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History of
Huntsville :----------
Huntsville is named after John Hunt, the first settler of the land
around the Big Spring. However, Hunt did not properly register his
claim, and the area was purchased by Leroy Pope, who imposed the
name Twickenham on the area to honor the home village of his distant
kinsman Alexander Pope. Twickenham was carefully planned, with streets
laid out on the northeast to southwest direction based on the Big
Spring. However, due to anti-English sentiment during the War of
1812, the name was changed to Huntsville to honor John Hunt, who
had been forced to move to other land south of the new city. Both
John Hunt and Leroy Pope were Freemasons and charter members of
Helion Lodge #1. In 1811, Huntsville became the first incorporated
town in Alabama. However, the recognized "birth" year
of the city is 1805, the year of John Hunt's arrival. The city's
sesquicentennial anniversary was held in 1955 and the bicentennial
was celebrated in 2005.
Bird's Eye View of 1871 Huntsville,
Alabama.Huntsville's quick growth was from wealth generated by the
cotton industry. Many wealthy planters moved into the area from
Virginia, Georgia, and the Carolinas. In 1819, Huntsville hosted
a constitutional convention in Walker Allen's large cabinetmaking
shop. The forty-four delegates meeting there wrote a constitution
for the new state of Alabama. In accordance with the new state constitution,
Huntsville became Alabama's first capital when the state was admitted
to the union. This was a temporary designation for one legislative
session only, and the capital was then moved to another temporary
location, Cahawba, until the legislature selected a permanent capital.
(Today, the capital is Montgomery.)
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In
1855, the Memphis and Charleston Railroad was constructed
through Huntsville, becoming the first railway to link the
Atlantic seacoast with the Mississippi River. Huntsville initially
opposed secession from the Union in 1861, but provided many
men for the state's defense when Abraham Lincoln called for
an invasion of the South. The 4th Alabama Infantry Regiment,
led by Col. Egbert J. Jones of Huntsville, distinguished itself
at the Battle of Mannasas/Bull Run, the first major encounter
of the American Civil War.
The Fourth Alabama Infantry, which contained two Huntsville
companies, were the first Alabama troops to fight in the war
and were present at the end when Lee surrendered to Grant
at Appomattox in April 1865. Eight generals of the war were
born in or near Huntsville, evenly split with four on each
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On the morning of April 11, 1862,
Union troops led by General Ormsby M. Mitchel seized Huntsville
to sever the Confederacy's rail communications. The Union troops
were forced to retreat some months later, but returned to Huntsville
in the fall of 1863 and thereafter used the city as a base of operations
for the remainder of the war. While many homes and villages in the
surrounding countryside were burned in retaliation for the active
guerrilla warfare in the area, Huntsville itself was spared because
it housed the occupying Union Army.
After the Civil War, Huntsville became
a center for cotton textile mills, such as Lincoln and Merrimack.
Several of the city's present neighborhoods were built to house
the mill workers.
By 1940, Huntsville was still a small
quiet town with a population of only 13,150 inhabitants. This quickly
changed at the onset of World War II, when Huntsville was chosen
as the location of Redstone Arsenal, with its numerous munitions
manufacturing plants. The Arsenal was almost closed in 1949 when
it was no longer needed, but it saw new life when Senator John Sparkman
convinced the U. S. Army to choose Huntsville as the location for
its missile research program. In 1950, Senator John Sparkman brought
German rocket scientist Wernher von Braun and his colleagues to
Redstone Arsenal to develop what would eventually become the United
States' space program.
Historic rockets in Rocket Park of the US Space and Rocket Center,
Huntsville, Alabama.On September 8, 1960, U.S. President Dwight
D. Eisenhower formally dedicated the Marshall Space Flight Center
in Huntsville. (NASA had already activated this facility, which
is located on Redstone Arsenal, on July 1 of that year.) |
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