Ensley and Tuxedo Junction

Nonfiction, Travel, Pictorials, Art & Architecture, Photography, History
Cover of the book Ensley and Tuxedo Junction by David B. Fleming, Mary Allison Haynie, Arcadia Publishing Inc.
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Author: David B. Fleming, Mary Allison Haynie ISBN: 9781439626580
Publisher: Arcadia Publishing Inc. Publication: January 17, 2011
Imprint: Arcadia Publishing Language: English
Author: David B. Fleming, Mary Allison Haynie
ISBN: 9781439626580
Publisher: Arcadia Publishing Inc.
Publication: January 17, 2011
Imprint: Arcadia Publishing
Language: English
With dreams of building a vast steel production operation, Memphis planter Enoch Ensley founded a city in the wooded valley at the heart of Jefferson County, Alabama. He named the city Ensley, after himself, and established the Ensley Land Company to acquire and develop 4,000 acres for industrial facilities and a town. As field workers left their farms to work in steel mills and businesses sprang up on the valley floor, Ensley became a diverse place of hopes and desires. A strong community of churches, businesses, civic clubs, and neighborhoods developed around the factories and railroads. Jazz music was the social thread of Ensley�s African American community, known as Tuxedo Junction. Musicians such as Erskine Hawkins famously mastered the style. The annexation of Ensley into Birmingham established the �Magic City� as the largest and wealthiest in Alabama and the heart of the Southern steel manufacturing economy.
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With dreams of building a vast steel production operation, Memphis planter Enoch Ensley founded a city in the wooded valley at the heart of Jefferson County, Alabama. He named the city Ensley, after himself, and established the Ensley Land Company to acquire and develop 4,000 acres for industrial facilities and a town. As field workers left their farms to work in steel mills and businesses sprang up on the valley floor, Ensley became a diverse place of hopes and desires. A strong community of churches, businesses, civic clubs, and neighborhoods developed around the factories and railroads. Jazz music was the social thread of Ensley�s African American community, known as Tuxedo Junction. Musicians such as Erskine Hawkins famously mastered the style. The annexation of Ensley into Birmingham established the �Magic City� as the largest and wealthiest in Alabama and the heart of the Southern steel manufacturing economy.

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