- Structure Type: Metal 8-panel, rivet-connected polygonal Warren Through Truss.
- Location: Spans the Coosa River/Logan Martin Lake at Riverside (St. Clair County) and Lincoln (Talladega County).
- History: Built in 1930 and rehabilitated in 1972, serving as a key crossing on U.S. Route 78.
- Dimensions: Approximately 917 feet long with a 232-foot main span and a 19.7-foot wide roadway.
- Condition/Future: Considered an aging, narrow bridge carrying high daily traffic (roughly 20,000 vehicles/day).
Saturday, March 28, 2026
River Bridge, Riverside, Alabama
The Bridges of Cleburne County, Alabama
Cleburne Coounty, on the eastern side of Alabama, has several old and some historical bridges crossing the Tallapoosa River.
Due to age and deteroriation one or more of these bridges may have already been replaced.
Arlington Antebellum Home & Gardens
Arlington Antebellum Home & Gardens is a mansion built by Judge William S. Mudd, who went on to join with the Elyton Land Company in the founding of Birmingham in 1871. The house, which formerly commanded hundreds of acres, is currently located on a 6-acre lot at 331 Cotton Avenue Southwest in the Arlington-West End neighborhood of Birmingham.
Owned by the City of Birmingham, Arlington Antebellum Home & Gardens serves as a historical interpretive museum and reception hall. The property is managed by a staff overseen by the Arlington Historical Association's board of directors. The executive director is Toby Richards. (https://www.bhamwiki.com/w/Arlington_Antebellum_Home_%26_Gardens)
Friday, March 13, 2026
Exploring the Charm of Southern Travels: Top Destinations You Can't Miss
The Allure of Southern Hospitality: A Warm Welcome Awaits
Southern hospitality is a cultural hallmark that sets the region apart. Visitors are often greeted with open arms and a genuine smile, making them feel right at home. Whether you're staying at a quaint bed-and-breakfast or dining at a family-run restaurant, the warmth of the locals is palpable.
This welcoming spirit extends beyond mere politeness; it embodies a way of life where sharing stories and traditions is encouraged. Engaging with residents can lead to memorable experiences and insights that enrich your journey through the South.
Cultural Treasures: Must-Visit Cities Steeped in History
The South is rich in history, with cities that showcase its diverse cultural heritage. New Orleans, with its vibrant Mardi Gras celebrations and historic French Quarter, offers a unique blend of French, Spanish, and Creole influences. Charleston, known for its well-preserved architecture and cobblestone streets, tells the story of the colonial era.
Exploring these cities provides a glimpse into the past, with museums and historic sites that celebrate the South's complex history. Each destination reveals tales of resilience and innovation, making it essential for travelers to delve into the local narratives.
Natural Wonders: Exploring the South's Breathtaking Landscapes
From the majestic Smoky Mountains to the stunning beaches of the Gulf Coast, the South is home to a myriad of natural wonders. The Great Smoky Mountains National Park offers hiking trails that lead to breathtaking vistas and diverse wildlife, while the coastal regions boast serene shorelines perfect for relaxation and adventure.
Nature enthusiasts will find countless opportunities for exploration, whether it's kayaking in the bayous of Louisiana or wandering through the lush landscapes of the Appalachian Trail. Each natural site provides a unique experience, inviting travelers to connect with the beauty of the Southern wilderness.
Culinary Delights: A Taste of Southern Flavors and Traditions
Southern cuisine is a celebration of flavors, with dishes deeply rooted in tradition. From mouthwatering barbecue to classic gumbo, the South offers a culinary journey that reflects its diverse culture. Each meal tells a story, often influenced by the region's agricultural bounty and cultural exchanges.
Sampling local favorites, such as fried chicken and biscuits, or indulging in a slice of pecan pie, allows travelers to savor the essence of Southern hospitality. Many areas also host food festivals, providing an excellent opportunity to experience a variety of dishes and local chefs.
Festivals and Events: Celebrating the Spirit of the South
The South is alive with vibrant festivals that celebrate its rich culture and traditions. Events like the Atlanta Dogwood Festival and the Nashville Film Festival bring communities together, showcasing local art, music, and cuisine. These gatherings are a fantastic way to experience the region’s unique spirit.
