Rainfall (Past 24 Hours): 0.00 inches
Week to Date Rainfall: 0.60 inches
Month to Date Rainfall: 3.70 inches
Fall to Date Rainfall: 0.60 inches
Year to Date Rainfall: 45.40 inches
Notes: Today in the 274th day of 2016 and the ninth day of Fall. There are 92 days left in the year.
Readings taken at 0700 hours Central Standard Time (1300 GMT) daily,
just west of the Monroe-Conecuh County line and south of U.S. Highway
84, near Excel, Alabama, USA, in the vicinity of Lat 31.42834N Lon
87.30131W. Elevation 400 feet above sea level. CoCoRaHS Station No.
AL-MN-4, Station Name: Excel 2.5 ESE.
Friday, September 30, 2016
Thursday, September 29, 2016
BUCKET LIST UPDATE No. 298: Visited the grave of Hinchey W. Warren
Hinchey Warren grave pictured far left. |
One of the most interesting and remarkable men from Conecuh
County’s early history was Hinchey W. Warren, who was born in Burke County, Ga.
in 1787.
He moved to Conecuh County in 1818 and settled about one
mile east of Sparta, where he died years later. Warren, a War of 1812 veteran,
is said to be the great-grandfather of U.S. President Warren G. Harding and is
also rumored to have hidden a chest of gold in Shipp’s Pond during the Civil
War.
Several years ago, I read that Warren was buried in the
Warren Family Cemetery, and I presumed that this cemetery was on private
property and off limits to the public. However, a few weeks ago while at the
library in Evergreen, local historian Sherry Johnston informed me that the Warren
Family Cemetery was actually next door to New Hope Missionary Baptist Church.
In fact, Warren’s grave is just a few steps off of County Road 87, which is also
known as the Jay Villa Road.
I'd placed a visit to this grave on my "bucket list" several years ago, and last Thursday afternoon, I took a few minutes to ride down
to this church, which is a little over seven miles from downtown Evergreen, to spend a few minutes looking around this old cemetery. Records show that between
12 to 15 graves are in this graveyard, but most of them now are marked by old stones
and faint depressions in the ground.
The cemetery does contain a few marked graves, including the
grave of Hinchey W. Warren, but all of these are in bad condition. If you go
there yourself, you’ll see three slabs to the right of the remnants of an old
wrought-iron fence, and these graves are the final resting places of Warren,
his wife and son.
When I got there last Thursday, Warren’s grave was almost
entirely covered with dead leaves and sticks, but when I cleared it off, I
discovered something interesting. According to the broken slab over his grave,
he “departed this life February 28th, 1855 in the 68th
year of his age.” This pretty much blew the Civil War gold story out of the
water since Warren would have been dead six years by the time the war started
in 1861.
All of the graves in the Warren Family Cemetery are in bad
shape and are hard to read, especially the grave of Hinchey Warren. I read
somewhere that it’s been said that grave robbers damaged his grave while
looking for buried “treasure” and other supposedly hidden valuables. Whether or
not that’s true, I do not know.
Hinchey Warren did have a son named Hinchey Warren Jr., and
I considered that he may have been the Hinchey Warren who sank a chest of gold
in Shipp’s Pond to keep it from falling into Yankee hands during the Civil War.
With that in mind, I looked into records that revealed that Hinchey Warren Jr. actually
died in the 1850s, that is, well before the start of the Civil War.
I’m not sure where Hinchey Warren Jr. is buried but Hinchey
Warren’s only other son, John Quincy Adams Warren, is buried beside his father.
John Q.A. Warren, died at the age of 30 on April 4, 1856, a little over a year
after his father passed away.
Apparently, John Quincy Adams Warren was a unique character
himself, but that is a story for another day. With that said, I’ll wrap this
thing up again for another week, but, in the meantime, if you get the desire to
do some rambling on your on, you might want to check out the Warren Family
Cemetery for yourself. It’s definitely one of the more unique cemeteries that
I’ve been to in Conecuh County.
Today in History for Sept. 29, 2016
Oliver Hazard Perry Throck Morton |
Sept. 29, 1547 – Miguel de Cervantes was born near Madrid.
He is best remembered for his 1605 novel, “Don Quixote.”
