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Photo by Eugene Allen Smith.
Geology
Survey Wagon on the Alabama River, Washington Ferry, Autauga
County. 1891 or 1894. Courtesy Geological Survey
of Alabama/Alabama Museum of Natural History.
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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – The Alabama Museum of Natural History
in Smith Hall on The University of Alabama campus will host the
photographic exhibit, Science into History: Photographs by Eugene
Allen Smith and the Geological Survey of Alabama, Aug. 27-Nov.
11.
The exhibit showcases 28 rare photographs of Alabama landscapes
taken by Eugene Allen Smith, Smith Hall namesake, between 1885
and 1910. Smith served as state geologist, University of Alabama
professor and director of the Alabama Museum of Natural History.
A mini-exhibition of 70 photographs also will be on display and
later circulated throughout the state by the Alabama Humanities
Foundation.
“Under Smith’s leadership the Survey made great advances
in understanding Alabama’s very diverse geology and natural
resources,” said Dr. Nick Tew, state geologist and UA adjunct
professor. “The photographs of the Smith era provide a unique
window into the culture and character of the state in the late
19th and early 20th century.”
Frances Robb, exhibition curator, selected the featured works
from more than 1,250 photographs. “They aren’t just
pictures of rocks,” Robb said. “They show aspects of
a now-varnished, rural Alabama landscape – gristmills, timber
mills, plantations, cotton gins and presses. This collection is
a treasure trove for anyone interested in Alabama history.”
The opening of the exhibition on Aug. 27 will include a day-long
symposium followed by a reception from 3-5 p.m. For more information
on the exhibition and the symposium, call 205/348-7551 or visit
the Web site at www.amnh.ua.edu. Operating hours for UA’s
Museum of Natural History are Tuesday – Saturday, 10 a.m. – 4:30
p.m. Admission is $2 for adults and $1 for children and seniors.
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