Thursday, November 9, 2017

Today in History for Nov. 9, 2017

Grave of A.E. Moore in Andalusia, Ala.
Nov. 9, 1620 – Pilgrims aboard the Mayflower sighted land at Cape Cod, Massachusetts.


Nov. 9, 1780 – During the American Revolutionary War, British Major James Wemyss, commanding a force of 140 horsemen, attempted to surprise 300 South Carolina militiamen under General Thomas Sumter at Fishdam Ford, South Carolina. Instead of capturing Sumter as planned, Wemyss, “the second most hated man in the British army,” was wounded in the arm and knee, and captured by Sumter.

Nov. 9, 1813 – During the Creek Indian War of 1813-1814, the Battle of Talladega took place as Andrew Jackson led about 2,000 Tennessee Volunteers and friendly Indians to victory over about 700 hostile “Red Sticks,” commanded by William Weatherford, in the vicinity of present-day Talladega, Ala. The battle led to the rescue of friendly Creeks besieged in Fort Leslie.

Nov. 9, 1814 – After capturing Pensacola and leaving Major Blue to scour the coast and drive out the Indians from the swamps of the Escambia and the Choctahatibee, General Jackson started back for Fort Montgomery – a new fort a mile or two north of the destroyed Fort Mims, erected by Col. Thomas H. Benton, who had command there in the all of 1814 – and went down the river to Mobile.

Nov. 9, 1818 – Russian novelist Ivan Turgenev was born in Orel, Russia. He is best known for his 1862 novel, “Fathers and Sons.”

Nov. 9, 1819 – The Rev. George Lassiter Lee was born near Burnt Corn, Ala. He would go on to serve as clerk and moderator of the Bethlehem Association.

Nov. 9, 1819 – William W. Bibb was inaugurated Alabama’s first governor.

Nov. 9, 1851 – Kentucky marshals abducted abolitionist minister Calvin Fairbank from Jeffersonville, Indiana and took him to Kentucky to stand trial for helping a slave escape.

Nov. 9, 1861 - The first documented football game in Canada was played at University College in Toronto.

Nov. 9, 1861 - Soldiers of the 11th, 18th and 29th Illinois Regiments camped in Bloomfield, Mo. They used an empty newspaper office to print a newspaper about their activities. They named the paper the “Stars and Stripes.”

Nov. 9, 1861 – During the Civil War, the Federal occupation of Beaufort, S.C. began.

Nov. 9, 1861 – During the Civil War, the Federal expedition to Mathias Point, Va., on the York River, began.

Nov. 9, 1861 – During the Civil War, an engagement was fought at Ivy Mountain in Floyd County, Ky. The Confederates had about 1,000 men, but were chased by a substantially larger Union force, elements of a dozen units. Union losses were about 30, against roughly 250 Confederate casualties.

Nov. 9, 1862 - General Ambrose Burnside assumed command of the Union Army of the Potomac. General George B. McClellan had been removed from command on November 5. Burnside served until January 25 when General Joseph Hooker took the position.

Nov. 9, 1862 – During the Civil War, skirmishes were fought in the Boston Mountains and between Cane Hill and Fayetteville in Arkansas; at Huntsville and Drywood (Dry Wood) in Missouri; at Lebanon and Silver Springs in Tennessee; and at Philomont, Fredericksburg, Newby's Cross Roads and near Rappahannock Station in Virginia.

Nov. 9 1862 – During the Civil War, Federal reconnaissance was conducted from Bolivar Heights to Rippon in West Virginia. A three-day Federal expedition also began into Greenbrier County, W.Va. St. George was captured and a skirmish was fought on the South Fork of the Potomac in West Virginia.

Nov. 9, 1863 – During the Civil War, skirmishes were fought near Huntsville, Ark.; in the Choctaw Nation in the Indian Territory; near Bayou Sarah and Indian Bayou in Louisiana; and near Covington, Va.

