May 20, 685 – The Battle of Dun Nechtain was fought between
a Pictish army under King Bridei III and the invading Northumbrians under King
Ecgfrith, who were decisively defeated.
May 20, 1497 – John Cabot set sail from Bristol, England, on
his ship Matthew looking for a route to the west (other documents
give a May 2 date).
May 20, 1498 – Portuguese explorer Vasco da Gama discovered
the sea route to India when he arrived at Kozhikode (previously known as
Calicut), India.
May 20, 1506 – Italian explorer Christopher Columbus, who is
credited with discovering the Americas, passed away in poverty at the age of 54
in Valladolid, Crown of Castile, Spain.
May 20, 1520 - Hernando Cortez defeated Spanish troops that
had been sent to punish him in Mexico.
May 20, 1520 – The massacre at the festival of Tóxcatl took
place during the Fall of Tenochtitlan, resulting in the turn of the Aztecs
against the Spanish.
May 20, 1570 – Cartographer Abraham Ortelius issued the
“Theatrum Orbis Terrarum,” the first modern atlas.
May 20, 1609 – Shakespeare's sonnets were first published in
London, perhaps illicitly, by the publisher Thomas Thorpe.
May 20, 1774 - Britain's Parliament passed the Coercive Acts
to punish the American colonists for their increasingly anti-British behavior.
May 20, 1774 - The Parliament of Great Britain gave royal
assent to the Massachusetts Government Act. The act abrogated the existing
colonial charter of the Province of Massachusetts Bay and gave its
royally-appointed governor wide-ranging powers.
May 20, 1774 - The Parliament of Great Britain enacted the
Administration of Justice Act (Act for the Impartial Administration of
Justice). The Act granted a change of venue to another British colony or Great
Britain in trials of officials charged with a crime growing out of their
enforcement of the law or suppression of riots.
May 20, 1775 - North Carolina became the first colony to
declare its independence. This is the date that is on the George state flag
even though the date of this event has been questioned.
May 20, 1776 – American-Canadian explorer Simon Fraser was
born in Mapletown, New York. Fraser became a
British fur trader and an explorer who charted much of what is now the Canadian
province of British Columbia (B.C.). He also built the first European
settlement in B.C.
May 20, 1778 - In Pennsylvania, the Battle of Barren Hill
took place. British forces made an unsuccessful attempt to trap Continentals
that were defending Valley Forge.
May 20, 1799 – Novelist Honore de Balzac was born in Tours,
France.
May 20, 1802
– By the Law of 20 May 1802, Napoleon Bonaparte reinstated slavery in the French
colonies, revoking its abolition in the French Revolution.
May 20, 1834 – Marquis de LaFayette, who visited Claiborne,
Ala. on April 1825, passed away at the age of 76 in Paris, France.
May 20, 1839 – Mitchell Burford Salter was born near
Evergreen, Ala. On April 20, 1861 in Evergreen, Salter enlisted as a private in
Co. E, 4th Alabama Infantry. His right arm was amputated at the Battle of
Gettysburg, and the bone from his arm is on display in the National Museum of
Health and Medicine in Washington, D.C. After his discharge, he went to work
for the U.S. government gathering taxes and continued that work until the war
ended. Salter died in 1920 and is buried in Old Evergreen Cemetery.
May 20, 1860 – Noah Dallas Peacock (Lewis Lavon Peacock’s
older brother) married 20-year-old Martha Caroline Bridges at Rocky Head, Ala.
May 20, 1861 - North Carolina became the 11th state to
secede from the Union.
May 20, 1861 – During the Civil War, the state of Kentucky
proclaimed its neutrality, which would last until Sept. 3 when Confederate
forces entered the state.
May 20, 1861 - During the Civil War, the capital of the
Confederacy was moved from Montgomery, Ala. to Richmond, Va.
May 20, 1861 – During the Civil War, an act was committed on this day which, in later days, would no doubt set off a media frenzy of unprecedented proportions, not to mention a legal and constitutional crisis. At a prearranged time (in the middle of the afternoon) every U.S. Marshall in the North went to pay a visit on the local telegraph office. There the marshals confiscated every single telegram which had been sent for the past year. The intent was to ferret out spies or suspicious patterns of messages.
