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Alabama "Tribal Town" in Creek Indian (7) Other sources claim it is derived from the Choctaw Indian language, translating as "thicket-clearers" or "vegetation-gatherers."

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Alabama. "Tribal Town" in Creek Indian (7) Other sources claim it is derived from the Choctaw Indian language, translating as "thicket-clearers" or "vegetation-gatherers.". State Nicknames. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Alabama

Alabama"Tribal Town" in Creek Indian (7)

Other sources claim it is derived from the Choctaw Indian language, translating as

"thicket-clearers" or "vegetation-gatherers."

Page 2: Alabama

State Nicknames

● The Yellowhammer State:Since the civil war when a company of Alabama soldiers wore uniforms trimmed with yellow cloth and were nicknamed Yellowhammers. "

● The Cotton State: located in the cotton belt and cotton production was a major influence in the growth and culture of the state

● The Heart of Dixie: originally because Montgomery was the first capital of the Confederate States during the Civil War

Page 3: Alabama

When did it become a state?

• Alabama became the 22nd state on December 14, 1819.

Page 4: Alabama

Capital

• Montgomery (3)• Population: 201,998• Birthplace and capital of the confederate

states of america• On January 28, 1846 Montgomery was

selected as the capital of Alabama.• The world's first electric trolley system was

introduced here in 1886.(4)

Page 5: Alabama
Page 6: Alabama

State Flag

• Authorized by the Alabama Legislature on February 16, 1895

• Salute - Flag of Alabama I salute thee. To thee I pledge my allegiance, my service, and my life.

Page 7: Alabama

Confederate flag

• The Confederate flag was designed and first flown in Alabama in 1861.

• On January 11, 1861 Alabama becomes the fourth state to secede from the Union.

Page 8: Alabama

State Flower

• Goldenrod from September 6, 1927 to August 26, 1959

• Camellia from August 26, 1959 to present

Page 9: Alabama

State Wildflower

• Oak Leaf Hydrangea• Adopted 1999• Grows six to eight feet tall.

Page 10: Alabama

State Bird

• Yellowhammer AKA the golden winged woodpecker

• Adopted 1927• Flickers are reported to eat more ants than

any other American bird.• Bird call

Page 11: Alabama

State Game Bird

• Wild Turkey• Adopted 1980• Today 6.4 million wild turkeys roam the lower

49 states.• Turkey

Page 12: Alabama

State Amphibian

• Red Hills Salamander

• Adopted in 1990

• Campaign led by the third graders at Fairhope Elementary School

• Exist only in a 50,000 - acre area of southern Alabama.

• This rare and elusive salamander was not known to exist until 1960, when Leslie Hubricht, a renowned expert on land snails, accidentally discovered the first one while searching for snails in the Red Hills of Alabama. It was not only a new species, it was the first new salamander genus discovered in North America since 1939. The salamander was named Phaeognathus hubrichti after Mr. Hubricht. A second specimen wasn't obtained until 1963.

Page 13: Alabama
Page 14: Alabama

State Reptile

• Alabama red bellied turtle• Adopted 1990• Adult turtles are approximately 1 foot in

length. Females are slightly larger with a carapace (upper shell) length reaching 13 inches.

• life expectancy for this large turtle is about 50 years in the wild.

• Turtle

Page 15: Alabama

State saltwater Fish

• Fighting Tarpon• It can reach a weight of 100 pounds.• Tarpon

Page 16: Alabama

State Freshwater Fish

• Largemouth bass• They incorrectly identified it by the Latin name

Micropterus punctulatus, which is actually the Spotted Bass.

• Bass

Page 17: Alabama

State Butterfly

• Eastern Tiger Swallowtail• Adopted 1989• butterfly

Page 18: Alabama

State Insect

• Monarch Butterfly• The Monarch ingests toxins from the

milkweed plant which are poisonous to predators.

• State Insect

Page 19: Alabama

State Fossil

• Basilosaurus cetoides (Zeuglodon)• Adopted 1984• A complete skeleton of a basilosaurus

(which means "king of the lizards") was found on a plantation in southwestern Alabama in 1834

• The two most complete Basilosaurus cetoides skeletons ever found are from Alabama - one is displayed at the McWane Center in Birmingham and the other in the Smithsonian Institute in Washington, DC.

