Sign in Hollywood, Alabama;
HOLLYWOOD
HOLLYWOOD TOWN HALL
HOLLYWOOD COUNTRY CLUB
Clyde Nelson, born in
Columbiana, Alabama, was only 26 when he began development of the Town of Hollywood in 1926. With a sales force of 75 and the slogan "Out of the smoke zone, into the ozone" his beautiful community soon took shape. Homes were usually designed by local architect
George P. Turner in Spanish Mission style as was the rage in
Hollywood, California. Many were also of the English Tudor design. Besides homes, Nelson built the magnificent Hollywood Coutry Club (burned 1984) on Lakeshore Drive and the Hollywood Town Hall (now
American Legion Post No. 1340) on Hollywood Boulevard. He formed Birmingham area's first bus line and laid the first natural gas pipeline over the mountain into Shades Valley. Hollywood's first and only mayor, Clarence Lloyd, owned the first house at 109 Bonita Drive. Incorporated January 14, 1927 the town was annexed into the City of Homewood October 14, 1929. ERECTED IN 2003 BY THE CITY OF HOMEWOOD AND THE BIRMINGHAM-JEFFERSON HISTORICAL SOCIETY
Hollywood is a neighborhood that is part of Homewood, Alabama.
Formerly a city on the outskirts of Birmingham, it was incorporated in 1927. In 1929, it was annexed to the City of Homewood.
The neighborhood is made up of mostly Tudor style and Spanish Mission style houses. Most of these homes were built between 1926 and 1929, when the Depression brought new construction to a halt.
The population of Hollywood is approximately 916 people.