Walking Tour Selma
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7/31/2019 Walking Tour Selma
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132 Broad Street
Selma, AL 36701
334-874-4764
1-800-457-3562
S E L M A - D A L L A S
C O U N T Y T O U R I S M
D E P A R T M E N T
25. Further on Broad Street you will see
the 1930s Kress Building. The decorative
Art Deco Style structure prominently fea-tures the Kress name accented by four-color
terra cotta tiles. New occupied by Butler-
Truax Jewelers, the building has been given
a new lease on life.
26. The last stop on your tour will be The Selma
Welcome Center. Their doors were open in
December of 2009 to welcome visitors and
tourists to our historic city. They have a won-
derful collection of area attractions and bro-
chures on each of our museums, self guided
tours which includes the Selmas Windshield
Tour, Selmas Ghost Tour, Old Live Oak
Cemetery Tour, and a one mile walking tour
of historic downtown Selma. They also have listings of local hotels and restau-
rants as well as special events.
C I T Y O F S E L M A
W E L C O M E
C E N T E R
Tour
Step Back in time and stroll down the streets of historic
Selma. This one-mile route will take you by some of the
most important places in our beautiful city. Youll
understand why the largest historic district in the state
has been named a Preserve America Community.
Youll see sites from the Civil War era to the Voting
Rights movement which not only impacted the United
States but the entire world. When other cities were
modernizing their downtowns, Selma began to save
hers. Spend a few minutes in the heart of this city andshell touch yours.
A WALKINGA WALKINGA WALKINGA WALKING
TOUR OFTOUR OFTOUR OFTOUR OFSELMASELMASELMASELMA
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Tour
15. The Harmony Clubis a Renaissance Revival three story commer-
cial building with a cast iron storefront. The Harmony Club was built
in 1909 as a social club by Selmas Jewish community. In December2010 it was featured in the New York Times as a feature story on how
revitalization is so important to historic cities.
16. To your right you will see The Selma Times
Journal, the local newspaper, housed in an Italianate
Victorian Storefront building typical of the early
1870s. This newspaper has been published continu-
ally since 1828. Earlier uses of this building includeda wholesale grocery business and an agricultural im-
plementation business.
17. The Edmund Winston Pettus
Bridge, is to your right. The Bridge was
erected in 1939 and was named after the
U.S. Senator Edmund Winston Pettus.
This is also the scene of the Selma toMontgomery March in 1965. The demonstrations that
occurred here led to the U.S. Voting Rights Act of 1965. For more information
about the bridge, please read the historical marker.
18. Across the bridge is the National Voting Rights Museum
and Institute. The museums memorabilia honors partici-pants in the Voting Rights Movement. This movement
overcame Bloody Sunday and the prejudices of others, to
attain the right to vote. The U. S. Voting Rights Act of
1965 is their victory as well as each of ours.
19. The Songs of Selma Parkwas created by the City from a
vacant lot where the Baker Building once stood. The Baker
building housed a general merchandise store, a hardware storeand at the time of burning a fine dining restaurant. The parks
name came from the book The poems of Ossian containing the
poem Song of Selma from which Selma is named.
20. Traveling down Water Avenue you can see typical commercial riverfront build-
ings as you approach Lafayette Park(the brick area located next to the St. James
Hotel) which commemorates Lafayettes visit to Selma. At the foot of the Park isthe Bridge Tenders Housethat was used by the
bridge tender when Selmas turn bridge was in
operation. Please feel free to read the HistoricalMarker.
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