Leroy, Alabama's Kelvin Moore. |
Aug. 28-30, 1862 – The Second Battle of Manassas (Second
Bull Run) took place in Prince William County, Va. and four members of the
Conecuh Guards were killed there - Thomas Robertson, Joseph Stallworth, James
H. Thomas (who’d been wounded earlier at Seven Pines on May, 31, 1862) and
Jasper Newton Stinson (who’d been promoted to color sergeant of the Fourth
Alabama Regiment about a month before). Five other members of the Conecuh
Guards were wounded - 1st Lt. Alfred Christian, 1st Lt. John G. Guice (who was
wounded in two places, lost a leg and was honorably discharged), William Morrow
(who was later wounded at Spotsylvania Court House in May 1864 and returned to live
in Mobile County after war), Buck Stuckey (who would be killed at the Battle of
Darbytown Road in September 1864) and Francis M. Sampey (who would be wounded
later near Farmville, Va. in April 1865 and die in Selma in 1874).
Aug. 28, 1862 - Confederate General Braxton Bragg captured a
Union garrison at Mumfordsvilled, Ky.
Aug. 28, 1863 - Confederate Naval Lt. George W. Gift paid a
visit to the shipyard above Mobile Bay, Ala. to observe the progress in
construction of the two vessels, the Tennessee and Nashville.
Aug. 28, 1864 - Union General Alfred Terry was promoted from
brigadier general to major general in the United States Volunteers.
Aug. 28, 1941 - The Football Writers Association of America
was organized.
Aug. 28, 1963 – In a disappearance attributed to the
“Bermuda Triangle,” two new KC-135, four-engine jet Stratotankers, on a
refueling mission out of Homestead Air Force Base, Fla. on their way to a
classified refueling range in the Atlantic, disappeared shortly after giving
their position as 300 miles southwest of Bermuda.
Aug. 28, 1963 - Martin Luther King, Jr. gave his "I
Have a Dream" speech in Washington, D.C.
Aug. 28, 1981 – Leroy native Kelvin Moore would make his
major league debut, playing first base for the Oakland A’s against the Boston
Red Sox at Fenway Park in Boston. Oakland lost, 12-5. Batting fifth, Moore went
1-for-4, his hit coming on a single to center field in the top of the eighth.
Aug. 28, 1985 – Hurricane Elena, which destroyed about 300
coastal Alabama homes, formed in the Atlantic.
Aug. 28, 1986 – Five historic districts in Greenville were
added to the National Register of Historic Places. Those districts included the
Commerce Street Residential Historic District, the Fort Dale-College Street
Historic District, the King Street Historic District, the South Greenville
Historic District, the South Street Historic District and the West Commerce
Street Historic District.
Aug. 28, 2005 - Hurricane Katrina hit the gulf coast of the
United States. At least 1,200 people were killed in Louisiana and Mississippi.
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