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ALABAMA
Recreation
and Places of Interest
Alabama has many recreational
facilities and places of scenic and historic
interest. In northern Alabama, reservoirs attract
thousands of fishing enthusiasts each year. Fishing
and other water sports also lure visitors along
the Gulf of Mexico.
National Parks
Most of the units administered by the National
Park Service are linked to Alabama’s rich
history. Tuskegee Institute National Historic
Site preserves some of the institute’s
original brick buildings as well as the home
of Booker T. Washington, who in 1881 founded
the noted college for blacks. The school today
remains an active university that owns most of
the property within the national historic site.
Horseshoe Bend National Military Park is the
site where in 1814 the forces of General Andrew
Jackson broke the power of the Upper Creek alliance
of Native Americans and opened large parts of
Alabama and Georgia to settlement. In the northeastern
corner of Alabama is Russell Cave National Monument.
A small cave there served as a home for Native
Americans for a span of more than 8,000 years.
A small portion of the Natchez Trace Parkway
crosses northwestern Alabama on its route between
Nashville, Tennessee, and Natchez, Mississippi.
The parkway generally follows a trail first established
by Native Americans and later heavily used by
early settlers. Little River Canyon National
Preserve is noted for its spectacular landscapes
and canyons created by the river.
National Forests
There are four national forests in Alabama. The
largest forest is Talladega National Forest,
which is made up of one section in west central
Alabama and another, a mountainous section, in
northeastern Alabama. The northeastern section
encircles Cheaha State Park, which is the site
of Cheaha Mountain, the highest point in the
state. William B. Bankhead National Forest is
located in northwestern Alabama. Conecuh National
Forest is situated in southern Alabama. The smallest
of Alabama’s national forests is Tuskegee
National Forest, which is situated in the eastern
part of the state.
State Parks
Alabama’s state park system offers a great
variety of scenic and recreational attractions.
DeSoto State Park, not far from Fort Payne, is
the site of one of the deepest canyons east of
the Mississippi River. At Huntsville is Monte Sano
State Park, which lies on the crest of Monte Sano
and includes Natural Well, a great circular hole
whose depth has never been determined. Cheaha State
Park, near Anniston, is surrounded by Talladega
National Forest. The largest state park is Oak
Mountain State Park, which covers an area of 4,023
hectares (9,940 acres). It is located near Birmingham.
Gulf State Park lies on Alabama’s Gulf Coast
southeast of Mobile. Rickwood Caverns State Park,
located at Warrior, north of Birmingham, is known
for its underground caverns, with limestone formations
believed to be 260 million years old, and its underground
pools.
Museums
Notable museums include the Birmingham Museum of
Art, the Montgomery Museum of Fine Arts, the
Alabama Museum of Natural History at the University
of Alabama, the George Washington Carver Museum
at Tuskegee University, the Anniston Museum of
Natural History, the Mobile Museum of Art, and
the United States Army Aviation Museum at Fort
Rucker. The Berman Museum of World History in
Anniston exhibits more than 3,000 historical
objects, art, and weapons spanning 3,500 years,
many belonging to prominent historical figures
such as Abbas I, Emperor Charles V, Napoleon
I, and Jefferson Davis. The Birmingham Civil
Rights Institute has exhibits that depict historical
events from racial separation in the 1920s to
present-day racial progress.
Other Places to Visit
The Ave Maria Grotto, located at Southern Benedictine
College near Cullman, contains miniature reproductions
of the Vatican and of temples, mosques, and churches
from around the world. Bellingrath Gardens, set
on a bluff near Mobile, are filled with thousands
of colorful flowering plants.
The Boll Weevil Monument, at Enterprise, was
erected “in
profound appreciation of the boll weevil, and what
it has done to herald prosperity,” after
the insect had destroyed most of the 1910 cotton
crop and farmers had turned as a result to the
cultivation of peanuts.
Birmingham’s Arlington Antebellum Home and
Gardens, used as headquarters by General J. H.
Wilson in his raid through the state in 1865, is
one of the most frequently visited sites associated
with the American Civil War (1861-1865). Another
is the First White House of the Confederacy in
Montgomery, the home of President Jefferson Davis
during the early months of the Confederacy.
The State Capitol in Montgomery is considered to
be one of the most beautiful in the nation. It
served as the first capitol of the Confederacy.
Ivy Green, an ivy-covered frame cottage in Tuscumbia,
was the birthplace and childhood home of Helen
Keller, the renowned author and lecturer.
A huge statue of Vulcan, the Roman god of fire
and the patron of metalworkers, stands on Red Mountain
overlooking the city of Birmingham. The 17-m (55-ft)
statue is mounted on a 37-m (120-ft) tower and
is said to be the largest iron statue in the world.
Source: MSN Encarta:
Online Encyclopedia
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