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Showing posts with label Alabama. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alabama. Show all posts

1942: Alabama

Area and Population.

Alabama has a land area of 51,078 sq. mi.; three major river systems; Coosa-Alabama, Tombigbee-Warrior, and Tennessee; more than 5,000 mi. of railway, 3,000 mi. of improved highways, and 1,600 mi. of navigable waterways. The population, according to the 1940 census, was 2,832,961, of whom 1,847,850 were whites (foreign-born 13,066), and 985,111 Negroes. This is a population increase of 7.1 per cent since the previous census. The three largest cities are Birmingham, 267,583; Mobile, 78,720; and the capital, Montgomery, 78,084. The rural population numbers about 47.5 per cent of the whole.

Education.

School attendance is compulsory for children between the ages of 7 and 16. Public elementary schools, comprising grades 1-6, enrolled 485,855 pupils in 1940-41; the 12,940 elementary teachers received an average salary of $588 for a school term of 148 days. The high schools, grades 7-12, enrolled 196,419 pupils; the 6,578 teachers received an average of $977 for a term of 167 days. The total net revenue receipts from all sources for all schools amounted to $22,311,814. Of this amount $571,199 was allotted to the University of Alabama, and $704,699 to Alabama Polytechnic institute. The state system includes, in addition, five teacher-training schools, the Alabama College for Women, and the Agricultural and Mechanical Institute (for Negroes). During the year 1941-42 students enrolled in the Engineering, Science, and Management Defense Training courses at the University of Alabama and the Alabama Polytechnic Institute numbered respectively 9,531 and 9,783.

Agriculture.

More than half the total area of Alabama is classified as farm land; the size of the average farm being about 80 acres. The value of the 1941 crops exceeded that of the previous year by more than 50 per cent. The growing season was retarded by early droughts, whereas a dry fall contributed favorably to the harvesting. In order of production value the leading crops were cotton, corn, peanuts, cottonseed, hay, and sweet potatoes. The total value of all crops approximated $164,000,000.

Industry.

During the year 1941 industrial activity in the state reached its highest peak. This resulted chiefly from the defense program, which stimulated demands for the products of heavy industry. In electric energy the state consumed more than two billion kilowatt hours. The cotton industry used 1,224,300 bales of cotton. In the metropolitan area of Birmingham there were 164,123 gainfully employed people whose weekly pay roll amounted to $3,363,500. The city had 541 manufacturing industries which produced 2,325 different products.

Legislation.

The bicameral Legislature, composed of 35 members in the Senate and 106 in the House, now meets quadrennially, but will convene in biennial session after 1943. In a short special session of the Legislature in November, 1942, the following bills were passed: to appropriate $2,000,000 to lengthen the school term to eight months; to protect the jobs of state, county, and municipal employees in military service; to amend the state code so as to bring it in line with the 'lame-duck' section of the Twentieth Amendment to the Federal Constitution.

Finance.

At the close of the fiscal year of 1942 Alabama had a surplus of about $25,000,000. Not since the state entered the Union, in 1819, has she enjoyed such financial strength. Low-ebb had been reached some ten years ago, when the financial condition was worse than at any time since the period following the Civil War. In 1941 the net state receipts totalled $71,017,032. Of this amount $50,109,194 came from taxes, and the balance from non-tax sources. Some $9,000,000 were allocated to the state by Federal grants. Automobile taxes produced 43.1 per cent of the tax receipts, tobacco 25.7 per cent, while general property taxes totalled only 11 per cent from more than a billion-dollar assessed valuation. The much-discussed poll tax contributed a mere 0.5 per cent.

The net state disbursements reached $64,695,938. Schools received approximately one-fourth of this, highways one-fifth, grants to counties one-sixth, and debt service one-tenth. The bonded debt of Alabama amounts to $69,660,000, and the regular annual bill for retirement reaches approximately $5,000,000. As a whole, the debt retirement program is well organized.

State Officers.

Governor, Chauncey Sparks; Lieutenant Governor, Handy Ellis; Secretary of State, Howell Turner; Treasurer, Walter C. Lusk; Auditor, John Brandon; Attorney General, Robert B. Harwood; Superintendent of Education, E. B. Norton.

