Capt. William Morgan |
Sept. 11, 1824 – During his tour of the United States, the
Marquis de Lafayette, celebrated the 47th anniversary of the Battle of
Brandywine with French residents in New York.
Sept. 11, 1826 – Captain William Morgan is arrested in
Batavia, N.Y. for debt. This sets into motion the events that lead to his
mysterious disappearance.
Sept. 11, 1830 – The Anti-Masonic Party convention, one of
the first American political party conventions, was held in Philadelphia, Pa.
Sept. 11, 1861 - U.S. President Lincoln revoked General John
C. Frémont's unauthorized military proclamation of emancipation in Missouri.
Later, Lincoln replaced Frémont with General David Hunter.
Sept. 11, 1861 - Confederate troops under General Robert E.
Lee moved into position against a Union stronghold on Cheat Mountain in western
Virginia. Three days later the Confederates retreated without firing a shot.
Sept. 11, 1864 - A 10-day truce was declared between General
Sherman and General Hood so that civilians could leave Atlanta, Ga.
Sept. 11, 1901 – Dispensation meeting was held for Downing
Lodge No. 580 in Castleberry.
Sept. 11, 1912 - Eddie Collins of the Philadelphia Athletics
stole six bases against the Detroit Tigers.
Sept. 11, 1913 – Paul William “Bear” Bryant was born in
Fordyce, Ark.
Sept. 11, 1921 - The first-ever Hollywood scandal began when
silent-film star Roscoe "Fatty" Arbuckle was arrested for the murder
of actress Virginia Rappe. At the time of his arrest, Arbuckle was a massive
movie star, commanding an unheard-of $1 million per year salary from his
studio. After two mistrials, a third trial saw Arbuckle acquitted of the
charges, though his career never recovered from the scandal.
Sept. 11, 1924 – Football coach Tom Landry was born in
Mission, Texas.
Sept. 11, 1926 - In southeast Florida and Alabama, 243
people died in a hurricane.
Sept. 11, 1946 - The Brooklyn Dodgers and the Cincinnati
Reds played to a scoreless tie in 19 innings.
Sept. 11, 1956 - Frank Robinson of the Cincinnati Reds tied
a rookie record for most home runs in one season when he hit his 38th of the
year.
Sept. 11, 1959 - Roy Face of the Pittsburgh Pirates ended a
22-game winning streak. He finished the season 18-1.
Sept. 11, 1961 – Experienced tractor operator Mack Tallant,
58, of Gainesville, Ga. was instantly killed by a crawling tractor at the
construction site of the interstate highway project just north of Owassa.
During this morning accident, the tractor overturned, crushing his body when he
attempted to drive the tractor onto a lowboy from the side. The piece of heavy
equipment was being driven onto a couple of blocks of wood and from there onto
a truck, but something slipped or gave way, causing the accident. Tallant was
an employee of Southeastern Highway Construction Co. and had been working in
Conecuh County for about eight months, living at the Trahan residence on
Desplous Street in Evergreen.
Sept. 11, 1974 - The St. Louis Cardinals and the New York
Mets set a National League record when they played 25 innings. It was the
second longest game in professional baseball history.
Sept. 11, 1985 - Cincinnati Reds player-manager Pete Rose
got the 4,192nd hit of his career, breaking Ty Cobb’s major league record for
career hits. Rose’s hit came in the first inning of a game against the San
Diego Padres in front of a home crowd at Cincinnati’s Riverfront Stadium. Eric
Show was the opposing pitcher.
Sept. 11, 1987 - Howard Johnson of New York Mets became the
first National League infielder to hit 30 home runs and steal 30 bases in the
same season.
Sept. 11, 1999 - Brett Favre and Robert Brooks of the Green
Bay Packers completed a 99-yard touchdown reception against the Chicago Bears
to tie an NFL record.
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