Monday, November 18, 2024

 "Dr. Leland say he had no idea what war was by all his reading about it until he saw its effects he say it is beyond description awful. He thinks so many went back to tell the History of it that the rest will not be so willing to go to war after this. some of the heads and feet of those who were buried were uncovered. He himself would have given One dollar for a drink of water when he was there and he could not get it he said they had to drink from water worse than our hogs drink in the street. I think it is awful to die in a battle. O preserve us from such horrible ends is my prayer. O for the reign of Righteousness and peace may it soon cover this earth and first reign in each of our hearts. O to be kept from the evil of this world while we are in it." Tuscaloosa's Barbara Little in 1861 writing about the first Battle of Bull Run.

" Fifty-six years in business in Tuscaloosa, Victor Friedman represented the Tuscaloosa Merchants' Bureau on last night's program. He told how, when he first came to this city, his first purchase here was a lantern to assist him in walking the streets of Tuscaloosa after dark and to guard him against bumping into cows and hogs and beautiful oak trees on Tuscaloosa's streets."

from the February 14, 1926 TUSCALOOSA NEWS

 

"Correspondence of the Gazette. 

Of the rights of the people, Mr. Editor, inalienable and inherent, is to complain at the office-holders. They are a privileged class. Now, I propose to give them one of their privileges that of being abused.

I shall complain, first, that they promise more than they perform. Let us take up our City authorities What are they doing ? 

As I was walking down town this morning, I was almost lost in the weeds that hedged my path. It is true there was no hog hiding in the rank tangle to frighten me by his ugh ! ugh ! but The scent of the swill  Hangs 'round it still. Crossing one of the bridges, one foot caught against a nail that caused me to stumble and catch the other in an opening in the planks. This happens frequently. A buggy, the other day, got its wheel lodged between two planks of the flooring of the Street Railway crossing and was nearly wrecked, striking against the ends of the cross-ties.

They will cover there up in due time, of course. Tho City Fathers owe it to their constituency to give us safe ways for foot and vehicles. Did yon ever, Mr. Editor, stop and look at that enclosure of trees on Greensboro St.? It is a picture of real loveliness. Let our colored folk come into town and hitch their lean cattle to the failing and fallen planks that environ those lovely oaks, and you have a picture that Harper would envy.

Sunday is here now. What do you see on this sacred day, Mr. Editor? You don't see it? There are those who do, and they have the power to arrest it . While here goes an orderly procession of cheerful and happy faces to the house of God, there goes a line of almost equal length, finding its way, by the aid of hired ushers, to the den of the Rum-seller and the doom of the drunkard. We have men in our midst doing more mischief than the worst plague that ever visited a people, I complain that there is no resistance to this worse than small-pox scourge. The City Fathers can do something and the whole city intelligence will support them.

from the July 20, 1882 TUSKALOOSA GAZETTE

 Since the passage of the hog law the following from an exchange is no longer applicable to Tuskaloosa: "Oh, the hog, the beautiful hog curling his tail as he watches the dog, defying the law or his bread and meal ; roaming at large in every street, hunting, grunting, nosing around, 'till the open gateway is sure to be found, with hinges broken and ruined quite, by the lovers that hung there Sunday night ; it won't be shut, it won't hang level ; in walks the hog and raises the very mischief."

 from the March 22, 1888 TUSCALOOSA GAZETTE

"Times:

I would suggest that your East End correspondent in his conspiracy against hogs, remember the fact, that no scavenger cart ever visits this blessed annex, and our main reliance to get rid of dead carcasses on our neglected streets and side paths are buzzards and hogs." 

