Hi, Y'all....
what a funny idea to talk about Alabama, and it is an opportunity for me,while you are sleeping, to begin with a little bit of history.
I'm just learning all about Alabama from my English Teacher Polly, who loves her state, and she is trying to infect me (succesfully!) with her enthusiasm.
Before I begin, I have to confess that our family at first wanted to see the rest of the USA like New York, Chicago, New Orleans,etc., instead of looking what to do in Alabama. I think that's normal.
Do Y'all spend your vacation in Germany? No! You want to see what's in the rest of Europe, or in the USA,and in other continents, am I right?
Now, with the help of Polly, my wonderful Teacher, I'm learning a lot of interesting things from Alabama. She asks me, for example:"What, you have never been in Selma??? We have to go there! ".....
ALABAMA, Nickname: The Heart of Dixie
The national flower is the Magnolia!
(Not a littke plant like you think, but a huge tree, some of them almost 10 meters tall, the white blossom as big as both of your hands together, it is beautiful!)
The capital city is Montgomery, Birmingham is the biggest city, and most of the people call it the Secret Capital City. Birmingham was once a very important city with it's Iron Production, and it is the most important city for the Civil Rights Movement,(Martin Luther King), about seggregation, herassment etc.
The most important city at the Alabama Gulf Coast is Mobile with the oil company (with the same name, you know, now Exxon-Mobile).
Alabama has about 4 1/2 Million citizens.
In the 15th century the first Spanish settlers came to Alabama,at the end of the 16th century the French came from the South, 1763, the British conquered Alabama, and, of course, from 1861 to 1865, the Alabamien had been in the middle of the Civil War as one of the Confederated States, who had fought together against the "Agression of the North".
Tradition is until today very important for the Southern. They are very proud people. You shouldn't discuss with them about the Civil War. You 'gonna' find everywhere the Flag of the Confederated right now.
I love the Gulf Coast, the forest everywhere, the North of Alabama with the lower mountains (the south of the Appalachians), the waterfalls, the creeks, Alabama has a lot of lakes, and don't forget the golf-courses!
Special points of interests are Huntsville, with the Space and Rocket Center,
Birmingham, with the Museum of Civil Rights,the Botanical Gardens,a nice Zoo,
my town Tuscaloosa has its "University of Alabama",very impressiv buildings, (all rebuilt after completely burnt down in the Civil War), and a football stadium for more than 80 000 people,(all the time sold out!) so you can put the whole citizenship of Tuscaloosa in that stadium. And their football team "Crimson Tide" is just a University Team, not one of the professionals!
If someone should be interested in visiting the Mercedes Plant, you can go to a visitor center in Vance (Tuscaloosa County).
Last but not least I have to mention the very south end of Alabama with sugarwhite sandy beaches at the Gulf Coast, Fort Morgan at Gulf Shores, Dauphin Island (very strong devastation after the last hurricanes), Orange Beach, Mobile,where a very special
point for me is "Bellinggrath Gardens",(located in Theodore), a house and garden ( built 1917), from Walter Bellinggrath, who became a Millionair with Coca Cola.
In Mobile is a little historical downtown, where you can celebrate "Mahdi Gras" like in New Orleans, (some people told me, that it would be better in Mobile
), I hope I can enjoy that one time before we go back to Germany.
Mahdi Gras, celebrated in February, is a kind of "Carneval" like the 5th season in Düsseldorf, Cologne, or Mainz.
So, thats it! ....That's all I remember after my last lessons and from my own experiences with my currently home country.
I hope, it was a beginning for a little discussion about Alabama.
See y'all,
Monika.