Upload
others
View
0
Download
0
Embed Size (px)
Citation preview
B.B. Comer Memorial Library
Presents
The SouthFirst Bank
Adult Lecture Series
“Looking Forward to the Past” Refreshments 11:00am—Program at 12:00Noon
A special thanks to our media partners:
TV 47; The Daily Home; Sylacauga Today;
The Local Issue.com; WYEA Radio; WFEB Radio
“Looking Forward to the Past ”
Comer Library’s SouthFirst Bank Adult Lecture Series—Fall 2015
Wednesday, November 4, 2015—Dolores Hydock
“Spirits, Souls and Saints: Stories about—and for—the angels
hiding among us.”
Wednesday, October 28, 2015—Monique Laney
“When Histories and Memories Collide: How Huntsville
Made Sense of its German Rocket Team’s Nazi Past”
In late July 1969, Huntsville joined the world in celebrating the successful return of the Apollo
11 astronauts. The once small cotton mill town had added reason to jubilate because the rocket
specialists who had made this enormous cold war feat possible were their direct neighbors and
friends. Some of the specialists were members of Wernher von Braun’s German rocket team,
who had been brought to the United States after World War II because of their expertise gained
developing the V-2 rocket for the Nazi regime. This fact did not become a point of concern until
one of the team members was accused of war crimes in the 1980s. Laney will describe how
Huntsville’s diverse community responded to this news and tried to grapple with its meaning,
shedding light on the intersections of German and U.S. history and memory.
Monique Laney was raised by an American father and German mother living first in Tusca-
loosa, AL, and later Frankfurt, Germany. She earned her Master’s Degree at the Johann Wolf-
gang Goethe-Universität in 1995, and her Ph.D. at the University of Kansas in 2009. She moved
back to Alabama and joined the History Department at Auburn University in 2014. Dr. Laney
is the author of German Rocketeers in the Heart of Dixie: Making Sense of the Nazi Past During
the Civil Rights Era. She has received multiple prestigious national awards for her scholarship,
has published two articles on her research, and has presented her work at national and interna-
tional conferences.
Wednesday, October 21, 2015—Governor John Patterson
With Warren Trest
“Battle of El Guettar: A Turning Point in the
Tunisian Campaign” Former Alabama Governor, John Malcolm Patterson, participated in the Battle of El Guettar
as a young artillery officer. The battle took place in south-central Tunisia fought between
elements of the Army Group Africa under General Hans-Jurgen von Arnim, along with
Italian forces under General Giovanni Messe, and U. S. II Corps under Lieutenant General
George S. Patton. It was the first battle in which U. S. forces were able to defeat the
experienced German tank units. According to military historian, Warren Trest, no one tells
the story of that pivotal battle better than Patterson—a junior officer who rose from private
to major, winning the Bronze Star. Albert Patterson’s murder cast his son into politics, first as
an attorney general, and later as the governor of his state. After leaving the governor’s office,
Patterson moved into the state’s judiciary, serving on the Court of Criminal Appeals until his
retirement in January, 1977. Warren Trest, the former senior historian with the U.S. Air
Force Historical Research Agency at Maxwell AFB, has authored more than 50 military
histories and is the author of the authorized biography of Alabama’s youngest governor.
The fascination with the supernatural is always with us and Dolores will tap into that
interest with stories that make us think about possibilities. She said, “One (true) story will
refer to a ghostly apparition my mother experienced in my house; another story is about
how people can be ‘angels’ in our lives—sometimes intentionally and sometimes by accident;
and one story is about my mother’s spirit embodied in the spirit of my white cat.” Hear
these stories as only Dolores can tell them.
Hydock, originally from Pennsylvania, is an award winning actress and story performer
whose work has been featured in concerts and festivals throughout the United States. She
serves as a touring artist for the Alabama State Council on the Arts and the Alabama
Humanities Foundation. Dolores lives in Birmingham, Alabama and in her spare time,
teaches Cajun and zydeco dancing.
“Looking Forward to the Past”
Wednesday, September 16—Elnora Spencer
“Best of the ‘Jazzy Blues’ and More”
Award –winning singer, Elnora Spencer, will open the Comer Library’s SouthFirst Bank Lecture Series
accompanied by piano, bass and drums. Elnora calls her style the ‘jazzy blues’ and her repertoire of
songs—gospel, jazz and R&B—will feature favorite oldies from several eras. Music in Elnora’s home was
a family affair. She has been singing since the age of four and the roster of musical family members in-
cludes her mother—a noted gospel singer during the ‘50s—as well as a grandfather who was musical and
an aunt who performed on the Morning Show out of Birmingham.
In 2014, Elnora was inducted as a Master Blues Artist in the Alabama Blues Hall of Fame. She has been
featured in the Living Legends Performing Live Series at Moonlight on the Mountain in Bluff Park and
has sung with the Alabama Symphony Orchestra. Many of the participants in the Comer Library’s
programs will remember her from performances at the lecture series with bass legend, Cleve Eaton,
pianist, Kermit Orr, drummer, Buddy Simpkins, and jazz trumpeter, Bo Berry. An hour with Elnora is
an opportunity to relive a beloved time in musical history.
Wednesday, September 23—Faye Gibbons
“Halley: the Story of a Depression Era Georgia Mountain Girl”,
Faye Gibbons’ novel, Halley, is set in the rural Depression-era South. Every detail shows that she
knows this hardscrabble world to the bone—the chamber pot, buttermilk, and cow-safe fencing.
