BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — There was a time, not so very long ago, when this city earned the nickname ''Bombingham,'' renowned for senseless violence and its strength in confronting the racial hatred that fueled it.
But days after Birmingham endured its third mass shooting of 2024, officials and residents who know what it means to be tested are voicing a new strain of frustration and despair.
With 122 homicides so far this year, the vast majority of them carried out with guns, Birmingham could well break its decades-old record for killings. And in a city that takes great pride in its history of facing down demons, it is increasingly hard for many to see a way out.
''I'm sick of it. I'm really sick of it,'' Crystal Smitherman, who represents the nightlife district where four people were killed and 17 injured in a shooting over the weekend, said during an emotional city council meeting Tuesday. ''I don't care what you have to do, put the hammer down.''
Outside the chamber, resident Robert Banks, recalling how his mother survived the bombing of the city's 16th Street Baptist Church during the civil rights upheaval of the 1960s, expressed similar anguish. The spate of shootings, he said, raises doubt about preserving the city that generation fought for.
''If we don't get a grip on what's to come and what's happening now, we ain't going to have no Birmingham,'' said Banks, who knew at least three of those killed in Saturday's shooting.
Birmingham is hardly a stranger to violence. In the 1950s and 1960s it gained worldwide attention when segregationists, bent on defeating Black residents' push for equality, unleashed a series of explosions. The most infamous came in 1963, when four Black girls were killed in the church bombing by four members of the Ku Klux Klan.
But the shooting Saturday outside a nightclub, as well as other recent killings, are very different. Nearly all the shooters and their victims are Black, many of them young men determined to settle disputes with bullets. And the widespread availability of devices that convert handguns to automatic weapons that can fire dozens of shots with a single pull of the trigger has made street-corner shootings much more lethal.