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Steve
has gathered some information
on Huntsville, AL and surrounding areas
and thought that you may enjoy learning
about our great city
Huntsville, Alabama, an all around great
place to live, work and raise a family! |
Huntsville,
Alabama USA is one of the most recognized cities in
the Southeast,
consistently named as one of the best places to live
and work by a variety of national
publications. Our city is regularly named as a premier
location for both business and
quality of life. In addition to providing you with Huntsville
real estate information we
strive to provide a variety of other information about
the Huntsville, Alabama area.
We hope you enjoy the following Huntsville, Alabama
History information.
Technology, space & defense industries
have a major presence here with the Army's Redstone
Arsenal, NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center &
Cummings Research Park.
Home to several Fortune 500 companies, Huntsville
also offers a broad base of manufacturing, retail
and service industries. Our quality of life is second
to none with a variety of educational, recreational,
and cultural opportunities. We successfully combine
the rich heritage of Southern hospitality along with
innovative high-tech ventures and
cultural diversity for a living environment desirable
for all.
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Huntsville
Profile
The high-tech
city of Huntsville which sprawls at the foot of a mountain
in North Alabama is equally at home in the 19th century
or the 21st. Huntsville's tourist attractions reflect
the heritage of Alabama's first English-speaking city,
the strife of the American Civil War, and the accomplishments
of America's rocket scientists.
Huntsville's population
truly reflects international cultures. Of the 180,000
city residents, more than 10 percent are natives of
other countries. More than 100 languages and dialects
are spoken here. In addition to the German rocket
scientists who arrived in 1950, for example, Huntsville
is home to the first U.S. plant built by Korea's largest
corporation.
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Several
Japanese-owned companies operate manufacturing plants
here. Scores of foreign national flags ring the roof
of the headquarters of an international computer manufacturing
firm headquartered in Huntsville. Huntsville's visitor
attractions offer a wealth of activities for the native
and international visitor alike. Visitors who want to
be "astronauts for a day" can sample astronaut
training activities at the sprawling U.S. Space and
Rocket Center. The hands-on showcase of space technology
is the state's largest tourist attraction. It is home
to the internationally known U.S. Space Camp which has
franchise operations in Japan, Belgium and Canada. A
variety of city museums downtown and an outstanding
symphony orchestra offer rich cultural opportunities
involving the arts. The legendary Robert Trent Jones
Golf Trail, which encompasses 21 courses in eight cities
in Alabama, begins here at the 54-hole Hampton Cove
Golf Course. Hampton Cove features two championship
courses surrounded by mountains and lakes. Alabama now
ranks fifth in the nation for public golf courses per
resident living there.
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The
Birthplace of Alabama
Pioneer John Hunt, for whom the city is named, occupied
a cabin alongside a spring here in 1805. A town soon
flourished and was the largest in the Alabama Territory
by 1819. That year the leaders of the Alabama Territory
met here to petition the U.S. Congress to grant Alabama
statehood. The recreated 1819 Alabama Constitution Village,
a block from the courthouse square, commemorates the
historic events through tours given by costumed tour
guides.
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| Huntsville
was the cotton trading center of the Tennessee Valley
during the 1840s and '50s when planters and merchants
originally from Virginia and the Carolinas built impressive
town homes. LeRoy Pope, who purchased land at auction
and donated land for the town, originally picked the
name Twickenham. He wanted to honor the London suburb
which was home to poet Alexander Pope, a relative.
However, following the War of 1812, the name reverted
to Huntsville to honor the first man who settled here.
Walking tours of the
Twickenham historic district, with the state's largest
collection of pre-Civil War homes, are popular year-round.
Because many wealthy businessmen remained loyal to the
Union at the start of the Civil War, the town was spared
the destruction by occupying armies. Plan also to visit
the 1819 Weeden House Museum and the 1860 Huntsville
Depot Museum. A unique shopping opportunity is offered
at the 1879 Harrison Brothers Hardware Store. Restored
19th century cabins and farm buildings are displayed
at the mountaintop Burritt Museum and Park.
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America's
Space Capital
Huntsville was still a cotton market town of 16,437
people in 1950 when U.S. Sen. John Sparkman (who lived
in Huntsville's historic Twickenham neighborhood) brought
a band of German rocket scientists to Redstone Arsenal
to develop rockets for the U.S. Army. By the end of
the decade, Wernher von Braun's team had developed the
rocket which orbited America's first satellite. They
eventually put the first American in space and transported
the first astronauts to the Moon.
Redstone Arsenal
is one of the U.S. Army's most important strategic
posts. It is responsible for research, development,
production and worldwide support of missiles, aviation,
rockets and related programs. The influx of engineers,
scientists and other technical specialists has transformed
the small town into a cosmopolitan community which
nonetheless maintains its heritage and reputation
for hospitality. For more historical information on
Redstone Arsenal and Huntsville, visit www.redstone.army.mil/history.
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The
Huntsville area remains one of the South's fastest-growing.
The county's population is estimated at 260,000. It
has the highest per capita income in the Southeast.
Atlanta's is second. The nearby city of Madison, just
west of Cummings Research Park, is experiencing rapid
growth. The Hampton Cove area on U.S. 431 south is the
fastest growing residential area within Huntsville's
city limits. A legacy of the space program which benefits
visitors is the renowned U.S. Space & Rocket Center.
Guests can experience astronaut-training activities,
feel simulated weightlessness and view large-screen
movies filmed by astronauts in space.
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The Center's U.S. Space Camp attracts young people from
throughout the world who spend a week experiencing space
flight training and participate in mock space missions.
It was Von Braun himself who inspired Space Camp. He
suggested that the space museum develop an intensive
youth science program to stimulate children's interest
in math and science. Guided bus tours of the NASA Marshall
Space Flight Center take visitors through large hangar-sized
buildings such as where engineers are building the nation's
first permanent space station. They also visit giant
outdoor test stands where America's rockets have been
test fired.
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| Adjacent
to the space museum is the beautiful Huntsville Botanical
Garden which features floral and aquatic gardens. Despite
becoming the space capital of America, Huntsville maintains
close contact with its past. The literal birthplace,
"the big spring," still flows from a rock
bluff underneath the 1835 Regions Bank. It winds through
a lushly landscaped park into a lake surrounded by scores
of trees. A new three-story building to house the Huntsville
Museum of Art has been built in Big Spring Park. Facing
the park is the city's civic and convention center named
for the legendary German-born rocket scientist. The
Von Braun Center contains an arena, exhibit hall, banquet
hall, theater and meeting rooms. A variety of special
events, ranging from tours of historic homes in the
spring to the Big Spring Jam music festival in September
and brilliantly lighted Christmas festivals in December,
fill the annual calendar of events. Air travelers arrive
at the Huntsville International Airport just 12 miles
west of Huntsville. Some 70 jet flights depart daily
in addition to several weekly non-stop freight flights
to Europe.
Huntsville, Alabama
USA. We have space available for you. |
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