Sept. 29, 1780 - British spy John
André was court-martialed, found guilty and sentenced to death by hanging.
André, a 31-year-old accomplice of Benedict Arnold, had been captured by
Patriots John Paulding, David Williams and Isaac Van Wart six days earlier on
Sept. 23, after they found incriminating papers stashed in his boot, and it was
the discovery of these papers that revealed the traitorous actions of Benedict
Arnold to the U.S. authorities. André was executed by hanging in Tappan, New
York, on Oct. 2, 1780.
Sept. 29, 1789 – The United States
Department of War first established a regular army with a strength of several
hundred men.
Sept. 29, 1789 – The 1st United States Congress adjourned.
Sept. 29, 1803 – American captain and explorer Mercator
Cooper was born in Sag Harbor, N.Y. Cooper is credited with the first formal
American visit to Tokyo, Japan and the first formal landing on the mainland
East Antarctica.
Sept. 29, 1810 – Victorian novelist Elizabeth Gaskell was
born in London. She is best remembered for her novels “Cranford” (1853), “North
and South” (1855) and “Mary Barton” (1948).
Sept. 29, 1861 - Oliver Hazard Perry Throck Morton had been elected lieutenant-governor of Indiana in 1860. After his running mate was appointed to the Senate, Morton became Governor. A staunch supporter of the Union, he had gone from having a neutral state (Kentucky) between his state and the Confederacy to having the Secessionists on his southern border. He wrote to Lincoln on this day demanding that attention be paid to this situation. Lincoln sent back sympathy but little else. Morton suspended the Indiana state legislature and used the money saved to outfit and arm Indian regiments for the Union cause. When rifles were not forthcoming Morton started a factory to make his own. Indiana furnished 150,000 troops with little use of the draft.
Sept. 29, 1861 – During the Civil War, skirmishes were
fought at Albany and Hopkinsville, Ky.
Sept. 29, 1861 – During the Civil
War, a skirmish was fought at Berlin, Md.
Sept. 29, 1861 – During the Civil
War, an affair took place at Travisville, Tenn.
Sept. 29, 1861 – During the Civil
War, an affair took place at Vanderburgh's House, Munson’s Hill, near Bailey’s
Crossroads, Va.
Sept. 29, 1862 - Union General Jefferson C. Davis mortally
wounded his commanding officer, General William Nelson, in Louisville,
Kentucky. Davis had been upset by a reprimand handed down by Nelson. After
quarreling in a hotel lobby, Nelson slapped Davis. Davis then chased him
upstairs and shot him. Davis was never court-martialed. It was thought that the
influence of Indiana Governor Oliver Morton, who was with Davis at the time of
the shooting, was instrumental in preventing a trial. Davis went on to serve
with distinction at the Battles of Stones River, Chickamauga, and Chattanooga.
Sept. 29, 1862 – During the Civil War, skirmishes were fought on the Elizabethtown Road and rear New Haven, Kentucky.
Sept. 29, 1862 – During the Civil war, a Federal cavalry expedition began from Centerville to Warrenton and Buckland Mills, Virginia.
Sept. 29, 1863 – During the Civil War, skirmishes were fought at Stirling's Plantation, near Morganza, La. and at Friendship Church and Leesburg, Tennessee.
Sept. 29, 1863 – During the Civil War, a 28-day Federal expedition began from Pilot Knob to Oregon County, Missouri and to Pochontas, Arkansas.
Sept. 29, 1864 - Union General
Ulysses S. Grant tried to break the stalemate around Richmond and Petersburg
(25 miles south of Richmond) by attacking two points along the defenses of
Confederate General Robert E. Lee. The assault against Richmond, called the
Battle of New Market Heights (Chaffin’s Farm/Fort Harrison), and the assault
against Petersburg, known as the Battle of Poplar Springs Church (or Peeble’s
Farm), were both failures. However, they did succeed in keeping pressure on Lee
and prevented him from sending reinforcements to the beleaguered Rebel General
Jubal Early, who was fighting against General Philip Sheridan in Virginia’s
Shenandoah Valley.
Sept. 29, 1864 – J.W. Daniels of the Conecuh Guards was
wounded at Fort Harrison in Richmond, Va. He returned to Conecuh County, Ala.
after the war.
