John Fulton Reynolds |
Sept. 21, 1645 – Canadian explorer Louis Jolliet was born
near Quebec City, Canada. Jolliet is best known for his discoveries in North
America. Jolliet and Jesuit Father Jacques Marquette, a Catholic priest and
missionary, were the first non-Natives to explore and map the Mississippi River
in 1673.
Sept. 21, 1692 – In connection with the Salem witchcraft
trials, Robert Mailea was accused of being a witch.
Sept. 21, 1776 - The Great Fire of New York destroyed 10 to
25 percent of the city, shortly after the city was occupied by British forces
during the American Revolution.
Sept. 21, 1776 - Nathan Hale was captured while sailing Long
Island Sound en route to American-controlled territory. He was executed the
next day for spying.
Sept. 21, 1779 - Louisiana governor and Spanish military
officer Bernardo de Galvez, with the aide of American troops and militia volunteers,
captured the British post and garrison at Baton Rouge, located in what was then
British-controlled West Florida. In a cunning and brilliant move, de Galvez
included in the terms of the British surrender of Baton Rouge that the British
also surrender Fort Panmure at Natchez to Spanish control. Defeated and on the
verge of utter annihilation, the British had no other choice but to accept the
terms.
Sept 21, 1780 – During the American Revolution, American
General Benedict Arnold met with British Major John Andre to discuss handing
over West Point to the British, in return for the promise of a large sum of
money and a high position in the British army. The plot was foiled and Arnold,
a former American hero, became synonymous with the word “traitor.”
Sept. 21, 1784 - "The Pennsylvania Packet and Daily
Advertiser" was published for the first time in Philadelphia. It was the
first daily paper in America.
Sept. 21, 1820 - Union Civil War General John Fulton
Reynolds was born in Lancaster, Pa. Reynolds commanded the left wing of the
Army of the Potomac during the Gettysburg, Pa. campaign and on the morning of
July 1, he rode into Gettysburg and placed his force in front of advancing
Confederates, forcing Union General George Meade, commander of the Army of the
Potomac, to fight. The 42-year-old Reynolds was killed that day, most likely by
a Confederate volley, and was buried in Lancaster, his birthplace.
Sept. 21, 1823 - Joseph Smith Jr. reported his initial
visitation with the Angel Moroni. Smith said the angel led him to gold plates
buried near his home in western New York; some of the plates he later
translated into the Book of Mormon.
Sept. 21, 1841 – Former Alabama governor John Murphy of
Monroe County, Ala. died at his plantation in Clarke County and was buried at
Gosport. He was 54 or 55 years old.
Sept. 21, 1858 – Arthur P. Bagby passed away in Mobile, Ala.
Born in Louisa County, Va., in 1794, he arrived at Claiborne in 1818 with his
worldly belongings tied in a handkerchief and affixed to a stick over his
shoulder. He would go on to become a prominent lawyer, congressman and Alabama
governor.
Sept. 21, 1864 – During the Civil War, a skirmish occurred
at Athens, Ala.
Sept. 21, 1866 – Herbert George “H.G.” Wells, pioneer of
science fiction, was born on this day in Bromley, England.
Sept. 21, 1897 - The New York Sun ran the "Yes,
Virginia, there is a Santa Claus" editorial. It was in response to a
letter from 8-year-old Virginia O'Hanlon.
Sept. 21, 1902 – Sir Allen Lane, the creator of Penguin
Books, was born Allen Williams Lane in Bristol, England.
Sept. 21, 1905 – The Monroe Journal reported that L.N.
Parson was the winner of a recent one-hour cotton-picking contest at Jones
Mill. He picked 53 pounds in one hour, beating J. Driscoll, who picked 48
pounds in that time.
Sept. 21, 1912 – Around 5:30 a.m., the No. 2 passenger train
and a freight train collided a few hundred feet above the north switch on the
L&N Railroad in Evergreen, Ala. The Courant described it as “one of the
worst train wrecks that has been on this division of the L&N in a long
while” and that “it was nothing short of a miracle that no one was killed.”
Sept. 21, 1914 – The new Conecuh County High School opened
in Castleberry, Ala. for the first time in a building that cost $10,000 to
construct. Members of the building committee included Elisha Downing, Dr. R.T.
Holland and P.M. Skinner. Miss Sarah E. Luther was principal and had the
distinction of being the only female principal of a high school in the state.
