Charles Dawes |
Aug. 27, 1770 – Philosopher Georg Hegel was born in
Stuttgart.
Aug. 27, 1776 - British forces
under General William Howe and his brother, Admiral Richard viscount Howe,
defeated Patriot forces under General George Washington at the Battle of Brooklyn
Heights in New York.
Aug. 27, 1809 - Hannibal Hamlin, the 15th Vice President of
the United States, who served under President Abraham Lincoln during the Civil
War, was born in Paris, Maine.
Aug. 27, 1846 – Samuel G. Portis was commissioned as Monroe
County, Alabama’s Sheriff.
Aug. 27, 1856 – R. Hunley Agee was born at Perdue Hill, Ala.
He later became the president of the R.H.&W.C. Agee Grocery Co. and one of
Selma’s leading businessmen. He served as a member of Selma’s city council and
as city tax assessor for two years.
Aug. 27, 1858 - The first cabled
news dispatch was sent and was published by "The New York Sun"
newspaper. The story was about the peace demands of England and France being
met by China.
Aug. 27, 1859 – Petroleum was
discovered in Titusville, Pennsylvania leading to the world's first
commercially successful oil well. It's been called "the most important oil
well ever drilled" because it marked the beginning of the modern petroleum
age. Petroleum had been discovered elsewhere, of course, but this was the first
well successfully drilled in search of the stuff.
Aug. 27, 1861 – During the Civil
War, a skirmish was fought at the Antietam Iron Works in Maryland.
Aug. 27, 1861 – During the Civil
War, a skirmish was fought at Ball’s Crossroad, Va.
Aug. 27, 1861 – During the Civil
War, King Kamehameha IV announced that his nation, Hawaii, would observe
neutrality in the hostilities. This simplified matters for Pacific naval
operations of both sides, but had little diplomatic effect.
Aug. 27, 1861 - Union ships sailed into Cape Hatteras, North
Carolina, beginning a two-day operation to secure the area for the Federals and
denying the Confederates an important outlet to the Atlantic. The capture of
Cape Hatteras was an important victory for the Union, especially after the
disaster at the First Battle of Bull Run, Virginia, one month earlier. It also
gave the Union a toehold on the North Carolina coast, and it sealed an
important outlet to the Atlantic.
Aug. 27, 1862 – During the Civil War, a skirmish occurred at
Bridgeport, Alabama.
Aug. 27, 1862 – During the Civil War, Fort McCook was attacked at Battle Creek, Tennessee and the Federals burned the fort and retreated.
Aug. 27, 1862 – During the Civil War, skirmishes were fought near Kossuth, Mississippi; near Cumberland Gap, Murfreesborough, Reynolds Station, near Pulaski, and Woodbury, Tennessee; and at Buckland Bridge (Broad Run,) Bull Run Bridge, Kettle Run (near Bristoe Station,) Salem, and Waterford, Virginia
Aug. 27, 1862 – During the Civil War, General John Pope was in deep, deep trouble and didn’t know it. He did know that he had suddenly lost communication with Washington because Fitzhugh Lee had cut the telegraph wires in Manassas Junction. Since he was in town waiting for his father (Robert E. Lee) Fitz decided he might as well send the tons of supplies he had captured at the railroad depot south instead of north, and burn what couldn’t be carried. Pope on this day moved north, thinking he had the younger Lee trapped at the old Bull Run battlefield, and that George McClellan would soon be arriving to help. Other generals would be arriving, all right, but their names were Lee, Longstreet, and Jackson.
Aug. 27, 1863 – During the Civil War, skirmishes were fought with Indians at Fort Bowie in the Arizona Territory; at Bayou Meto, Arkansas; in Carter County and at Clark’s Neck, in Lawrence County, Kentucky; at Mount Pleasant and near Vicksburg, Mississippi; near Shellmound, Tennessee; at Weaverville and Little Washington, Virginia; and at Balls Mill and Beverly, West Virginia. A cavalry skirmish was also fought at Edward’s Ferry, Maryland.
Aug. 27, 1864 – During the Civil War, skirmishes were fought near Pine Bluff and Fayette, Arkansas; at Owensborough, Kentucky; and at Duffield’s Station and Mutter’s Hill, West Virginia.