Sept. 29, 1864 - Confederate General John Bell Hood began
tearing up the Western and Atlantic Railroad.
Sept. 29, 1864 – Confederate Gen. Nathan B. Forrest moved
northward from the Sulphur Branch Trestle Fort in Limestone County, Ala., which
he captured four days earlier, to destroy other bridges after sending prisoners
southward to the Tennessee River.
Sept. 29, 1864 – During the Civil War, skirmishes were fought at White Oak Creek, Arkansas; at Moore’s Bluff, Mississippi; at Cuba, Leasburg (Harrison), Missouri; along the Scuppernong River, North Carolina; and at Centreville, Jonesborough, Lynchburg and along the Watauga River in Tennessee.
Sept. 29, 1864 – During the Civil War, a six-day Federal expedition began from Vicksburg to Rodney and Fayette, Mississippi, with a skirmish at Port Gibson, Mississippi.
Sept. 29, 1864 – During the Civil War, sustained operations began against Indians in the Nebraska and Colorado Territories.
Sept. 29, 1864 – The Battle of Peeble's Farm began in Virginia and continued until Oct. 2. The battle, also known as the Battle of Poplar Springs Church, Wyatt’s Farm, Chappell’s House, Pegram’s Farm, Vaughan Road and Harmon Road, was fought in Dinwiddie County, Va. and was part of the Siege of Richmond and Petersburg campaign.
Sept. 29, 1888 – Dr. Samuel S. Gaillard was born in Perdue
Hill, Ala. A third generation doctor, he was the first intern at Mobile Infirmary
when it opened in 1910. He was a specialist in radiology and roentgenology and
served in World War I and World War II. He attended West Point Military
Academy, Louisville (Ky.) Medical School and graduated from the University of
Alabama Medical School in 1910.
Sept. 29, 1889 – A lodge of the Independent Order of Good
Templars was organized in Monroeville, Ala. by Lodge Deputy L.N. Lambert of
Perdue Hill. The lodge began with 13 members and with F.A. Seymour as Chief
Templar.
Sept. 29, 1895 – Joseph Banks “J.B.” Rhine, widely
considered to be the "father of modern parapsychology," was born in
Waterloo, Pa.
Sept. 29, 1890 – Outlaw train robber Rube Burrow arrived at
the home of John Barnes near Castleberry, four weeks after his eighth and final
train robbery near Flomaton. After breakfast, Burrow departed, headed for
Repton.
Sept. 29, 1901 – Noble Prize-winning Italian physicist
Enrico Fermi was born in Rome.
Sept. 29, 1907 – The cornerstone was laid at Washington
National Cathedral in the U.S. capital.
Sept. 29, 1907 – Singing cowboy Gene Autry was born Orvon
Grover Autry near Tioga, Texas.
Sept. 29, 1910 - Alabama author Rebecca Harding Davis died
in Mount Kisco, N.Y.
Sept. 29, 1913 - Rudolf Diesel, inventor of the engine that
bears his name, disappeared from the steamship Dresden while traveling from
Antwerp, Belgium to Harwick, England. On October 10, a Belgian sailor aboard a
North Sea steamer spotted a body floating in the water; upon further
investigation, it turned out that the body was Diesel’s. There was, and
remains, a great deal of mystery surrounding his death: It was officially
judged a suicide, but many people believed (and still believe) that Diesel was
murdered.
Sept. 29, 1915 – “The Eagle’s Mate,” featuring Mary
Pickford, was scheduled to be shown at the Arcade Theater in Evergreen, Ala.
Sept. 29, 1915 – The Evergreen Courant reported that the
“opening of the Conecuh County High School was quite encouraging, the
attendance on opening day being 52 percent better than on the corresponding day
last year, and new students are coming in every week.”
Sept. 29, 1915 – The Evergreen Courant reported that Prof.
C.M. Dannelly had been appointed to the position of chief clerk in the office
of state superintendent of education.
Sept. 29, 1915 – The Evergreen Courant reported that Capt.
E. Downing of Castleberry, Ala. had told the paper that he was “greatly
pleased” by the performance of the Conecuh Guards during their recent
encampment in Montgomery. The company won both of the prizes offered during the
encampment.
