Road map of Alabama with distances between cities

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Road map of Alabama with distances between cities

Alabama map highway free
Highway map of Alabama state. Detailed highways and roads map of Alabama state with cities and towns. Alabama road map with exit numbers.
Detailed roads map of Alabama
Alabama roads map
Highway map of Alabama 2021. Free road map of Alabama state.
Funny and true nicknames of the state Alabama
  • Heart of South
  • The Lizard State
  • Cotton State
  • The Cotton Plantation State
  • Heart of Dixie
  • Yellowhammer State

What are the official nicknames of Alabama state?
  • Yellowhammer State: Since the Civil War, Alabama has been known as the “Yellowhammer State.” A group of Huntsville cavalry soldiers under the command of Rev. D.C. Kelly rode to Hopkinsville, KY, where they met General Forest’s troops. Compared to the battle-weary troops in Hopkinsville, the cavalry wore bright new uniforms with unsullied yellow armbands. As they passed Company A, Pvt. Will Arnett called out: “Yellowhammer, Yellowhammer, flicker, flicker!” Everyone laughed hysterically and the name soon spread through the entire Confederate Army, then eventually became Alabama’s official nickname.
What are the unofficial nicknames of Alabama state?
  • Heart of Dixie: “Dixie” was taken from the $10 notes from the Bank of Louisiana, as “dix” mean “ten” in French. The South eventually became known as “Dixieland,” Alabama serving as the capital of the Confederacy. Hence, “the Heart of Dixie” was coined by the Alabama Chamber of Commerce in the 1950s. For a while, this nickname featured on state license plates.
  • Camellia State: Camellia japonica is the state flower of Alabama.
  • Cotton State: Alabama is the largest cotton-growing state east of the Mississippi. Cotton nicknames such as “Cotton Plantation State” (1844), “Cottondom” (1856), Cotton Belt (1871), “Cotton Country” (1871), or “Cottonia” (1862) are applied to the southern region as a whole.
  • Stars Fell on Alabama: This nickname comes from a 1934 jazz standard by Frank Perkins, with lyrics by Mitchell Parish. The song was made famous by Ella Fitzgerald, Frank Sinatra, and Louis Armstrong. Additionally, it harkens back to a meteorological event in November Gov. Don Siegelman wrote of the meteor shower: “It is my hope that this design will help send a message that stars have indeed fallen on Alabama and continue to fall on Alabama.” In January 2002, this phrase replaced “Heart of Dixie” on Alabama license plates.
  • Lizard State: As early as 1845, Alabamians were known as “lizards.”
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