United States Senators:

John H. Bankhead, Lister Hill.

1941: Alabama

During the year 1941, Alabama enjoyed unusual progress and prosperity. This not only applied to people within the state in all walks of life, but also to the state as a whole. State Treasury receipts for the fiscal year were $113,595,123.39; state disbursements amounted to $105,245,311.69. The balance on hand in the Treasury at the end of the year, including a previous balance, amounted to $15,745,870.89.

Area and Population.

Alabama has an area of 51,078 sq. mi., with an average density of 55.5 persons per sq. mi. The state population was 2,832,961, by the 1940 census, a growth of 7.1 per cent, in advance of the 1930 figures. Birmingham, Alabama's largest city, had a population of 267,583, showing a gain of 7,905 during the decade. Mobile, Alabama's seaport is the second city, with 78,720, while Montgomery runs a close third with 78,084. Gadsden has 36,975 people; Tuscaloosa (seat of the University of Alabama) 27,493; Anniston, 25,523; Bessemer. 22,826.

Education.

The school census for 1940 credited Alabama with 875,019 children of school age (6 to 20). Of these, 485,855 were enrolled in the elementary grades, and 196,419 in high schools, making a total enrollment of 682,274. The number and kinds of schools, 1939-40, were as follows: elementary, 2,621: accredited high schools, 347; combined elementary and high, 1,634 — a total of 4,602 schools. The average salary for Alabama's teachers is $719.

Through the cooperation of the State Department of Education and the institutions of higher learning as consultants, local school systems have carried forward significant curriculum revisions in recent years. Holtville High School received national recognition for revision of the curriculum to meet the needs of the pupils in the special community served by the school. Many other schools in the state made similar important improvements.

Alabama ranks high among the states in long-term planning of schools, in the economical administrative machinery provided for directing school activities, and in procedures used for equalizing educational opportunities for all the children in the state; but, due to financial difficulties, the state has not been able to provide as long school terms as other states. School authorities in Alabama see no hope for an adequately supported nine months' school term for all of the children, without Federal support. It is estimated, however, that one-twelfth of the boys and girls educated in this state move to other sections of the country, and that the nation as a whole is the beneficiary of this human resource. It has been contended by able men and women in this and in neighboring states that the nation therefore should pay part of the educational cost.

Alabama now has a free public library service and units are multiplying throughout the state. Thousands of approved books are being distributed to the people, to be read, returned, and passed on to others.

Agriculture.

Alabama's balmy climate is conducive to abundant crops. Its latitudes know wheat and clover in the northern section, cotton, corn, peanuts, pecans, honey, and dairy products in the central lands, early vegetables, oranges, and kumquats in the semi-tropical southern region. Flowers, cultivated and wild, grow everywhere.

Alabama is therefore a splendid agricultural state. Diversification, with rotation of crops, is generally practiced. More acreage is now being devoted to dairy herds, and to pastures for the production of fine herds of improved beef cattle. Alabama has a goal of 1,500,000,000 pounds of milk for 1942, with a proportionate amount of butter. Poultry products, with increased goals, are featured on all farms. Alabama has 1,330,000 farm workers, and they are cooperating with the government in speeding up food production.

Statistics as to the leading crops are given in the accompanying table.

The State Department of Corrections and Institutions, through the state's large prison farms, is experimenting along agricultural lines. For instance, 'ramie,' the old Chinese perennial from which cloth was made to wrap Egyptian mummies, and for other ancient uses, is being planted in quantity, and many modern uses are being found for this fine fiber plant. Silk culture and processing; the use of sweet potato meal as a stock food; production of finer syrups, and many other farm-product ideas are also being worked out on the prison farms — in addition to growing of regular crops.

Industry.

Thriving industrial plants hum in the Birmingham district, and about Anniston, Gadsden, Huntsville, Decatur, Montgomery, Mobile and other points. Many textile plants are located in smaller towns. There are more than 2,000 industrial plants running full time in the state. Government defense plants, airport centers and aviation schools, Army cantonments; and ship-building plants are also beehives of activity in many sections of the state.

