U.S. General Irvin McDowell |
July 21, 356 BC – The Temple of Artemis in Ephesus, one of
the Seven Wonders of the World, was destroyed by arson. The fire was set by
Herostratus, who committed the act in a quest for fame.
July 21, 1775 - Patriot minutemen in whaleboats, commanded
by Major Joseph Vose, raided Nantasket Point, also known as Little Brewster Island,
in Boston Harbor, Mass. The raiders temporarily drove off the island’s British
guard and confiscated lamps, oil, gunpowder and boats, before burning the
wooden parts of the point’s lighthouse.
July 21, 1793 –French admiral, explorer, and politician
Antoine Bruni d'Entrecasteaux died of scurvy at the age of 55, off the Hermits.
He is perhaps best known for his exploration of the Australian coast in 1792,
while searching for the La Pérouse expedition.
July 21, 1796 – Scottish poet and prominent Freemason Robert
Burns passed away at the age of 37 in Dumfries, Scotland. It is believed that
in May 1785 he wrote “Epistle to William Simson” to the William Simson
(Simpson), who eventually became a trustee at the school in Belleville, Ala.
July 21, 1861 – The First Battle of Bull Run (also known as
First Manassas) began at Manassas Junction, in Prince William County, Va., near
the city of Manassas, not far (about 30 miles) from Washington, D.C. It was the
first major battle of the U.S. Civil War, and the Confederates won the battle.
The Union Army was led by General Irvin McDowell, and Confederate forces were
led by P.T. Beauregard.
July 21, 1861 – Confederate General Thomas J. Jackson earned
the nickname "Stonewall" during the First Battle of Bull Run. During
the battle, Confederate General Barnard Elliott Bee Jr. led his Confederates to
reinforce Jackson on Henry Hill and was reported to have characterized Jackson
as “standing like a stone wall.” Bee died minutes later, but the nickname
“Stonewall” stuck as Jackson’s men held their ground.
July 21, 1861 - Nearly 400 Confederate soldiers were killed
at the First Battle of Bull Run, including six members of the Conecuh Guards -
Dr. Samuel H. Wimberly, First Sergeant Louis Gatch, First Cpl. William Thomas,
Jesse Peacock, John Robbins and James Strickland. Members of the Conecuh Guards
known to have been wounded in the battle included 1st. Lt. Archibald D.
McInnis, 2nd Lt. John G. Guice, First Sergeant Andrew J. Mosley (wounded in
head and arm), Sgt. James M. Andrews (survived war and returned to Conecuh
County), Fourth Cpl. Joseph A. Thomas, Blake Beard (wounded and honorably
discharged), J.B. Bonnett (wounded and honorably discharged), John Mason
(dropped from roll in 1862 and returned to live in Conecuh County), Evander
McIver (wounded in two places, honorably discharged in September 1861 and moved
to Texas after war), Owen Perry (honorably discharged, rejoined the army later,
was captured and died in prison), and Theodosius Turk (honorably discharged
under act of Congress in 1862). Capt. Pinckney D. Bowles had his canteen
shattered at First Bull Run by a rifle ball fired by Union troops. Casualties
at Bull Run shocked the nation. The Union count came to 2,800, including 460
killed, and the Confederates had 1,900, with nearly 400 dead. Although future
battles would make these numbers appear small, they were a wake-up call to a
public, in both the North and the South, unprepared for such a bloody conflict.
July 21, 1861 – During the Civil War, skirmishes were fought with Indians on the South Ford of the Eel River in California and at Charlestown, West Virginia. A Federal operation also began between Springfield and Forsyth, Missouri.
July 21, 1862 - Former U.S. President Martin Van Buren, who
served as the nation’s eighth president between 1837 and 1841, slipped into a
coma. Three days later, he passed away.
July 21, 1862 – During the Civil War, skirmishes were fought around Nashville, Tennessee and at Luray, Virginia.
July 21, 1862 – During the Civil War, in a tersely worded telegram, Braxton Bragg informed Jefferson Davis that he would move his army in force from Tupelo, Mississippi to Chattanooga, Tennessee.
July 21 1863 – During the Civil War, skirmishes were fought at Street's Ferry, North Carolina; and at Manassas Gap, Wapping Heights, Snicker’s Gap, and Gaines’ Cross Road and Chester Gap, Virginia.
July 21, 1864 – A four-day Federal operation from Barrancas,
Fla. toward Pollard, Ala. began with skirmishes at Camp Gonzales, Fla. and near
Pollard, Ala.
