Historical Marker Search

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historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMIHB_confederate-monument_Huntsville-AL.html
Erected on November 21, 1905, a handsome monument was dedicated to the Confederate dead by the Virginia Clay Clopton Chapter #1107 United Daughters of the Confederacy of Huntsville, and was unveiled with proper ceremonies in which many veterans of…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMIH9_central-presbyterian-church_Huntsville-AL.html
This church which had its origins in the Cumberland Presbyterian Church was first mentioned at a meeting of the Presbytery on April 7, 1812. It became known as First Cumberland Presbyterian Church of Huntsville, Alabama. In 1828 the first building…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMIH0_calhoun-house_Huntsville-AL.html
On this site stood the Calhoun House, used as a Federal Courthouse, where desperado Frank James was tried and found not guilty, by jury trial, on April 25, 1884, for robbery of a government payroll near Muscle Shoals, Alabama, March 11, 1881. One …
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMHNS_alabamas-constitution-and-statehood_Huntsville-AL.html
Before statehood, the Alabama Territory had only limited rights of self government. Between July 5 and August 2, 1819, forty-four delegates from across the Territory convened in Huntsville to draft a constitution for statehood. Lawyers, merchants,…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HMETV_passenger-depot_Huntsville-AL.html
Memphis and Charleston Railroad Company Eastern Division headquarters in this passenger depot, adjoining yards and ships captured by Union Army April 11, 1862. Vital east-west Confederate rail link severed; C.S.A. soldiers imprisoned here. Depot l…
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