Nov. 9, 1863 – During the Civil War, a two-day Federal expedition from Williamsburg toward New Kent Courthouse in Virginia began.

Nov. 9, 1863 – During the Civil War, a Federal operation took place near Weldon, N.C.

Nov. 9, 1863 – During the Civil War, President Abraham Lincoln spent the evening at the theater watching John Wilkes Booth star in “The Marble Heart.”

Nov. 9, 1864 – During the Civil War, skirmishes occurred at Shoal Creek and Florence, Ala.

Nov. 9, 1864 – During the Civil War, skirmishes were fought at Atlanta, Ga. and near Licking, Mo. A five-day Federal expedition from Memphis to Moscow, Tenn. also began. A six-day Confederate operation from Devall’s Bluff to Searcy and Clinton in Arkansas began.

Nov. 9, 1888 – Mary Jane Kelly was murdered in London, widely believed to be the fifth and final victim of the notorious unidentified serial killer Jack the Ripper.

Nov. 9, 1892 – William Calvin Maxwell, 3rd Aero Squadron, was born at Fork, Ala., about 1-1/2 mile west of Natchez. Maxwell Air Force Base in Montgomery was later named in his honor.

Nov. 9, 1901 - President Theodore Roosevelt established a naval base in the Philippines at Subic Bay, on territory won from Spain during the Spanish-American War.

Nov. 9, 1904 – German SS officer Viktor Brack was born in Haaren, Rhine Province, German Empire.

Nov. 9, 1906 – Theodore Roosevelt became the first sitting President of the United States to make an official trip outside the country. He did so to inspect progress on the Panama Canal.

Nov. 9, 1914 - In the first ever wartime action by an Australian warship, the cruiser Sydney sinks the German raider Emden in the Indian Ocean during the first autumn of World War I.

Nov. 9, 1917 – During World War I, Army Pvt. Aubrey Emmet Moore, 22, of Andalusia, Ala. “died from disease” at Camp Wheeler, Ga. Born on May 12, 1895, he was buried in the Magnolia Cemetery in Andalusia.

Nov. 9, 1918 – During World War I, Army Pvt. John E. Autrey of Thomasville, Ala. was killed in action two days before the war officially ended.

Nov. 9, 1923 – In Munich, Germany, police and government troops loyal to the democratic government crushed the Beer Hall Putsch in Bavaria. The event began the evening before when Nazi leader Adolf Hitler took control of a beer hall full of Bavarian government leaders at gunpoint.

Nov. 9, 1926 – H.P. Lovecraft completed “The Strange High House in the Mist,” which was originally published in the October 1931 edition of Weird Tales magazine.

Nov. 9, 1926 – Irish playwright Hugh Leonard was born John Joseph Byrne in Dublin.

Nov. 9, 1928 – Poet Anne Sexton was born in Newton, Mass.

Nov. 9, 1931 – National Baseball Hall of Fame outfielder and manager Whitey Herzog was born in New Athens, Ill. During his career, he played for the Washington Senators, the Kansas City Athletics, the Baltimore Orioles and the Detroit Tigers and he went on to manage the Texas Rangers, the California Angels, the Royals and the St. Louis Cardinals. He was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 2010.

Nov. 9, 1934 – Scientist and author Carl Sagan was born in Brooklyn, N.Y.

Nov. 9, 1935 – National Baseball Hall of Fame pitcher Bob Gibson was born in Omaha, Neb. He played his entire career, 1959-1975, for the St. Louis Cardinals. He was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1981.

Nov. 9, 1938 – The Nazi German diplomat Ernst vom Rath died from the fatal gunshot wounds of Jewish resistance fighter Herschel Grynszpan, an act which the Nazis used as an excuse to instigate the 1938 national pogrom, also known as Kristallnacht (Night of Broken Glass).

