Learn / History

Where American jazz met Birmingham.

Tuxedo Junction wasn't a metaphor. It was a real corner , a streetcar crossing in Ensley , where Black Birmingham gathered, danced, and made music that shaped a century.

Chapter one

The Big Band Era & why it matters here.

Between the 1920s and the mid-1940s, big-band swing was America's popular music. Radio networks broadcast live from ballrooms nationwide, jukeboxes carried 78-rpm records into every corner store, and dance halls filled with couples working out a shared vocabulary of rhythm.

Birmingham , and Ensley specifically , was part of that story. The Alabama State Teachers College (now Alabama State University) 'Bama State Collegians turned out into a working swing outfit that would become the Erskine Hawkins Orchestra. Musicians who trained here carried Ensley's phrasing onto national stages.

This park isn't a monument to a dead era. It's a marker for a living lineage , one that still shows up every fourth Saturday in July when the festival cranks up.

Erskine Hawkins performing at the Alabama Music Hall of Fame.
Chapter two

A history of "Tuxedo Junction."

1920s,30s

A streetcar hub

Tuxedo Junction was the intersection where Ensley, Fairfield, and Wylam streetcar lines met. On weekends, working folks in their sharpest clothes gathered for music, food, and dancing , a Black social capital in Jim Crow Birmingham.

1939

The song

Erskine Hawkins and his orchestra recorded "Tuxedo Junction" for Bluebird Records. The tune , co-written with saxophonist Bill Johnson and pianist Julian Dash , became a national hit and later a signature for Glenn Miller.

2009

Belcher-Nixon Building

The Belcher-Nixon Building at the crossing was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2009 , official recognition of a place the community had never forgotten.

Coming soon

Space for the sounds and stories.

This section will grow to include archival photos, an audio clip of the original 1939 recording, and a short documentary trailer being produced by community filmmakers.
Song clip · 1939 · coming
Documentary trailer · coming
Archival photo essay · coming

Have archival material , a photo, a program, a family memory , from Tuxedo Junction? We'd love to hear from you. Reach us on the contact page.

A local song, a national standard

"Way down south, in Birmingham , I mean, south, in Alabam' , an old place, where people go to dance the night away."

, "Tuxedo Junction," Erskine Hawkins & his Orchestra, 1939