from the January 30, 1895 TUSCALOOSA WEEKLY TIMES

"As it now is with hog gaps on every fence line to catch the floating debris the level of the ditch is constantly changing, causing stagnant pools to form ; a breeding place for mosquitoes and malarial fever. The poor condition of our streets furnishes a constant subject for unfavorable comment.I look upon the improvement of our streets as of paramount importance, We have all the other public utilities, such as sewerage system, water works, dummy line, electric light and ice plant, but our streets are rougher than country roads. With out any great expenditure of money our streets could be rendered level, firm and hard, both in the rainy and dry season.

from the September 9, 1900 TUSKALOOSA GAZETTE

 An ordinance amending the hog law, by reducing the charges for taking up hogs on the streets, from one dollar to fifty cents per head, was introduced by Mayor Foster and adopted. On motion of Alderman McCormick the salaries of the policemen were increased from $45 to $50 per month..

 

WHY COW LAW SHOULD NOT BE PASSED. 1. For on luckless bovin that teals a oabbage or an apple from a careleaa grocer, or opens th latehless gate of so improvident oilizen, there ar butidrada of respectable eows that anietly brows on onr back streats without molesting anyone. 2. A aow that bahavaa badly eaa be abated like any other nuisance.

When there is such a plain rtaort, would it b wis to punish th inno cent in ordar to suppress the guilty? Thi is ai ti-republioan. 8. Th complaint against marauding; stock comes from those who bavt no Interest in them. The weilare of a whole city is not to be sacrificed for a oabbage. If the driven of country wagons go off and leave their teams and wagons exposrd contrary 10 an xpreas law ol the city can they justly invoke the creation of another law to protect tham in their lawlessness ; Or if a grocer persist in blocking th idewalk with oratea of cabbages where loud scent attracts a foraging animal, is it not just one of the risks which he take in putting it there T 4 The back streets covered with Ber muda grass is th only valnahl free bold of th city.

This is open to any family that keeps a cow. To cut off thi 'reshold which bas exiattd front time immemorial would be equiva lent to levying a heavy tax upon a portion of our citizens least able to bear it. Many a poor widow, strug gling to support a family of fatherleaa children, fnda iu thi her greatest source of support. 5. Hundreds of dollars annually were lost to the city by the passage of th hog law.

There are heaps ol garbage in our back streets which those scavengers removtd, and which the town cart dot not reach. The children yet pine for these delightful spare-rib and tenderloin which their mother prepared, and now it is proposed to take the milk away from the babte and sucklings. The law means less of milk to tht poor, and to the rich it means that diseased milk which comes from confining stock in pens and feeding them on artificial food. 6. Apart from any sanitary or local consideration, however, it ia impolitic and unslatearuaiilike to destroy values, Ia town without pay-rolls, without industries and struggling for bare x istence, it is not best to sacrifice too much to style.

We have had too mue.h nf that. ,.

The back streets covered with Ber muda grass is th only valnahl free bold of th city. This is open to any family that keeps a cow. To cut off thi 'reshold which bas exiattd front time immemorial would be equiva lent to levying a heavy tax upon a portion of our citizens least able to bear it. Many a poor widow, strug gling to support a family of fatherleaa children, fnda iu thi her greatest source of support. 5.

Hundreds of dollars annually were lost to the city by the passage of th hog law. There are heaps ol garbage in our back streets which those scavengers removtd, and which the town cart dot not reach. The children yet pine for these delightful spare-rib and tenderloin which their mother prepared, and now it is proposed to take the milk away from the babte and sucklings. The law means less of milk to tht poor, and to the rich it means that diseased milk which comes from confining stock in pens and feeding them on artificial food. local it.

Saturday, November 16, 2024

 Louis DeShields 1898-1987 Louis “Pop” DeShields (1898-1987) - Find a Grave Memorial

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Wednesday, November 13, 2024



 DOTS FROM THE DRUID CITY LITERARY CLUB. 

Who Planted The First Oaks la Tuskaloosa ?