Alabama has a number of large hydro-electric plants on the Coosa and Tallapoosa rivers, to supply current to cities, to industry, to farms and homes. In addition, the U. S. Government owns dams of huge proportions on the Tennessee River.

In addition to the state-owned docks at Mobile, with two miles of concrete wharves and 1,086,300 ft. of covered floor space (25 A.), Mobile has 28,000 ft. of developed water front. Through this port annually come sugar, bananas, molasses, ores, dyes, newsprint, fertilizers, asphalts, bagging, asbestos, and other items of import, while from Alabama go exports of iron, steel, cotton, coal, coke, corn, lumber and processed materials.

Mineral Products.

Production of Alabama's leading mineral, bituminous coal, amounted to 15,150,000 tons in 1940, compared with 11,995,000 tons valued at $27,708,000 in 1939. The mining of iron ore, for which the state ranks third in the Union, also increased to 7,316,127 tons, an appreciable gain over the 5,985,208 tons produced in 1939, with a value of $9,971,024. Shipments of pig iron amounted to 3,476,072 tons worth $49,706,851; coke totaled 4,727,400 tons; and cement 5,249,759 bbl., with a value of $7,616,405.

Forestry.

Alabama has 23,000,000 A. of forest, representing 22,000,000,000 board ft. of hardwoods, and 23,000,000,000 ft. of pine and soft woods. It ranks sixth as a lumber-producing state.

It is interesting to note that Alabama is conserving her forestry resources, and that millions of young trees are being planted annually. On one Government-owned tract, 3,000,000 pine seedlings are now being planted. In one county the Chamber of Commerce is sponsoring the planting of tens of thousands of pine seedlings on a 96-acre farm. Many similar projects might be cited.

State Officials.

Governor, Frank M. Dixon; Lieutenant Governor, A. A. Carmichael; Attorney General, T. S. Lawson; Secretary of State, John Brandon; State Treasurer, Charles E. McCall; State Auditor, Howell Turner; Superintendent of Education, A. H. Collins.

United States Senators:

John Hollis Bankhead, Lister Hill.

1940: Alabama

Area and Population.

Alabama's boundaries, unchanged since 1819, when the state entered the Union, encompass an area of 42,251 sq. mi. The 1940 census showed a gain in population of 7.1 per cent for the state as a whole, with 2,832,961; although 19 of the state's 67 counties showed a decrease in the past decade. The main loss of population occurred in the rural counties, though some of the agricultural areas of the state recorded surprising gains. The major increases were 17.4 per cent for Fayette County, 30.7 for Russell County, a 19.5 per cent increase for Mobile, and 15.9 per cent for Montgomery.

Population group ratios remain unchanged in that the whites constitute approximately 64.3 per cent of the total and the Negroes 35.6.

Birmingham is the largest city in the state and the third largest in the south, with a population of 267,583. Nearby iron, coal and limestone — necessary ingredients in making steel — year-round navigable waterways, together with railroads, highways and air lines, all contribute toward making 'The Magic City' a strategic center for the South.

Montgomery, with a population of 78,084, is the state capital. Surrounded by the splendid pasture lands of the Black Belt area, Montgomery is a center for packing-houses and allied industries, and is a thriving and steadily growing city.

Located at the head of Mobile Bay is the port city of Mobile, with a population of 78,720. It has constantly increased its shipping facilities and has become one of the most commercially important cities along the Gulf coast. Notwithstanding present European conditions the docks have continued to show an increase in tonnage handled over the wharves, both in imports and exports.

Education.

Alabama's school children (ages 6 to 20) attend 2,475 white schools and 2,413 Negro schools. Detailed classifications are as follows: elementary grades, white children 311,843 and Negro children 197,659, totalling 509,502; high schools, including both junior and senior classifications, 445,829 white pupils and 227,341 Negroes, with a total attendance of 673,170.

The Department of Education's outstanding achievement has been the placing in operation of the tenure law which provides for the retention of capable teachers, so as to protect their jobs from political control. The Department is undertaking to standardize school bus transportation throughout the state by owning the busses instead of contracting for their operation.

Alabama has also a practical program for teachers' retirement benefits. The teacher contributes 3½ per cent of his salary, up to a certain limit, and his return is based proportionately upon his years of service to the time of retirement. The state provides for the administration and overhead charges.

