Join Us for a Day of Awareness and Healing in Woodstock, Alabama!

Woodstock, AL – The Town of Woodstock, in collaboration with the Alabama Suicide Prevention and Resources Coalition (ASPARC), invites the community to a special event on Saturday, September 28, from 10 AM to 12 PM. This gathering aims to raise awareness about mental health and suicide prevention while honoring those who have lost loved ones to suicide.

The event will feature engaging activities suitable for all ages, including rock painting, wildflower painting, and art therapy sessions led by local artist Crystal Phipps. Attendees will also have the opportunity to create beautiful bouquets and plant wildflowers, fostering a sense of community and support.

In addition to these meaningful activities, guests can enjoy a selection of delicious food and hand made crafts from local vendors, including:

Wild Honey Flower Truck
Creekside Shaved Ice
Granny’s Creations

Also on hand, Bounce Rentals 4 You.


This event is not just a chance to have fun; it’s an important opportunity to connect, share experiences, and promote understanding around mental health challenges.

We encourage everyone to come out, participate, and show your support. Together, we can make a difference in our community.

For more information, please contact Cheryl Dodson at 205-902-4012 or info@asparc.org.

Woodstock Community Library Receives Donation of Historical Documents from the Family of Patricia Kinard Sellers


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Woodstock, AL – September Sept. 12, 2024 – The Woodstock Community Library is honored to announce the generous donation of historical documents from the family of Patricia Kinard Sellers. These valuable records, which offer a glimpse into the rich history of Woodstock, will soon be cataloged and made available to the public.

The donated documents trace the history of the Woodstock and Green Pond schools, shedding light on its growth, culture, and notable events. The family of the late Patricia Kinard Sellers, a lifelong resident and beloved member of the community, has entrusted the Woodstock Community Library with the preservation of these materials for future generations.

“We are grateful for this invaluable contribution, which will enhance the library’s local history collection and deepen our understanding of Woodstock’s past,” said Mayor Jeff Dodson. “The generosity of the Sellers family allows us to continue our mission of preserving the town’s deep connection to education in Bibb County and our heritage.”

The documents are currently being cataloged and will be housed at the library for research and educational purposes.

For more information, please contact:
Woodstock Community Library
Email: library@townofwoodstockal.com


The Ray – Strickland Cemetery, Woodstock, Alabama

Ray Cemetery (ALGENWEB)

Ray Cemetery (FINDAGRAVE)

PHOTOS COPYRIGHT Ⓒ LINDA SANSING, OCTOBER 2022

WOODSTOCK, Ala., Oct. 28, 2022 – Mrs. Linda Sansing and her husband Sidney W. Sansing visited the Ray – Strickland Cemetery in October of 2022 with several people from the First Baptist Church of Woodstock, Alabama. She reports that the road/path is hard to traverse and it was an intense hike for the group. She also reports that the fenced in area of the cemetery is well kept. Mr. Sidney Sansing reports that there are several graves outside the fenced area, in the surrounding woodland.

Continue reading “The Ray – Strickland Cemetery, Woodstock, Alabama”

Teachers, then and now: Thank you from a grateful librarian

As the school years draws to an end in Bibb County, we are reminded of all the teachers who have touched lives. Now, and in the past.

The Woodstock Community Library sends our deepest thanks to the teachers in our community.

Almost every day, a child comes through the doors of the library excited about something they have learned in school, or looking for a book their teacher or school librarian told them about.

It’s pure joy on our end to be even a small part of that.

Some days, it’s an adult who tells us the story of a teacher who impacted them and that happened twice today!

A young man who grew up in Hueytown and recently listened to the S-Town podcast stopped by.

As it turns out, his ancestors are from the Woodstock area and they donated the land where the Bibbville Baptist Church was built.

He shared with me the story of his great-great grandmother Hattie Belle Dunlap Dowdle and gifted her photo to the library archives.

Hattie Belle taught school at Bibbville, Alabama and her influence is still felt in his life and doubtlessly, many untold others.

(He grew up to be a writer, teacher and a researcher of Southern writers like Flannery O’Connor.)

hattie e_edited
Hattie Belle Dunlap Dowdle, Bibbville, Alabama

Later in the afternoon a lady named Amy stopped by the library to purchase a Woodstock Music Festival T-Shirt.