 The first Oaks were planted in Tuskaloosa in 1839, by an Irishman named Michael Shelly, who came along about that time. Mr. Erasmus Cooper employed him to plant them in front of the little brick house on the South of Main St., just West of Chestnut St., which now belongs to Mr.Chas Small wood, and to occupied by Mr. Tan.Simpson, as a residence ; and here you will to-day see the finest specimen of Oaks in the City. This man Shelly ,in talking about the trees, always insisted upon giving them what is perhaps then: proper botanical name, and thereby secured for himself, as long as he remained, m Tuskaloosa, the name of " Quircus Aquations." , He next planted a row m front of Bar Room, which in those davs. stood about where now stands the North end of what is known as the Drish Building.' This Bar Room was kept for Mat Duffee, by a man called Jimmy Owen, and it was known in those (lays as the "Old Fort" On or near the same snot iu.raruti B wmi uie omoe 01 ur. Jlullman and the Bnggs' Carriage Shop, landmarks which will per. haps be remembered by some of our i,i mi.:..

!,,.( , i'i .s. .1 J 1 J! t t t 1 wwiBiaw, lite next Oaks Were planted in 1840 and '41, in the centre of Main Street between Monroe and Market. and constitute that beautiful row which now flourishes in the business portion of the town. The expense was borne by the various parties who owned property ou either side oi tne street. The next were planted out in 1842 by Mr.

Win, M. Prince, tho School master, who advertised himself as "The Thrashing Machine," and for wnommanyot our old citizens re tain a reeling recollection. He plan ted a row around what in those days Was known as the "Indian Queen" Hotel, but which: is now known as The Druid City Hotel. Dr. John Owen, at the expense of the City, next planted them out on Main St., au tne way rroin aiarKet St.

to the capitoL-f, JVlr. Charley Patterson next planted thim on two sides of his Hotel, which stood where Mr. J, D. Spillers store now stands; and from that time the planting of trees increased, until now our beautiful town is Known tar and wide as The City of Oaks. J.

af-ti a 1.

Saturday, November 09, 2024

 CAMP HORNE

J.T. Horne https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/87699639/james-thomas-horne

 In a brief talk, Rotarian Jim Horne declared that he wanted it strictly understood that the new camp site is not to be known as "Horne's Camp" that though he gave it to the scouts as a whole, he is in no way connected with it; that it now belongs to the community, theirs to look after and develop. He stated that his reasons for giving the camp and in taking an active interest in scouting was due to the fact that he had no such advantages as a boy himself and that he had determined then to some day do something that would better the boys' lot. Mr. Horne then outlined the plans for the new camp which include several large buildings, a dam and waterworks and declared faith enough in those of Tuscaloosa, who have the money and the necessary lumber and other materials to see the project through.

 

 

The Scouts Win Praise Praise for the Black Warrior district of the Boy Scouts from C. E. Carmack, regional executive over five states, is a matter for some pride in Tuscaloosa and in the group of counties which compose this district. And an added interest is given to the work here because of the new things which Mr. Carmack says are expected to come of the work in this district.

Re-forestation through Scouting is one of the new things promised the South by the Tuscaloosa Scout camp, says the regional executive. J. T. Horne, who presented the Tuscaloosa Scouts with the Herrin's Lake camp had a long vision of training boys in foresting the hills of Tuscaloosa county, recalls the  visitor here, and now the story of Mr. Horne's vision is being spread with particular pains to other camps and councils throughout the South.

And that is a worthy thing to come out of Tuscaloosa county and a worthy thing for a Tuscaloosan to accomplish and for other Tuscaloosans to encourage. Mothers and fathers are showing an interest in the local Scout camp and in camping programs. The camps in the Black Warrior district are being thrown open to adult and to family campers when they are not in use by the Scouts, with the simple" provision that arrangements be made at Scout headquarters. And the regional director 'sees good to result. Not only will it encourage and add stimulus to Scouting he says, but two or three days camp by mothers and fathers, even once a year, under a definite program and leadership can be expected to add something to the lives of the fathers and mothers.

