Lizzie Borden |
July 19, 1545 – The Tudor warship Mary Rose sank off
Portsmouth. In 1982 the wreck was salvaged in one of the most complex and
expensive projects in the history of maritime archaeology.
July 19, 1692 – In connection with the Salem witchcraft
trials, Rebecca Nurse, Susannah Martin, Elizabeth Howe, Sarah Good and Sarah
Wildes were hanged at Gallows Hill.
July 19, 1776 - Congress decided to produce a handwritten
copy of the Declaration of Independence to bear all the delegates' signatures.
July 19, 1779 – Massachusetts, without consulting either
Continential political or military authorities, launched an ill-fated 4,000-man
naval expedition commanded by Commodore Dudley Saltonstall, Adjutant General
Peleg Wadsworth, Brigadier General Solomon Lovell and Lieutenant Colonel Paul
Revere. The expedition consisted of 19 warships, 24 transport ships and more
than 1,000 militiamen. Their objective was to capture a 750-man British garrison
at Castine on the Penobscot Peninsula, in what would later become Maine.
July 19, 1799 – The “Rosetta Stone” was found by one of
Napoleon’s soldiers at a port town on the Mediterranean coast, about 35 miles
north of Alexandria, Egypt. Containing fragments of Greek and Egyptian, it held
the key to translating hieroglyphics.
July 19, 1814 – Firearms manufacturer Samuel Colt was born
in Hartford, Conn.
July 19, 1834 – French Impressionist Edgar Degas was born in
Paris.
July 19, 1832 – The village of Walker’s Mill (present-day
Monroeville, Ala.) got its first post office, and Joel Rawls was the
postmaster. Rawls had a general store on the town square, and the post office
was probably located within his store. Rawls named the community Centreville because
it lay in the center of the county.
July 19, 1848 – The first women’s rights conference in
history was organized in Seneca Falls, N.Y. by Elizabeth Cady Stanton and her
friend Lucretia Mott.
July 19, 1860 - Lizzie Borden was born in Fall River, Mass.
She is best remembered for being tried and acquitted for the 1892 axe murders
of her father and her stepmother in Fall River. The case was a cause célèbre
throughout the United States.
July 19, 1863 – During the Civil
War, Confederate General John Hunt Morgan's raid into Union-held territory was
dealt a serious blow when a large part of his force was captured as they tried
to escape across the Ohio River at Buffington Island, Ohio. Cut off from the
south, Morgan fled north with the remnants of his command and was captured a
week later at Salineville, Ohio.
July 19, 1864 – Confederate soldier
Lewis Lavon Peacock was admitted to General Hospital at Howard’s Grove,
Richmond, Va. for acute diarrhea.
July 19, 1879 - Doc Holliday commited his first murder, shooting former army scout Mike Gordon for shooting up his Las Vegas, New Mexico saloon. Gordon died the next day.
July 19, 1880 – Amasa Coleman Lee -
Harper Lee’s father - was born in Georgiana, Ala.
July 19, 1898 – H.P. Lovecraft’s father, Winfield Scott Lovecraft,
died at Butler Hospital in Providence, Rhode Island. A traveling salesman for
Gorham & Co., Silversmiths of Providence, W.S. Lovecraft suffered a nervous
breakdown in a hotel room in Chicago and was brought back to Butler Hospital,
where he remained for five years before dying on July 19, 1898.
July 19, 1898 – Novelist Emile Zola
fled France in the wake of what would become known as the “Dreyfus Affair.”
July 19, 1906 – Monroeville, Ala.
marshal C.E. Hunter overheard an incriminating conversation between two men in
seats near him on the train between Monroeville and Peterman, which led him to
arrest C.S. Bowen, who was wanted for shooting and killing Charles Revill in
Opp on July 12.
July 19, 1909 - The first
unassisted triple play in Major League Baseball was made by Cleveland Indians
shortstop Neal Ball in a game against Boston.
July 19, 1909 – Hall of Fame
pitcher Cy Young earned his 500th career pitching victory.
July 19, 1911 – The State Baptist
Convention was scheduled to begin in Greenville, Ala.
July 19, 1914 – Sarah Cunningham,
wife of the late Dr. William Cunningham, passed away at the age of 91. She was
one of Conecuh County, Alabama’s oldest residents.
July 19, 1915 – “Lola,” a silent
film starring Clara Kimball Young, was scheduled to be shown at the Arcade
Theatre in Evergreen, Ala. at 5:45 p.m. Admission was 10 cents and 20 cents.
July 19, 1915 – B.G. McCalman of
The Troy Herald visited The Evergreen Courant’s office.
July 19, 1915 – The Hon. H.C. Miller of Birmingham, the Grand
Master of Masons of Alabama, passed through Monroeville, Ala. on this Monday on his
way to Uriah for the Monroe County Masonic Conference.
