The downtown is like so many I have seen before. As I plied the streets of Wylam I was starting to see a recurring theme. The interstate is way over there (points to the south) and with it therein lies commerce. What's left is brick monuments to a bygone era. Oh, some enterprising soul will endeavor a junk store or a barber shop but mostly they stand as vacant reminders of what had to be a vibrant community. The Mom & Pops who made the community hum.
There was the abandoned Alabama National Guard armory. I have seen them like this in the country but rarely do i encounter one in an urban area. What happened to them? Did they disband? Get rolled into other units?
I found some other cool things worth seeing. Well, worth seeing to me and perhaps you if you're still reading this. Wall art. I love wall art. Oh not all of it is as sexy as an old Coca-Cola sign of course. But it is still a written...well painted...reminder of some business's attempt to lure in customers and certainly brightens up an otherwise boring brick wall. The Sistine Chapel it's not. Or even "See Seven States" on a barn. But it's still a document of the past and worth preserving.
One thing I did find quite amusing. Well amusing in that I tripped over it. A street sign a mere 4 inches above the ground. If I had to guess this was all there was many years ago to denote which street is which. So, and of course I'm assuming here, these were designed for people on foot. When getting around in a small community meant walking to the general store or your church was on this or that street. But the good news I suppose is that even dogs and cats don't have to look up. So next time you are in Wylam (btw, you have to make the effort as Wylam is actually a little arduous to get to) make sure and look down so you don't trip over Indiana Street.
Learned an important lesson today. Google Chrome is no panacea. I wrote this entire blog two days ago and was saving it to post later. Well turns out that's like setting hamburger out to thaw. It's fine for a while but if it sits for too long it goes bad. I tried several times to post but to no avail. So save your blogs on note cards elsewhere or be prepared to reconstruct them from memory. Technology is great...to a point.
what does this have to do with wylam bricks? i have some old bricks that came from yje corner of edison ave.and riverside ave. in jacksonville fl. i am trying to determine whether these bricks have any value as antiiques.
ReplyDeleteTry looking on eBay. The brick you have came from the Wylam brick yard. A lot of which were for the steel industry. (Firebrick) There were also cobblestone and red brick for homes and businesses.
DeleteThe abandoned National Guard Armory pic is in Ensley, Alabama (part of Birmingham) and was the locally famous site for "Duke's Sock Hop' held in the 1950s and 1960s (Duke Rumore - WYDE disc jockey). Bands included The Premiers, Swinging' Medallions, Sam the Sham & the Pharoahs + many local and regional bands. The record "Are You Alright?" by the Premiers was recorded there live with a crowd in the hundreds. This is the only pic of the old Ensley National Guard Armory I've seen online.
ReplyDeleteThe armory is on the Wylam side of the viaduct. Ensley is on the other side. My family was one of the first families to settle in Wylam & I spent most of my youth there.
DeleteI also spent a lot of time at Wylam armory playing basketball and volleyball at Wylam armory behind Miss Annie DeJohn's store. I'm 68yo and 4th gen Wylamite. I have a firebrick stamped "Wylam" from Wylam School. In St. Augustine Fl you will see pavers from Graves brickyard, Birmingham. I also have one of those they were going to discard in St. Aug.
DeleteI also spent a lot of time at Wylam armory playing basketball and volleyball at Wylam armory behind Miss Annie DeJohn's store. I'm 68yo and 4th gen Wylamite. I have a firebrick stamped "Wylam" from Wylam School. In St. Augustine Fl you will see pavers from Graves brickyard, Birmingham. I also have one of those they were going to discard in St. Aug.
DeleteNOW IT IS THE KILLING FIELDS!
ReplyDeleteGangs?
DeleteThat four inch street you stumbled upon .. I used as a skateboard ramp growing up.. I grew up on Indiana street and no one could give you a better life from bottom to the top instagram @wylamgtommylee
ReplyDeleteANY one know the approx value of these bricks?
ReplyDeleteAbout 10$ a brick
ReplyDeleteVery cool to come across this. I was born and raised in Wylam. My grandparents were among the earliest settlers of Wylam. My paternal grandfather was a brick mason who was said to have built most of the foundations and chimneys in the early Wylam houses. He also worked on the Wylam School building that was completed in 1922, so I found several of those Wylam and Alabama-stamped fire bricks in his yard. Someone gave me a few more after the school building was torn down in 2009, and I have them as pavers in my yard in Tallahassee. I didn't know that they were of any particular value except to us old timers from the town. By the way, there are some Wylam "nostalgia" groups on Facebook if anyone is really interested. You can find them by searching on the name. There was also an annual Wylam Reunion in Hueytown (second Sunday in September) for a number of years. It was discontinued during the pandemic since almost all of us are well over 60 now, but may resume this year or the next if there is sufficient interest. Duncan Hoehn
ReplyDeleteMy wife was from Dylan. Frisco street. I would love to find one of those qualm stamped pavers for her.
DeleteBest way to find birth, death, and marriage records from Wylam?
ReplyDeleteMy wife was from Wylam . I would love to find one of those Wylam stamped pavers for her.
ReplyDelete