Agriculture.

In cooperation with the U.S. Department of Agriculture, operating through its extension service, with the Alabama Polytechnic Institute, Alabama has adopted a long-time conservation plan under the AAA program. The plan became operative December 1, 1940, and continues for a five-year period. As Alabama is the first state to adopt the following program much practical interest has been accorded the outline set forth below:

(1) Each participating farmer shall grow on at least 25 per cent of his crop-land, each year, certain erosion-resisting and soil-conserving crops.

(2) Proper terracing is to be done over a period of five years on all crop-land having a slope in excess of two per cent, which is not in permanent vegetative cover.

(3) On at least one acre of cropland out of 15, certain perennial soil-conserving crops shall be maintained or established during the next five years.

(4) On at least one acre out of 15, permanent pasture land shall be maintained or established during the next five years.

Farmers will be given credit units for carrying out each of these practices. A part of the net payments with respect to cotton, peanuts, tobacco, wheat, and potatoes will be conditioned upon their carrying out these soil-conserving practices.

Industry.

Alabama's industrial picture is one of constant expansion, with money being expended throughout the state, and in the creation of new industries including everything from ribbon factories to electrical power development. A new aluminum company in the Muscle Shoals area has spent $23,000,000; a steel company has spent $30,000,000; and additional millions are being spent in shipyards on the Tennessee River and at the Gulf Port of Mobile. Flour mills and cheese factories are being established in the Tennessee Valley. Apart from all this are the war defense industries.

Mineral Products.

Bituminous coal, Alabama's most valuable native mineral, was produced in 1939 to the amount of 11,995,000 tons, an appreciable increase over 1938, when 11,061,493 tons were valued at $26,769,000. Shipments of iron ore totaled 5,985,208 tons, a rise of 39 per cent over 1939, and having a value of $9,971,024. Production of coke was slightly in excess of that for 1938, at 3,854,505 tons; and pig iron was shipped in the amount of 2,717,502 tons, an increase of 727,160 tons over 1938.

Social Welfare.

Alabama began its welfare program early, with the establishment in 1918 of the Children's Welfare Department, which in 1935 became an official unit of the state Government, and is now known as the State Department of Public Welfare. Agencies administer its program through 67 county departments, each under a director chosen by the local public-welfare board. The 1940 expenditures for the department exceeded those of 1939, as increased revenues were appropriated for the purpose. The Department cooperates with the program of the various Federal organizations handling relief problems, and also with the U.S. Children's Bureau.

The state no longer operates an institution for the aged, but cares for such dependents through its Welfare Program, which contributes to a fund for their support by matching money made available by the National Welfare Board. This matching is on a fifty-fifty basis, county and state contributing one-fourth each.

Finance.

A slight increase in general fund revenues for the fiscal year was noted. Contributing to the total were Alabama Liquor Store profits which topped the three-million dollar mark, and the net Liquor License income which exceeds $235,000. Appropriations from this fund are made to the Department of Education and the Welfare Department. Gasoline tax collections are up to approximately an 8 per cent increase, indicating an increase in travel evidently by the state's own citizens inasmuch as state automobile licenses have also increased.

Legislative Matters.

As the Legislature of Alabama was not in session during the year 1940 the only matters of legislative importance were those referred to the people by way of constitutional amendments. These, of which there were eight, were largely concerned with bond issues, tax measures, and salaries, and were each approved by a comfortable majority in the general election held on November 5.

State Officials.

Governor, Frank M. Dixon; Lieutenant Governor, A. A. Carmichael; Attorney General, T. S. Lawson; Secretary of State, John Brandon; State Treasurer, Chas. E. McCall; State Auditor, Howell Turner; Superintendent of Education, A. H. Collins.

United States Senators.

John Hollis Bankhead, Lister Hill.

1939: Alabama

Area and Population.

Admitted to statehood Dec. 14, 1819. Alabama ranks 28th in size among the states, with an area of 51,998 sq. mi. In population it ranks 15th, numbering 2,646,248 according to the Census of 1930; 2,895,000 on July 1, 1937, according to the latest Federal estimate.

