Story by Paul South
Photos by Max Jolley

Under a blazing St. Clair County summer sun, Mallory Walls worked at her art, transforming a blank exterior wall at Small Town Blanks  – a T-shirt shop – into an 11-foot brick canvas of patriotism, pride, military service and memory.

As Walls painted the work of art at the intersection of Cogswell Avenue and 20th Street North, motorists honked their horns or called out words of encouragement. Pedestrians came with ice cold lemonade or brownies. As she toiled on the orange scaffold, art became life in a small town.

Mallory at work

Some veterans stopped to say thanks. Others wept.

A country was celebrated.

Veterans were honored.

And with a single letter and two numbers, a local boy was remembered.

This story is about more than Pell City’s first downtown mural

The mural was commissioned by Michelle and Craig Tumlin to honor veterans, men and women close to their hearts. Their story is well known.

Their son, Houston Lee Tumlin served honorably in the United States Army. He was known to the wider world for his role  as Walker Bobby in the Will Ferrell film, Talladega Nights: The Legend of Ricky Bobby. But to folks in Pell City, he was just Houston, a kid who “lit up a room,” his mother said.

But after his military service, Houston, plagued by CTE (Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy), depression and post-traumatic stress disorder, Houston sadly became a heartbreaking statistic – one of the 22 veterans who each day take their own lives.

A decorated veteran, he died on March 23, 2021. He was 28.

Even as they walked through the valley of the shadow of grief, the Tumlins created Houston Project, a charity working to help veterans and their families.

Mallory Walls’ creation, funded by money raised at Houston Project’s recent gala, is just another way to honor veterans and their service and sacrifice.

The Artist and Her Art

Mallory Walls can’t remember a time when she wasn’t painting. She began art lessons in kindergarten. Her mother, Rachel Gilbreath, was also an artist who crafted murals.

 Mallory got her first commission at 14. Her first mural, a casino-themed portrait for a Nashville, Tennessee, bed and breakfast came at 19. She’s painted more  than 100 murals in her career.

“Ever since my first commissioned piece, I’ve painted a lot. I decided to go full time with art in 2024.”

Mallory signing her work

As for the Houston Project commission, Walls is a longtime friend of Craig and Michelle Tumlin and their family, attending Victory Christian School with their daughter, Hayden. As well as Pell City’s Victory Church.

“I got to know them through a small-group Zumba class at church,” she said of the Tumlins. “They commissioned a couple of pieces from me before, watercolor paintings.”

The process for the downtown mural began two years ago, to create a piece that honored vets. From the time she began painting, it took five days – 10 to 12 hours a day – to finish the  11 feet tall by 18 feet wide work of art.  She completed it during one of the hottest weeks of the year, through rain and shine and off-the-charts humidity.

She had an umbrella to fend off the sun and rain and also got a helping hand from her cousin, Mia Holland,  who helped her fill out the red and white stripes of Old Glory.

“I wouldn’t have been able to finish it in five days without her help. We really had to work to get in between the bricks coated. It paid off to be deliberate with it.”

The goal  for the piece?

“We wanted to create a piece that was very timeless,” Walls said. “We wanted something that people could enjoy not just now, but for years to come. The message behind it was to honor our veterans who had done so much and the families of veterans. Most everybody knows a veteran or is related to a veteran. We wanted to let veterans know that they are seen and honored and that we are so thankful for them.”

More broadly, there is a deeper meaning. In the painting, a male and female soldier stand facing the Stars and Stripes with a smart salute, their backs to the viewer. It’s not known if the soldiers are Black, white, brown, yellow or red, Catholic or  Protestant, Republican or Democrat. They are simply American soldiers.

“You can’t see their age. You can’t see their race. Everyone who knows or is a veteran can relate to it and be impacted by it on some level,” Walls said.

As she worked, townsfolk stopped to ask questions, or offer words of encouragement.

“Of all the murals I’ve done, I’d have to say this was the most community involved,” I got to meet so many people. I grew up around Pell City, but I met so many people and got to experience Pell City in a whole new way. Strangers were so kind, bringing me lemonade and brownies to keep me going. It was just amazing to see the community response. It was very special in that way.”

She added, “That’s one of the things I love about doing an outdoor mural is the community response. I love it … Even in the early days when it was in its ugly stage, people would come up, and I’d say, ‘You have to come see it when it’s done.’”

What does she hope townsfolk and visitors to Pell City take from the mural?

“I hope it tells veterans  that we see them, we honor them, and we thank God for them.”

A Mom and H44

Michelle Tumlin has  received a flood of messages – phone calls and social media posts –even the wife of a veteran who was moved to tears by the mural.

But she is quick to give thanks, to donors at the Houston Project gala, to Joanna  Hagan and her son, Wayne, who own the building that’s home to the mural, to city officials like City Manager Brian Munger.

And she’s thankful for Mallory Walls, the artist.

Michelle Tumlin reflects for a moment at mural

“She’s very talented,” Tumlin said. “She’s done work for us over the years, and I knew there was no better artist to do this.”

The idea for the mural was an extension of the work of Houston Project.

“We’re a non-profit that helps veterans, but we also honor our son,” Tumlin said. “I’ve been brainstorming. I called Mallory and told her, ‘I see a flag. I see a male and female soldier saluting,’ and she made it happen.” Captioning the image were two words: “Never Forgotten.”

“It could not be more perfect,” Tumlin said. “I wanted it to be a mural that all veterans’ family members could go, think of their loved ones and have ‘that moment’ (of remembrance), you know. I think it has done that. Just the reaction of this town was … I felt like we were part of a patriotic Hallmark movie.”

Fittingly, the mural gives the Tumlins “that moment,” too. As Michelle remembers Houston, tears flow. And tucked in a spot on the mural are dog tags bearing a letter and a number. For the Tumlin family, every time the number comes up, it’s a message from their beloved son.

The letter on the dog tag is H for Houston. The number is 44, the number he wore on sports teams growing up.

“My heart is just beaming,” Tumlin said. “And I know  Houston Tumlin is just smiling down from heaven. When I see that mural, I see my son.”

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