Dec. 25, 1642 - Scientist and physicist Sir Isaac Newton was born in
Woolsthorpe, Lincolnshire, England.
Dec. 25, 1802 – David Moniac, the first Native American
graduate of the U.S. Military Academy, was born in Montgomery County, Ala.
Dec. 25, 1832 - Latter Day Saints prophet Joseph Smith
predicted an American Civil War and said it would start with the rebellion of
South Carolina.
Dec. 25, 1862 - Lieutenant Elisha Hunt Rhodes, famous
diarist, spent Christmas Day with Union soldiers.
Dec. 25, 1864 - Union Admiral David Dixon Porter began a
ground attack on Fort Fisher, North Carolina. The attack failed. The previous
day Porter began a bombardment that failed to destroy the fort. The following
January Union troops succeeded in taking the location.
Dec. 25, 1868 - U.S. President Andrew Johnson granted an
unconditional pardon to all persons involved in the Southern rebellion that
resulted in the Civil War.
Dec. 25, 1869 - Angered over a card game dispute,
16-year-old John Wesley Hardin, who lived in Pollard, Ala. for about 18 months,
shot James Bradley dead during a showdown on a deserted street in Towash,
Texas. Bradley shot at Hardin but missed. Hardin killed Bradley with bullets to
the head and chest.
Dec. 25, 1877 – Mary Elizabeth McCorvey Fountain died at
Tunnel Springs. She was the mother of former Monroe County Probate Judge
Murdock McCorvey Fountain.
Dec. 25, 1890 - “Ripley's Believe It or Not!” creator Robert
Ripley was born in Santa Rosa, Calif.
Dec. 25, 1894 - The University of Chicago became the first Midwestern
football team to play on the west coast. U.C. defeated Stanford, 24-4, in Palo
Alto, Calif.
Dec. 25, 1914 – Judge J.T. Lackland of Grove Hill, Ala.,
judge of the first judicial circuit, passed away in a Selma hospital at the age
of 62.
Dec. 25, 1924 – “The Twilight Zone” creator Rod Serling was
born in Syracuse, N.Y.
Dec. 25, 1945 – NFL quarterback Ken “The Snake” Stabler was
born in Foley, Ala. He would go on to play for Alabama, the Oakland Raiders,
the Houston Oilers and the New Orleans Saints.
Dec. 25, 1946 – Pro Football Hall of Fame fullback Larry
Csonka was born in Stow, Ohio. He would go on to play for Syracuse, the Miami
Dolphins and the New York Giants.
Dec. 25, 1946 – Singer-songwriter Jimmy Buffett, who grew up
in Mobile, Ala., was born in Pascagoula, Miss.
Dec. 25, 1950 – The Stone of Scone, the traditional
coronation stone of British monarchs, was taken from Westminster Abbey by
Scottish nationalist students. It later turned up in Scotland on April 11,
1951.
Dec. 25, 1958 – Baseball Hall of Fame left fielder Rickey Henley Henderson was born in Chicago, Ill. He would go on to play for the Anaheim Angels, the Boston Red Sox, the Los Angeles Dodgers, the New York Mets, the New York Yankees, the Oakland’s Athletics, the San Diego Padres, the Seattle Mariners and the Toronto Blue Jays.
Dec. 25, 1961 – “The Innocents,” a movie version of Henry James's book “The Turn of the Screw,” with screenplay written by William Archibald and Alabama author Truman Capote, was released.
Dec. 25, 1962 – The motion picture adaptation of “To Kill a Mockingbird,” a film based on the 1960 Pulitzer Prize-winning novel of the same name by Monroeville, Ala’s Harper Lee, opened in theaters. Directed by Robert Mulligan, the movie starred Gregory Peck, Robert Duvall, Mary Badham, Phillip Alford and John Megna. In 1995, the United States National Film Registry picked “To Kill a Mockingbird” for preservation in the Library of Congress as a “culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant” film.
Dec. 25, 1971 - The longest pro-football game to date
finally ended when Garo Yepremian kicked a field goal in the second quarter of
sudden death overtime. The Miami Dolphins defeated Kansas City, 27-24. The
total game time was 82 minutes and 40 seconds.
Dec. 25, 1975 - In the early morning hours on this Christmas
Day, George Lutz of “Amityville Horror” fame looked up at the house after
checking on the boathouse and saw a pig standing behind his daughter Missy at
her bedroom window. When he ran up to her room he found her fast asleep with
her small rocking chair slowly rocking back and forth.
Dec. 25, 1989 - Former baseball player and manager Billy
Martin died in a truck crash in Fenton, N.Y.
Dec. 25, 2002 - University of New Mexico junior place-kicker
Katie Hnida attempted to kick an extra point in a game against UCLA in the Las
Vegas Bowl. Though her kick was blocked by UCLA, Hnida became the first woman
to play in a Division I football game.
Dec. 25, 2003 - The ill-fated Beagle 2 probe, released from
the Mars Express, disappeared shortly before its scheduled landing on the Red
Planet.
Dec. 25, 2007 – A two-vehicle accident on I-65 claimed the
life of Cynthia McGill Till, 60, of Repton. The accident took place at 2:35 p.m.
near the 57-mile marker, about one mile south of Atmore in Escambia County.
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