May 20, 1862 - The Union Congress passed the Homestead Act
of 1862. The act allowed an adult over the age of 21, male or female, to claim
160 acres of land from the public domain. Eligible persons had to cultivate the
land and improve it by building a barn or house, and live on the claim for five
years, at which time the land became theirs with a $10 filing fee.
May 20, 1863 – During the Civil War, skirmishes were fought at Fort Gibson in the Indian Territory and at Salem and Collierville, Tenn. The Union demonstration against Kinston, North Carolina began. The siege of Vicksburg, Mississippi entered its second day.
May 20, 1864 – During the Civil War, at the Battle of Ware
Bottom Church, which was part of the Virginia Bermuda Hundred Campaign, 10,000
troops fought in this Confederate victory.
May 20, 1864 – During the Civil War, skirmishes were fought at Crooked River, Fla. and at Greenville, Miss.
May 20, 1864 – During the Civil War, Union Lt. Col. Joseph Bailey had rescued the waterborne side of the Red River Expedition earlier when he built a dam which raised the water level and allowed his ships to pass some rapids. On this day, he helped out the army of Union Gen. Nathaniel Banks, rigging a bridge out of a large number of steamships anchored and lashed side-by-side. Once the armies passed over this walkway to the side of the river they were officially supposed to be on, the ill-fated Red River Expedition was officially over at last.
May 20, 1864 - President Lincoln signed the legislation creating the Official Records.
May 20, 1865 – During the Civil War, skirmishes were fought near Pawnee Rock, Kansas; near Longwood, Missouri; and at Deer Creek, Wyoming.
May 20, 1871 – The people of unincorporated Greenville, Ala.
voted on this day to accept a charter granted by the legislature on March 9,
1871 to incorporate the City of Greenville. John B. Lewis was elected the first
Mayor of the City of Greenville.
May 20, 1883 - The
Krakatoa volcano in the Sunda Strait of Indonesia began erupting on this date.
May 20, 1894 - The first bloodshed
of the 1894 miners' strike occurred when a strike breaker was killed by
striking miners near Birmingham, Ala. In their first show of industrial
strength and discontent, 8,000 Alabama miners left the job in April 1894. The
strike was over by August, as the powerful coal companies prevailed with the help
of the State Militia and leased convicts.
May 20, 1905 - The George W. Foster
Camp, United Confederate Veterans, held its annual meeting in the Monroe County
Courthouse on this Saturday afternoon in Monroeville, Ala. Capt. Thomas J.
Emmons was re-elected commander, and Capt. Thomas S. Wiggins was chosen
adjutant. Thomas A. Nettles and J.A. Grace were picked as delegates to the
annual reunion on June 14-16 at Louisville, Ky., and J.I. Watson and N.J.
Stallworth were picked as alternates.
May 20, 1909 – Conecuh County Sheriff J.F. Irwin returned
from East St. Louis, where he went to arrest a man named “Milne,” who was
wanted in Conecuh County for murder.
May 20, 1915 - A movie version of Alabama author Augusta
Jane Evans Wilson's book “God's Witness”
was released.
May 20, 1916 - The Saturday Evening Post published its first
cover with a Norman Rockwell painting, “Boy with Baby Carriage.”
May 20, 1916 - The small town of
Codell, Kansas was struck by a tornado. But what was truly incredible was
Codell was hit by a tornado on the same date in 1917, and yet again in 1918.
Further, all three storms came through around the same time-- in the early
evening.
May 20, 1919 – During World War I, Army Pvt. George Lee of
Evergreen, Ala. “died from disease.”
May 20, 1920 – Montreal radio station XWA broadcast the
first regularly scheduled radio programming in North America.
May 20, 1921 – National Baseball Hall of Fame pitcher Hal
Newhouser was born in Detroit, Mich. He went on to pitch for the Detroit Tigers
and the Cleveland Indians. He was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1992.
May 20, 1922 - Author James Ralph Johnson was born in Fort
Payne, Ala.