The racial percentages of population are as fellows; whites, 64.3 per cent Negroes, 35.6 per cent. Members of other races constitute about 0.1 of 1 per cent. Of Alabama's white race 94 per cent are native born. The rural population of the state comprises about 71.8 per cent of the total.

Birmingham is the largest city in the state, and the third largest in the South, with a population of approximately 300,000, no official census having been made since 1930. In the Birmingham section iron, coal and limestone — the essentials for steel making — are found together in large deposits; there is likewise a year-round navigable river, with railroads, highways and air-lines contributing to make the city a strategic distributing center for the nation.

Montgomery, situated near the center of the state, with a population of about 82,000, is the capital and is striving constantly with the gulf port of Mobile in a race to become the second largest city in Alabama. Montgomery is essentially an industrial city, with packing-house products steadily increasing, due to the splendid pasture lands in the Black Belt area surrounding the city.

Mobile is, as its location implies, a busy port with growing industries and shipping facilities. The population within the incorporated limits of Mobile is approximately 85,000.

Agriculture.

Refrigeration for every community has been the Alabama policy for the past year. The work of the Department of Agriculture and Industries in stressing to Alabama farmers the advantages of refrigeration for meats, fruits and vegetables is producing results. The 'quick freezing' unit at the Alabama State Docks brought additional money to the strawberry growers for their crop in 1939, by taking care of all berries harvested after the price had dropped to a level below which profits would be endangered.

Quick freeze units operated in connection with adequate storage facilities are also being established in many communities, so as to permit the storage of fruits, vegetables and meats by individual Alabama farmers. Farmers who have thus stored their surpluses may draw on them during the balance of the year to feed their families.

Industry.

Many industries already located in Alabama are enlarging their operations, especially in Mobile and Jefferson counties. New industries are locating in many sections of the state, laying the foundation for industrial development in rural sections and providing cash for farm families through employment of some of the members. Enlargement of existing industries, however, accounts for the major portion of industrial expansion in Alabama at the present time. Worthy of particular mention is the expansion of the Aluminum Ore Company through the construction of a $4,000,000 plant; and the National Gypsum Company's completion of the first unit of a $2,000,000 plant for the production of wallboard. Naval stores, ply-wood, paper-board, are among the products scheduled for increased production. Other industrial expansions include bakeries, gas and oil terminals; and a new high voltage line costing $1,500,000 now being completed by the Alabama Power Company.

Mineral Products.

Lowered production of bituminous coal, Alabama's leading mineral, followed the trend in 1938 which was generally due to the business recession of that year. The mines furnished an estimated total of 19,950,000 tons compared with 12,440,322 tons (valued at $29,857,000) in 1937. The production of coke was proportionately less at 3,374,898 tons. Shipments of iron ore, the mineral second in importance in Alabama, amounted to 4,281,332 tons valued at $7,341,620. Pig iron, in production of which Alabama ranks third among the states, was about a third below that of 1937, the total being 1,990,342 tons valued at $29,190,091.

Education.

Alabama has a total of 884,281 children of school age (6 to 20), including 565,020 whites and 319,261 Negroes. These children attend 2,478 white schools and 2,413 Negro schools. Further classification would be: in the elementary grades from 1 to 6, white children 364,958 and 196,747 Negro children, totalling 501,705. High schools, comprising both Junior and Senior classifications, with grades from 7 to 12, are attended by 443,829 white children and 226,652 Negroes, with a total attendance for both groups of 670,481.

Alabama's expenditures on education amount to $21,132,741. From these funds come the annual salaries of the public elementary and high schools, with the average for the white teachers at $830.00 and for Negro teachers at $396.00.

The increase in average daily attendance in public schools from 1934 to 1939 was, in the elementary grades, 32,778: high school grades, 36,710. The per cent increase in attendance was 13.68. From 1930 to 1938 the number of illiterates of ages from 10 to 20 was reduced 15,245. The number of teachers employed has increased from 16,202 in 1935 to 18,411 in 1939, and a further increase is needed to eliminate overcrowding in classrooms. The training of public school teachers has been greatly improved. The number of white teachers with less than two years of college training has been reduced from 4,107 in 1935 to 1,466 in 1939, whereas the number of white teachers with four years or more of college training increased from 3,674 to 5,792 for the same period. The 1939 Legislature appropriated $1,967,000 additional Minimum Program funds to the public schools annually. The additional school funds, together with former appropriations, are about sufficient to provide the additional teachers needed, to pay the salary schedule in full, to provide capital outlay to cities on the same basis as to counties, and to operate a statewide term of seven months for elementary grades and nine months for high school grades. School consolidation has progressed rapidly and this movement has promoted economy and efficiency in school administration.

