Jefferson Columbus Davis |
Sept. 29, 1862 - In Louisville, Ky., Union General Jefferson
Columbus Davis mortally wounded his commanding officer, General William Nelson.
Nelson had slapped Davis during a quarrel in a hotel lobby. Davis chased Nelson
upstairs and shot him. Davis was never court-martialed.
Sept. 29, 1864 - Union General Ulysses S. Grant attacked
forces under Confederate General Robert E. Lee at the Battle of New Market
Heights (Chaffin's Farm/Fort Harrison). The attempt failed.
Sept. 29, 1864 – J.W. Daniels of the Conecuh Guards was
wounded at Fort Harrison in Richmond, Va. He returned to Conecuh County after
the war.
Sept. 29, 1864 - Confederate General John Bell Hood began
tearing up the Western and Atlantic Railroad.
Sept. 29, 1888 – Dr. Samuel S. Gaillard was born in Perdue
Hill. A third generation doctor, he was the first intern at Mobile Infirmary
when it opened in 1910. He was a specialist in radiology and roentgenology and
served in WWI and WWII. He attended West Point Military Academy, Louisville
(Ky.) Medical School and graduated from the University of Alabama Medical
School in 1910.
Sept. 29, 1895 – Joseph Banks “J.B.” Rhine, widely
considered to be the "father of modern parapsychology," was born in
Waterloo, Pa.
Sept. 29, 1896 – Confederate Gen. Nathan B. Forrest moved
northward from the Sulphur Branch Trestle Fort in Limestone County, which he
captured four days earlier, to destroy other bridges after sending prisoners
southward to the Tennessee River.
Sept. 29, 1890 – Outlaw train robber Rube Burrow arrived at
the home of John Barnes near Castleberry, four weeks after his eighth and final
train robbery near Flomaton. After breakfast, Burrow departed, headed for
Repton.
Sept. 29, 1942 – Conecuh County officials released several
hundred pounds of iron fixtures that were parts of the old gallows at the
Conecuh County Jail in Evergreen to the local salvage committee for use in the
manufacture of war materials. The old gallows hadn’t been used since the
county’s last legal execution on Jan. 22, 1926.
Sept. 29, 1951 - The first network football game was
televised by CBS-TV in color. The game was between the University of California
and the University of Pennsylvania.
Sept. 29, 1954 - Willie Mays, centerfielder for the New York
Giants, made his amazing over-the-shoulder catch of a fly ball hit by Cleveland
Indians first baseman Vic Wertz to rob Wertz of extra bases in Game 1 of the
1954 World Series. The catch has gone down as one of the greatest in the
history of baseball.
Sept. 29, 1957 - The New York Giants played their last game
at the Polo Grounds before moving to San Francisco, Calif.
Sept. 29, 1972 – Greenville beat Evergreen, 22-12, at Brooks
Memorial Stadium in Evergreen.
Sept. 29, 1986 - The television program “Miscalculation,” teleplay by Alabama
author Robert McDowell, is broadcast as part of the “Amazing Stories” series.
Sept. 29, 1987 – Conecuh County Rabies Inspector Jim
Bricken, DVM, anounced that a raccoon found on Sept. 27, 1987 in the Old Town
community was positive for rabies.
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