The outdoors has many things to offer to add to the lives of older persons, the executive adds. If Scouting in Tuscaloosa and in the Black Warrior district can deserve a National recognition and a Nation-wide reputation for these two things; then Scouting here will have added definitely to the resources of the Nation not only in timber, but in health and happiness.

 "The present moment is time feelin' up reality." : ROBERTOREG

Tuesday, November 05, 2024

 

1889 SANFORD FIRE MAP

 

Sunday, November 03, 2024

 TREATY OF ST. STEPHENS or TREATY OF THE CHOCTAW TRADING HOUSE, October 24, 1816

 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treaty_of_Fort_St._Stephens

"They started to pour in during 1815. So great did the influx become in 1816 and 1817 that corn, much in demand from the Indians and earlier white settlers, climbed to four dollars per bushel along the main road from Huntsville to Tuscaloosa." page 3 or THE FORMATIVE PERIOD IN ALABAMA 1815-1828 by Thomas Perkins Abernethy. 

from MATT CLINTON: https://www.tuscco.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/TuscaloosaEarlyDays-39.pdf

"These men--Tindall, Moody, the Meeks, and Wyman--are competent witnesses that
Thomas York was our first settler.
On old maps of the city of Tuscaloosa the avenue we now call Twentieth Avenue is
called York Street. No other street or avenue bears the name of any person who is known
to have settled in Tuscaloosa at an early date. This fact seems to be corroborative
evidence that York was our first settler."

"For the first five years of Tuscaloosa's existence all of the settlers were squatters; that is,
they had no title to the land. The town was surveyed in 1821. A letter written January 9,
1821, by Josiah Meigs, commissioner of the general land office, to General John Coffee
says, in part: "The survey of the township on which the town of Tuscaloosa is situated is
much wanted. You will please send a plat of it immediately to this office, and cause the
section or fractional section on which the said town stands to be laid off into town lots
without delay, forwarding a plat thereof to this office without delay."
The actual survey was made by Collin Finnell, grandfather of Judge Woolsey Finnell. Dr.
William Cochrane, who came to Tuscaloosa in 1817, at the age of one year, is our
authority for the method used in laying out the town. The surveyors began at the boat
landing below the Falls and followed the road up the River Hill. From this point a wide
street was laid out perpendicular to the river. This street is now called Greensboro
Avenue. Broad Street was laid out at right angles to Greensboro Avenue, and the other
streets were laid out in conformity with these two.
The sale of lots began in the fall of 1821, probably in October. Colonel John McKee was
appointed registrar of the land office in Tuscaloosa and served from March 7, 1821, to
January 13, 1824. The land sale began with the auctioning of lot number 1, which is
located in the northeast corner of section 22. Other lots were sold in numerical order.

In 1903 Colonel H. S. Halbert wrote Thomas P. Clinton from Meridian, Mississippi as
follows: "As you are engaged on a history of Tuscaloosa County, I would like to mention
a few incidents that I have frequently heard mentioned in my family history. The Rev.
Joshua Halbert who was born in S.C. in 1788, was the first man who ever drove a horse
wagon to the site of the present town of Tuscaloosa. He married Matilda Nash, and I have
always heard that Tuscaloosa was first called Matildaville in honor of her, before it
received its final name of Tuscaloosa.

Baptists were the first to organize a congregation in Tuscaloosa. On January 24, 1818,
Rev. Thomas Baines and Rev. Nathan Roberts met with the congregation in the home of
Benjamin Higginbotham. They organized a church, which they called Ebenezer. In April
Rev. Nathan Roberts was called as first pastor, and Collin Finnell was made clerk. Other
ministers who served as pastors of this church were as follows: Rev. Daniel Brown
(1821-1822), Rev. Thomas Baines (1822-1824), Rev. Hosea Holcomb (1824-1827), and
Rev. Robert Marsh (1827- 1831). On October 3, 1818, this group united with nine other
congregations to constitute the Cahaba Association. A frame building was erected near
the brow of the hill at the north end of Twenty-seventh Avenue. North of and in the rear
of the church the first dead of the town were buried. The earliest known burials in
Greenwood Cemetery were made in 1821, and it is not probable that burials were made
there before that date, as the town was not surveyed until 1821.






