home
education01.jpg
Education
Sloss Furnaces offers programs appropriate for all age levels (elementary, middle/high school, college, continuing education). Curriculum resource materials are available. Sloss is actively involved in Museum-School collaboration and partnerships. We offer an Outreach Program, Tours for educators and students, Adult Lectures, Teacher Training, Community-based education programs and Volunteer/Docent opportunities. We also have resource materials for educators available in our museum store. Contact Kimbellee Fipps - Education Coordinator, at (205) 324-1911 for more information.

Online Lessons

Attention: open in a new window. PDFPrintE-mail

lesson_like_it_aint.jpg If you would like additional information on the background of the men who labored at Sloss Furnaces, please visit the Mervyn H. Sterne Library at the University of Alabama at Birmingham's Oral History Collection Website and follow these simply steps:

Mervyn H. Sterne Library at the University of Alabama at Birmingham's Oral History Collection

» click on Browse by Topic
» click on Industrial Workers in Birmingham
» click on a specific worker to listen to audio interview or see written transcript

The reminiscences of these individuals offer a rare glimpse of an earlier Birmingham and a way of life that has all but disappeared. For further information on Sloss Furnaces Oral History Collection, contact Curator Karen R. Utz.
 

James Withers Sloss and Birmingham's "Great Iron Boom," 1871-1890

Attention: open in a new window. PDFPrintE-mail

lesson_james_sloss.jpg By Karen Utz

This magic little city of ours has no peer in the rapidity of its growth...its permanent mountains growning to be delivered of their wealth...the El Dorado of iron masters.

Download Lesson
 

Take a 360° Virtual Tour of Sloss Furnaces

Attention: open in a new window. PDFPrintE-mail

lesson_virtual_tour.jpg Begin Tour
 

Goin’ North: The African American Women of Sloss Quarters

Attention: open in a new window. PDFPrintE-mail

lesson_quarters.jpg By Karen Utz

"This collection... represents state-of-the-art women's history. It proves the point that women historians have long asserted but not always demonstrated: that unless women's lives are considered, the history of societies' economic, political, and social realms will remain incomplete and inadequately understood."
--Victoria Blunt, author of Unruly Women: The Politics of Social and Sexual Control in the Old South.

Download Lesson
   

Sloss Furnaces Company Housing: "The Quarters"

Attention: open in a new window. PDFPrintE-mail

lesson_quarters.jpgBy Sloss Furnaces National Historic Landmark

By the turn of the century, 48 African-American tenements had been erected along 32ndStreet (site of Sloss today). The residents, mainly ex-sharecroppers seeking economic advancements during Birmingham’s industrial boom, called their neighborhood “the Quarters.”

Begin Lesson
 

Like It Ain't Never Passed

Attention: open in a new window. PDFPrintE-mail

lesson_like_it_aint.jpg By Sloss Furnaces National Historic Landmark

[32 mb, QuickTime Format, QuickTime 6 Required]
A video documentary on Sloss Furnaces.

Play Video
   

Cast In Iron: Days of Sloss

Attention: open in a new window. PDFPrintE-mail

lesson_cast_in_iron.jpg By the University of Alabama Center for Public Television and Radio


[65 mb, QuickTime Format, QuickTime 6 Required]
A video documentary on Sloss Furnaces.



Play Video
 

Social Studies, “Alabama: The New South"

Attention: open in a new window. PDFPrintE-mail

lesson_social.jpg By Bode Morin

The history of Alabama can easily be broken down into three broad time periods.  The first is the antebellum period, where agricultural interests dominated the state. The second is the Civil War and Reconstruction eras. The third is the period following the Reconstruction, sometimes called the Redemption, that marked the beginning of the New South, when broad economic changes ushered in large-scale industrial ventures.

Download Lesson