Online Encyclopedia

SELMA

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V24, Page 614 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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SELMA  , a

city and the county-seat of Dallas county,
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Alabama, U.S.A., altitude 126 ft., on the right
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bank of the Alabama
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river, a little S. of the centre of the state, and known as the Central City . Pop . (1900) 8713, of whom 4429 were negroes; (1910 U.S. census) 13,649 . It is served by the
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Louisville &
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Nashville, the
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Southern and the Western of Alabama
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railways . It has a Carnegie library, two parks and two Y.M.C.A. buildings . In the city are the Selma Military Institute (1907), and the Alabama Baptist Colored University (opened in 1878), which is one of the largest
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schools in the South owned and controlled by negroes, and has
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industrial, domestic, normal, collegiate and (especially) theological courses . The Society of
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United Charities supports the Selma . Hospital (1889) for negroes and the Selma Infirmary (189o) . The city has a large trade, principally in cotton (the chief crop of the surrounding country), and in
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lumber from the
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great pineries . There are cotton' compresses, cotton warehouses, &c.; in 1905 the value of the factory
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pro-ducts was $1,138,817 . The
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water supply is obtained from artesian wells . The site was originally called Moore's Bluff, from one Thomas Moore, who owned a steamboat landing here about 1815 .

A

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town was established about 1817, and in 1820 was incorporated under its
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present name (from the Ossianic legend) . Selma was first chartered as a city in 1852 . During the
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Civil War it was the seat of Confederate arsenals, shipyards and military factories . On the and of
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April 1865 it was captured by Federal troops under General James H . Wilson (b . 1837) and much of the city was destroyed by fire . Near Selma lived William Rufus King (1786-1853), a Democratic representative in Congress from North Carolina in 1811-1816, a member of the United States Senate from Alabama in 1819-1844 and 1846-1853, minister to France in 1844-1846, and
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vice-president of the United States from the 4th of March 1853 until his
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death on the 18th of April; and Selma was the home of John Tyler Morgan (1824-1907), a brigadier-general in the Confederate army in 1863-1865 and a prominent Democratic member of the United States Senate in 1877-1907; and of Edmund Winston Pettus (1821-1907), also a brigadier-general in the Confederate Army and, in 1897-1907, a Democratic member of the United States Senate .

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