Legends and Figures
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Johnny Mack BrownBorn September 1, 1904, in Dothan, Alabama Johnny Mack Brown (September 1, 1904 – November 14, 1974) was an All-American college football player and film actor. Born and raised in Dothan, Alabama, Brown was a star of the high school football team, earning a football scholarship to the University of Alabama. Playing the halfback position on his university's Crimson Tide football team, Brown helped his team to become the 1926 NCAA Division I-A national football champions. In that year's Rose Bowl Game, he earned Most Valuable Player honors after scoring two of his team's three touchdowns in an upset win over the heavily favored Washington Huskies. His good looks and powerful physique saw him portrayed on Wheaties cereal boxes and in 1927 brought an offer for motion picture screen tests that resulted in a long and successful career in Hollywood. He appeared in minor roles until 1930 when he was cast as the star in a Western movie entitled Billy the Kid and directed by King Vidor. An early widescreen film, the movie also features Wallace Beery as Pat Garrett. Also in 1930, Brown played Joan Crawford's love interest in Montana Moon. Brown went on to make several top-flight movies under the name John Mack Brown, including The Secret Six (1931) with Wallace Beery, as well as the legendary Lost Generation celebration of alcohol, The Last Flight (1931), and was being groomed by MGM as a leading man until being replaced on a film in 1931, with all his scenes reshot with Clark Gable in his place. Rechristened Johnny Mack Brown, he returned to making exclusively Westerns and eventually became one of the screen's top B-movie cowboy stars, making 127 Western films during his career, including Ride 'Em Cowboy with Abbott and Costello. Brown also starred in four serials for Universal Studios (Rustlers of Red Dog, Wild West Days, Flaming Frontiers and The Oregon Trail) and was a hero to millions of young children at movie theaters and on their television screens.
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ALABAMA
Albert L. Murray
Bessie Morse Bellingrath
Booker T. Washington
Daniel Pratt
Dinah Washington
Dr. David Satcher
Erskine Ramsay Hawkins
Eugene Walter
F. Scott Fitzgerald
Fannie Flagg
Fred Shuttlesworth
George Wallace
George Washington Carver
Hank Williams
Helen Keller
Henry Louis "Hank" Aaron
Horace King
Hugo LaFayette Black
James Ralph "Shug" Jordan
James Withers Sloss
Jean-Baptiste
Jefferson Davis
Jesse Owens
Joe Louis
John Pelham
Johnny Mack Brown
Joseph Wheeler
Julia Strudwick Tutwiler
Kathryn Tucker Windham
Leroy "Satchel" Paige
Major General William Crawford Gorgas
Martin Luther King Jr.
Nat "King" Cole
Nelle Harper Lee
Paul William "Bear" Bryant
Raphael Semmes
Rosa Parks
Sam Phillips
Tallulah Bankhead
The Tuskegee Airmen
Truman Capote
Wernher von Braun
William "Red Eagle" Weatherford
William Christopher (W.C.) Handy
William March
William Rufus deVane King