Centre: Confederate Memorial, Cherokee County Courthouse, dedicated in 1988 by SCV, Emma Sansom Camp No. 27.[6]
Centreville: Confederate Monument, Bibb County Courthouse, erected in 1910 by UDC, Leonard Calloway Pratt Chapter No. 1056.[7] "These were men who by the simple manhood of their lives, by their strict adherence to the principles of right, by their sublime courage and unspeakable sacrifices, even to the heroism of death, have preserved for us through the gloom of defeat a priceless heritage of honor."[8]
Decatur: Confederate Monument, near Morgan County Courthouse, erected in 1922 by UDC, Joe Wheeler Chapter No. 291.[9]
Birmingham: Confederate Soldiers and Sailors Monument, Linn Park, completed in 1905 by UDC, Pelham Chapter No. 67.[3] In August 2017 Birmingham Mayor William A. Bell ordered the monument covered in plastic and surrounded by plywood, acknowledging state law prohibits removing it, but arguing the law does not prohibit covering it up. He said: "This country should in no way tolerate the hatred that the KKK, neo-Nazis, fascists and other hate groups spew. The God I know doesn't put one race over another." The Alabama Attorney General Steve Marshall sued the Mayor and the City over the action.[19][20]
Demopolis: Confederate Monument (1910). It was destroyed on July 16, 2016 when a policeman accidentally crashed his patrol car into the monument. The statue fell from its pedestal and was heavily damaged. In 2017, the Demopolis city council voted 3–2 to move the damaged Confederate statue to a local museum and to install a new obelisk memorial that honors both the Union and the Confederate soldiers.[21][21][22]
Demopolis: Breastworks Confederate Memorial (1941)
Eufaula: Confederate Monument, erected in 1905 by UDC, Barbour County Chapter.[23]
Selma: Edmund PettusBridge; (built 1940, carries US Route 80) is named for the Confederate General and Alabama Grand Dragon of the KKK. Ironically, this bridge is now famous as the site of "Bloody Sunday" March 7, 1965, when, led by Martin Luther King, Jr., "some 600 civil rights marchers headed east out of Selma... They got only as far as the Edmund Pettus Bridge six blocks away, where state and local lawmen attacked them with billy clubs and tear gas and drove them back into Selma."[40]
Selma: Defense of Selma Memorial, erected in 1907 by UDC.[38][41]
Selma Memorial boulder marking The Selma Ordnance and Naval Foundry "destroyed by the Federals 1865" placed "...in honor of the memory of hundreds of faithful men who made these great works a base for war material for the entire Confederate Army and Navy." Erected 1917 Alabama Division United Daughters of Confederacy.[42]
Selma: "Arsenal Place" memorial (1931) marking the site of the Confederate ordnance works "destroyed by the Union Army April 6, 1865".
Selma: A memorial arch on the grounds of the Federal Building / U.S. Courthouse honors Confederate Generals and Senators John Tyler Morgan and Edmund Pettus, who were instrumental in securing Federal appropriations for the State.
Selma: Old Live Oak Cemetery a Selma city-owned property incorporates various features including:
Jefferson Davis Memorial Chair – an inscribed stone chair
Confederate Memorial Circle, dedicated in 1878, Confederate Memorial Association.[38]
Nathon Bedford Forrest Bust Monument (2000) Built partly with city funds, sponsored by Friends of Forrest and UDC.[43] The bust of Forrest was allegedly stolen sometime later. The base is inscribed in part "defender of Selma, wizard of the saddle, untutored genius, the first with the most."[44](Images all sides)[45]
A Confederate Soldier Monument (pre-1881) with cannons protecting it
Brantley: Unknown Alabama Confederate Soldiers, a new Confederate monument, was installed in Confederate Veterans Memorial Park in Brantley two weeks after the Rally the Right rally in August 2017. The park is privately owned.[49][50]
Tuscaloosa: Confederate Monument, Greenwood Cemetery, erected in 1880 by the Ladies Memorial Association.[54]
Union Springs: Confederate Monument, Old City Cemetery (The Confederate Cemetery), dedicated in 1895, Ladies Memorial Association.[55]
^White, Marjorie Longenecker, Richard W. Sprague, G. Gray Plosser Jr. Editors, Downtown Birmingham” Architectural and Historical Walking Tour Guide, Birmingham Historical Society, The First National Bank of Birmingham, 1980 p. 9
^ abcConfederated Southern Memorial Association, History of the Confederated Memorial Associations of the South (New Orleans: Graham Press, 1904), pp. 48–49.