July 19-20, 1915 – The Monroe County Masonic Conference was
be held at Blacksher Lodge, No. 593, at Uriah, Ala. Eleven of the 12 lodges in
Monroe County were represented at the Conference, and 102 Masons attended the
event. Grand Master H.C. Miller of Birmingham conducted the conference and
instructed the craft in the ritualistic work, and Dr. J.H. McCormick of Mobile
gave lectures on the various phases of Masonry.
July 19, 1920 - Alabama author
Octavus Roy Cohen's play “Come Seven”
opened on Broadway.
July 19, 1934 – Evergreen’s
baseball team was scheduled to play Luverne on this Thursday afternoon in
Luverne, Ala.
July 19, 1940 – During what is now
known as the “Field Marshal Ceremony,” Hitler appointed field marshals due to
military achievements for the first time in World War II.
July 19, 1941 - The first black pilots in the American military begin their primary flight training at Tuskegee Institute's Moton Field. This first class of "Tuskegee Airmen" graduated the next March after transferring to Tuskegee Army Air Field to complete their training. The group saw its first action in World War II in 1943 as members of the segregated 99th Fighter Squadron of the Army Air Corps.
July 19, 1950 – Army PFC Ernest C.
South of Covington County, Ala. was killed in action in Korea.
July 19, 1954 - The first part of the “Lord of the Rings,” “The Fellowship of the Ring” was published on this day.
July 19, 1959 - A radio version of
Alabama author Ambrose Bierce's story "An Occurrence at Owl Creek
Bridge" was broadcast as part of the “Suspense”
series.
July 19, 1960 - Juan Marichal of
the San Francisco Giants became the first pitcher to get a one-hitter in his
major league debut.
July 19, 1963 – The Moundville
Archaeological Site in Moundville, Ala. was named a National Historic Landmark.
July 19, 1964 - The TV show “The
Twilight Zone” aired its final episode on CBS after a five-year run.
July 19, 1966 - At the Astrodome,
the first major league game to be played totally on artificial turf took place.
Prior to this game, the outfield had consisted of painted dirt and the infield
was covered with artificial turf.
July 19, 1971 - In New York, the
topping out ceremony for Two World Trade Center (South Tower) took place. The
ceremony for One World Trade Center had taken place on December 23, 1970.
July 19, 1972 – A “posse” of about
25 men scoured Marzolf Hill in Missouri – the snake-infested, cave-packed
terrain where the Harrison children had first sighted the “Missouri Monster” –
and didn’t even find a rabbit. Police Chief Shelby Ward told the media that he
was satisfied that there was no longer a monster on Marzolf Hill.
July 19, 1974 - The House Judiciary
Committee recommended that U.S. President Richard Nixon should stand trial in
the Senate for any of the five impeachment charges against him.
July 19, 1979 – The Evergreen
Courant reported that 24-year-old Roger Pritchard, a graduate assistant
football coach at Alabama State University in Montgomery, had been named head
football and basketball coach at Lyeffion High School. Pritchard, a native of
Fort Myers, Fla., was a three-year regular at linebacker for the Hornets after
transferring to ASU from The Citadel. He was a 1972 graduate of North Fort
Myers High School where he was a star football player.
July 19, 1979 – The Conecuh County
High School Quarterback Club was scheduled to meet on this Thursday night at
7:30 p.m. in the school lunchroom in Castleberry, Ala. The football team’s new
coach, Doug Williamson, was scheduled to meet the public at the event.
July 19, 1985 - Christa McAuliffe
of New Hampshire was chosen to be the first schoolteacher to ride aboard the
space shuttle. She died with six others when the Challenger exploded the
following year.
July 19, 1986 - Chon Mitchell of
Evergreen High School was crowned Conecuh County’s 1987 Junior Miss at the 1987
Junior Miss Pageant held at the new Wiley Salter Auditorium at Ed Reid State
Technical College in Evergreen, Ala.
July 19, 1990 - Two enlisted men
stationed at Fort Bragg, North Carolina lost their lives when the 1988 Ford
Ranger they were riding in went over a bridge on Interstate Highway 65 at the
106-mile marker. Their truck was airborne for over 100 feet before landing on
its top at the bottom of the bridge some 34 feet down. The accident took place
just inside the Conecuh County, Ala. line.
July 19, 1996 - HBO aired the final
episode of "Tales from the Crypt."
July 19, 1998 – Swedish journalist
and lake monster hunter Jan Sundberg told Reuters that the echoing equipment
that he used on his expedition to Seljord Lake in 1977 had detected large
objects moving under the water in unison and separating in different
directions.
July 19, 2007 – Paranormal
investigator and newspaper columnist George Buster Singleton passed away at the
age of 79 in Monroeville, Ala.
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