Participating in these events allows travelers to immerse themselves in the local culture and interact with the residents. Whether it's enjoying live music, participating in parades, or tasting local dishes, festivals provide a deeper understanding of what makes Southern culture so special.
Wednesday, March 11, 2026
Monday, March 9, 2026
Cruising The South
Friday, February 20, 2026
Horton Covered Bridge in Blount County, Alabama
The wooden Horton Mill Covered Bridge is located about five miles north of Oneonta and spans the Calvert Prong of the Little Warrior River.
Built in 1934, the 220-foot-long bridge is listed on the National Register of Historic Places, the first covered bridge in the southeastern United States to be added. At 70 feet, it is the highest covered bridge above any U.S. waterway. The bridge is no longer open to vehicle traffic.
History
According to Wikipedia the original bridge was built in 1894 at the foot of Sand Mountain, about three-fourths mile downstream from the current location. It was named for a local business owned by Thurman M. Horton, who helped construct the bridge which allowed residents of Sand Mountain a better means of access to nearby Oneonta as well as to Horton's mill and a general store which were located along the east side of the Calvert Prong.
Construction of the current Horton Mill Covered Bridge began in 1934 over a deep gorge cut by the river and was led by Talmedge Horton, a family descendant of Thurman Horton. It took a 15-man crew 1-1/2 years to complete the project. The bridge was fully restored in 1974 by the Alabama Historical Commission and the Blount County Commission. It is one of three historic covered bridges remaining in Blount County.
Restoration of all three covered bridges began in late 2011 starting with the Swann Covered Bridge near Cleveland. Money for these projects primarily came from the federal National Historic Covered Bridge Preservation Program as well as transportation enhancement funds. The Horton Mill Covered Bridge was the last to be restored due to its high elevation above the river which made things more challenging. Wooden structural pieces were repaired or replaced as needed and new tin roofs were put on all three bridges in order to keep the weather off vital supporting timbers. Total restoration costs for the covered bridges was approximately $540,000. The difference was covered by county expenditures.
Wednesday, February 18, 2026
Gold Prospectors Giving Alabama Another Look
As the price of gold continues to climb, some prospectors are taking another look at the rich history of gold mining in Alabama and what may still be hidden in the rocks and streams of the eastern part of the state.
Prior to the California “rush”, several east Alabama counties had produced 50,000 ounces of gold. Between 1838 -1860 coins were minted at the U.S. Mint in Dahlonega, Georgia from gold extracted in Alabama.
One early mining town was Arbacoochee, located in Cleburne County, which boasted a population of 5,000 (perhaps the largest city in the state at the time) and considered the gold center of the nation in 1840. It was where Alabama gold was first discovered in 1832 and the mine produced over $5 million worth.
Arbacoochee was among 100 mining towns in Alabama located in or near the Upper Gold Belt running from northern Georgia down into Alabama. Other counties in the “belt” include Randolph, Talladega, Clay, Tallapoosa, Coosa, Chambers, Elmore, Shelby and Chilton.
The local newspaper, reported a representative of one mining company showing samples taken from the Arbacoochee area. “He informed us that another vein has just been discovered which is eight feet thick and is turning out exceedingly well.” (1)
The same paper reported in May 1896 the discovery of another vein with “a width of 30 feet in widest place and 3 feet in narrowest place, it’s depth is not yet known.” (2)
Arbacoochee, covering 600 acres, was considered by some to be the most extraordinary gold placer deposit in Alabama.
Today there is very little remaining of Arbacoochee’s former glory but modern-day prospectors still find glitter in their pans from area creeks and roadside streams.
According to reports, gold panning provided a livelihood for some as late as the 1930s. “Some managed to pan $300-$400 per day and streams around Chulafinne may have been better than those at Arbacoochee,” (3)
The site is now in private ownership so anyone wishing to pan or dig must seek permission from landowners, however just parking on the side of the road and panning near culverts and bridges on county right-of-way will produce results as two Georgia prospectors recently discovered on a visit to the area of what was once “downtown”.
Hobbyists Matthew Hardin and Chris Casey, found flakes in a small branch running under CR 42. Other streams running under SR 46 just east might also yield results as several mines were located in that area.
