PRESS RELEASE
ARCHITREATS: FOOD FOR THOUGHT PRESENTS THE 2011 YEAR OF ALABAMA MUSIC AND BECOMING ALABAMA |
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ArchiTreats: Food for Thought begins another year of informative talks on Alabama history at the Alabama Department of Archives and History. Many of the programs in 2011 highlight the Becoming Alabama Initiative or the Year of Alabama Music. For the next five years, we will commemorate and study significant events in our state and national history relating to the War of 1812 and Creek Indian War, the Civil War, and the Civil Rights movement as part of the Becoming Alabama Initiative commemorations. During 2011, we will also celebrate and examine Alabama musical traditions during the Alabama Tourism Department's Year of Alabama Music. Join us, at noon, on the third Thursday of each month as we reflect, remember, and preserve Alabama's fascinating past. January 20 The Road to War: January - April 1861 by Robert B. Bradley February 17 My Father, Hank Williams by Jett Williams March 17 The Civil War Pharmacy by Michael Flannery April 21 To Kill a Mockingbird: Successes and Myths by Nancy Anderson May 19 The Freedom Riders Come to Alabama by J. Mills Thornton June 16 Mobile Brass Band Traditions & Mardi Gras by Kern Jackson with a performance by Marcus Johnson and the Bay City Brass Band July 21 Alabama Stories: Food and Memory by Scott Peacock August 18 Race Relations in Alabama, 1965-1968: A Photojournalist's Perspective by Jim Peppler September 15 Tecumseh at Tuckabatchee: Fact and Fiction by Kathryn Braund October 20 The Legacy of Alabama Gospel Quartets by Doug Seroff with a performance by the Four Eagles Gospel Singers November 17 The Civil Rights World in Alabama, 1961-1962: Reflections by Fred Gray December 15 Southern Music of the Civil War Era by Daryl Masters with a performance by the 33rd Alabama Campfire Players
The 2011 ArchiTreats series is made possible by the Friends of the Alabama Archives and is co-sponsored by the Alabama Humanities Foundation, a state program of the National Endowment for the Humanities. The public is invited to bring a sack lunch and enjoy a bit of Alabama history. Coffee and tea will be provided by the Friends of the Alabama Archives. For more information, call (334) 353-4726.
Alabama Department of Archives and History
624 Washington Avenue
P O Box 300100-0100
Montgomery, Alabama 36130-0100
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