May 20, 1922 - Babe Ruth and Bob Meusel returned to the New
York Yankees lineup. They had been suspended on Oct. 16, 1921.
May 20, 1927 – Pro Football Hall of Fame wide receiver and
defensive end Bud Grant was born in Superior, Wisc. He went on to play for the
University of Minnesota and the Philadelphia Eagles and he also coached the
Minnesota Vikings.
May 20, 1929 – Lyeffion High School was scheduled to hold
its graduation exercises, and Dr. J.B. Hobdy, director of vocational education,
was to deliver the graduating address. J.T. Dykes was Lyeffion’s principal.
May 20, 1932 – Amelia Earhart took off from Newfoundland to
begin the world's first solo nonstop flight across the Atlantic Ocean by a
female pilot, landing in Ireland the next day.
May 20, 1933 - The FBI's hunt for Bonnie and Clyde began
when the United States Commissioner at Dallas, Texas issued a warrant against
Clyde Barrow and Bonnie Parker for interstate transportion of a stolen vehicle.
May 20, 1935 – During an Evergreen City Council meeting in
the office of Mayor C.A. Jones on this Monday night, traffic policeman Harry L.
Riley was promoted to Chief of Police to replace J.C. Grant, who had resigned
earlier that day to accept a job with the State Highway Department.
May 20, 1937 – The Monroe Journal reported that a large
crowd attended the graduation exercises of the eighth grade of Goodway School,
held in the school auditorium. The program was as follows: Salutatory,
Cleveland Jones; Class Will, Burnett Lane; Class Prophecy, Hazel Booker;
Valedictory, Evelyn White; Graduation Address, Rev. Cameron; Presentation of
Diplomas; Class Song, Graduating Class. The members of the eighth-grade class
were Burnett Lane, Luvern Coker, Evelyn White, Vera Nell Morris, Iva Wiggins,
Mary Spears, Doris Matheny, Cleveland Jones and Hazel Booker.
May 20, 1937 – The Monroe Journal reported that the Rural
Electrification Administration had advised that the contract for the
construction of distribution lines in Monroe County had been approved. The
transmission line was to be extended from Baldwin County into the southwest
corner of Monroe County and serve homes between Uriah and the Alabama River.
May 20, 1941 - Taft Wright of the Chicago White Sox set an
American League record for 13 consecutive games with RBIs.
May 20, 1942 – During a storm, three military planes crashed
in Conecuh County, Ala. and five more crashed near Atmore, Ala. enroute from
Crestview, Fla. to Maxwell Field in Montgomery, resulting in five deaths. All
of the planes were piloted by British cadets who were assigned to Maxwell Field
for training.
May 20, 1942 - Lt. Laula M. Middleton, son of Mrs. Evelyn
Middleton of Fairview, Ala., was awarded his “war wings” at Foster Field, Texas
after a period of intensive training since Nov. 8, 1941. Upon receiving his
wings, he was immediately transferred to Orlando, Fla. for advanced training.
May 20, 1943 – The Evergreen Courant reported that, after
graduating recently from the officer candidate school at Fort Sill, Okla.,
Winton D. McIntyre of Evergreen, Ala. was commissioned a second lieutenant in
the field artillery. He was assigned to Camp Gruber, Okla.
May 20, 1946 – English-born poet W.H. Auden became a U.S.
citizen.
May 20, 1946 - Claude Passeau made his first error since
September 21, 1941. He set the pitcher's fielding record at 273 consecutive
errorless chances.
May 20, 1947 – The first organizational meeting of the
Monroeville Kiwanis Club was held at the Tally-Ho Restaurant in Monroeville,
Ala. and Owen Ivey was elected as the club’s first president.
May 20, 1950 – Seven people were killed in a two-vehicle
accident on this Saturday morning around 6:15 a.m. on the Loree Road, just
inside the city limits of Evergreen, Ala. Those killed included Jay Sawyer, 30,
of Frisco City; Leonard Bryant, 21, of Frisco City; Walter Johnson, 26, of
Frisco City; James Johnson, 25, of Frisco City; and General Rodgers, 33, of
Monroeville; Mario Salter of Evergreen; and Mary Bozeman.