Sept. 29, 1923 – Pro Football Hall of Fame head coach Bum
Phillips was born in Orange, Texas. During his NFL career, he coached the Houston
Oilers and the New Orleans Saints.
Sept. 29, 1924 - Alabama author W. L. Heath was born in Lake
Village, Ark.
Sept. 29, 1930 – Colin Dexter, the author of the Inspector
Morse mysteries, was born in Lincolnshire, England.
Sept. 29, 1935 – Bagdad’s baseball team beat Evergreen, 4-0,
in Bagdad (Fla.?). Hyde pitched for Evergreen, and Lewis played catcher. Soward
pitched for Bagdad, and Franklin caught. Bagdad got six hits off Hyde while
Evergreen only got three hits off Soward.
Sept. 29, 1942 – Conecuh County officials released several
hundred pounds of iron fixtures that were parts of the old gallows at the
Conecuh County Jail in Evergreen, Ala. to the local salvage committee for use
in the manufacture of war materials. The old gallows hadn’t been used since the
county’s last legal execution on Jan. 22, 1926.
Sept. 29, 1950 – Evergreen High School beat Andalusia High
School, 13-12, in Andalusia, Ala. on this Friday night. This win was
Evergreen’s second of the year and extended the team’s unbeaten streak to 12 straight.
Standout players on Evergreen’s team that year included Ward Alexander, Pace
Bozeman, John Henry Brantley, Sam Cope, Gwyn Daniels, Donahue Edson, Shirley
Frazier, Ed Hooks, Capt. Jeff Moorer, Gillis Morgan, Max Pope, Douglas Potts,
C.A. (Jackie) Robinson, William Stewart, Bobby (Pistol Pete) and Franklin
Williamson. Wendell Hart was Evergreen’s head coach, and John Lockwood was
assistant coach.
Sept. 29, 1951 – The first live sporting event seen
coast-to-coast in the United States, a college football game between Duke and
the University of Pittsburgh, was televised on NBC.
Sept. 29, 1951 - The first network football game was
televised by CBS-TV in color. The game was between the University of California
and the University of Pennsylvania.
Sept. 29, 1954 - Willie Mays, centerfielder for the New York
Giants, made his amazing over-the-shoulder catch of a fly ball hit by Cleveland
Indians first baseman Vic Wertz to rob Wertz of extra bases in Game 1 of the
1954 World Series. The catch has gone down as one of the greatest in the
history of baseball.
Sept. 29, 1955 – American explorer and author Ann Bancroft
was born ini Mendota Heights, Minn. Bancroft was the first woman to
successfully finish a number of arduous expeditions to the Arctic and Antarctic.
Sept. 29, 1955 - The movie “The Night of the Hunter,” screenplay by Alabama author
James Agee, was released.
Sept. 29, 1957 - The New York Giants played their last game
at the Polo Grounds before moving to San Francisco, Calif.
Sept. 29, 1963 – Decatur, Ala. native Marv
Breeding appeared in his final Major League Baseball game, taking the field one
last time for the Los Angeles Dodgers
Sept. 29, 1963 – Birmingham, Ala. native Alex
Grammas made his final Major League appearance, taking the field one last time
for the Chicago Cubs.
Sept. 29, 1964 – William A. House Jr. passed away at the age
of 82 at his home at Uriah, Ala. He was a member of the Uriah Masonic Lodge.
Sept. 29, 1965 - Hanoi published the text of a letter it had written to the Red Cross claiming that since there was no formal state of war, U.S. pilots shot down over the North would not receive the rights of prisoners of war (POWs) and would be treated as war criminals.
Sept. 29, 1969 - Secretary of the Army Stanley Resor announced that the U.S. Army, conceding that it was helpless to enlist the cooperation of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), was dropping the murder charges (of August 6) against eight Special Forces accused of killing a Vietnamese national.
Sept. 29, 1972 – Greenville beat Evergreen, 22-12, at Brooks
Memorial Stadium in Evergreen, Ala.
Sept. 29, 1974 – The Rev. Roderick McDonald was scheduled to
preach his first sermon as the new minister at the Evergreen (Ala.)
Presbyterian Church at 11 a.m. on this Sunday morning.
