Former Gov. Albert P. Brewer and banking trail blazer Harry B. Brock Jr. will be inducted into the Alabama Men’s Hall of Fame on Sept. 17. The annual induction luncheon is scheduled for 11:30 a.m. at The Club in Homewood.
The program recognizes men native to or most closely identified with Alabama who have made significant contributions on a state, national or international scale within their professional field. Honorees must have been deceased at least two years before they are eligible for induction, according to a statement issued by Samford.
Inductees are selected by the AMHOF board of directors following a statewide nomination process.

Gov. Albert P. Brewer
Brewer (1928-2017) was an Alabama governor and Samford University law professor who founded the Public Affairs Research Council of Alabama. He was a progressive who was recognized for reforming and creating programs in Alabama. He taught at Samford’s Cumberland School of Law for more than two decades.
Brewer served as governor from 1968 until 1971. He practiced law in Decatur before and after his service as governor. He joined Samford in 1987 as distinguished professor of law and government and worked to establish PARCA as a nonprofit, nonpartisan organization that studied issues of public interest affecting state and local government in Alabama.
Brewer’s administration as governor produced the largest appropriations increase for public schools in state history. He created the Alabama Development Office and introduced measures to economize the operation of state government.
“He was the only governor we had who ever came close to being a ‘New South’ governor,” said noted historian Wayne Flynt.

Harry Blackwell Brock Jr.
Blackwell (1926-2015) was a leader in banking in Alabama whose hard work and business acumen changed the structure of the banking industry in the state. His efforts in leading a small group of investors in 1964 to open Birmingham’s first new bank in 18 years laid the foundation for the city to become a major regional banking center.
Brock was instrumental in the passage in 1980 of the Statewide Bank Merger bill, which allowed bank branching across county lines. Later, he led his bank, Central Bancshares, to buy a Texas bank, making it the first in Alabama to own a bank in another state.
Brock was a philanthropist as well as a banker. Among the institutions that benefitted from his efforts were the University of Alabama, Southern Research Institute, the Gorgas Scholarship Foundation and Samford University. He served Samford as a trustee from 1962 until his death in 2015.
Plaques recognizing the men in the Hall of Fame are installed in Samford University’s Harwell G. Davis Library.
Luncheon tickets are $40 each and available from: Kathryn Hicks Porter, 77 Fairway Drive, Birmingham, AL 35213-4240.
For more information, contact Ms. Porter at 871-5616 or khp470@aol.com.