July 21, 1864 – Col. Samuel Adams, an attorney, educator and
state representative who lived in both Conecuh and Butler counties, was shot
through the breast and killed instantly while superintending the erection of
fortifications near Atlanta while serving with the 33rd Alabama. His remains
were returned to Greenville, Ala., where he was buried.
July 21, 1864 – During the Civil War, an engagement occurred at Bald Hill, Georgia. Skirmishes were also fought on the Atchafalaya River in Louisiana; and near Carthage and another near Plattsburg, Missouri.
July 21, 1865 – In the market square of Springfield,
Missouri, Wild Bill Hickok shot and killed Davis Tutt in what is regarded as
the first western showdown. The two men had a falling out over a woman and a
gambling debt, and finally agreed to settle their differences in a duel. At a
distance of about 75 paces, they fired simultaneously, and Tutt’s shot went
wild, but Hickok’s hit Tutt through the heart.
July 21, 1873 – At Adair, Iowa, Jesse James and the James–Younger
Gang pulled off the first successful train robbery in the American Old West.
Tey held up the Rock Island Express and stole $3,000.
July 21, 1879 – Charles Roberts shot and killed D.W. Rankin
at Perdue Hill, Ala. That same day, Jonathan L. Marshall, a Justice of the
Peace in Monroe County, issued an arrest warrant for Roberts, who was charged
with murder. Roberts was arrested and brought before Marshall. During the
ensuing investigation, Marshall ruled that Roberts wasn’t guilty of murder, but
second-degree manslaughter instead. Marshall set Roberts’ bail at $400, which
Roberts paid and was released from custody.
July 21, 1887 – A rain of ants occurred in Nancy, France.
July 21, 1896 – The Monroe Journal announced, under the
headline “Twice-A-Week,” that beginning that week and for an “indefinite
period,” the newspaper would be published twice a week, on Tuesdays and
Fridays, “thus giving its readers the advantage of fresher news and more
carefully selected matter. During the remainder of the State campaign and until
its results is known, a lively interest will be felt in what is transpiring and
it is largely to gratify this desire that this departure is made. The subscription
price will remain at the same figure - $1 a year.”
July 21, 1896 – The Monroe Journal reported that work on the
new Methodist parsonage was progressing steadily. The timbers had been “pretty
well all cut,” and the frame was to be erected in a few days.
July 21, 1896 – The Monroe Journal reported that Mrs. Sallie
Farish (nee Dickinson) of Nellie in Wilcox County was on a visit to her mother,
the postmistress at Turnbull.
July 21, 1899 – Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist Ernest
Hemingway was born in Oak Park, Ill.
July 21, 1899 – Harold Hart Crane was born in Garrettsville,
Ohio.
July 21, 1911 – Two freight trains wrecked near Garland,
Ala. on this Thursday afternoon, leaving both engines and a number of cars
damaged. Merchandise was scattered along the tracks, but both crews escaped
without serious injuries.
July 21, 1915 – The Evergreen Courant reported that Auburn
University chemistry professor H.S. Gentry was working as the prescription
clerk at the Peoples Drug store until September, relieving J.M. Northcutt, who
had taken some time off.
July 21, 1918 – During World War I, Army Cpl. Will F.
Alexander of Georgiana, Ala. was killed in action.
July 21, 1930 - The Veterans Administration of the United
States was established.
July 21, 1932 – Evergreen’s baseball team beat Greenville,
5-4, at Black’s Field in Greenville, Ala.
July 21, 1933 – Novelist, poet and teacher John Gardner was
born in Batavia, N.Y.
July 21, 1941 – The Evergreen Courant reported that the
approval of the City of Evergreen’s contract with Alabama Power Company for the
purchase of electricity at wholesale rested with the Alabama Public Service
Commission. The PSC promised a ruling prior to Sept. 1, which was the
expiration date of the city’s contract with the Alabama Electric Cooperative.
Hearings on the contract change were held on July 14 and July 18, and the
contract change was opposed by the Southern Pine Electric Cooperative and the
Alabama Electric Cooperative.
July 21, 1943 – Poet Tess Gallagher was born in Port
Angeles, Wash.
July 21, 1944 – During World War II, Claus von Stauffenberg
and fellow conspirators were executed in Berlin, Germany, for the July 20 plot
to assassinate Adolf Hitler.
July 21, 1946 – In Amateur League Baseball, a game between
Evergreen and Uriah was rained out.
