Andrew Jackson in 1824. |
Aug. 9, 1814 - The Treaty of Fort Jackson was finalized
after warring Creeks, under the leadership of William Weatherford, aka “Red
Eagle,” surrendered to Gen. Andrew Jackson and ceded their lands to the federal
government. This event opened up half of the present state of Alabama to white
settlement.
Aug. 9, 1845 – Nicholas “Nick” Stallworth was born in
Evergreen. On April 24, 1861 at Sparta, he joined the Conecuh Guards as a
private at the age of 15, becoming the youngest member of the 4th Alabama Infantry
Regiment. He was wounded in left forearm and right thigh at Cold Harbor (Gaines
Mill) and later became adjutant of 23rd Alabama Regiment. He became an attorney
after the war, a state representative and solicitor of 11th Judicial Circuit.
Aug. 9, 1853 (54?) – Dr. John Watkins passed away at Burnt
Corn.
Aug. 9, 1854 – “Walden”
by Henry David Thoreau was first
published.
Aug. 9, 1862 - Rebels scored a narrow victory at the Battle
of Cedar Mountain as Confederate General Thomas J. "Stonewall" Jackson
narrowly defeated a Union force led by General John Pope at Cedar Mountain, Va.
Aug. 9, 1864 – During the Civil War, now that Fort Gaines on
Dauphin Island, had surrendered and Fort Powell at Cedar Point had been
abandoned, the Federal siege of Fort Morgan, Ala. began. Major General John
Granger embarked for Navy Cove, four miles down the peninsula from Fort Morgan
on the bay side of Mobile Bay. The commander of Fort Morgan, General Richard L.
Paige, caused the gunboat Gaines to be burned, the hospital and other
outbuildings. After landing, the Federals moved forward and by nightfall,
Granger’s force was less than two miles from Fort Morgan.
Aug. 9, 1864 – During the Civil War, a skirmish occurred near
Pond Springs in Northern Alabama.
Aug. 9, 1867 – Rev. Fielding Straughn of Belleville, one of
Conecuh County’s earliest settlers, passed away at the age of 83.
Aug. 9, 1877 - Paleontologist Timothy Abbott Conrad passed
away in Trenton, N.J. He studied the fossil beds at Claiborne for two years
with Charles Tait and published the first geologic map of Alabama. During his
time at Claiborne, Conrad shipped cases full of fossils back to Philadelphia
for identification.
Aug. 9, 1897 – George Bradley was tried for the June 17
murder of Richard Rumbley at Rumbley’s store near Pleasant Ridge. Bradley was
found guilty and hung on Sept. 17, the second hanging in Monroe County since
the Civil War.
Aug. 9, 1899 – Everette Howard Brown was born in Conecuh
County. During World War I, while serving with the 167th Regiment, 42nd U.S.
Division (Rainbow), he would be killed in action on July 27, 1918 in France. He
enlisted in the Alabama National Guard’s Co. G, 1st Ala. Infantry in Bay
Minette on June 17, 1917. He is buried in the Oise-Aisne American Cemetery,
Fere-en-Tardenois, in France.
Aug. 9, 1910 – Alfred Robert “Son” Boulware Jr. was born.
Many believe Boulware was the inspiration for Harper Lee’s Boo Radley. He died
of tuberculosis on May 2, 1952 and is buried in Monroeville’s Pineville
Cemetery.
Aug. 9, 1938 – Franklin D. Roosevelt passed through
Evergreen about 10 p.m. on a train bound for Washington.
Aug. 9, 1956 - The first statewide, state-supported
educational television network went on the air in Alabama.
Aug. 9, 1961 – Greening Masonic Lodge was dedicated on
Edwina Street in Evergreen.
Aug. 9, 1975 - The New Orleans Superdome officially opened
when the Saints played the Houston Oilers in exhibition football. The new
Superdome cost $163 million to build.
Aug. 9, 1981 - Major league baseball teams resumed play at
the conclusion of the first mid-season players’ strike.
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