Top Math Schools in Alabama

Offers latest ranking of top schools for mathematics in Alabama. You can learn what the top-ranked math colleges and universities are in Alabama, and compare the best math colleges on TopSchoolsintheUSA.com. Search the top graduate schools in math, view school profiles, and contact information for all 3 mathematics colleges in Alabama.

Top Math Schools in Alabama

School Rank Graduate Mathematics
1 Auburn University
Department of Mathematics and Statistics
Address: 221 Parker Hall, Auburn, AL 36849-5310
Admissions Phone: (344) 844-4290
Admissions E-mail: rodgec1@auburn.edu
Admissions Website: http://www.math.auburn.edu
2 University of Alabama–Birmingham
Department of Mathematics
Address: 1300 University Boulevard, Birmingham, AL 35294-1170
Admissions Phone: (205) 934-2154
Admissions E-mail: graduate@math.uab.edu
Admissions Website: http://www.math.uab.edu
3 University of Alabama
Department of Mathematics
Address: Box 870350 , Tuscaloosa, AL 35487-0350
Admissions Phone: (205) 348-4898
Admissions E-mail: vliem@as.ua.edu
Admissions Website: http://www.math.ua.edu

National trails in Alabama

Natchez Trace – sections of the historic forest trail. Laid along the National Park Road of the same name.

“Road of Tears” – the route along which in the thirties and forties of the XIX century went west to Oklahoma, expelled by the government from their lands, the Indians of the southeastern United States.

Selma to Montgomery is a historic Black American protest march that took place March 21-25, 1965, led by Martin Luther King Jr.

Some National Historic Landmarks in Alabama

  • Ivy Green is a house-museum in Tuscumbia, where writer Helen Keller spent her childhood. Built in 1820.
  • Fort Morgan, which was built on the shores of Mobile Bay in 1834 and was used by the Confederates during the American Civil War.
  • Government Street Presbyterian Church in Mobile is one of the oldest and best-preserved Greek Revival churches in the United States. Built in 1837.
  • Barton Hall is a Greek Revival manor near the town of Cherokee built in 1840.
  • Alabama State Capitol, also known as the ” First Confederate Capitol “. Built in Montgomery in 1851.
  • City Hall is a complex of buildings in the city of Mobile, built in 1857 to house the city hall and the market.
  • Episcopal Church of the Nativity in Huntsville, built in 1859 in the Gothic Revival style.
  • Gaineswood is a Greek Revival plantation house in Demopolis, built in 1861.
  • Dexter Avenue Baptist Church in Montgomery, pastored from 1954 to 1960 by Martin Luther King. Built in 1889.
  • Union Station in Montgomery, built in 1898.
  • The Monroe County Courthouse in Monroeville, built in 1903
  • Brown Chapel Church in Selma, which served as a meeting place for civil rights leaders and the starting point for the 1965 Montgomery Built in 1908.
  • 16th Street Baptist Church in Birmingham, where members of the civil rights movement met. On September 15, 1963, members of the Ku Klux Klan planted a bomb in it, the explosion of which killed four and injured twenty-two people. Built in 1911.
  • Bethel Baptist Church in Birmingham, built in 1926, served as the headquarters of the Christian Human Rights Movement from 1956-1961.
  • Foster Auditorium is one of the buildings of the University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa, built in 1939.
  • The Edmund Pettus Bridge across the Alabama River in Selma, where a bloody clash between civil rights marchers and militias took place in 1965. Built in 1940.
  • The Alabama Museum Ship (USS Alabama) was a battleship built in 1942 that saw action in the Pacific during World War II. Now moored in Mobile.
  • Engine and structure test facility at the George Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, built in 1957.
  • The dynamic test facility for the Saturn V rocket at the George Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, built in 1964.
  • The Neutral Buoyancy Simulator is a laboratory built at the George Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville in 1968 to train astronauts.