The post Pike Road Alabama appeared first on Digital Alabama.
]]>is a town located in northeastern Montgomery County in the south-central part of the state. As of the 2000 census, the population of the town was 310. The 2010 census indicated a population of 5,406. It is part of the Montgomery metropolitan area.
The Pike Road area has been settled since around 1815. Pike Road is so named because it was once a toll road, where one paid a fee or “pike” to travel on it. The community itself thus came to be referred to as Pike Road. In 1997, a vote was held among the residents of the Glynlakes, Bean, Barnes, and Meriwether Road communities to incorporate as Pike Road; the measure passed with 97 percent of the vote.
Circa 1825
Foundation is pegged-together heart pine; framing is 3″ by 9″ timbers; mantles, dados, and all the bricks are hand made. Kitchen, baths, a rose garden and pavilion for dancing were added by the Churchill Marks family in the 1920s. The house was purchased by Dr. Haywood B. (Woody) Bartlett in 1957.
In 1967, the movie of Truman’s Capote’s “Thanksgiving Visitor” was filmed in the house. The facility has served as the Pike Road Community Club Center since 1968. The Pike Road Arts and Crafts fair is held here annually on the first Saturday in November. The house suffered extensive fire damage on August 28, 1997 and was subsequently restored by the Pike Road Community.
The house was built ca. 1830’s by Alexander Carter on a small land holding. Increasing fortunes led to a 1780-acre diversified and innovative plantation. Oak trees planted on either side of the front drive led to it’s name. During WWII, an auxiliary landing strip, called Mt. Meigs Field, was built on the land by the Army Corp of Engineers. It was used for training by American, French, and British aviation cadets from Gunter Field, as well as by “Tuskegee Airmen” from Moton Field. Prominent families who owned The Oaks include those of Edward Pierce, E.T. Davis, William Nicrosi, Price McLemore, Tine Dave, any Wayne Dawson.
The Historical Marker was placed by the East Montgomery County Historical Society, Alabama Historical Association, April 14, 2011.
Pike Road is currently developing a 30-mile-long nature trail that will connect the many neighborhoods making up the town.
[simple-links orderby=”title” order=”ASC” category=”4424″]
The post Pike Road Alabama appeared first on Digital Alabama.
]]>The post Alabama State Capitol appeared first on Digital Alabama.
]]>Take a free guided-tour of the Alabama State Capitol. Built in 1851, the Alabama State Capitol, in Montgomery Alabama, is known as the first Confederate Capitol Building.
While on the the Alabama Capitol Hill grounds, you can see the Avenue of Flags and Confederate Memorial.
More Free Things To Do in Alabama
The post Alabama State Capitol appeared first on Digital Alabama.
]]>The post Montgomery Alabama’s Haunted Baseball Field appeared first on Digital Alabama.
]]>The Montgomery Military Prison was established in a cotton warehouse in the Spring of 1862, after the battle of Shiloh. The cotton shed was situated between Tallapoosa Street and the Alabama River. It housed more than 700 Federal prisoners, most of which were captured in southeastern Tennessee, Shiloh. 198 men, most listed as unknown, died at the Montgomery Military Prison from April to December of 1862. The survivors were moved to Tuscaloosa, Alabama in December 1862.
A portion of Oakwood cemetery was designated for those Federal prisoners to be buried. Most of those Union POW graves have been moved to the National Cemetery in Marietta, Georgia.
The Montgomery Biscuits Stadium now stands where the once prison stood and ghost sightings have been common, leading some to believe that the spirits of the soldiers who died at the prison, now haunt the baseball field.
One spirit appears as a tattered homeless man, typically only asking the passerby for food or water.
More ghost tales at Alabama Ghosts and Ghost Towns Index
The post Montgomery Alabama’s Haunted Baseball Field appeared first on Digital Alabama.
]]>