from an act of congress, passe March 3, 1817, the Mississippi Territory was divided, and the eastern half erected into a separate district called the Alabama Territory. By another act of congress, passed the same day, a surveyor was appointed for the lands in the northern portion of the Alabama territory, and General John Coffee was made the surveyor general of this district. By the third section of this last named act several sections of land suitable for town sites were to be reserved from entry and sale as public lands. These reserved sectlons were to be laid off into town lots, and offered for sale to the highest bidders, whenever tha President of the United States should direct. The attention of the surveyor general was at once directed to  the falls of the Black Warrior as a suitable place for the establishment of one of ' these" towns.

Fractional section 22 of j township 21, range 10 west, which lies on the south side of the river at the lowest falls, was selected by the president as the ' site of a town as yet unnamed to be laid off into lots and sold. This fractional section 22 constituted the original town of Tuscaloosa as laid out by the surveyor general afterwards.

 May 12, 1899 TUSCALOOSA WEEKLY TIMES (W. S. Wyman)

John M. Jenkins and Elias Jenkins, merchants. Their log store stood at or near the north-east corner of the present Broad and Market streets, where now stands the store of Friedman & Rosenau. It is proper to remind the reader that the town had not yet been laid off into streets and lots. The houses were scattered here and there, as the people had chosen to build them. Judge Smith says that this corner was about the centre of the town at that time. Benjamin and George Cox. merchants of Newton; James Hogan, merchant, father of the late Alexander Perry Hogan: Captain James H. Dearing, merchant, who removed here from Saint Stephens. He was owner and captain of the Tombigbee, the second steamboat to come from Mobile to the Falls of the Warrior. Captain Dearing's log store was on what was afterwards known as lot 165 in the official plat of the town. Here he afterwards built the two-story block which remains to this day, occupied in 1S98 by H. Gluck and others. 

INCORPORATION OF TUSCALOOSA.

 Towards the end of the year 1819, the town had grown large enough to feel the need of regular government. On the 13th of December the legislature passed an act to incorporate the town of Tuscaloosa, j Two facts are worth mention in this connection: First, that now for the first time was the town called Tuscaloosa; second, that when the settlement was raised to the dignity of a town, none of the inhabitants owned so much as a square foot of land within its limits. They were all "squatters." for the town site which had been ' reserved from entry and sale had not yet been laid out. On the first Tuesday of January, 1819, all while male citizens of the age of twenty-one. residing on the fraction of land known as the south fraction of' I section 22, township 21. range 10. west, were  invited to assemble at the court house and choose by ballots seven householders to act I as emmissioners ef the town of "Tuscaloosa.

 THE FIRST COI'RT HOUSE AND JAIL. It is manifest from the words of this act that in the month of December, 1819, there was already a court house for the county within the limits of the town.

So far as I know- there is no record or tradition which enables us lo establish the spot on which this first court house stood. I conjecture that it was a temporary structure of logs . buit on tne k), vv,ich was afterwards de- stined on the plat, of the town as "Court Square." This was the lot on the north side of Broad street, immediately opposite the present Washington hotel. Judge Smith tells us in his "Reminiscences" that the first jail "was about in the center of what Is now Market street, near Main;" that is to say, somewhere between Broad and street and the MeLester House corner. "It was built of heavy hewn logs, and one story high." The prison bounds of this first jail are thus given in one of the old court records: "Commencing at the jail, thence running in a direct line to Living's, including Living's houses; thence to J.

