Boll Weevil Monument. |
Like a lot of folks from the Evergreen area, I rode over to
Dothan on Saturday to watch Hillcrest High School’s basketball teams play in
the regional tournament at the Dothan Civic Center.
If you drive east on U.S. Highway 84, it’s pretty much a
straight shot from Evergreen to Dothan. I left the house around one o’clock
Saturday and eased my way along Highway 84. A couple of hours later, I found
myself in Enterprise and got to thinking about the somewhat famous Boll Weevil
Monument located in downtown Enterprise.
As best that I could remember, I’d never seen this monument
in person, so I pulled into a gas station for a Coke and to look up the
monument’s location on my phone. A few minutes later, thanks to Google Maps, I
found the monument and parked just up the street for a closer look.
This monument is located at the intersection of Main Street and
College Street, which is a pretty busy intersection. When I got out of my
truck, I noticed a historical marker on the corner and walked over to read it
first. According to that marker, the boll weevil monument was erected on Dec.
11, 1919 “in profound appreciation of the Boll Weevil and what it has done as
the Herald of Prosperity, this monument was erected by the Citizens of
Enterprise, Coffee County, Alabama.”
'Smallest City Block in the World' |
Many of you will remember from Alabama History class that the
boll weevil showed up in Alabama in 1915 and ruined cotton crops all over the
state, including here in Conecuh County. In response to this agricultural pest,
the folks in Coffee County and in the “Wiregrass” part of the state starting
planting peanuts instead of cotton, and this new crop resulted in prosperity
for these farmers and their neighbors. The monument serves today as a reminder
that adversity can sometimes serve as the catalyst for much brighter days
ahead.
After five or 10 minutes, I got back in the truck and
continued on toward Dothan. I eventually parked down the street from the civic
center, and while walking toward the building, I encountered another unusual
monument.
There in a small triangle-shaped wedge of grass at the
intersection of North College Street and North Appletree Street sits a
headstone-shaped marker that read: The Smallest City Block in the World is Marked
by Camellia Garden Club – May 1, 1964.
Later, I read on the internet that this garden club erected
this monument in 1964 after “Ripley’s Believe It or Not!” designated this small
triangle of grass as the world’s smallest city block several years before. This
unusual location can also be found in the Guinness Book of World Records.
If you go there today, you’ll notice, in addition to the
monument, that this small block is home to a stop sign, a yield sign and a
street sign marking the intersection of North College and North Appletree
streets.
In the end, I suppose there are a fair number of unusual
attractions like this across Alabama, so the next time you find yourself on a
long road trip, keep your eyes open because you might encounter one or more of
them yourself.
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