During the last four years $16,000,000 worth of additional school buildings have been constructed with the help of Federal PWA, WPA, and other grants and aids, with a resulting increase in the debt service of Boards of Education of only $4,000,000. County boards are gradually changing from private ownership of school buses to county ownership, resulting in improvement of school bus equipment and in slight reductions in transportation costs on a per pupil basis. Administrative overhead of the public schools of Alabama on a per capita basis is far below the average of the nation and is only sixty-one per cent of the average of the southern states.

Legislative Matters.

Alabama's Legislature submitted to a vote of the people in 1938 five amendments to the State Constitution, all of them being adopted. These constitutional amendments, sponsored by Governor Frank M. Dixon, have modernized and humanized the governmental functions affected, providing up to date methods of handling today's problems.

Amendment No. 1 permits the Legislature to make it possible for any person charged with a felony to plead guilty fifteen days after his arrest, and thus begin serving his sentence without having to wait for a grand jury to bring in an indictment. By doing this the prisoner is enabled to receive credit for practically all of his detention instead of spending perhaps 3 to 6 months awaiting indictment.

Amendment No. 2 provided for the installation by Alabama of a modern pardon and parole system. Enabling acts were passed by the Legislature to provide for a full time 3-member Pardon and Parole Board and to relieve the Governor of all power over prison sentences, except to commute or reprieve sentences in cases involving the death penalty.

Amendment No. 3 provided for biennial sessions of the legislature.

Amendment No. 4 permitted the Legislature to extend the field of investment of trust funds to securities guaranteed or insured by the U. S. Government.

Amendment No. 5 empowered the Legislature to pass laws permitting the installation of voting machines in those cities or counties which desire them. Mobile and Birmingham have now installed them.

Other major legislation included the creation of a state Civil Service or Merit System to take the state workers out of politics.

In a general reorganization of the state agencies brought about by Governor Frank M. Dixon, active commissions were abolished in favor of single executives for the Department of Revenue and for the Highway Department. Four departments were brought under the head of the Department of Conservation, which is headed by a Commissioner. The Departments include Game, Forestry, Fish and Seafood, Parks and State Geologists, each of which has a head responsible directly to the Commissioner of Conservation.

The Department of Industrial Relations was formed by the consolidation of five separate agencies: Unemployment Compensation, State Employment Service, the Division of Labor. Workmen's Compensation, and Safety Inspection. This particular reorganization saves the state $600.00 a day. Total savings through reorganization of state agencies amount to over one million dollars annually.

The Legislature also balanced the budget, providing for additional appropriations however as the State's income increases to take care of them, and to be allocated at the discretion of the Governor.

Finance.

General fund revenues for the fiscal year were estimated at $8,797,102. Contributing to the total are Alabama liquor store profits, estimated at one million dollars, and licenses at $273,000. Appropriations from this fund to the Department of Education amount to $2,043,848, in addition to earmarked funds which provide for most of Alabama's educational expenses.

Alabama Unemployment Compensation operations are financed from two funds. The administrative fund is supplied by a Federal appropriation to the Social Security Board and allocated to the states. In the nine months from January to September 30, 1939, the Social Security Board allocated $209,854.54 to Alabama for the expenses of the Division of Unemployment Compensation. No state money is used to supplement this fund. The Unemployment Trust Fund, created by the employers paying 2.7 per cent of their pay-rolls and the workers paying 1 per cent of their wages, provides benefits which are paid to eligible workers who are unemployed. Total contributions to this fund between Jan. 1, and Sept. 30, 1939 have been $6,200,176.10. The Commission has received $105,557.74 earned interest on this fund from the U. S. Treasury. Out of the fund a total of 508,577 checks, amounting to $3,456,708.64 have been paid to unemployed beneficiaries.