V. Isbell's: from thence to John Read's, including Nash's cotton gin; from Read's to Pewell's; thence to Level's tavern; thence across the lot to the jail." "It would puzzle the oldest inhabitant," says Judge Smith, "to run out these interesting linos .at this time." We can identify . now only one of these limits, namely Lovel's tavern. This was somewhere in the neighborhood of Friedman & Rosenau's corner. 

from the June 2, 1909 BIRMINGHAM NEWS 

The earliest settlers at the fails of the Warrior probably came from Tennessee. They were Thomas, Jonathan and Emanuel York, who came in the spring of 1816. Other settlers rapidly followed, and on December 13, 1819, the town of Tuskaloosa was Incorporated by the legislature of Alabama at its first session. At the time of this incorporation the title to the site of the town was still in the United States government; as under an act of congress passed on March 3, 1817, fractional section 22. township 21, Range 10 west, Huntsville meridian, was reserved for a town site. The survey of this section into streets and lots was not made until 1821, at which time the lots were sold by the United States government.

By act of congress passed May 26, 1824, the title to the streets and also certain lots set apart for public use and known as Court Square, the Market Square, the Jail lot, the spring, the church, the burial ground, the river margin, the pond and the common, were vested In the city of Tuskaloosa.

from the July 9, 1909 BIRMINGHAM NEWS

  The attention of the surveyor general was at once directed to the falls of the Black Warrior as a suitable place for the establishment of one of these towns, Fractional section 22 of township 21, range 10 west, which lies on the south side of the Warrior River at the lowest falls, was selected by the president as the site of a town as yet unnamed to be laid off into lots and sold at auction. This fractional section 22 constituted the original town of Tuscaloosa as laid out by the surveyor general afterwards. A great part of this story is gathered from an article published in Tuscaloosa Times "Trade Edition" Friday, May 12, 1899, by Dr. William S. Wyman, under the title, "The Beginning of Tuscaloosa and Newton." It's the best kind of a story for it incorporates his own memories, those of Judge Washington Moody, A. B. McEachin, Thomas Maxwell, W. C. Richardson and Judge William R.

Smith,

 from October 5, 1941 MONTGOMERY ADVERTISER: "To John Coffee as surveyor general and his corps of assistants was assigned the task of making the original surveys. His deputy surveyors - were Samuel Bigby, John S. and Jeremiah Doxey, Benjamin and Hardy Clements, Benjamin Harris and perhaps others."

from George Little's MEMOIRS (1924) "...(Hardy) Clements was a surveyor by profession. and laid off the town of Tuscaloosa; as  he went over the county in his work, he was able to pick up a number of bargains in land and amassed a large fortune. He lent out his surplus money and was very conscientious about interest charges, never charging more than the legal rate."

from MATT CLINTON

“Tuscaloosa, Alabama – Its Early Days 1816-1865”:

 John B. Pass and William Toxey came to Tuscaloosa in 1820. On the corner now
occupied by the First National Bank they built the first two-storied brick building. Pass
and Toxey used the lower story for their store, and the upper rooms were used as a hotel
by Billy Dunton, who called his hotel the Golden Ball. From time to time this building
was added to and became Washington Hall. It extended northward through the block.
The first to build on this corner (or near it) was Thomas Lovel, who built a two-roomed
log house. The place was known as Lovel's Tavern. A few years later the Jenkins brothers
occupied the corner. There is no record of Lovel's owning the lot. Possibly he was a
squatter, as indeed were all who settled here before the town was surveyed in 1821. At
the land sales of 1821 William Toxey bought the lot. It is probable that the brick building
was not built before 1831. Dr. John Neilson, who came to Tuscaloosa in 1831, stated that
when he came here a log house stood on the corner.
John O. Cummings, a native of Tennessee, came to Tuscaloosa in 1824. He formed a
partnership with John T. Irby and, after the closing of this firm, entered partnership with
Charles G. Picher. The Cummings and Picher business was located on the First National
Bank corner. They probably succeeded Pass and Toxey in that location. This firm met
with disaster in the panic of 1837. Both men retired to live on farms. Their friends tried
to reestablish them in the business world, and Cummings became a commission merchant
in Mobile. In 1859 he fell a victim to yellow fever. Picher had lost confidence in himself
and refused help. The man who had been a prosperous merchant, wearing linen of pearly
whiteness, boots of the nicest fit, and a hat of finest beaver, had degenerated into a listless
farmer wearing blue jeans, a home-made wool hat, and brogans.
Ed Sims and David Scott came to Tuscaloosa in 1822. They built a large brick storehouse
on the northeast corner at the intersection of Broad Street and Twenty-third Avenue.
When Tuscaloosa became the state capital, the State Bank was located on this corner. At
a later time the famous "Bee-Hive" store of Thomas Maxwell was established there. The
Belk-Hudson Company now occupies the old site
At the land sales of 1821 Sims and Scott bought many lots for speculative purposes and
profited considerably from their merchandising and real estate businesses. Sims was
particularly interested in establishing schools for girls. He presented the Methodist
Conference with a brick house to be used as a boarding school for girls. It was
established in 1828 and was known as the Sims Female Academy. It was located on the
northwest corner at the intersection of Fourth Street and Twenty-second Avenue. Dr.
Wyman says that it was probably the first boarding school for girls located in Alabama.
Later Sims cooperated with other citizens in starting the Tuscaloosa Female Academy, an
interdenominational school. Later this school came under the control of Professor and
Mrs. Samuel Stafford. Sims also aided in the establishment of the Wesleyan Female
Institute, which was located opposite the First Methodist Church on Eighth Street in the
building formerly owned and occupied by E. N. C. Snow and later used as the Doctor's
Clinic. Sims lived on the Hargrove Road in the present Mosely home. Scott withdrew
from the firm and started a cotton factory in Bibb County. Before the Civil War Scott
returned to Tuscaloosa and reestablished his business.

