Showing posts with label Bibb. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bibb. Show all posts

Monday, March 12, 2007

Bibb County Glades, Alabama

Bibb County Glades Sign, Alabama
33° 3'33.03"N
87° 2'4.14"W
About 35 miles southwest of Birmingham

Have you ever seen a U-Haul truck with the Alabama pink root graphic? It depicts a unique biological community along the Little Cahaba River discovered in 1992 by biologist Jim Allison. These dolomite glades are home to many rare plants, eight of which grow nowhere else in the world. The Nature Conservancy's Nancy Stiles Freeland Bibb County Glades Preserve encompasses 480 acres of the Ketona glade ecosystem and the remains of the Brighthope Furnace. It is a short walk from the gate across the entrance road to the river, which is a nice spot for a picnic. (There are no facilities.)
Little Cahaba River, Bibb County, Alabama
Brighthope (or Little Cahaba) Furnace
was built by William Phineas Browne to provide iron for the Confederacy. It was destroyed by the Union army. Dr. James Day was kind enough to provide us with a copy of his doctoral thesis "'Diamonds in the Rough': A History of Alabama's Cahaba Coal Field," which recounts Mr. & Mrs. Browne's struggles to develop their coal and iron businesses. Rhonda Ellison's book, Bibb County, Alabama: The First Hundred Years, gives a description of the dam and furnace site (pg 101). We will try to find evidence of both on our next visit.

Friday, February 23, 2007

Crenelated Water Tower, Marvel, Alabama

Crenelated Water Tower, Marvel, Alabama
33 deg 8' 49.95"N
87 deg 0' 7.47"W
About 28 miles southwest of Birmingham

Marvel was a mining town in the Cahaba coal fields. Roden Coal Company operated there from the early 1900's until the 1950's. Although many people still live in the town, this water tower is a striking remnant of more prosperous times. The top is crenelated and a ladder angles out of one of the windows, which must require more acrobatics to climb than I'd be willing to do at that height. I've never seen a concrete water tower before and I would like to know how it was constructed. MSHA has a photo of the mine's surface plant with a note that there was an explosion on October 22, 1916 that killed 18 miners.
Next time we visit Marvel, we'll look for the mine ruins.

Wednesday, February 14, 2007

Storm Damage in Eoline, Alabama

32 deg 59' 46.22"N
87 deg 14' 0.02"W
6.5 miles NW of Centerville.

Eoline is a landmark on our way to the woodpecker swamp in the Talledega National Forest.
James Spann has photos of damage from last night's storm on his weather blog.
I hope everyone there is OK and that the damage is minimal in the morning light.