Anderson Stage Stop |
Sept. 16, 1620 - The Mayflower departed from Plymouth,
England. The ship arrived at Provincetown, Mass. on Nov. 21 and then at
Plymouth, Mass. on Dec. 26. There were 102 passengers onboard.
Sept. 16, 1798 – Justus Wyman was born in Woburn, Middlesex,
Mass. He lived at Fort Claiborne in Monroe County in 1817 and is considered to
be Alabama’s first historian. He wrote a historical sketch of the new state
before moving to Montgomery in 1820. He died in September 1855 in Talladega
Springs, Ala.
Sept. 16, 1832 - Confederate General George Washington
Custis Lee was born to Robert E. and Mary Custis Lee in Fort Monroe, Virginia.
Sept. 16, 1862 - Union General George B. MeClellan arrived
in Sharpsburg, Maryland and prepared to attack General Robert E. Lee's forces
along Antietam Creek. The next day the Battle of Antietam took place.
Sept. 16, 1864 - Confederate Cavalry General Nathan Bedford
Forrest’s nearly month long raid into Alabama and Middle Tennessee begun.
Sept. 16, 1864 – Mathew Anderson, who established the
Anderson Stage Stop on the Old Federal Road along the Conecuh-Monroe county
line, joined Dailey’s Co. of the Monroe Co. Home Guard Militia.
Sept. 16, 1864 – Richard Francis Burton and John Hanning
Speke were scheduled to debate the source of the Nile at a meeting at the
British Association for the Advancement of Science.
Sept. 16, 1889 – The home of C.T. Simmons, “one of Monroe’s
most substantial citizens,” burned in the Carlisle community. The fire was
discovered around 10 a.m. and it was a total loss. Among the losses was
Simmons’ “very valuable” library.
Sept. 16, 1889 – The Pineville Academy opened for the
1889-1890 school year with Prof. W.L. Pruett as principal and Miss Hamel of
Nashville as assistant.
Sept. 16, 1892 – Former Alabama Gov. Thomas Hill Watts, who
was born in Butler County in 1819, passed away at the age of 73 in Montgomery.
Sept. 16, 1907 - Judge Terry Richardson, the son of Judge
J.C. Richardson of Conecuh’s judicial circuit, was found dead in his bed at the
St. Charles Hotel in Luverne at an early hour on this Monday morning.
Sept. 16, 1912 – During a municipal election in Evergreen,
W.B. Ivey was elected mayor and J.G. Lundy, A.H. Mason, F.A. Pritchett, G.W.
Salter Jr. and H.A. Shields were elected to the council.
Sept. 16, 1912 – The State High School Commission announced
that the Conecuh County High School would be located in Castleberry after the
town offered a guarantee of $10,000 and six acres of land.
Sept. 16, 1924 - Jim Bottomley knocked in 12 runs in a
single game, setting a major league baseball record.
Sept. 16, 1953 - The St. Louis Browns of the American League
were given permission to move to Baltimore, Md., where they became the
Baltimore Orioles.
Sept. 16, 1958 – Baseball pitcher Orel Hershiser was born in
Buffalo, N.Y.
Sept. 16, 1963 - The science-fiction anthology TV series
“The Outer Limits” debuted on ABC. The eerie opening of each episode featured
the image of an oscilloscope: "There is nothing wrong with your television
set. Do not attempt to adjust the picture. We are controlling transmission...We
can change the focus to a soft blur or sharpen it to crystal clarity. For the
next hour, sit quietly and we will control all that you see and hear. We
repeat: there is nothing wrong with your television set. You are about to participate
in a great adventure. You are about to experience the awe and mystery which
reaches from the inner mind to... The Outer Limits."
Sept. 16, 1988 – Shields beat R.C. Hatch, 84-0, in Beatrice
with Shields quarterback Jeff Montgomery completing six of eight passes for 177
yards and four touchdowns. He also kicked two extra points, completed a pass
for a two-point conversion and scored on a two-point conversion run.
Sept. 16, 1988 - Tom Browning pitched the 12th perfect game
in major league baseball.
Sept. 16, 2004 – Hurricane Ivan made landfall at Gulf Shores
around 2 a.m. with winds between 120 and 130 miles per hour.
Sept. 16, 2009 – The Monroeville Downtown Historic District was
added to the National Register of Historic Places.
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