In the southwest portion of the county was located the second largest mine; the King Gold Mine just off CR 24. It consisted of a 2,500 square feet pit. Those wishing to pan in the area might try public right-of-way around bridges on county roads 24 and 127 crossing Nixon Branch and Chulafinnee Creek and SR 281. Private landowners in the area may also grant permission. Randolph County
Mines operated there between 1835 - 1862. Reportedly, farmers living along creeks near Wedowee panned enough to buy fertilizer for crops in the early 1900s.
Promising areas may be around Gold Ridge and Pinetucky. Gold Ridge is south of Ranburne along Gold Ridge Road just over the county line into Randolph. The Little Tallapoosa River andKnoke’s Creek flow nearby.
Pinetucky may be reached from U.S. 431 south of Hollis Crossroads by taking Cleburne County Road 10 to Micaville and then south on CR 29. The Pinetucky Gold Mine was the site of a 20 stamp mill and was among earliest discoveries of lode veins in Alabama.
Mine Number One was located just west of CR 29 where it junctions with CR 202 at Pinetucky.
The second mine was located some 3000 feet westward but can only be reached by traveling south on CR 29 and taking a right onto CR 204 for about 4,000 ft with the site on the right hand side of the road. A little further northward is Buchannon Creek, a possible panning site.
Talladega County
During the early 1800s several mines operated near Waldo on 1,180 acres. Gold Log Mine was
the largest and consisted of a water-powered mill which turned a generator and a jaw crusher, ten 750-pound stamps, two 60-ft. amalgamation plates, blanket covered tables and an electric furnace. Reports suggest the mill extracted as much as $80 of gold per ton of ore. The facility closed in 1940.
Claude Waid, a driller in the mine, recalls, “The gold was just like a smear on a butterfly wing. Very seldom would you find enough as big as a pin head. We were working down under the creek and you had to keep the pumps running.” (4)
Another Waldo resident, Fred McKnight, said his cousins panned Talladega Creek during the Depression and made $5 per day.
The second largest mine in the area was Riddle’s Mill and assays taken in 1930 showed the quartz ore to contain $20 to $150 in gold per ton. “They were (in 1888) mining 20 tons of ore per day profitably and there was five distinct veins.”(5)
By 1889 the Storey Mine was said to have yielded $100,000 in gold. Men panning for gold at nearby Robb Placer before 1930 made up to $50 per day.
Clay County
In the Pyriton area are many sites in the hills west of SR 9 up against Talladega Mountain in the Talladega National Forest.
District Ranger Kimberly Bittle says, “recreational gold panning along with ‘rockhounding’ is permitted on the national forests in Alabama. . . Taking a handful of rock, mineral or petrified wood specimens from the surface of National Forest lands is permissible,” (6) and no fee is required but anyone planning to pan should contact the local district office and obtain a free permit. The district office in Heflin issues about 50 permits per year, however to pan in the Clay/Talladega portion of the TNF you should visit the Talladega District Office in Talladega.
The Harold Gold Mine was located east of Bethlehem Church on CR 18. This area can be reached by taking SR 148 west out of Millerville until it connects with CR 18.
Gold was also found in the Cragford district east of Lineville.
Prospectors may want to check the shoal sands of the Tallapoosa River and the gravel bars of Gold Mines Creek south of Erin. Gold has also been panned south of Lineville in area streams emptying into Crooked Creek.
Tallapoosa County
Goldville was located in north Tallapoosa County during the mid-1840’s and is 21 miles north of Dadeville on SR 49 in an area including some of the state’s well known mines.
Hobby prospector Joe Waters explains “In 1842, gold was discovered in Northeast Tallapoosa County . . . . The population of Goldville quickly reached 3,500 . . . . The gold was there, but the methods of obtaining it were crude. There also was free gold, concentrated at the surface by weathering which made it possible to work with a shovel and pan in some places. Gold was worked down to water level. A great amount of work was done as indicated by the trenches, pits, and shafts that can still be found. . . . The town of Goldville was born and died between the census of 1840 and 1850. . . When news of the California gold strike reached Goldville, the miners packed up and left not even taking time to put out their campfires.” (7)
The Devil’s Backbone District in south-central Tallapoosa County was perhaps the richest goldbearing area in the state, located within a narrow band beginning at Martin Dam and followingthe shores of Lake Martin to Jackson's Gap.