Aug. 27, 1864 – During the Civil War, a 10-day Federal operation began, encompassing Little Rock, Devall’s Bluff, Searcy, Fairview and Augusta, Arkansas.
Aug. 27, 1864 – During the Civil War, the project to completely surround Atlanta, Ga., was nearing completion on this day. General William Tecumseh Sherman had pretty much had his way with the city since the Battle of Atlanta more than a month before. With every step from Peachtree Creek to Ezra Church to this day, the Federal Armies of the Cumberland, the Ohio and the Tennessee would attack, the defenders would retreat, and General Hood would blame General Hardee for one lapse or another. The final assault was nearing on this day as Sherman launched the assault on the Macon & Western Railroad lines. The loss of the final supply route would force Hood to surrender, die--or evacuate.
Aug. 27, 1864 – During the Civil War, a Federal operation began against Oywhee Indians near Fort Boise in the Idaho Territory.
Aug. 27, 1865 - Charles Dawes, the 30th U.S. Vice President,
who served under President Calvin Coolidge, was born in Marietta, Ohio.
Aug. 27, 1871 – Novelist Theodore Dreiser was born in Terre
Haute, Indiana. He’s the author of several novels, most notably “Sister Carrie” (1900) and “An American Tragedy” (1925).
Aug. 27, 1881
– The Georgia hurricane made landfall near Savannah, Georgia, resulting in an
estimated 700 deaths.
Aug. 27, 1883
– During what is now known as the “Eruption of Krakatoa,” four enormous
explosions destroyed the island of Krakatoa and caused years of climate change.
Aug. 27, 1893
– The Sea Islands hurricane struck the United States near Savannah, Georgia,
killing an estimated 1,000-2,000 people.
Aug. 27, 1899 – Novelist C.S. Forester was born Cecil Smith
in Cairo, Egypt.
Aug. 27, 1902 – The Evergreen Courant reported that Manager
Thos. Johns of the Telephone Exchange, with his family, had moved into the
residence in front of the Evergreen Baptist church.
Aug. 27, 1902 – The Evergreen Courant reported that Mack
Binion, the young son of E.M. Binion, had a very bad accident the previous week
by being gored by one of his father’s cows, its horns lacerating the flesh
between the knee and hip. At press time, the boy was doing “very well.”
Aug. 27, 1902 – The Evergreen Courant reported that Rev.
A.G. Mosley, pastor of the Evergreen Baptist church, was expected to return to
Evergreen and begin his regular services on the first Sunday in September.
Aug. 27, 1908 - Lyndon B. Johnson, the 36th President of the
United States, was born in Stonewall, Texas.
Aug. 27, 1912 – The character of Tarzan, King of the Apes,
came to life for the first time in an All-Story Magazine story, “Tarzan of the
Apes: A Romance of the Jungle” by Edgar Rice Burroughs.
Aug. 27, 1914 – Brewton and Monroeville played a baseball
double header in Brewton, Ala. Brewton won the first game, 3-2, and Monroeville
won the second game, 1-0.
Aug. 27, 1915 – Uncle Jake Franklin, who lived near Brooklyn,
died and was believed to have been 107 years old.
Aug. 27, 1916 - A “deplorable homicide” occurred on this
Sunday night near the camp of the Alabama Turpentine Co. at Megargel in which
Willie Whisenhant was shot and killed by Hiram N. Dilburn. Dilburn was warden
of the state convicts employed at the camp while Whisenhant was an employee of
the turpentine company. Some misunderstanding arose between the two men over
the time or manner of working the convicts and hard feelings were aroused over
the matter. It was said that Dilburn went to the boarding place of Whisenhant
late on Sunday evening and angry words were exchanged. The two men walked a
short distance from the house where the difficulty was renewed, culminating in
the shooting. Dilburn was jailed in Monroeville.
Aug. 27, 1921 - The owner of Acme Packing Company bought a
pro football team for Green Bay, Wisc. J.E. Clair paid tribute to those who
worked in his plant by naming the team the Green Bay Packers.
