RMS Queen Mary. |
Sept. 26, 1580 – Sir Francis Drake finished his
circumnavigation of the Earth.
Sept. 26, 1776 - The Continental Congress elected Benjamin
Franklin, Silas Deane and Arthur Lee as agents to be sent to secure a formal
treaty between France and the United States. Franklin, Deane and Lee were given
formal instructions by the members of the Continental Congress as to what
concessions they would be authorized to make in negotiating the treaty. First
and foremost, they were instructed to tell the king of France, that if a treaty
were signed, the United States would never form an allegiance with Great
Britain and, if war between France and Great Britain were ever declared, the
United States would defend France.
Sept. 26, 1777 – During the American Revolution, British
troops captured and occupied Philadelphia. They held the city until June 18,
1778.
Sept. 26, 1789 – Thomas Jefferson was appointed the first
United States Secretary of State, John Jay was appointed the first Chief
Justice of the United States, Samuel Osgood was appointed the first United
States Postmaster General, and Edmund Randolph was appointed the first United
States Attorney General.
Sept. 26, 1792 – Irish-New Zealand explorer and politician
William Hobson was born in Waterford, Ireland. He became the first Governor of
New Zealand and co-author of the Treaty of Waitangi.
Sept. 26, 1820 – American hunter and explorer Daniel Boone
died at the age of 85 at Nathan Boone's house, Femme
Osage Creek, Missouri. Boone is most famous for his exploration and
settlement of what is now Kentucky, which was then part of Virginia but on the
other side of the mountains from the settled areas. His frontier
exploits made him one of the first folk heroes of the United States.
Sept. 26, 1834 – Indian Springs Baptist Church’s petitionary
letter was presented to the Baptist Association meeting in Monroe County, Ala.
Sept. 26, 1861 – The Perry Walker Rangers, a Confederate
cavalry unit, departed Monroeville, Ala. under the command of T.H. Malden of
Monroeville.
Sept. 26, 1863 – During the Civil War, a skirmish occurred
at Hunt's Mill, near Larkinsville in Jackson County, Ala.
Sept. 26, 1864 - Confederate General Sterling Price invaded
Missouri and attacked the Union garrison near Fort Davidson at Pilot Knob. Price’s
troops captured the fort within two days and scattered the Union defenders, but
also suffered heavy losses. Some 1,000 of Price’s troops were killed or
wounded, and the Confederates gained little in the way of strategic value or
political impact.
Sept. 26, 1864 - A guerilla band of 200 gathered under
William "Bloody Bill" Anderson near the town of Centralia, Missouri.
The next morning Anderson led 30 guerillas into the town and looted the
community and terrorized residents.
Sept. 26, 1872 – The first Shriners Temple (called Mecca)
was established in New York City.
Sept. 26, 1877 - According to the West Alabamian, which was
Carrollton, Alabama's only newspaper at the time of the events, Nathaniel
Pierce was being held for murder when, on this date, an armed mob forced their
way into the jail where Pierce was being held, took him outside the city, and
killed him. (13 Alabama Ghosts)
Sept. 26, 1888 – Nobel Prize-winning poet Thomas Stearns “T.S.”
Eliot was born in St. Louis, Mo., where he spent the first 18 years of his
life.
Sept. 26, 1895 – The Monroe Journal reported on the brutal
murder of Conecuh County, Ala. mail carrier Silas Hobley, whose decayed corpse
was found on Sept. 16 near Belleville.
Sept. 26, 1905 – Holdings of the Bear Creek Mill Co. in
Monroe County, Ala. were sold to V.J. Herlong and the United Lumber Co.
Sept. 26, 1906 - Author Ellen Tarry was born in Birmingham,
Ala.
Sept. 26-27, 1906 – Fort McRee on Perdido Key across
Pensacola Pass from Fort Pickens was struck by a hurricane that destroyed most
of the newer structures erected at Fort McRee since 1898.
Sept. 26, 1908 - Ed Eulbach of the Chicago Cubs became the
first Major League Baseball player to pitch both games of a doubleheader and
win both with shutouts.
Sept. 26, 1914 – The George W. Foster Camp No. 407, United
Confederate Veterans, met in Monroeville, Ala. to elect delegates for the
upcoming state reunion in Mobile.
Sept. 26, 1919 - The St. Louis Browns defeated the New York
Yankees 6-2 in a game that lasted 55 minutes. The game was the second game of a
doubleheader.
Sept. 26, 1930 – H.P. Lovecraft completed “The Whisperer in
Darkness,” which was originally published in the August 1931 issue of Weird
Tales.