• http://www.statesymbolsusa.org/Alabama/AL-state-fossil.html

Page 20: Alabama

State Fossil

Page 21: Alabama

State Marine Mammal

• West Indian manatee• Save west indian manatee

Page 22: Alabama

State Tree

• Southern Longleaf Pine• first designated the state tree as "the

southern pine tree" in 1949 - it wasn't until 1997 that the southern longleaf pine was specified.

• ecosystem once covered 90 million acres in the Southeastern United States. Less than three million acres remain

Page 23: Alabama
Page 24: Alabama

State Tree Fruit

• Peach• Adopted 2006• There are thirty to forty varieties of peaches

grown commercially throughout Alabama

Page 25: Alabama

State Mineral

• Hematite• Adopted 1967• Approximately 375 million tons of hematite

was mined in Alabama from 1840 to 1975

Page 26: Alabama

States gemstone

• Star blue quartz• Become the state gemstone 1990• Chosen by a state senator

Page 27: Alabama

State Rock

• Marble• Adopted 1969• The marble from this area has been called

the whitest marble in the world.

Page 28: Alabama

State Shell

• Johnstone’s Junonia• Adopted 1990• Found only in Alabama water• The shell was named in honor of Kathleen

Yerger Johnstone (an amateur conchologist from Mobile, Alabama who made seashells popular through speeches and books).

Page 29: Alabama

State Nut

• Pecan• Adopted 1982• April declared as National Pecan Month.• Astronauts took pecans to the moon on two

Apollo space missions.

Page 30: Alabama

State Fruit

• Blackberry• Adopted 2004• The Song of the Blackberry queen

Page 31: Alabama

State fair

• Florence renaissance faire

• Named state fair in 1988

• Held the fourth Saturday and Sunday in October

• The event draws 40000-50000 people

• One of the highlighted pre-fair events is an authentic Medieval / Renaissance feast featuring food and entertainment of the period (held one week before the faire). People who attend the feast are encouraged to follow the customs of the era by bringing their own tablecloth, candelabra and eating utensils (this was a common practise during Medieval times - the nobility liked to flaunt their wealth by displaying gold plates and candlesticks of brass, silver and gold).

Page 32: Alabama

State Fair

Page 33: Alabama

State Mammal

• Black Bear• Adopted 1996• Seeing a bear in the wild is a very rare

experience. • Black bears are not always black - there are

cinnamon, white, beige, and "blue" and black bears.

• They can run up to 30 mph and are good swimmers.

• bear cubs

Page 34: Alabama

State Mammal

Page 35: Alabama

State Bible

Purchased in 1853, this historic bible was used to swear in Jefferson Davis as the President of the Confederate States of America on February 18, 1861. Each of Alabama's governors has used this same bible to be sworn in since 1853

Page 36: Alabama

State Soil

Page 37: Alabama

State Song

• It was written on March 3rd, 1931• Mrs. Edna Gockel Gussen from Birmingham Alabama

wrote the song

• The song is called Alabama

• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ndTPPEU5vd0

Page 38: Alabama

State Seal 1

• Created by William Wyatt bibb

• State seal from 1817-1869

• Then from 1937-present

• The great seal of Alabama displays the major rivers of the state.

Page 39: Alabama

State Seal 2

• Creator not named• Seal from 1869-

1939

Page 40: Alabama

State motto and coat of arms

• "Audemus jura nostra defendere"

• We Dare Retain our rights

• Adopted 1939

• Alabama's coat of arms displays a shield with the emblems of five governments that have held sovereignty over the state. The flags of Spain, France, Great Britain, and the Confederacy sit behind the emblem for the United States.

• The shield is supported by bald eagles on either side (symbols of courage). The crest of the shield represents the Baldine (the ship sailed by Iberville and Bienville from France in 1699 to settle a colony near present - day Mobile).

Page 41: Alabama

State Coat of Arms

Page 42: Alabama

Rosa Parks (9)

• Feb 13, 1913-October 25, 2005• Civil Rights leader who refused to give up

her seat to a white man• Born in Tuskegee• Rosa Parks Biography

Page 43: Alabama
Page 44: Alabama

Helen Keller (1)

• June 27, 1880- June 1, 1968• Blind and Deaf Author and lecturer• Born in Tuscumbia• Helen Keller biography

Page 45: Alabama

State Outdoor Drama

• The Miracle Worker• Adopted 1991• The first production of the drama was

performed on the grounds of Ivy Green in 1962.