The facilities of the Department of Finance have been extended to counties and to municipalities by assisting the groups in making purchases through the State Purchasing Agent's set-up and by supplying auditors for special audits where needed. This assistance has resulted in savings to Alabama's tax payers.

Banking.

Banking conditions in Alabama in 1939 showed decided improvement in State Banks. In 1938 there were 153 State banks and 15 branch banks in the state. One of these banks, with 14 branch banks, converted its set-up from a state banking institution to that of a national bank, removing it from the list of state banks and reducing for a time the total state banking assets some $4,700,000. There were other liquidations which brought the total number of banks to 149 State Banks and 1 branch bank, as of October 2, 1939. Notwithstanding the reduction in capital and assets by the conversion of this system of banks, Alabama showed an increase of $8,500,000 in total assets and an increase of $12,100,000 in cash deposits.

Welfare and Correction.

The state institutions caring for various classes of unfortunates in Alabama includes the Alabama Boys Industrial School at East Lake, and the Alabama Training School at Birmingham for Girls, which take care of white juvenile delinquents; the Alabama Reform School for Juvenile Negro Law Breakers at Mt. Meigs, The State School for the Deaf and Blind at Talladega; the Partlow State School for the Feeble Minded at Tuscaloosa; the Bryce Hospital at Tuscaloosa for the insane among the whites, and Searcy Hospital at Mt. Vernon for Negroes. On the Kilby Prison Reservation is Rogers Hospital, the tubercular hospital for state prisoners. There are no state-supported institutions for the care of children, although a number of such homes are operated by private agencies, principally church and fraternal organizations. All of these are carefully inspected and supervised by the State Department of Public Welfare. This department also administers State and Federal money for the aid of dependent children in their own homes or in the homes of reputable families or boarding mothers. The only institution operated by the state for the aged, the Home for Confederate Soldiers and their Widows at Mountain Creek, was recently closed, the few remaining inmates being boarded with relatives or reputable families. The state contributes to the support of the dependent aged from a fund created by the matching of money made available through the National Welfare Board. This matching is on a 50-50 basis, counties and State contributing one-fourth each in the matching process. In the fiscal year of 1939 ending September 30, there had been expended by the Department of Public Welfare $4,040,074. Of this $1,830,208 was for the aged, $53,214 for the blind, $824,434 for dependent children, and $266,754 for other direct assistance. The Department cooperated with the program of the various Federal organizations handling relief problems, and also with the U. S. Children's Bureau.

State Officers.

The chief state officers are Governor, Frank M. Dixon; Lieutenant Governor, A. A. Carmichael; Attorney General, T. S. Lawson; Secretary of State, John Brandon; State Treasurer, Chas. E. McCall; Auditor, Howell Turner; and Superintendent of Education, Dr. A. H. Collins.

United States Senators.

John Hollis Bankhead, Lister Hill.

1938: Alabama

Area and Population.

Known as a typical state of 'the deep South,' Alabama's statehood dates back to Dec. 14, 1819. With an area of 51,998 sq. mi. (including inland and land locked waters) it ranks 28th in size among the states. In population it ranks 15th, numbering 2,640,248 according to the census of 1930; 2,895,000 on July 1st, 1937, according to the latest Federal estimate. Of the 1930 population, whites numbered 64.3 per cent of the total; Negroes slightly more than 35.6 per cent; members of other races a small, scattered minority. The rural population constituted 71.9 per cent of the whole. Only .6 per cent of the whites are foreign-born.

The largest city is Birmingham, 250,678 (1930 census), and third largest city in the South, and a center of thriving industry. The region around it is the only place in the world where iron, coal, and limestone — the essentials for steel making — are found together in large deposits. The city is also a strategically located distributing center for nation-wide shipping. Next in size is Mobile, 68,202, Alabama's only seaport. It is one of the two ports in the United States designated by the government as a Foreign Trade Zone. This means that foreign goods may be unloaded at special piers, stored, and then reshipped to another foreign port without incurring a United States custom duty. Montgomery, near the geographical center of Alabama, is the state capital. Long an important agricultural and livestock market, the trend of the city now is toward industrialization. Gadsden, 32,586, is noted for steel, rubber goods, and textiles.

