Napoleon Bonaparte Buford |
Jan. 13, 1128 - The military order Knights Templar was
granted a papal sanction, declared to be an army of God by Pope Honorius II.
Jan. 13, 1807 - Union General Napoleon Bonaparte Buford was
born in Woodford, Kentucky. During the Civil War, Buford held many commands in
the West and was a hero at the Battle of Belmont, Missouri.
Jan. 13, 1830 – The Great fire of New Orleans, Louisiana
began.
Jan. 13, 1840 – Confederate soldier Walter Newton Duke was born.
He enlisted in Co. D. of the 5th Alabama Regiment (later Co. C after April 27,
1862) on March 16, 1861. He was listed as sick at St. Frances de Sales Hospital
between March 1, 1862 and Aug. 31, 1862. He was taken prisoner at South
Mountain, Md. on Sept. 14, 1862, forwarded to Ft. Delaware, Del. on Oct. 2,
1862 and to Aikens Landing for exchange on Nov. 10, 1862. He was a patient at
Winder General Hospital No. 4 from Nov. 3, 1862 to Dec. 16, 1862. He was taken
prisoner at Gettysburg on July 4, 1863 and forwarded to Ft. Delaware on July 7,
1863 and arrived on July 12, 1863. He arrived at Point Lookout, Md. on Oct. 23,
1863 and was paroled on Feb. 18, 1865. He died on Dec. 16, 1922 and was buried
in Ramah Cemetery at Teneha in Shelby County, Texas.
Jan. 13, 1862 - Union General Ambrose Burnside and his forces
arrived at Hatteras Inlet in North Carolina.
Jan. 13, 1865 - In North Carolina, Union forces began a
massive three-day bombardment at Fort Fisher.
Jan. 13, 1906 – A head-on collision between two trains took
place on the Southern Alabama division of the Louisville & Nashville
railroad about two miles north of Monroe Station at about 5 a.m. One of the
trains was a northbound logging train of 11 empty cars belonging to the Bear
Creek Mill Co. The other train was a southbound “special” train carrying the
“Little Johnny Jones” theatrical company from Selma to Pensacola. That train
consisted of two baggage cars, a day coach and two Pullman luxury cars.
Jan. 13, 1906 - Hugh Gernsback of the Electro Importing
Company advertised radio receivers for sale for the price of just $7.50 in "Scientific
American" magazine.
Jan. 13, 1910 – The first public radio broadcast took place as
a live performance of the opera “Cavalleria rusticana” was sent out over the
airwaves from the Metropolitan Opera House in New York, New York.
Jan. 13, 1915 – The Evergreen Courant reported that Brooklyn
merchant E.N. Amos had entered bankruptcy.
Jan. 13, 1929 - Nearly 50 years after the famous gunfight at
the O.K. Corral, Wyatt Earp died quietly in Los Angeles at the age of 80.
Jan. 13, 1937 – The “Allen Treasure,” $2,700 in pre-Civil
War gold coins were discovered beneath a smoke house in the Clarke County
community of Rockville, Ala.
Jan. 13, 1955 – Astronomer Morris K. Jessup, the author of
“The Case for the UFO,” received a letter from a man who identified himself as
“Carlos Allende.” In the letter, Allende informed Jessup of the “Philadelphia
Experiement.”
Jan. 13, 1968 – Johnny Cash gave his legendary live performance
at Folsom Prison in Folsom, Calif.
Jan. 13, 1977 – The Evergreen Courant reported that five
persons had been arrested and charged with the burglary of the County Line
Discount Package Store on U.S. Highway 84, outside Repton, on the
Conecuh-Monroe county line. The burglary took place around midnight on Jan. 4,
1977.
Jan. 13, 1977 – The Evergreen Courant reported that
Evergreen High School’s boys basketball team improved to 6-2 on the season with
a 72-58 win over T.R. Miller. Senior center Marion Stanton led Evergreen with a
double double, scoring 15 points and grabbing 16 rebounds.
Jan. 13, 1983 - Weather reporter Earl Windham reported a low
of 23 degrees in Evergreen.
Jan. 13, 1986 - "The Wall Street Journal" printed
a real picture on its front page. The Journal had not done this in nearly 10
years. The story was about artist, O. Winston Link and featured one of his
works.
Jan. 13, 2005 - Major League Baseball adopted a
steroid-testing program that suspended first-time offenders for 10 days and
randomly tested players year-round.
Jan. 13, 2005 - Concert and operatic star Nell Rankin died
in New York at age 81. The Montgomery, Ala. native made her stage debut in
Wagner's Lohengrin in Zurich, Switzerland in 1949.
Jan. 13, 2005 - The NFL fined Randy Moss of the Minnesota
Vikings $10,000 for pretending to pull down his pants and moon the Green Bay
Packer crowd during a playoff win the previous weekend.
Jan. 13, 2006 – A tornado destroyed the Belleville, Ala.
fire station in Conecuh County and left a path of debris and structural damage a half-mile wide
and a mile long along U.S. 84. One death occurred, three homes were destroyed, and
15 structures were damaged.
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