain of the Harriott II riverboat on a dock in Riverfront Park. [34]
Location of Montgomery County in Alabama. This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Montgomery County, Alabama. This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Montgomery County, Alabama, United States. Latitude and longitude coordinates are ...
The Summit included a multitude of speakers as well as those previously mentioned. [5] On October 1, 2021, the EJI reopened the Legacy Museum as an expansion from the original location at 400 N. Court St. in Montgomery, Alabama. The new grounds of the Legacy Museum is a location where previously enslaved people were warehoused.
Alabama State University (ASU, Bama State, or Alabama State) is a public historically black university in Montgomery, Alabama.Founded in 1867, during the Reconstruction era, it was one of about 180 "normal schools" established by state governments in the 19th century to train teachers for the rapidly growing public common schools.
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However, the city council passed the Montgomery Streetcar Act in 1906 that further mandated a continuation of segregation. [4] Segregation ended with the famous Montgomery bus boycott started by Rosa Parks and led by Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. and E. D. Nixon that lasted from December 2, 1955, to December 20, 1956.