Sept. 26, 1934 - The RMS Queen Mary was launched. After the
ocean liner was permanently docked in Long Beach, Calif., reports of ghosts and
paranormal activity emerged. The most haunted section of the ship is said to be
the engine room where a young sailor was crushed to death.
Sept. 26, 1957 – Future Major League first baseman and Leroy
native Kelvin Orlando Moore was born. He would go on to play three seasons for
the Oakland A’s.
Sept. 26, 1957 – Lyeffion High School was scheduled to open
their 1957 football season against Beatrice High School at Lyeffion, but that
game was not played because the flu “laid low about half of the Eagle squad.”
Sept. 26, 1958 – Alabama baseball great Virgil Trucks, then
a pitcher for the New York Yankees, appeared in his final Major League Baseball
game.
Sept. 26, 1962 - Maury Wills of the Los Angeles Dodgers
became the first player to steal 100 bases in a season. He ended the season
with 104.
Sept. 26, 1969 – Air Force A1C Michael David Gunnels of
Andalusia, Ala. was killed in action in Vietnam.
Sept. 26, 1969 – “Abbey Road,” the last recorded album by The
Beatles, was released.
Sept. 26, 1971 – Marine Sgt. Charles Wayne Turberville, 21,
of Finchburg, Ala. was killed while on duty at the American Embassy in Phnom
Penhm, Cambodia during a Khmer Rouge terrorist attack. Born on July 17, 1950,
he graduated from Monroe County High School, joined the Marines and became a
member of the prestigious Marine Security Guard Battalion. He was buried at
Bryant Cemetery at Finchburg.
Sept. 26, 1971 - Baltimore Orioles pitcher Jim Palmer won
his 20th game of the year, becoming the fourth Orioles pitcher to win 20 games
in the 1971 season. This made the 1971 Orioles pitching staff the first since
that of the 1920 Chicago White Sox to field four 20-game winners. The other
20-game winners were Dave McNally, Mike Cuellar and Pat Dobson.
Sept. 26, 1972 – Conecuh County, Ala. Superitendent of
Education Harvey G. Pate resigned and was replaed by Wayne Pope, who was
appointed to fill Pate’s unexpired term by the Conecuh County Board of
Education.
Sept. 26, 1974 – The Evergreen Courant reported that two
large snakes were killed in former Evergreen (Ala.) Mayor Coy Harper’s yard in
the same day. Policeman Robert Taylor killed a 4-1/2 foot long rattlesnake
(with 14 rattles) during the afternoon. Later that day, Orbie Mosley killed
another rattlesnake that was five-feet long (with 10 rattles and a button) in
the same yard.
Sept. 26, 1980 – The undefeated Lyeffion High School Yellow
Jackets, under head coach Roger Pritchard, kept their record perfect by beating
Excel, 26-6, in Lyeffion, Ala. This was Lyeffion’s first win over Excel in 18
years, and Ricky Gill was the leading rusher for Lyeffion with 71 yards. Donald
Lee completed four of 11 pass attempts for 88 yards and two scores. Roosevelt
Mixon played an inspired game as he had nine solo tackles and 11 assists. Other
standout Lyeffion players in that game included Jeff Baggett, Bobby Blount,
Mack Dailey, Floyd McNeil, Leoudis Mims, Jess Mixon, Howard Johnson, Tim
Searcy, Ardell Taylor and Freddie Taylor. Tim Bowen was Excel’s quarterback.
Sept. 26, 1981 - Nolan Ryan of the Houston Astros became the
first player to pitch five no-hitters with a 5-0 victory over the Los Angeles
Dodgers.
Sept. 26, 1987 – Conecuh County native Thomas Watson Spence,
79, of Montgomery passed away in a Montgomery, Ala. hospital. He was a former
Macon County Superintendent of Education and former sales representative for
Scott-Forman Book Co.
Sept. 26, 1991 – Fonde Melton, 43, took the oath of office
for his second term as Monroe County, Ala. tax assessor. Probate Judge Otha Lee
Biggs administered the oath. Melton’s official six-year term in office began on
Oct. 1, 1991 when state and county offices opened their new fiscal year.
Sept. 26, 1998 - Mark McGwire hit home runs 67 and 68 for
the season.
Sept. 26, 1998 - Dennis Eckersly of the Boston Red Sox
appeared in his 1,071st game.
Sept. 26, 2002 – Weather reporter Harry Ellis reported 1.18
inches of rain in Evergreen, Ala.
Sept. 26, 2006 - Facebook was opened to everyone at least
13 years or older with a valid email address.
Sept. 26, 2012 - The National Football League and the NFL
Referees Association reached an agreement to end an ongoing referee lockout. On
June 4, 2012, the NFL had announced it would be hiring replacement officials
after a failed attempts to resolve a labor dispute.
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