Nov. 9, 1939 – The Monroe Journal reported that work started during the preceding week on a new building to be occupied by Lee Motor Co. in Monroeville, Ala. The building was located on a lot between the “Sinclair Place” and the building occupied by J.F. Lathram. The paper predicted that it would be several weeks before the building would be ready for occupancy. Once complete, the building was to be one of the largest in Monroeville.

Nov. 9, 1941 – On this night, film exploded within the unoccupied Monroeville (Ala.) Theatre building, and the resulting fire destroyed the building. Damage to the 800-seat theatre was estimated at $50,000, according to Monroeville Fire Chief John Wiggins. Stock in a neighboring hardware store was also damaged.

Nov. 9, 1946 - The second-ranked Notre Dame Fighting Irish and the first-ranked Army Cadets play to a historic 0-0 tie at Yankee Stadium in New York. Notre Dame-Army was college football’s biggest rivalry, and more than 74,000 people crowded the stands. At a time when football tickets typically cost $1 to $5, many fans had paid scalpers as much as $250 for their seats. The game had been sold out since June.

Nov. 9, 1950 - Led by the brilliant running of left halfback Bruce Petty, who rushed for 210 yards, Excel High School beat J.U. Blacksher, 20-0, on this Thursday night to improve to 7-2 on the season. Other outstanding Excel players in that game included Gene Brown, Nelson Mosley, Ray Scruggs and Charles Stacey. Outstanding Blacksher players in the game included fullback Evans McGhee and quarterback Bobby Grissette.

Nov. 9, 1953 - The U.S. Supreme Court upheld a 1922 ruling that Major League Baseball did not come within the scope of federal antitrust laws.

Nov. 9, 1956 – In an incident attributed to the Bermuda Triangle, a U.S. Navy Martin Marlin P5M patrol seaplane vanished while on patrol near Bermuda with a crew of 10.

Nov. 9, 1960 – Robert McNamara was named president of Ford Motor Company, the first non-Ford to serve in that post. A month later, he resigned to join the administration of newly elected John F. Kennedy.

Nov. 9, 1965 - Willie Mays was named the National League’s Most Valuable Player.

Nov. 9, 1965 - The Great Northeast Blackout of 1965 happened on this day, with nine states, as well as two provinces of Canada, hit by a series of power failures that lasted up to 13 hours. In New York City, 800,000 people were caught in the subways, when the blackout struck at rush hour. Though the cause was blamed on human error, many UFO sightings occurred the same night over the area, suggesting to some that their presence was connected to the blackout.

Nov. 9, 1965 – A Catholic Worker Movement member, Roger Allen LaPorte, protesting against the Vietnam War, set himself on fire in front of the United Nations building.

Nov. 9, 1967 - The first issue of Rolling Stone was published in San Francisco.

Nov. 9, 1967 - While on a mission over Laos, Capt. Lance P. Sijan ejected from his disabled McDonnell Douglas F-4C Phantom jet near Vinh, North Vietnam. Despite suffering a skull fracture, a mangled right hand, and a compound fracture of the left leg during his ejection, Sijan successfully evaded capture for more than six weeks. Eventually Sijan’s wounds and lack of sustenance overwhelmed him and he collapsed along a road, where he was found by North Vietnamese troops. After several days of captivity, Sijan gathered his strength and escaped. Still weakened and suffering from his injuries, Sijan was recaptured and tortured, and then transported to the infamous prison known as the Hanoi Hilton. While there, he contracted pneumonia and died. Throughout his ordeal, Captain Sijan never gave up his desire to escape and resisted his captors to the very end. When the American prisoners of war (POWs) were released in 1973, several of Sijan’s fellow POWs immediately initiated a recommendation for Sijan to receive the Medal of Honor. On March 4, 1976, President Gerald Ford presented the medal to Captain Sijan’s father in a ceremony at the White House.

Nov. 9, 1970 – During the Vietnam War, the Supreme Court of the United States voted 6–3 against hearing a case to allow Massachusetts to enforce its law granting residents the right to refuse military service in an undeclared war.
  