The faculty included C.E. Williams (a science and manual training teacher and
director of boys’ athletics) and Lucile M. Cobb of Tuskegee (teacher of
English, expression and physical culture). The school’s opening ceremonies
included a big barbecue, an exhibition drill by the Conecuh Guards and a
baseball doubleheader with Garland. “It was a history-making day, and it will
be pointed to in the years to come as one of the greatest occasions in the
history of Castleberry.” Speeches were made by Mayor E. Downing, Supt. R.E.L.
Key, C.S. Rabb and State Superintendent W.F. Feagin and members of the school
faculty, the principal speech being made by Feagin.
Sept. 21, 1914 – The Evergreen (Ala.) City School opened to
begin the 1914-15 school year.
Sept. 21, 1914 – Monroeville, Ala. held its municipal
elections and L.J. Bugg was elected mayor. G.C. Watson, J.A. Lazenby, T.E.
Dennis, G.B. Barnett and J.R. Lyon were elected city councilmen. I.B.
Slaughter, M.M. Fountain, J.M. Coxwell, A.R. Boulware and A.T. Sowell were
elected to the school board.
Sept. 21, 1918 – During World War I, Army Pvt. Will Dickson
of Repton, Ala. “died from disease.”
Sept. 21, 1937 - J.R.R. Tolkien's novel "The
Hobbit" was first published.
Sept. 21, 1939 – Brutus H. Bailey of Franklin, Ala. was bit
by a snake, believed to have been either a rattlesnake or copperhead, just
before noon while surveying a piece of land with several other men near
Franklin.
Sept. 21, 1941 - Alabama author Fannie Flagg was born in
Irondale, Ala.
Sept. 21, 1942 – Conecuh County, Ala. schools were scheduled
to begin the 1942-43 school year after a delay of about two weeks to the school
year. School was originally supposed to begin on Sept. 7, but the Conecuh
County Board of Education decided on Aug. 21to postpone the start of school because
farmers were dependent on their children for help in gathering their cotton and
peanut crops during a labor shortage.
Sept. 21, 1947 – Horror novelist Stephen King was born in
Portland, Maine.
Sept. 21, 1951 – In high school football, Brantley High
School beat Repton High School, 33-0, in Brantley, Ala.
Sept. 21, 1957 – “Crazy in Alabama” author Mark Childress
was born in Monroeville, Ala.
Sept. 21, 1967 – Evergreen High School’s Elliott “Buck”
Quarles was named the Outstanding Player of the Week by the Evergreen Jaycees
for his performance against Monroe County High School on Sept. 15.
Sept. 21, 1968 - "All Along the Watchtower" was
released by Jimi Hendrix.
Sept. 21, 1970 - "NFL Monday Night Football" made
its debut on ABC-TV. The game was between the Cleveland Browns and the New York
Jets. The Browns won, 31-21.
Sept. 21, 1970 – The New York Times premiered a new section
called the “Op. Ed. Page,” a section opposite the traditional editorial page
that was to be devoted to the columns of outside writers and to illustrations
and political cartoons.
Sept. 21, 1971 - The American League approved the move of
the Washington Senators to Arlington, Texas.
Sept. 21, 1972 – Liam Gallagher, the founder and lead singer
of the rock band Oasis, was born in Burnage, Manchester, England.
Sept. 21, 1980 - The Giants retired Mobile, Ala. native
Willie McCovey’s uniform number 44, which he wore in honor of Hank Aaron, a
fellow Mobile native.
Sept. 21, 1981 - Philadelphia Phillies pitcher Steve Carlton
struck out the 3,118th batter of his career to break Bob Gibson’s National
League record for career strikeouts. Despite Carlton’s 10 shutout innings and
12 strikeouts, the Phillies lost the marathon game to the Montreal Expos in the
17th inning, 1-0.
Sept. 21, 1982 - National Football League (NFL) players
began a 57-day strike. It was their first regular-season walkout.
Sept. 21, 1989 - Ronald Faulkner of 220 Bruner Avenue in
Evergreen, Ala. killed a “monster water moccasin” on this Thursday on Highway
31 South. The snake, which was five feet long and weighed an estimated 20 to 25
pounds, was crawling across the highway when Faulkner killed it.
Sept. 21, 1993 - Nirvana's album "In Utero" was
released.
Sept. 21, 1996 - Hank Williams III made his Grand Ole Opry debut
at the age of 23.
Sept. 21, 2003 - After eight years studying the Jovian
system, the Galileo space probe was terminated, crashing into Jupiter's
atmosphere.
Sept. 21, 2008 - The New York Yankees played their last game
at Yankee Stadium. The new Yankee Stadium opened across the street in 2009.
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