 Since the call for the election of the first officials of the town of Tuscaloosa was issued in
December, 1819, and since the call specified that the meeting was to take place in the
court house, we know that there was a court house in Tuscaloosa as early as December,
1819. There is no existing and known record to tell us where that court house was
located. On this point Dr. Wyman says: "I conjecture that it was a temporary structure of
logs built on the lot which was afterwards designated on the plat of the town as 'Court
Square.' This was the lot on the north side of Broad Street, immediately opposite the
present Washington Hotel." In 1899, when Dr. Wyman wrote the article in which this
statement is made, the Washington Hotel was on the southwest corner at the intersection
of Broad Street and Twenty-second Avenue, that is, the present site of the post office.
(Washington Hotel was the Bell Tavern with a new name. It is not to be confused with
Washington Hall, which stood where the First National Bank is now.)
In 1821 the Masonic Hall was adopted as a temporary seat of justice. An annual rent of
$80 was paid for use of the building. In 1822, by a vote of the people of Tuscaloosa
County, the seat of justice was moved to Newtown. Newtown had been incorporated in
December, 1820, and, because Tuscaloosa had not been surveyed at that time, grew faster
than Tuscaloosa. The courthouse in Newtown was located in lots 9 and 10 of the survey
of that town, that is, west of Thirty-second Avenue between Sixth and Seventh Streets.
The Newtown Company donated the land and the building. A "handsome brick edifice"
was erected, and court was held in the building until 1826, when the courthouse was
moved back to old town. Peter Donaldson was paid $15 "for use of house in which to
hold court." Donaldson was a hotel keeper in Tuscaloosa and was probably at that time
proprietor of Washington Hall. It is possible that court was held in the large room on the
second floor of that building.
In 1830 a two storied brick court house was erected at the northwest corner at the
intersection of Market (Greensboro Avenue) and Union (Seventh) Streets. A special tax
was levied for three years for the purpose of paying for the lot. John S. Fitch was paid
$25 for drawing the plan of the building; Pleasant Wilson was paid $15 for legal services;
and a contract was made with Edwin Sharpe for the building of a court house. The
contract price was $2,478.
In 1845 the courthouse was moved to the southeast corner of Greensboro Avenue andSixth Street, the corner on which the Alston Building is located. The purchase price of
$4,000 was to be paid from a special fund derived from sales of unclaimed runaway
slaves and strays. In 1846 the town government was authorized to erect a tower at the
west end of the courthouse. On this tower there was placed a clock which remained the
property of the town.
The courthouse we now have, at the southwest corner of Greensboro Avenue and Seventh
Street, was built in 1907.
The first county jail was built by John Baker in 1818. It cost $138 plus $10 for making a
lock. Soon after the building was put up, $75 more was spent for "repairing and making
secure the door of said jail." During the first three years $240 was paid to different
persons who served as guards at one dollar per day.
The location of the first county jail is a puzzle. An early record defines the prison bounds
of the Tuscaloosa County Jail yard as follows: "Commencing at the jail, thence in a direct
line at Lewin's, including Lewin's houses; thence to J. V. Isbel's; from thence to John
Read's; including Nash's cotton gin; from Read's to Powell's; thence to Lovel's tavern;
thence across the lotto the jail." The paper is signed by Abel Pennington, probably a
deputy sheriff, and is dated June 14, 1819. Lovel's tavern was located where the First
National Bank is now, and the jail lot seems to have been located between that corner and
the McLester Hotel, that is, in the middle of what is now Greensboro Avenue. Charles
Lewin later moved to Newtown and was one of its incorporators.
When the court house was moved to Newtown, the jail was also moved. Lot number 91
was deeded to the county for the jail lot. Lot number 91 of the survey of the Lower Part
of the Town of Tuscaloosa was located on the northwest corner of Richmond and
Sandusky Streets. Today these streets are called Fifth Street and Thirty-fourth Avenue,
respectively. There is no record of the land or the building costing the county anything,
and the conclusion is that the Newtown Company paid for the jail. In 1847 a jail was built
on lot 168 of Tuscaloosa at a cost of $403.87. Lot 168 is on the southeast corner at the
intersection of Broad Street and Twenty-third Avenue and is now occupied by the Kress
store. In 1856 a jail was built on the southwest corner at Sixth Street and Twenty-eighth
Avenue, that is, across the street from and south of the old Capitol building. The building
was erected by William B. Robertson at a cost of $8,029.40. In 1890 a jail was built on
the courthouse lot (Alston Building) at a cost of $11,000.


ANCIENT HISTORY FITTS DEED 61 YEARS OLD TO METHODIST CHURCH THIS CITY On August 6th 1S34 Goodwin G Griffin his wife Milley of Marengo 1 county executed a deed tor a con-; sideration of $300 for lot no 209 containing half acre to Edward Sims, Thomas Owen, JDennis Dent j Edward F Carnege, Benjamin h Fontain John H Vincent and George Curling, trustees of the f . t T T7 1 ".I . i iuecnoQisr .episcopal vnurcn 01 j Tuskaloosa, Ala. The deed war acknowledged before Nathanie' -Norwood, Notary Public, on 25th September 1S34 and recorded ir deed book no. 1 page 243.

Very few of our citizent, excep:jevery probably Jno Glasscock knew per ' sonally said Trustees. John 1 Vincent was the father of Bishoi John H Vincent, who preachei n our Methodist Church last win ter one the ablest and most eloquer. sermons ever delivered in tha church. The Bishop was born i the dwelling in which the lamentt Dr Stillman died, and a table j his memory is placed over the do of the dwelling. JSK.

-"ligious.

Saturday, November 02, 2024

 OCTOBER @ RIVER BIRCH








 ARCHIE'S HALLOWEEN PARTY