Nov. 9, 1979 – Monroe Academy beat Glenwood Academy, 21-7, to collect the 100th football win in school history.

Nov. 9, 1984 - A bronze statue titled "Three Servicemen" by Frederick Hart, was unveiled at the site of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington, D.C.

Nov. 9, 1989 – During the Cold War, the Fall of the Berlin Wall occurred when Communist-controlled East Germany opened checkpoints in the Berlin Wall allowing its citizens to travel to West Germany. This key event led to the eventual reunification of East and West Germany, and the fall of communism in eastern Europe including Russia.

Nov. 9, 1991 - Roman Anderson of the Houston Cougars became the first player in NCAA history to surpass 400 points when he kicked a 32-yard field goal.

Nov. 9, 1992 – The Hawthorne House (also known as the Col. J.R. Hawthorne House) in Pine Apple in Wilcox County, Ala. was added to the Alabama Register of Landmarks and Heritage.

Nov. 9, 1995 – Hugh Hunter Allen, who is buried in the Belleville Baptist Church cemetery, passed away. Born March 20, 1917, he served in World War II and Korea after enlisting in 1936. He was taken prisoner by the Japanese in April 15, 1942, and survived the Bataan Death March and POW camps in the Philippines and Japan. He was a POW for three years and seven months and later received the Purple Heart. He retired in 1960 as a Master Sergeant in the Air Force.

Nov. 9, 1995 - George Elbrecht was elected president of the Monroe County Board of Education and C.P. Carmichael was chosen vice-president during a meeting that began at 6 p.m. in the Resource Center in Monroeville. Board member Alfred Nall of Excel nominated Elbrecht; Tony Powell of Uriah seconded the motion; and the vote was unanimous.
  
Nov. 9, 1997 - Barry Sanders of the Detroit Lions became the first player in NFL history to rush for over 1,000 yards in nine straight seasons. In the same game, Sanders passed former Dallas Cowboy Tony Dorsett for third place on the all-time rushing list.

Nov. 9, 1998 – In “V for Vendetta,” a parade was staged to foster the illusion that Susan was still in control. Creedy told Harper that the coup was coming within the next few days. Harper then told Helen, and she planned accordingly. Finch returned to London. He confronted V in Victoria Station and shot him. Rosemary brought her gun to the parade. She confronted Susan and shot him. Susan was pronounced dead at the hospital. Creedy put himself in charge of Norsefire. Finch arrived and announced that he’d killed V. Conrad Heyer received a videotape. He played it and watched his wife having sex with Harper. Norsefire publicly announced that V was presumed killed. Harper, under Helen’s orders, killed Peter Creedy. V returned to the Shadow Gallery, mortally wounded. Before dying, he asked Evey for a Viking funeral and asked that without lifting the mask, she must discover whose face was behind it. After thinking for some time, Evey discovered whose face was behind the mask. Harper, sneaking into the Heyer household to meet Helen, met Conrad instead. Later, Helen returned home to discover Harper dead and Conrad bleeding to death. Outraged, she left them both. A mob gathered outside the Head to await final word on V’s – and their own – fate. Finch resigned. With Creedy and Heyer missing, Dominic was put in charge. At midnight, V appeared announcing the end of Norsefire, and instructed the populace that they must choose what to do next. After V’s announcement, the mob riots. Dominic was wounded, but rescued by V.

Nov. 9, 2001 - U.S. President George W. Bush announced a 25 percent increase in the number of National Guard troops stationed at airports during the holiday season.

Nov. 9, 2004 - U.S. First Lady Laura Bush officially reopened Pennsylvania Avenue in front of the White House to pedestrians.
  
Nov. 9, 2007 – After 35 years in prison, Arthur Bremer, who attempted to assassinate George C. Wallace in May 1972, was released on parole.


Nov. 9, 2010 - Former President George W. Bush's book "Decision Points" was released.

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