May 20, 1953 - Using a phrase that would haunt Americans in later years – “Now we can see [success in Vietnam] clearly, like light at the end of a tunnel” – Gen. Henri Navarre assumed command of French Union Forces in Vietnam. The French had been fighting a bloody war against communist insurgents in Vietnam since 1946. The insurgents, the Viet Minh, were fighting for independence and the French were trying to reassert their colonial rule in Indochina.
May 20, 1959 - The New York Yankees were in last place for
the first time since May 25, 1940.
May 20, 1961 - The Freedom Riders arrived at the Greyhound
bus terminal in Montgomery, Ala. where they are attacked by an angry mob. The
Freedom Ride, an integrated bus trip from Washington D.C., through the Deep
South, was formed to test the 1960 Supreme Court decision prohibiting
segregation in bus and train terminal facilities. Before reaching Montgomery,
they had already suffered violent reprisals in Anniston and Birmingham. The
Freedom Ride eventually resulted in a campaign that caused the Interstate
Commerce Commission to rule against segregated facilities in interstate travel.
May 20, 1966 – Army PFC Obie Clyde Simmons of Brewton, Ala.
was killed in action in Vietnam.
May 20, 1969
– The Battle of Hamburger Hill in Vietnam ended. After 10 days and 10 bloody
assaults, Hill 937 in South Vietnam was finally captured by U.S. and South
Vietnamese troops. The Americans who fought there cynically dubbed Hill 937
“Hamburger Hill” because the battle and its high casualty rate reminded them of
a meat grinder.
May 20, 1971 - Peter Cetera of the band Chicago was beaten
up by four men at a Chicago Cubs-Dodgers baseball game. The men objected to the
length of Cetera's hair. Cetera underwent four hours of emergency surgery.
May 20, 1976
– Major League Baseball catcher Ramón Hernández was born in Caracas, Venezuela.
He went on to play for the Oakland Athletics, the San Diego Padres, the
Baltimore Orioles, the Cincinnati Reds, the Colorado Rockies and the Los
Angeles Dodgers.
May 20, 1978 - Mavis Hutchinson, at age 53, became the first
woman to run across America. It took Hutchinson 69 days to run the 3,000 miles.
May 20, 1980 - The submarine Nautilus was designated
as a National Historic Landmark by the U.S. Secretary of the Interior.
May 20, 1980 – Evergreen, Alabama’s new park and recreation
area was officially named Evergreen Municipal Park in an action by the
Evergreen City Council during a meeting on this Tuesday night.
May 20, 1980 – At around 1:15 a.m., a tornado struck Conecuh
County, Ala., causing damage in and around Evergreen. The storm damaged the
residence of Circuit Judge Robert E.L. Key, including a pickup truck and house,
and the yards of Mabry Cook and Harry Ellis. Two businesses, Evergreen
Fertilizer & Chemical Co. and Daniels Floorcovering, also suffered damages,
and there was extensive loss from damage to timber.
May 20, 1982 – The Monroe Journal reported that the Conecuh
County Sheriff’s Department was investigating a cross-burning during the
previous week on the lawn in front of Repton High School. Deputy Sheriff James
Lambert said Repton principal David Johnson reported the cross-burning in front
of the school sign when he discovered it at the beginning of school on Wed.,
May 12. The cross was burned sometime late Tues., May 11, or early Wed., May
12, Lambert said, and although the incident appeared to be a prank, it was
under investigation.
May 20, 1984 - Roger Clemens got his first pitching victory.
May 20, 1988 - Mike Schmidt hit his 535th home run to move
into eighth place on the all-time list.
May 20, 1991 - Jeff Reardon got his 300th career pitching
save.
May 20, 1995 - Marty Cordova tied a rookie record when he
recorded home runs in five consecutive games.
May 20, 1997 - Frank Thomas of the Chicago White Sox reached
base safely for the 15th straight time.
May 20, 2005 – Don Hand became the head football coach at
Sparta Academy in Evergreen, Ala., replacing Gerry Watson.
May 20, 2006 - Barry Bonds of the San Francisco Giants tied
Babe Ruth for second place with his 714th career home run.
No comments:
Post a Comment