Aug. 27, 1921 – The British installed the son of Sharif
Hussein bin Ali (leader of the Arab Revolt of 1916 against the Ottoman Empire)
as King Faisal I of Iraq.
Aug. 27, 1929 – Author, dramatist and songwriter Ira Levin
was bon in New York City.
Aug. 27, 1937 - The movie “Dead
End,” screenplay by Alabama author Lillian Hellman, was released.
Aug. 27, 1938 – Phyllis Newcombe, 22, died after
spontaneously combusting in front of numerous witnesses around midnight during
a dance at the Chelmsford Shire Hall in England.
Aug. 27, 1940 – Preseason football practice began at Monroe
County High School under coach J.E. Williams. MCHS’s 1940 schedule was as
follows: Oct. 4, v. Thomasville; Oct. 11, at Atmore; Oct. 18, v. Grove Hill;
Oct. 25, v. Frisco City; Nov. 1, Open; Nov. 8, at Georgiana; Nov. 15, at
Greenville; Nov. 22, v. Brewton.
Aug. 27, 1942 – The Evergreen Courant reported that
construction of the Halso Mill Bridge over Pigeon Creek on Oaky Streak Road in
Butler County, 10 miles southwest of Greenville, had been completed. At 920
feet, the bridge was the longest bridge in the Butler County. It was 20-1/2
feet wide and rested on 300 pilings and was constructed of creosoted timbers.
Aug. 27, 1943 - The USS Eldridge was officially commissioned
with Lieutenant C. R. Hamilton, USNR, in command.
Aug. 27, 1943 - A movie version of Alabama author Lillian
Hellman's play “Watch on the Rhine”
was released.
Aug. 27, 1949 – Jeff Cook, who is best known as one of the
founding members of the country music group Alabama, was born in Fort Payne,
Ala.
Aug. 27, 1950 - The New York
Yankees honored sportscaster Mel Allen with "Mel Allen Day" and other
awards including a $10,000 cash prize. The play-by-play announcer for the Yankees
for 25 years was born was born Melvin Israel in Johns (Jefferson County) in
February 1913. In 1937, Allen left Alabama for a successful audition with the
Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS) in New York, taking his father's middle name
as his new on-air last name when the network suggested that he change his name
to something "less Jewish." He took the job with the Yankees that
made him famous in 1939.
Aug. 27, 1953 – Inverness, Ala. native Billy Hitchcock
appeared in his final Major League Baseball game, taking the field one last
time for the Detroit Tigers.
Aug. 27, 1955 – The first edition of the “Guinness Book of World
Records” was printed.
Aug. 27, 1964 – Baldwin County High School principal C.V.
Daniels announced that Vance McCrory of Frisco City had been named assistant
coach and science teacher at Baldwin County High School in Bay Minette, Ala.
Aug. 27, 1964
– South Vietnamese junta leader Nguyễn Khánh entered into a triumvirate
power-sharing arrangement with rival generals Trần Thiện Khiêm and Dương Văn
Minh, who had both been involved in plots to unseat Khánh.
Aug. 27, 1969 – Alabama native Oscar Gamble made his Major
League Baseball debut for the Chicago Cubs.
Aug. 27, 1970 - Vice President Spiro Agnew met with South Vietnamese president Nguyen Van Thieu in Saigon. In a speech at Ton Son Nhut air base, Agnew praised the South Vietnamese people for suffering “so much in freedom’s cause” and promised that “there will no lessening of U.S. support.” Meanwhile, MACV (Military Assistance Command Vietnam) reported that 52 Americans died and 358 were wounded during the week August 16-22, the lowest casualty toll since the week of December 3, 1966.
Aug. 27, 1972 - In the heaviest bombing in four years, U.S. aircraft flattened North Vietnamese barracks near Hanoi and Haiphong as part of ongoing Operation Linebacker I, part of President Nixon’s response to the NVA Easter Offensive. Planes also hit bridges on the northeast railroad line to China. In an associated action, four U.S. ships raided the Haiphong port area after dark, shelling to within two miles of the city limits. As the U.S. ships withdrew from the area, the cruiser USS Newport News sank one of two North Vietnamese patrol boats in pursuit, and destroyer USS Rowan set the other on fire.
