New Welcome Station to Host St. Clair Historical Society Genealogy Workshop
Where: Leeds-St. Clair County
Oakridge Welcome Station
1445 Ashville Road
Keynote Speaker
Robert Davis
Shiloh Cemetery Survey Available
Lunch on your own, Cemetery Walk , Historic Cedar Grove Church
Within ¼ mile
When: Saturday February 09 9:00 a. m.
COST $20.00
Send Reservation Checks to
Ann Coupland
150 Ware, Ave.
Odenville, AL 35120
Workshop Location
JFS Allstate Agency
1445 Ashville Road
(Across from Cedar Grove Church
Leeds/St. Clair County )
Alabama Historic Scenic Byway Oakridge Welcome Station
Update of Calendar Sponsors for second reprint and 2008-2009:
Monkey's Uncle full page
Leeds Commercial Development Board full page patron sponsor
Don and Jean Mock; Donald Mock II and Joseph (Pep) Mock 3/4 page
Otis Stewart full page
Donations:
Eddie and Carol Phillips
Tom Hall
| From: "Pat Hall" |
| Here's an interesting piece - while we do not believe that this is the same John Looney of the Pioneer House in St. Clair County, Alabama - there in all probability is a family connection somewhere along the line. The information is simply fascinating and the way that the local community leaders dealt with the information is particularly interesting for its openness, caring and compassion. |
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Earlier this year , the National Scenic Byways program officially announced the Stagecoach Route at Leeds to be Alabama's newest scenic byway. Since that time, the Leeds Scenic Byway's management team has been working hard to protect, preserve and promote the byway and to bring tourists to downtown Leeds.
The Leeds area already draws 2.5 million out-of-state guests annually to Barber Motorsports and other nearby tourist attractions. Bass Pro Shops, when it opens next year, will bring even more tourists to the immediate vicinity of Leeds.
The byway follows the Highway 119/411 corridor, which remains on the road to everywhere in Alabama. The Leeds byway is the perfect companion to other central Alabama tourist attractions and a place from which to launch one-day trips to recreational areas in three counties.
The byway management team is a tax-exempt nonprofit public charity appointed as the stewardship organization for the Leeds byway. The role of the management team is to preserve, promote and protect the byway. Members of the board include Carl Marbury, Chris McLaughlin, Pat Hall, Hayes Parnell III, Carol Phillips, John Saddler, Cary Kennedy, Donna Lynn Isbell and Willa Dean Hinson.
Lifetime members include those who served as a corridor advocacy group promoting the naming of the stagecoach route through Leeds. These members include citizens and officials from Jefferson, Shelby and St. Clair counties as well as representatives from Leeds clubs, homeowners groups and city council members. Membership is free to interested individuals. Interested individuals should contact a board member.
As an initial promotion, the management team published Stagecoach Stops, an 18-month event calendar that features historic downtown Leeds and includes scenic and historic photos of the byway as well as a list of attractions and events. Copies of the calendar will be available in a limited number at Rowan House, Bass House Museum, and the Leeds Area Chamber of Commerce.
This publication was made possible by grants from Alabama Tourism and Alabama Power as well as private donations. At the time of this writing, copies of the first printing are already taken. Because interested community leaders are backing the publication, the byway team is preparing a newly revised edition two of the calendar to be released early in September. Every attempt will be made to provide calendars to the public.
Future plans are promising. The Alabama Scenic Byways Commission and the state tourism bureau are developing directional signs for the byway that will be on the major freeways and U.S. Highway 280. Also, the 2007-2008 official Alabama highway map will feature Leeds as a scenic attraction.
In addition, Lee Sentell, director of the Alabama Bureau of Tourism and Travel, visited Leeds and toured the byway earlier this year. He has since provided four historic markers for Leeds locations; one is for the Bass House Museum, two for the Depot and one for the Shiloh Cemetery.
Alabama Power and the Leeds Chamber of Commerce are partnering with the byway team in presenting a leadership conference about developing a strong Leeds byway program that will add to the tourism package of the greater Birmingham area.The byway management team is finalizing plans for the August 25 conference. Leaders from organizations and businesses will bring ideas about marketing a scenic, historic area steeped in Southern Appalachian heritage.
Alabama's Stagecoach Route Through Leeds emerged from the American War of 1812 and its indian skirmishes. More than 22 markers in Leeds document the stagecoach road.
More than 33 homes, businesses, churches and cemeteries appear on the eight-mile byway through Leeds. They display county, state or national markers. Leeds Historical Society opens to the public, by appointment, Rown House Stagecoach Stop at state Highway 119 and Elliott Lane as well as the Bass House Museum at state Highway 119 and Leslie Street.
The historical park two blocks south of the Bass House Museum displays a monument to the three Medal of Honor recipients who were Leeds natives. Leeds is considered to have the most Medal of Honor recipients per capita in the United States.
Bridges along state Highway 119 and U.S. Highway 411 through Leeds have markers identifying the historic Little Cahaba River. The river is uniquely beautiful and entwined with early Alabama history.
The stagecoach road through Leeds travels beside the Little Cahaba River when not crossing it. Among the Cahaba Valley's historic treasures are American Indian archives and horse and cattle farms. Historic homes, churches, businesses and cemeteries cluster into the city of Leeds.
Today, nature enthusiasts enjoy the Leeds scenic setting for bicycling, canoeing, horseback riding, nature photography and fishing. Canoe, flat-boat and houseboat rentals are available at lake Purdy. Local horse farms offer riding lessons.
Bank-side fishing is free, and picnic sites locate beside the Little Cahaba River. Turning off state Highway 119 onto Zeigler Road leads about a mile west to Bass Pro Shops and Barber Vintage Motorsports.
Turning east at state Highway 119 and Parkway Drive leads to Old-town downtown Leeds, which was incorporated in 1887. Leeds is a tree city and a bird sanctuary. Flowers on downtown streets display each season's hues. Shops, a theater and art center, a library and more flourish in the Old-town district. The Leeds cement plant's downtown office building was designed by acclaimed 1930s industrial architects.
The 9th Street District, north off Parkway Drive, is listed on the National Register of Historic Districts. The Historic Depot and Davis House located here are open to the public by appointment. Here, restored buildings house shops.
Three blocks north, 9th street becomes Whitmire Street, and, two blocks farther north, it intersects with U.S. Highway 411.
Two blocks south of the traffic light, Shiloh Cemetery, the oldest Cumberland Presbyterian burial ground in middle Alabama, has graves dating as early as 1819.
Continuing north leads to I-20. Sites along this route include historic homes and churches. Cedar Grove Cemetery was a 19th-century burial ground.
Ultimately, Leeds is "Central Park" to largely urban Jefferson County. It is a getaway for those who love nature and a small-town atmosphere but also like the cultural and social events of a large city with arts, a zoo, theater and more. The new scenic byway threads itself through he landscape, knitting a very promising tourism package.
Pat