User:Kevin "Hawk" Fisher/Memorial Alabama

Inhabited places

 * 1) Bullock County (1866) named for successionist politician and CSA Col. Edward Bullock
 * 2) Chilton County (1868) named for William Parish Chilton, judge and member of the Confederate Provisional Congress
 * 3) City of Clanton (1866) named for CSA Brig. Gen. James H. Clanton
 * 4) Cleburne County (1866) named for CSA Maj. Gen. Patrick Cleburne
 * 5) Hale County (1867) named for CSA Lt. Col. Stephen F. Hale; also a member of the Provisional Confederate States Congress
 * 6) Lee County (1866) named for Robert E. Lee.
 * 7) Beauregard, Alabama (unincorporated) in Lee County named for CSA Gen. P.G.T. Beauregard
 * 8) Wheeler, Alabama (unincorporated) location of the National Register of Historic Places listed Joseph Wheeler Plantation  both named for the Confederate General.

Parks, water features and dams

 * 1) Brantley: Confederate Veterans Memorial Park, privately owned.
 * 2) Demopolis: Confederate Park is the town square named so in 1923 at the request of UDC.
 * 3) Florence: McFarland Park and Recreation Area, named for Confederate Maj. Robert McFarland.
 * 4) Greenville: Confederate Park (1910)
 * 5) Marbury: Confederate Memorial Park. The site operated as the Old Soldiers Home for Confederate Veterans from 1902 to 1939. In 1964, the Alabama State Legislature established the memorial park, which now hosts a museum and archives.
 * 6) Mountain Creek: Confederate Memorial Park
 * 7) Rogersville: Joe Wheeler State Park (1949) beside Wheeler Lake and Wheeler Dam all named for Confederate General and U.S. Congressman Joseph Wheeler.
 * 8) Shelby Springs: Confederate Training Camp, Hospital, Old Soldiers Home, Cemetery and Monument

Roads
Highways??
 * 1) Dauphin Island: Beauregard Street
 * 2) Fair Hope: Jeff Davis Street
 * 3) Gardendale: Robert E. Lee Drive
 * 4) Hodges: Robert E. Lee Drive
 * 5) Leeds: Robert E. Lee Street
 * 6) Livingston: Forrest Drive
 * 7) Livingston: Hood Street, named for CSA Lt. Gen. John Bell Hood
 * 8) Livingston: Jefferson Davis Drive
 * 9) Livingston: Lee Street
 * 10) Livingston: Longstreet Drive, named for CSA general James Longstreet.
 * 11) Livingston: Morgan Drive, named for CSA Gen. John Hunt Morgan
 * 12) Livingston: Stonewall Street
 * 13) McCalla: Confederate Parkway
 * 14) Millbrook: Robert E. Lee Drive
 * 15) Mobile: Beauregard Street
 * 16) Mobile: Forrest Street
 * 17) Mobile: Johnston Street, named for Confederate general Albert Sidney Johnston
 * 18) Mobile: Polk Street, named for CSA Lt. Gen. Leonidas Polk
 * 19) Mobile: Robert E. Lee Street
 * 20) Mobile: Van Dorn Street, named for CSA Maj. Gen. Earl Van Dorn
 * 21) Montgomery: Beauregard Street
 * 22) Montgomerry: Jefferson Davis Avenue
 * 23) Ozark: Jeb Stuart Court
 * 24) Ozark: Stonewall Circle
 * 25) Trussville: Robert Lee Street

Schools

 * 1) Brewton: Jefferson Davis Community College (1965)
 * 2) Huntsville: Lee High School (1957), home to the Lee Generals.
 * 3) Montgomery: Jefferson Davis High School (1968)
 * 4) Montgomery: Robert E. Lee High School (1955). The school mascot is the General
 * 5) Opelika: Beauregard Elementary School (2001) new campus on Lee County Rd 300 constructed, previously shared location with high school
 * 6) Opelika: Beauregard High School (1923)
 * 7) Satsuma: Robert E. Lee Elementary School
 * 8) Vestavia Hills City Schools, home of the Rebels. Until 2017, the school mascot was the Rebel Man, a Confederate Flag-waving Civil War rebel and plantation owner.

State symbols

 * 1) Alabama Coat of Arms (1923) and the State Seal include the Confederate Battle Flag.
 * 2) Alabama State Flag (1895) The Alabama Department of Archives and History found in 1915 that the flag was meant to “preserve in permanent form some of the more distinctive features of the Confederate battle flag, particularly the St. Andrew’s cross.” According to historian John M. Coski, the adoption of Alabama's flag coincided with the rise of Jim Crow laws and segregation, as other former Confederate slave states, such as Mississippi and Florida, also adopted new state flags based off Confederate designs around the same time when those states instituted Jim Crow segregation laws themselves:
 * 3) The Governor's version of the State Flag includes St Andrew's Cross plus the State Coat of Arms with the Confederate Battle Flag inclusion and the military crest on the bottom.

City symbols

 * 1) Mobile: the city seal incorporates a small Confederate Battle Flag along with other flags.
 * 2) Mobile: the city flag includes the city seal.
 * 3) Montgomery: The red and gray city flag includes a strip of stars from the Confederate Battle Flag.
 * 4) Montgomery: The city seal includes the words "Cradle of the Confederacy" and "Birthplace of the Civil Rights Movement"

State holidays
Insert info.