“How’s Mrs. Anne doing?” she asked.

(Mrs. Anne is our community’s retired librarian and a long-time teacher in Bibb County.)

Before I could reply, her eyes filled with unspilled tears and she continued to speak.

“I went back to school when I was 47. Mrs. Anne tutored me so I could pass college-level math and English. She gave me so much of her time. She believed in me when I didn’t believe in myself.”

I have not met Mrs. Anne, but I know from my year here in Woodstock that many other people have the same testimony.

“She helped me. She taught me. She encouraged me.”

Don’t we owe such a debt of gratitude to our teachers?

Past and present.

(A personal thanks to Hoover High teacher and Birmingham broadcaster Reed Lochamy (and Will!) at Oh Brother Radio who thought a year ago that this was a story worth telling, 2nd grade teacher Emily Ellison and school secretary Anne McLelland Kornegay who both serve on the Woodstock Community Library board of directors, and Bibb County board of education member Mrs. Billie Dailey who has consistently been a supporter of the Woodstock Community Library. We appreciate you!)

Memories of a tragedy

The Woodstock Community Library in Bibb County, Alabama is located just a few blocks from the site of a tragic train crash that happened in 1951.

Our patron, Mr. Wade Tibbs, was a young boy then and shares his memories of that time in the above video.

We are blessed to know Mr. and Mrs. Tibbs and look forward to their weekly library visits.

Mr. Tibbs retired from Torme Grocery in Bessemer after a long career as a meat-cutter and market manager. He also served in the Alabama National Guard for over 30 years.

Mrs. Gloria Tibbs is a well known local crafts woman who is famous for her artistic and intricate pine straw baskets. She’s also a voracious reader and delights the library with her faithful Thursday attendance.

Details of the train crash of The Crescent and The Southerner are taken from court archives.

“On November 25, 1951, defendant’s railroad train, the Crescent, normally running between Montgomery and New Orleans over its own rails, was proceeding southbound at Woodstock, Alabama, over the plaintiff’s tracks, due to a detour caused by a damaged trestle on defendant’s line. The detour was made under an arrangement ruled by a written Detour Agreement between the parties. Such train was being operated by plaintiff’s employees, and defendant had only one employee thereon, who was there solely for the purpose of keeping a record of the tickets for interline accounting. Plaintiff’s northbound train, the Southerner, entered the main line from a passing track, in violation of orders and signals, and a catastrophic, head-on collision ensued.

¶2

The collision occurred about 2:35 p. m., approximately three-fifths of a mile north of the small station of Woodstock, on plaintiff’s single track line of railroad. Approaching Woodstock the track runs generally in a north-south direction. At Woodstock a siding 1.62 miles long parallels the main track. Certain changes were made in plaintiff’s operation of this section of its railroad effective October 10, 1951, about six weeks prior to the accident. On September 24, 1951, plaintiff issued a bulletin addressed “To All Concerned” announcing that changes would be made in train operations, signals and interlockings on this section. Paragraph 1 of that bulletin notified plaintiff’s employees that a centralized traffic control system would be placed in service. Paragraph 2 thereof notified that trains or engines would be governed by block and interlocking signals, whose indications would supersede the superiority of trains for both opposing and following movements on the same track. Paragraph 4 stated that interlocking switches and color light signals would be placed in service at Woodstock at the north and south ends of the siding and at other stations named therein.”

For more: click here.

Free Adult Art Class in Woodstock, Alabama (Bibb County)

Please join us at the Woodstock Community Library for the best free adult art class in Bibb County, Alabama. Every Wednesday from 1-3pm Mr. Elam Miller instructs all levels of artists, including those who just want to see what the class is like!

No experience needed and supplies are furnished. 18 & up.

For more information please call 205-938-0008 or email library@townofwoodstockal.com

 


Woodstock Community Library
18441 Eastern Valley Road
Woodstock, Alabama

 

 

Tannehill Trade Days start this weekend! March 16-17

The third weekend of each month, from March 16-17 through November, shoppers and swappers come from far and near to Tannehill Trade Days in search of tools, clothing, jewelry, knives, furniture and other treasures.

 

Tannehill will have a wonderland of delightful vendors, please come! (March – November) rain or shine.

For more information click here.