Sept. 29, 1975 – National Baseball Hall of Fame outfielder
and manager Casey Stengel passed away at the age of 85 in Glendale, Calif.
During his career, he played for the Brooklyn Dodgers/Superbas/Robins, the
Pittsburgh Pirates, the Philadelphia Phillies, the New York Giants and the
Boston Braves, and he managed the Dodgers, the Braves, the New York Yankees and
the New York Mets. He was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1966.
Sept. 29, 1980 – A Conecuh County, Ala. jury found Jerry D.
Mixon, who was charged with murder, guilty of the lesser charge of manslaughter.
Mixon was defended by attorney Joe B. Nix Jr., and Circuit Judge Robert E.L.
Key presided over the trial. Mixon was to be sentenced on Oct. 28.
Sept. 29, 1982 - In Chicago, Ill., seven people died after
taking capsules of Extra-Strength Tylenol that had been laced with cyanide.
264,000 bottles were recalled.
Sept. 29, 1986 - The television program “Miscalculation,” teleplay by Alabama
author Robert McDowell, was broadcast as part of the “Amazing Stories” series.
Sept. 29, 1987 – Conecuh County, Ala. Rabies Inspector Jim
Bricken, DVM, anounced that a raccoon found on Sept. 27, 1987 in the Old Town
community was positive for rabies.
Sept. 29, 1988 - Stacy Allison of
Portland, Oregon, became the first American woman to reach the summit of Mount
Everest, which at 29,035 feet above sea level is the highest point on earth.
Allison, a member of the Northwest American Everest Expedition, climbed the
Himalayan peak using the southeast ridge route.
Sept. 29, 1990 – Construction of the Washington National
Cathedral was completed.
Sept. 29, 1995 – Sparta Academy beat Lakeside Academy,
40-20, on this Friday night in Eufaula. Lyle Bell led Sparta’s offense with 158
yards on 18 carries plus three touchdowns, and Rod McIntyre ran the ball 13
times for 107 yards. Other outstanding Sparta players in that game included
Steven Bradley, Lee Goodwin, Mike McIntyre, Chris Mitchell, Steven Salter,
Charlie Ward and Brent Worrell.
Sept. 29, 1995 – Wetumpka beat Hillcrest-Evergreen, 36-8, in
Evergreen. Kelvin Rudolph was named the Defensive Player of the Week for
Hillcrest Jaguars and Roger Rudolph was named the Offensive Player of the Week.
Kelvin had 10 solo tackles and five assists with three behind the line or
scrimmage. He also caused a fumble. Roger had a total of 11 knockdowns and 50
yards rushing. Roger also scored a two-point conversion and graded 1.7 on his
blocking.
Sept. 29, 1995 – Monroe Samuel, 87, drowned when he fell
through the covering over an old septic tank at his daughter’s vacant house in
Conecuh County’s Pleasant Hill community. Samuel went to check on the vacant
house around 2:30 p.m. and was reported missing around 5 p.m. when he failed to
return. Samuel’s three grandsons found him around 8:40 p.m.
Sept. 29, 1996 – “A Loss
of Innocence,” a television version of Alabama author Virginia
Sorensen's book “On This Star,”
was broadcast.
Sept. 29, 2005 – The Dixon Home Place near Andalusia was
added to the Alabama Register of Landmarks and Heritage.
Sept. 29, 2008 – Following the bankruptcies of Lehman
Brothers and Washington Mutual, the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 777.68
points, the largest single-day point loss in its history.
Daily Rainfall Observations from SW Alabama for Thurs., Sept. 29, 2016
Rainfall (Past 24 Hours): 0.00 inches
Week to Date Rainfall: 0.60 inches
Month to Date Rainfall: 3.70 inches
Fall to Date Rainfall: 0.60 inches
Year to Date Rainfall: 45.40 inches
Notes: Today in the 273rd day of 2016 and the eighth day of Fall. There are 93 days left in the year.
Readings taken at 0700 hours Central Standard Time (1300 GMT) daily, just west of the Monroe-Conecuh County line and south of U.S. Highway 84, near Excel, Alabama, USA, in the vicinity of Lat 31.42834N Lon 87.30131W. Elevation 400 feet above sea level. CoCoRaHS Station No. AL-MN-4, Station Name: Excel 2.5 ESE.
