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Records of local league chapters, including Auburn, Birmingham, Huntsville, Mobile, Montgomery and Tuscaloosa, can be found at Auburn University's library archives. [3] According to these records, [ 3 ] the League discussed topics such as educational funding, taxation, desegregation, congressional re-apportionment, and constitutional revision.
The Huntsville Tigers is a women's American football team located in Huntsville, Alabama. The Tigers played their first season of full-contact football in the spring of 2012. This was the Tigers' first season as a new team. The team consists of former Alabama Renegades and Tennessee Valley Tigers players as well as a number of new players.
The 2024 Conference USA women's basketball tournament was a postseason tournament held from March 12–16, 2024 at Propst Arena, part of the Von Braun Center in Huntsville, Alabama. [1] All nine members of Conference USA (CUSA) participated in the tournament.
The 2024–25 Alabama Crimson Tide women's basketball team represents the University of Alabama during the 2024–25 NCAA Division I women's basketball season.The Crimson Tide, led by twelfth-year head coach Kristy Curry, play their home games at Coleman Coliseum and compete as members of the Southeastern Conference (SEC).
Huntsville Female College (1851–1895) was a school in Huntsville, Alabama. The school burned January 4, 1895. [1] A historical marker commemorates its history. [2]
Huntsville League for Women's Suffrage, circa 1895. For many years, the women's suffrage movement in Alabama was represented only by Priscilla Holmes Drake and her husband, James Drake, who moved to Huntsville, Alabama in 1861. [1] Priscilla Drake was the only Alabama representative to the National Woman Suffrage Association (NWSA) in the 1860s ...
The 2020 Huntsville mayoral election took place on August 25, 2020, to elect the mayor of Huntsville, Alabama. Incumbent Republican Mayor Tommy Battle won re-election to a fourth term, with Democrat Andy Woloszyn coming in second. [8] The election was officially non-partisan, but some candidates were affiliated with political parties.
Terri Sewell was born in Huntsville, Alabama, [5] to Andrew A. Sewell, a former high school basketball coach, and Nancy Gardner Sewell, a retired high school librarian and former Selma city council member. Her mother was the first Black woman elected to Selma's city council.