July 21, 1947 – A joint meeting of members and former
members of American Legion Post 50 and Foshee-Tranum Post 3581 V.F.W. was
scheduled to be held at Evergreen High School on this Monday night “to continue
plans and discuss ways and means for construction of a Joint Home and Club
House.”
July 21, 1954
– During the First Indochina War, the Geneva Conference partitioned Vietnam
into North Vietnam and South Vietnam.
July 21, 1959 – Elijah Jerry
"Pumpsie" Green became the first African-American to play for the
Boston Red Sox, the last team to integrate. He came in as a pinch runner for
Vic Wertz and stayed in as shortstop in a 2–1 loss to the Chicago White Sox.
July 21, 1961 – In the Evergreen
Senior League, the Indians beat the Tigers, 6-2. Standout players for the
Indians included Jimmy Weaver and Stan Coker. Standout players for the Tigers
included Willie Mack Pate, Donnie Bolton and Grady Ralls.
July 21, 1961 – In the Evergreen
Senior Baseball League, the Braves beat the Tigers, 5-4. Standout players for
the Braves included winning pitcher Ronnie Jackson. Standout players for the
Tigers included Mike Fields, Sid Lambert and Grady Ralls.
July 21, 1962 - The federal
district court in Montgomery, Ala. rejected the Alabama legislature's plan to
reapportion itself, ordering it instead to implement the court's plan. Although
Alabama's Constitution of 1901 mandated reapportionment every ten years, the
state's legislative districts had not been redrawn since 1901, with the result
that less-populated districts came to dominate the legislature in violation of
the principle of "one man/one vote."
July 21, 1965 - With Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara back from a visit to Vietnam, President Lyndon B. Johnson began a weeklong series of conferences with his civilian and military advisers on Vietnam. He also met with private citizens that he trusted during this period. Johnson appeared to be considering all the options with an open mind, but it was clear that he was leaning toward providing more combat troops to bolster the faltering South Vietnamese government.
July 21, 1967 – National Baseball
Hall of Fame first baseman Jimmie Foxx passed away in Miami, Fla. at the age of
59. During his career, he played for the Philadelphia Athletics, the Boston Red
Sox, the Chicago Cubs and the Philadelphia Phillies. He was inducted into the
Hall of Fame in 1951.
July 21, 1976 - Local weather reporter Earl Windham reported
a high of 100 degrees in Evergreen, Ala.
July 21, 1977 – The Evergreen Courant reported that work was
proceeding rapidly on the bypass road from Highway 83 North to Highway 31
South.
July 21, 1978 – The Griffin House in Arlington in Wilcox
County, Ala. was added to the Alabama Register of Landmarks and Heritage.
July 21, 1983 - The world's lowest temperature in an
inhabited location, -128.6° F, was recorded at Vostok Station, Antarctica.
July 21, 1987 – Guns N’ Roses’ debut album, “Appetite for
Destruction,” was released.
July 21, 1990 – Mobile City eliminated Monroe County by
beating them 6-1 during the South State All-Star Advanced Babe Ruth Baseball Tournament
at Patrick Henry State Junior College in Monroeville, Ala. Standout players on
Monroe County’s 16-year-old team included Nick Ackerman, Mike Bishop, Richard
Chatman, Steve Goodman, Trey Harris and Mitchell Turberville. Mobile City went
on to win the tournament by beating Mobile County, 6-1, later that day in Monroeville.
July 21, 1997 – On this Monday evening, Vince Doerr, chief
of the Ochopee, Fla. Fire Central District, told the Miami Herald that he had
seen a “brown-looking tall thing” run across the road ahead of him. He was
certain that the thing was not a bear.
July 21, 1997 - The U.S.S. Constitution, which
defended the United States during the War of 1812, set sail under its own power
for the first time in 116 years.
July 21, 2004 - White House officials were briefed on the
September 11 commission's final report. The 575-page report concluded that
hijackers exploited "deep institutional failings within our
government." The report was released to the public the next day.
July 21, 2006 - Alex Rodriguez of the New York Yankees
collected his 2,000th career hit and became the youngest player to reach the
450 home run mark.
July 21, 2007 - The seventh and last book of the Harry
Potter series, "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows," was released.
July 21, 2012 – Erden Eruç completed the first solo
human-powered circumnavigation of the world.
July 21, 2014 – “Guardians of the Galaxy” premiered in
Hollywood. It was released in theaters on Aug. 1, 2014 in the United States in
3D and IMAX 3D.
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