
Violence has always been an enemy of law enforcers in Anniston, Alabama, but in 1914-15 that truth reached new heights. Over an eight-month span, six Anniston Police Department officers were shot and killed in a spasm of violence directly related to bootlegging and illegal saloons in the city. Twice Anniston had two police officers shot and killed on the same day. One of its police chiefs was murdered by a bootlegger. And one of the subsequent trials produced a swift verdict and a delayed execution that Annistonians watched against the sheriff's wishes.
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Aug 18, 2020
20 min

In 1952, the Army disregarded the advice of a top officer and decided to hold open-air biological warfare tests at Fort McClellan in Anniston, Alabama. In those tests the Army used two different bacterial agents that seem to have led to elevated rates of pneumonia cases among Anniston residents that winter. The bacterial agents were delivered in gaseous plumes and bacterial-filled bombs. But no one in the general public knew about it -- until a reporter for The Anniston Star newspaper used the Freedom of Information Act in 1981 to get declassified documents and publish these astonishing details.
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Jul 28, 2020
15 min

Sam Noble and Daniel Tyler, the founders of Anniston, Alabama, wanted to create a utopian factory city in the postwar New South that not only made them money but kept vice from creeping onto its streets. But they failed. As soon as the city was opened to the public in 1883, Anniston became known for its rampant whiskey reputation, and arrests of prostitutes and their clients at "bawdy houses" were common. So much for their Model City being free from vice.
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Jul 8, 2020
16 min

When the founding families of Anniston, Alabama, laid out the city's street grid, they named its largest road after C.T. Quintard, an Episcopal priest who served as a Confederate Army chaplain during the Civil War. But why? Quintard had no true connection to Alabama or Calhoun County -- other than, of course, his close relationship with a very important person in Anniston's past.
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Jun 17, 2020
18 min

If Anniston's politicians and newspaper had their way, the Army post created in 1917 during World War I wouldn't have been named after Union Gen. George B. McClellan of the Civil War. McClellan was a Philadelphian who graduated from West Point and had no connection to Alabama -- plus, he was a Yankee! And a New Jersey governor! And a failed presidential candidate! In this week's episode, Annie's Town takes a look at what names Annistonians preferred for their new Army post and the disappointment they felt when Little Mac was the Army's choice.
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Jun 1, 2020
24 min

The Anniston Tragedy: An Alabama newspaper editor, an offended reader and 3 men shot in the newsroom
In 1888, William Edmonds, editor of The Hot Blast newspaper in Anniston, Alabama, began a scorched-earth editorial crusade against vice and bootlegging in the city. He didn't make friends with the police (who were corrupt) and the bootleggers (who didn't want their revenue curtailed by a journalist). That October, two men confronted Edmonds in his office and shot him and two other men, which led to arrests and a lengthy list of occurrences that didn't end until the 1890s out in Los Angeles. It remains one of the craziest stories about the city's many years of vigorous newspapering.
Annie's Town can be found on ITunes, Google Play, Anchor.fm, Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts. Make sure you subscribe so you don't miss an episode. And be sure to leave a 5-star review if you like what you hear.
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May 15, 2020
30 min

The story of Anniston’s role in the Freedom Riders civil rights story is well known. But while racial violence was taking place in the city on Mother’s Day 1961, many Annistonians were oblivious and attended church, played golf and visited with their families.
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May 6, 2020
19 min

The founders of Anniston, Alabama, installed the city’s first 24 ordinances in 1877 and designed them to shape behaviors, uphold morals and keep rotting animals from fouling downtown. (Seriously.)
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Apr 29, 2020
23 min

Historians don’t know much about Annie Scott Tyler, who gave her name to the city of Anniston, Alabama. But we can learn snippets about her life by examining her background, her fascinating Confederate father and her social circle.
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Apr 17, 2020
15 min

An introduction to Annie’s Town, a new podcast about Anniston, Alabama, a quirky and frustrating Deep South city and its historical cast of characters and catalog of stories.
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Apr 10, 2020
1 min