• The Miracle Worker

Page 46: Alabama
Page 47: Alabama

Nathaniel Adams Cole (10)

• Nat King Cole• Known as the man with the velvet voice• March 17, 1919-February 16, 1965• Nat King Cole song

Page 48: Alabama

Jesse Owens (6)

• Winner of four gold medals in the 1936 summer olympic games

• September 12 1913- March 31 1980• Born in Oakville• Jesse Owens biography

Page 49: Alabama
Page 50: Alabama

Hank Aaron

• all time homerun champion• Feb 5 1934• Born in Mobile• Hank Aaron biography

Page 51: Alabama

Joe Louis

• Heavyweight champion of the world• He held the belt for nearly 12 years• May 13 1914-April 12 1981• Born in Lafayette • Joe Louis biography

Page 52: Alabama
Page 53: Alabama

Dr. Luther Leonidas Hill

• In 1902 he performed the first open heart surgery in the Western Hemisphere by suturing a stab wound in a young boy's heart.

• The surgery occurred in Montgomery. • 1862-1946

Page 54: Alabama

Heather Whitestone

• In 1995 she served as the first Miss America chosen with a disability.

• She was completely deaf.• Born February 24, 1973 in Dothan.

Page 55: Alabama
Page 56: Alabama

Mobile (8)

• Named after the Mauvilla Indians• Mobile is known as the city of six flags

having flown under the French, Spanish, British, Republic of Alabama, Confederacy, and the USA flags.

• The correct pronunciation of the city is mobeel, given the soft emphasis on the second syllable by its French founders.

Page 57: Alabama
Page 58: Alabama

Huntsville (5)

• Rocket capital of the world.• Alabama workers built the first rocket to put

humans on the moon. • In 1956 the Army Ballistic Missile Agency

was established at Huntsville's Redstone Arsenal.

Page 59: Alabama
Page 60: Alabama

Enterprise

• Houses the Boll Weevil monument. • Acknowledges the role this destructive insect

played in encouraging farmers to grow crops other than cotton.

Page 61: Alabama

Sequoyah (2)

• Devised the phonetic, written alphabet of the Cherokee language

Page 62: Alabama

State Championship Horse Show

• AOHA Alabama State Championship Horse Show• Adopted 1988

• The horse show is usually held at Garrett Coliseum in Montgomery over Labor Day weekend.

• The first statewide horse show was held in Montgomery over a two- day period in 1988 with 994 entries. By 2002 the Alabama State Championship Horse Show had grown to a three-day event with over 2,000 entries

• Winners receive awards such as trophy saddles, belt buckles, and plaques. No horse and rider can win more than one saddle per show, per division.

Page 63: Alabama

State Horse

• Racking Horse• Adopted 1975• A group of Alabama businessmen formed a

corporation and initiated the legal maneuverings that were necessary to designate this horse as a distinct breed.

• State Horse

Page 64: Alabama

State Agricultural Museum

• Landmark Park

• Located in Dothan

• Features of the 100-acre park include an 1890s living history farm, a one-room schoolhouse, a general store, a turn-of the-century church, elevated boardwalks, nature trails, wildlife exhibits, a planetarium, "barnyard playground" and a picnic area.

Page 65: Alabama

State Horseshoe Tournament

• Adopted in 1992• The tournament was held for a few years as

part of the annual Stockton festival but was then discontinued.

Page 66: Alabama

State Musical Drama

• The Incident at Looney's Tavern

• Adopted 1993

• The musical tells the story of Christopher Sheats (a young Winston County school teacher) and the hill people of Alabama, who didn't want to join the Confederacy and struggled against the South's secession, nearly creating "The Free State of Winston" during the Civil War.

• The first performances of The Incident at Looney's Tavern were staged in a shopping center parking lot at the Winston County

• State Musical Drama

Page 67: Alabama

State Historic Theater

• Alabama Theatre for the Performing Arts• Built in downtown Birmingham by Paramount Studios in

1927 as a showcase for Paramount films

• Used primarily as a movie palace for 55 years until closing its doors in 1981. In 1987 the theater was purchased by a nonprofit corporation and became a performing arts centre.

Page 68: Alabama

BBQ championship

• Christmas on the River BBQ cookoff• Begin in 1972• Grown to include barbeque teams from nine

states, 75 judges, and thousands of barbecue fanatics from across the country.