Halley and her younger brother, Robbie, and their parents, Jim and Kate, manage to get by until
Jim dies suddenly in an accident, and Kate decides that she and her children have no choice but to
move in with her parents. Grandfather Franklin is a hellfire and brimstone fundamentalist preach-
er who runs a strict household. A miserly tyrant, he claims any money the women in his household
earn. Waiting for the end of time may suit her grandparents and others of the same faith, but Halley
yearns for control of her life and longs for an education which she firmly believes will eventually
allow choices.
Faye Gibbons—the popular author of more than a dozen books—writes in the tradition of Laura
Ingalls Wilder and Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings, focusing on stories of rural life that feature the im-
portance of family and the land. Born into a large mountain farm family, she grew up in mill towns
and mountain communities throughout northern Georgia. Gibbons knows firsthand about the peo-
ple who populate her books, with her own memories of living in places without electricity, running
water, indoor toilets and with storytelling as the main form of entertainment. Her first book, Some
Glad Morning, won the Georgia Author Award in 1983 and in 1998, A Night in the Barn, won the
Alabama Author Award. Her literary papers are housed at the University of Southern Mississippi.
Wednesday, September 30—Peggy Jackson Walls
“A Century of Gold Mining at Hog Mountain—1839-1939”
Decades before the discovery of gold in California, farmers, miners, and sometimes entire families with high hopes, were digging for gold in the hills of the Southern Piedmont region. In 1842, one of Alabama’s first gold rushes took place in NE Tallapoosa County at Goldville, where a town sprang up with a population of 3000 people, a hotel, at least 23 businesses, including one or two saloons. The gambling, drinking and “wild” life caused many families to move to a new mining site, a town which remains today as New Site. In 1839, gold was discovered at Hog Mountain by a Mr. Johnson who used an ox-drawn cart to haul the ore to nearby Hillabee Creek to separate the gold from the rock. According to geological reports, Hog Mountain is considered the top gold mine in Alabama producing consistently since the 1880s. For this story, the presenter draws from first person accounts by miners who worked in the gold mines in the 1930s mining operation as well as the company doctor, managers, community members, and geological reports to give a look at how mining helped shape the local economy, community and history for a century. Peggy Walls has a Master’s Degree in English and Southern History from Auburn University. She has taught at the high school and college level and has several historical publications to her credit. She has spent years researching local history, interviewing people, and conducting tours of the east Tallapoosa County mining sites.
Wednesday, October 7—Troy Jones
“The Nashville Experience: Small Town Boy and Big
Town Song Writing”
Troy Jones dreamed of hearing a song that he had written played on the radio! As
a boy, he had listened to his dad spin records at a local AM radio station. For over
twenty years, he worked to become what he smilingly calls “an overnight success”
with his recording artists sounding like a roll call at a country music award show—
Kenny Chesney, George Strait, Billy Currington, Randy Travis, Brad Paisley,
Trace Adkins, and Ashton Shepherd. The singer-songwriter actually worked at a
paper mill for the twenty years that he was aiming at becoming a full-time song-
writer and his co-workers began calling him the “Fork Lift Philosopher.” Several
of Troy’s songs have hit the top of the charts— “People are Crazy”, “Shiftwork”,
and most recently, “God Paints”, recorded by Alan Jackson.
Originally from Port St. Joe, Florida, Jones met and married his wife Patsy and
raised a family in the Sylacauga area. The couple now reside at Lay Lake in
Talladega County. Library director, Shirley Spears said, “It has been our dream to
have Troy tell the brown bag audience about his Nashville experience and to hear
him sing some of his songs. These songs are so real—they resonate with people
from all over the country.”
Wednesday, October 14—Wayne Flynt
“In Sylacauga, Who is the Watchman? And What is
She Missing?”
For more information about the Adult Winter Brown Bag Series—Looking Forward to the Past —
call 256 249-0961, email [email protected],
or visit our website at www.bbcomerlibrary.net and while you are there, friend us on Facebook!
Continued
SouthFirst Bank Adult Lecture Series
Dr. Flynt said of his upcoming discussion of Nelle Harper Lee’s new book, Go Set a
Watchman: “It is obvious that she once again uses the Bible to talk straight to May-
comb and its people. But in Isaiah 21:6, it is clear that a specific person is given this
duty/responsibility/honor. In the novel, it is less clear. Is it a self-righteous Jean
Louise Finch, her now-flawed father, or every individual citizen called on by history
and events to take a stand for conscience sake? And is the novel primarily about race
in Alabama in the mid 1950s or about the generational passages we go through from
ages 6-9 when our father protects and nurtures us and seems to us to be perfect? Or is
it about our relationship when we are between 13 and 30 and our father does not un-
derstand us, want to change with the times, and is too much an accommodation to his
family, town, and culture to suit our firmer notions of what is now our better
understanding of life?”
Wayne Flynt graduated from Anniston High School, Howard College (now Samford
University), and took a doctorate at Florida State University. He taught at his alma
mater for twelve years and then served as head of Auburn University’s history
department until he retired as Distinguished Professor Emeritus in 2005. He has won
eighteen teaching awards and has written/co-authored twelve award winning books.
Library Director, Shirley Spears, commented: “With the advent of Harper Lee’s new
book and the ensuing fanfare, all eyes (including mine) turned toward Dr. Wayne
Flynt for a commentary on the new novel and the beloved author,
Nelle Harper Lee.”