Agriculture.

In spite of a state-wide drought during 1938 which checked production of many crops, increased yields of many agricultural products were a feature of the year. Better than average results marked production of sweet potatoes, corn, peanuts, satsuma oranges, and oats.

The total yield of cotton was below the ten-year average (1927-30), a condition due, among other factors, to reduced acreage, but the pounds-per-acre result was far better than the average.

During the year farmers living in remote sections had electricity brought to them. The Rural Electrification Authority was instrumental in helping thousands of them toward modernization of their homes.

Mineral Products.

The state's leading product, bituminous coal, retained its predominating position in 1937 with production at 12,400,000 tons, a slight increase over the figures for 1936. Iron ore, second in rank, increased by 51 per cent over the previous year, with 6,350,316 tons, valued at $10,747,967, for 1937, compared with 4,259,804 tons in 1936, valued at $6,838,016. Shipments of pig iron showed a proportionate advance: 2,528,785 tons for 1937, as against 2,061,534 tons in 1936. The production of coke rose from 3,089,622 tons in 1936, to 4,252,704 tons in 1937.

Manufacturing.

Although Alabama is an essentially agricultural state, it is rapidly becoming industrialized because of the countless numbers of finished products that may be made from Alabama's rich store of raw materials. Another factor contributing toward industrial progress in the state is its comparative freedom from capital-labor conflict.

Business Recovery.

Beginning in June, 1938, business and industrial recovery in Alabama swung up at a much sharper pace than in the United States as a whole. This increase was indicated forcibly in the production of pig iron, steel, coal, and coke, as well as in insurance sales, contracts for floor space, and totals of bank debits.

Phenomenal stepping up of blast furnace operations, significant gains in ingot production, and large scale orders for manufactured goods started thousands to work again in the Birmingham district during the year. Most mines in the same section began full-time operation. Shipping through the state docks at Mobile increased to the extent that they began to show a profit for the first time since they were built.

In October 1938 consumption of electricity increased by 4.4 per cent over October 1937. Using the same period for comparison, we find an increase of 3.3 per cent in cotton consumption and an increase of 4.2 per cent in steel ingot production.

Heavy increases in building contracts occurred in every month from May to September, 1938. The value of the contracts awarded in September 1938 surpassed the same month of the preceding year by 322.1 per cent.

The year 1938 was also a record year for road and bridge building in the state. Upwards of 1,714 miles of highways were paved or placed in contract for pavement. Three major bridge projects were begun.

Education.

Education benefited in 1938 in Alabama by the inauguration of a school-building program involving the expenditure of $4,500,000. The local school boards pay 55 per cent of the sum, and the Public Works Administration supplies the remainder.

Standards were raised in the matter of teaching personnel. In the continuation of a movement started in 1939, a greater per cent of public-school teachers each year are college graduates. The number of teachers holding degrees increased in 1938 to 9 per cent more than the 1937 number.

Institutes of higher learning started building programs, as well as the public schools. New dormitories, buildings, and one library were begun or planned for the various institutions.

Legislature.

State laws are made by a bicameral legislature, consisting of a Senate and a House of Representatives. The Legislature meets every four years, the next session occurring early in 1939.

Current Events.

Important events of the year included Alabama leadership in a fight against unequal freight rates between the different sections of the country. A representative from the Interstate Commerce Commission was in Birmingham for a discussion of the problem.

Election of state officers took place in 1938. After the Democratic primary in May the gubernatorial runner-up, Chauncey Sparks, withdrew from the campaign, leaving a clear field to Major Dixon of Birmingham who had received a strong plurality vote. Alabama, of course, is one of the 'Solid South' Democratic States, and Major Dixon won easily over his Republican opponent.

State Officers.

During the year 1938 the chief officers of the state were as follows: Governor, Bibb Graves; Secretary of State, Howell Turner; Treasurer, John Brandon; Auditor, Charles F. McCall; Superintendent of Education, Dr. A. H. Collins.

In November Frank M. Dixon was elected Governor.

United States Senators.

John Hollis Bankhead, Lister Hill (reelected in November).