The Battle of Churubusco. |
Aug. 20, 1540 – The DeSoto Expedition departed the ancient
Indian town of Coosa (Cosa, Coca), which was located on the east bank of
Talladega Creek, 1-1/2 miles northeast of Childersburg in Talladega County, Ala. DeSoto arrived at the town on July 16, 1540.
Aug. 20, 1800 – In an incident attributed to the "Bermuda
Triangle," the USS Pickering disappeared with a crew of 90 while en route to
Guadeloupe in the West Indies from New Castle, Delaware.
Aug. 20, 1824 – During his extended tour of the United
States, the Marquis de Lafayette left New York City and made several
stops on his way to Bridgeport, Conn., stopping in Harlem, New Rochelle, Byram
Bridge and Putnam Hill in Greenwich, Stamford, Norwalk, Saugatuck (Westport)
and Fairfield before reaching Bridgeport and staying at the Washington Hotel.
Aug. 20, 1832 – David Holmes passed away in Winchester, Va.
at the age of 63. On June 5, 1815, as the Territorial Governor of Mississippi,
Holmes would establish Monroe County by proclamation.
Aug. 20, 1847 – During the Mexican-American War, Mark B.
Travis, a younger brother of William Barrett Travis who died at the Alamo, was
said to have been wounded on this day at the Battle of Churubusco, a few miles
outside of Mexico City.
Aug. 20, 1862 – During the Civil War, Horace Greeley's
"The Prayer of Twenty Millions" was published in the New York
Tribune, and the editorial called on U.S. President Abraham Lincoln to declare
emancipation for all slaves.
Aug. 20, 1866 - U.S. President Andrew Johnson formally
declared that the American Civil War was over even though fighting had stopped
months earlier.
Aug. 20, 1890 – H.P. Lovecraft was born in Providence, Rhode
Island.
Aug. 20, 1920 – Professional football was born as seven men
met to organize a professional football league at the Jordan and Hupmobile Auto
Showroom in Canton, Ohio. The meeting led to the creation of the American
Professional Football Conference, the forerunner of today's National Football
League.
Aug. 20, 1937 - Dixie Bibb Graves took her seat in the U.S.
Senate to become Alabama's first female senator. Only the fourth woman to serve
as a U.S. senator, Graves had been appointed by her husband, Gov. Bibb Graves,
to succeed Hugo Black, who had been appointed to the U.S. Supreme Court.
Aug. 20, 1945 - Tommy Brown of the Brooklyn Dodgers became
the youngest player to hit a home run in a major league ball game. Brown was 17
years, 8 months and 14 days old.
Aug. 20, 1949 - Cleveland’s Indians and Chicago’s White Sox
played at Municipal Stadium in Cleveland before the largest crowd, 78,382
people, to see a nighttime major-league baseball game.
Aug. 20, 1977 – Cropduster Gary Earl Geck, 26, of
Castleberry killed in plane crash n a wooded area on the Appleton Road in the
southwestern section of Conecuh County.
Aug. 20, 1994 – Chris McCutcheon, 17, of Evergreen was
critically injured when the 1993 Honda Prelude he was driving collided with a
northbound CSX train around 10:15 a.m. at the railroad crossing near the Old Depot
in downtown Evergreen.
Aug. 20, 2005 - Thomas Herrion of the San Francisco 49ers
collapsed and died after a preseason game in Denver.
No comments:
Post a Comment