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Quiz about Alabama  State Song
Quiz about Alabama  State Song

"Alabama" - State Song Trivia Quiz

Alabama Uber Alles

This is part of the collection of state anthems/songs of the United States of America. I hope you enjoy learning about them as much as I did.

by misdiaslocos. Estimated time: 4 mins.
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Author
misdiaslocos
Time
4 mins
Type
Quiz #
416,413
Updated
May 11 24
# Qns
10
Difficulty
Very Easy
Avg Score
9 / 10
Plays
46
Last 3 plays: camhammer (10/10), Guest 165 (0/10), BarbaraMcI (10/10).
"Alabama, Alabama, We will aye be true to thee,
From thy Southern shores where groweth,
By the sea thine orange tree.
To thy Northern vale where floweth,
Deep and blue the Tennessee,
Alabama, Alabama, We will aye be true to thee!
Broad thy stream ;
Grand thy Bigbee rolls along;
Fair thy
Bold thy Warrior, ,
Goodlier than the land that Moses
Climbed lone Nebo's Mount to see,
Alabama, Alabama, we will aye be true to thee!
From thy prairies, broad and fertile,
Where thy shines.
To the hills where coal and iron,
Hide in thy ,
Strong-armed miners -sturdy farmers;
Loyal hearts what'er we be,
Alabama, Alabama, we will aye be true to thee!
From thy quarries where the marble
White as that of Paros gleams
Waiting till thy sculptor's chisel,
Wake to life thy poet's dreams;
Fear not only wealth of nature,
Wealth of mind hast thou no fee,
Alabama, Alabama, we will aye be true to thee!
Where the ,
Thy magnolia groves among,
Softer than a mother's kisses,
Sweeter than a mother's song,
Where the golden jasmine trailing,
Woos the treasure-laden bee,
Alabama, Alabama, we will aye be true to thee!
Brave and pure thy men and women,
Better this than
Make us worthy, God in Heaven
Of this goodly land of Thine.
Hearts as open as thy doorways.
free.
Alabama, Alabama, we will aye be true to thee!
Little, little can I give thee,
Alabama, mother mine.
But that little - hand, brain, spirit.
All are thine.
Take, O take, the gift and giver.
Take and .
Alabama, Alabama, we will aye be true to thee!
Your Options
[Coosa-Tallapoosa] [exhaustless mines] [corn and wine] [Liberal hands and spirits] [serve thyself with me] [whose name thou bearest] [dark and strong] [snow-white cotton] [I have and am] [perfumed south-wind whispers]

Click or drag the options above to the spaces in the text.



Most Recent Scores
May 22 2024 : camhammer: 10/10
May 21 2024 : Guest 165: 0/10
May 21 2024 : BarbaraMcI: 10/10
May 21 2024 : Xanadont: 10/10
May 19 2024 : donkeehote: 10/10
May 18 2024 : Tehilla2: 7/10
May 18 2024 : mungojerry: 10/10
May 17 2024 : daveguth: 10/10
May 16 2024 : Guest 12: 8/10

Quiz Answer Key and Fun Facts
Answer:

"Sweet Home Alabama"? "Stars Fell on Alabama"? "Song of the South" by Alabama? Nope, the state song is from the 1930s with lyrics written by Julia S. Tutwiler after she returned home to Alabama after an extended stay in Germany.

Julia is one of those fascinating Alabama women who worked hard against injustice, prejudice, and intolerance just like her more well-known Alabama compatriot, Helen Keller. She was born in 1841 and her father was one of the first full professors at the University of Alabama. He was forced to leave his teaching position, it is rumored, due to his anti-slavery views and he went on to found a private boys' school which also educated a few girls, including his daughter. In the complicated anti-bellum South however, his anti-slavery views did not prevent him from being a slave owner himself. That said, one of his slaves was literate and left behind a memoir of his time as Tutwiler's slave after he had been freed.

Within a year after the end of the Civil War, Julia found herself at Vassar College studying education and then went on an overseas tour through France and Germany, and finally returned to the USA, where she finished her education at Washington and Lee University.

It was this trip, especially the trip to Germany, which seems to have had the strongest effect on her life and views. She returned to the United States with a belief in the fact that the lives of the downtrodden, especially prisoners, needed to be protected, that women and men should have equal rights (within the confines of her time), and also that the people of Alabama needed to be more civic minded and patriotic. She became a tireless campaigner for the rights of prisoners and helped to get separate prisons for men and women, and eventually for children and adults. She also served as a college president of the Livingston State Normal School, its only female president, and founded the Alabama Girls' Industrial School, which later became the University of Montevallo.

To promote state patriotism, she wrote the poem "Alabama" which would later be turned into the state song. It borrowed heavily from her experience of Germany where she watched a new nation starting to emerge from a collection of smaller ones.
Source: Author misdiaslocos

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