I was interviewed by Courthouse News about designing the GOP for Jones logo and yard signs for a story on Doug Jones victory in Alabama.
Abandoned WWII U.S. Air force base
In 1938 the U.S. Army established Brookley Air Force Base on the shore of Mobile Bay, Alabama.
During World War 2 Brookley became the main supply base for the U.S. Air Force in the Southeast and Caribbean.
In 1944 the Army took advantage of Brookley's large, skilled workforce for the top-secret "Ivory Soap" project, designed to accelerate U.S. victory in the Pacific.
After World War II the base continued to serve the Army, maintaining aircraft and employing over 16,000 workers until it's closure due to budget cuts in 1964.
Brookley was Mobile's largest employer for nearly 30 years and it's closing was devastating to the local economy, to say the least.
Merchants National Bank Building
The Merchants National Bank building sticks out like a sore thumb from the skyline of downtown Mobile, Alabama. The 236-foot, 18 story building is clearly an old part of the port city, with it's Art Deco facade of patterened yellow bricks, ornate concrete carvings and green copper pyramid roof. They just don't make 'em like this anymore.
Opened in 1929, the same year that The Great Depression began, The Merchants National Bank was the first skyscraper on the U.S. Gulf Coast.
On July 1, 1985 it was renamed to the First Alabama Bank Building and in the 1990s again to the Regions Bank Building but 'Merchants National Bank' remains carved into it's exterior today.
In 2017 a Tennessee development company announced it had bought an entire city block in downtown Mobile, including the Merchant's National Bank.
Plans are to restore and redevelop it into high-end loft apartments, restaurants and retail spaces. Starting this month, the landmark building will never be quite the same again.
It was designed by the architectural firm, Graham, Anderson, Probst & Whiteheld who are responsible for, among other famous buildings, the Wrigley in Chicago.
The Merchants National Bank held the title of tallest building in Alabama outside of Birmingham and tallest on the Gulf Coast until 1965. Today it's only Mobile's 6th tallest but remains one of the largest surviving examples of Art Deco architecture in the Deep South.
Gallery below: from the top floor, just below the pyramid roof.
Gallery below: from the basement.
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