Aug. 27, 1976 – In Charles Branum’s debut as Evergreen High
School’s head football coach, Evergreen lost to W.S. Neal, 19-0, in East
Brewton. Tony Rogers led the offense and the defense with nine solos and five
assists.
Aug. 27, 1976 – Actress Sarah Chalke was born in Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.
Aug. 27, 1977 - The Sparta Academy Warriors were scheduled
to open their 1977 football season in Evergreen on this Saturday night at
Stuart-McGehee Field. Kickoff was set for eight o’clock against their
traditional rival, the Greenville Academy Tornadoes. Head Coach Mike Bledsoe
and assistant “Bo” Owens stated that their squad of 21 had been working hard
and showing lots of enthusiasm.
Aug. 27, 1981 – Mike Qualls’ long-running “From the
Sidelines” sports column made its first appearance in The Monroe Journal.
Aug. 27, 1982 - Oakland Athletics outfielder Rickey
Henderson stole his 119th base of the year, breaking Hall of Famer Lou Brock's
1979 record for stolen bases in a season.
Aug. 27, 1985 – “Claiborne-Murphy Bridge” at Claiborne,
which opened to traffic in October 1930, was demolished, replaced by more
modern bridge.
Aug. 27, 1986 – Excel’s Scott Bell played offensive tackle
for the University of Alabama in the Tide’s 16-10 win over Ohio State in the “Kickoff
Classic” in New York City. Between his careers at Excel and Alabama, he played
offensive tackle at Miss. Delta Jr. College, where he was named to the
Mississippi Junior College Conference All-State Football Team in 1985.
Aug. 27, 1986 - Nolan Ryan of the Houston Astros earned his
250th career win against the Chicago Cubs.
Aug. 27, 1990 – Conecuh County public schools were scheduled
to open for the first day of classes for students. Steve Coker was Conecuh
County’s Superintendent of Education.
Aug. 27, 1990 - The U.S. State Department ordered the
expulsion of 36 Iraqi diplomats. Fifty-two Americans also reached Turkey after
leaving Iraq, and three young American men were detained by the Iraqis.
Aug. 27, 1992 – The Evergreen Courant reported that the 1992
Sparta Academy Warriors would have big shoes to fill, trying to better the
record of 1991’s state runner-up championship team. According to Head Coach
Mike Bledsoe, 1992 would be a “rebuilding year” for the Warriors. The Warriors
were to begin their quest for glory on Fri., Aug. 28, in Luverne, facing off
against the Cougars of Crenshaw Christian Academy. Joining Coach Bledsoe on the
coaching staff were Headmaster David Clanton and assistant coach Michael
Bledsoe.
Aug. 27, 1992 – The Evergreen Courant reported that Shane
Lavigne, the son of Mrs. Joyce Lavigne Harper of Evergreen, was the recipient
of the 1992 Wendell Hart Scholarship. This prestigious award was announced
Tues., Aug. 25, by the scholarship committee. Shane was a graduate of Hillcrest
High School where he was a member of the Aerospace Club, Student Government
Association and Agri-business. He planned to attend Troy State University in
the fall where he planned to pursue a degree in pre-engineering.
Aug. 27, 1994 - The largest mass
balloon release --a staggering 1,592,744 balloons-- was staged by Disney Home
Video in Wilts, UK.
Aug. 27, 2003 – Mars made its closest approach to Earth in
nearly 60,000 years, passing 34,646,418 miles distant.
Aug. 27, 2007 - Michael Vick, a star quarterback for the
Atlanta Falcons, formally pleaded guilty before a Richmond, Va., judge to a
federal felony charge related to running a dogfighting ring.
Aug. 27, 2011
– Hurricane Irene struck the United States east coast, killing 47 and causing
an estimated $15.6 billion in damage.
Aug. 27, 2014 – Former Conecuh County Superintendent of
Education, principal, teacher and coach Walter B. Hudson Jr. of Evergreen
passed away at the age of 85 at West Florida Regional Medical Center in
Pensacola, Fla. A native of Louisville, Ala., he served in Japan with the U.S.
Air Force. He was buried at Magnolia Cemetery in Evergreen.
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