Hog Mountain, three miles west of Goldville, was a site where more gold was removed over a longer period of time than any other location in Tallapoosa County. Also known as Hillabee Mines, they were operated from1844 when oxen were used to haul the ore. While $500,000 worth was mined in the 1930s, processing cost $600,000 so operations ceased in 1936.
Coosa County
Gold may be found near the Unity Community west of Weogufka off CR 56 where the Stewart and Parsons mines were once located and around Alum Bluff near the mouth of Hatchett Creek. Roadside streams around Rockford may yield up some glitter. The stream bed of Gin-House Branch has produced some flakes as well.
Chilton County
The last of the gold fields discovered in Alabama were in Chilton County during the mid-1830’s. Sites include a number of placers along Mulberry Creek where stream gravel deposits have been worked. Many free nuggets were found up until the 1860’s in the Rippatoe Gold Mine near Varner.
State geologist Eugene Smith noted, “This famous property is situated in Sec. 17, T.21, R16E was extensively worked prior to 1860, work having begun here as early as 1835 and continued with but little interruption for twenty-five years.”(8)
Most of the mining operations in the state ceased during the Civil War but started up again in the 1870s, peaking at the end of the 19th century.
(1) The Cleburne New Era, March 23, 1893.
(2) The Cleburne New Era, May 1896
(3) The Creek Indian Town of Arbacoochee, Alabama, Final Report, March 7, 1984 Lenore B.
Martin. Historical and Genealogical Archive, Anniston-Calhoun County Public Library, Lenore Martin Collection
(4) Claude Waid in an interview with author in Waldo in the early 1980s
(5) E. Grace Jemison, “Historic Tales of Talladega”, Strode Publishers, 1984
(6) Press release/handout, Kimberly Little, Shoal Creek District Ranger, Talladega National Forest. Heflin, Alabama.
(7) http://jovikri.tripod.com/public-index.html
(8) Dr. Eugene Smith, Alabama Geological Survey Bulletin #1, 1886
Country Sounds Come To Festival
Young, local country music singer Aidan Wade entertained crowds at the annual Blount County Covered Bridge Festival in Oneonta, Alabama.
Tuesday, February 17, 2026
Historic Riverside Railroad Bridge
This is a photo of the historic railroad bridge in Riverside, Alabama that crosses the Coosa River/Lake Logan Martin between St. Clair and Talladega counties.
The bridge was erected in 1927 by Virginia Bridge and Iron Company of Roanoke, Virginia and was rehabbed in 1964.
According to HistoricBridges.org the bridge is composed of a variety of spans that date to different times. The main span, the swing span, dates to 1927 while one of the plate girder approach spans was built in 1964 by American Bridge. The organization notes, "There are two bolted fixed through truss spans that appear to be even newer. The remainder approach spans are deck plate girders."
The main length is 230 feet long and structure length is 720 feet.
"Small Town Charm" Performed During County Festival
Local group "Small Town Charm" performed a Linda Rhonstadt classic "When Will I Be Loved" during the 2025 Blount County Covered Bridge Festival held in Oneonta, Alabama.
The annual event featured a full line-up of entertainment. In addition to "Small Town Charm" other groups included "Pine Mountain Bluegrass", the "Clog Wild Cloggers", Aidan Wade, "Viva Dancers La Munecas", Isaiah Moore, "Brother Bob's Sirens and Saints" along with members of the Neely School of Music and Arts
Covered Bridge Festival
"Play That Funky Music" cover performed by Small Town Charm during the 2025 Blount County Covered Bridge Festival in Oneonta, Alabama
Visiting Cleveland, Alabama
This is a video I shot in downtown Cleveland in Blount County during the summer of 2025. This will start this blog of cities, towns, attractions and events throughout the South particularly in the state of Alabama.
River Bridge, Riverside, Alabama
The U.S. 78 bridge over the Coosa River in Riverside, Alabama, is a historic metal truss bridge constructed in 1930 that connects St. Cla...
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Arlington Antebellum Home & Gardens is a mansion built by Judge William S. Mudd , who went on to join with the Elyton Land Compa...
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A collection of flowers which you may see this spring and summer while touring Alabama
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The Allure of Southern Hospitality: A Warm Welcome Awaits Southern hospitality is a cultural hallmark that sets the region apart. Visitor...




