Los Angeles Times

‘Alabama’ origins

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Re “Scenic hills’ name is debated,” June 27

If those trying to change the name of the Alabama Hills just east of the Sierra Nevada bothered to look farther back than the Civil War, they would discover that the word “Alabama” is actually a Native American word derived from one of the tribes that lived in the area we call Alabama.

It’s not clear exactly which language the word comes from, but many researcher­s believe that it is a Choctaw word.

A people calling themselves the Alabama did live in the area and were plant gatherers. Spanish and French explorers spelled the name in a variety of ways, but it is clear the Alabama people were a significan­t presence in the area for hundreds of years.

Do your research, people.

Karen Hamstrom

Mission Viejo

Thank you for bringing attention to the story of the unfortunat­ely named Alabama Hills, first called thus by Confederat­e sympathize­rs paying homage to a Southern warship. This name is a stain on our history.

It’s been on my mind recently as an Angeleno after the powerful Black Lives Matter demonstrat­ions last month. I literally googled “renaming the Alabama Hills,” hoping to see if anyone else was calling attention to it, and your article popped up.

We have so little sense of history here in Southern California, certainly not a sense of any intersecti­on with slavery and the Civil War. We need to hear more stories of inspiring Angelenos like Biddy Mason, a woman who successful­ly sued for her freedom from enslavemen­t and became a property owner in downtown L.A. in 1866.

Let’s not allow the name of a public space in California to honor the Confederat­e South. Let’s all tell more diverse stories loudly.

Susan Vaill

Sherman Oaks

The origins of the word “alabama” are murky, but it is believed to originate from a Native American language and have various meanings, including “small village” and “thicket clearer.” Accordingl­y, the Confederat­e vessel that sank the Union ship Hatteras during the Civil War was bearing a Native American name with nonracial overtones.

Are we to have it then that the name of a state of the Confederac­y is now forbidden? Perhaps any such state? If the word “alabama” bears racial overtones, then the state of Alabama should change its name.

Where does offensive end and idiocy begin?

Louis Nevell Los Angeles

The Alabama Hills were named after the Confederat­e warship Alabama that sank the Union ship Hatteras? Then it’s a nobrainer: Rename them the Hatteras Hills.

John Godges

Santa Monica

 ?? Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times ?? THE ALABAMA HILLS, named after a Confederat­e ship, are in the Owens Valley near Lone Pine.
Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times THE ALABAMA HILLS, named after a Confederat­e ship, are in the Owens Valley near Lone Pine.

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