1881-1964
  Businessman, Scholar, Innovator
 Thomas Wesley Martin was born near Scottsboro, Alabama. He was the son of 
  Judge William L. Martin and his wife, the former Margaret Ledbetter. Martin 
  is remembered best for his presidency of the Alabama Power Company. He was a 
  practical businessman, humanitarian and scholar. He loved the South and his 
  native Alabama.
  
  When he was a young boy he moved with his family to Montgomery where he attended 
  Starkes School, then law classes at the University of Alabama. He practiced 
  law with his father, then for eight years served as Assistant Attorney General 
  of the State of Alabama. He rejoined his father's law firm in 1907 which became 
  Tyson, Wilson and Martin after his father's death. Following his service to 
  Alabama Power as legal counsel, he was appointed president of the company in 
  1925. He served as president of Alabama Power until 1964 when he died at eighty-three 
  years of age.
  
  Mr. Martin steered the Power Company through many crises. One of the more prominent 
  of these were the "mosquito suits" filed against the company by 1100 
  property owners. They charged that the building of the first large power dam 
  caused a multiplication in the number of mosquitos. Convinced that the dam was 
  in the public interest, Mr. Martin went to Washington and secured the assistance 
  of Maj. Gen. William Crawford Gorgas, an Alabamian who was then the Surgeon 
  General of the United States. He won the first "mosquito" suit and 
  the other suits were dropped.
  
  Martin's leadership brought about the rural electrification of Alabama. It has 
  been said that he "turned the lights on over Alabama." He received 
  the Edison Electric Institute Rural Electrification Award and was voted the 
  South's Man of the Year.
  
  Other important services to his state include: Helping to organize the Alabama 
  Chamber of Commerce, organizing the Southern Research Institute, one of the 
  most notable organizations in the country. He established a 32 Million Dollar 
  newsprint plant at Childersburg. He chaired the Talladega Co. War Plants Conversion 
  Committee. He experimented on company property to test the feasibility of the 
  gasification of coal. He headed the southeastern Power and Light Company where 
  he was key in integrating the power systems throughout the area. He organized 
  the Horseshoe Bend National Military Park and saw to the representation of William 
  Crawford Gorgas in the National Hall of Fame. He also saw to the placing of 
  relics of the Vine and Olive Colony in the State Archives.
  
  Forbes Magazine published Mr. Martin's name among America's Fifty Foremost Business 
  Leaders. His portrait was carried on the cover of this and other leading magazines. 
  "...he has won the friendly cooperation of consumers and has uniquely promoted 
  Southern prosperity." He died in Birmingham on December 8, 1964.
  
  Thomas Wesley Martin was inducted into the Alabama Men's Hall of Fame in 1988.