Week to Date Rainfall: 0.60 inches
Month to Date Rainfall: 3.70 inches
Fall to Date Rainfall: 0.60 inches
Year to Date Rainfall: 45.40 inches
Notes: Today in the 273rd day of 2016 and the eighth day of Fall. There are 93 days left in the year.
Readings taken at 0700 hours Central Standard Time (1300 GMT) daily, just west of the Monroe-Conecuh County line and south of U.S. Highway 84, near Excel, Alabama, USA, in the vicinity of Lat 31.42834N Lon 87.30131W. Elevation 400 feet above sea level. CoCoRaHS Station No. AL-MN-4, Station Name: Excel 2.5 ESE.
Steve Stacey maintains lead in local College Football Pick 'Em contest
The fourth weekend of our local ESPN College Football Pick
‘Em Contest came to an end on Saturday night, and Steve Stacey held on to sole
possession of first place for the fourth straight week. Steve, who lives in
Monroeville, is doing so well in the contest that ESPN notified him on Sunday that he is currently ranked No. 10 nationally out of the thousands of
contestants taking part in the contest. In all the years that we’ve done this
contest in the newspaper, this is the best that any of our local competitors
has done in the contest.
Drew Skipper and Travis Presley remained in second and third
place, respectively, for the second week in a row. Robert Bozeman also held on
to the No. 4 spot in the standings for the second straight week.
I jumped from seventh place to fifth place, and Rod Sims is
in sixth place. Mark Peacock dropped from fifth place into seventh place, and
Sharon Peacock went from ninth place into eighth place.
Three players – Eric Byrd, Nick Watson and Ricky Taylor –
were in a three-way tie for ninth place. Eric Talbot comes next in the No. 12
spot.
If you’re taking part in this contest and didn’t make the
Top 10 this week, don’t worry. We’ve got 10 more weeks to go, and we’ve got a
long way to go before it’s all over with. The Top 10 will change a lot over the
next 2-1/2 months, so keep plugging.
----- 0 -----
According to this week’s SEC football schedule, there are five
head-to-head match-ups between SEC teams on Saturday. Florida will play Vanderbilt
at 11 a.m. in Nashville (SEC Network), Tennessee will play Georgia in Athens at
2:30 p.m. (CBS), Texas A&M will play South Carolina at 3 p.m. in Columbia
(SECN), Kentucky will play Alabama at 6 p.m. in Tuscaloosa (ESPN) and Missouri
will play LSU at 6:30 p.m. in Baton Rouge (SECN).
In addition to those games, there are three other games
featuring SEC teams. Alcorn State will play Arkansas at 11 a.m. in Little Rock
(SECN), Louisiana-Monroe will play Auburn at 2:30 p.m. in Auburn (SECN) and
Memphis will play Ole Miss at 6 p.m. in Oxford.
Here are my predictions as to how those games will turn out.
I like Ole Miss over Memphis, Auburn over Louisiana-Monroe, Alabama over
Kentucky, Tennessee over Georgia, Florida over Vandy, Texas A&M over South
Carolina, LSU over Missouri and Arkansas over Alcorn State.
Last week: 7-2. So far this season: 36-8.
----- 0 -----
This time next week, the forgettable 2016 season will be
over for the Atlanta Braves. As of Monday morning, the Braves were still dead
last in the National League East standings, despite the fact that they actually
have a winning record (33-29) against division opponents. Their overall record,
as of Monday, was 63-92, which was second worst in the Major Leagues behind the
56-100 Minnesota Twins.
The Braves are scheduled to wrap up a three-game series
against the Phillies tonight (Thursday) and will close out the season with a
three-game series against the Detroit Tigers. The last game of that series is
scheduled to be played Sunday at 2 p.m. and will be noteworthy because it’ll be
the last Braves game to be played at Turner Field in Atlanta. Starting next
season, the Braves will play their home games at SunTrust Park.
Wednesday, September 28, 2016
Today in History for Sept. 28, 2016
Kate Douglas Wiggin |
Sept. 28, 1066 – William the Conqueror of Normandy arrived
on British soil. He defeated the British in the Battle of Hastings, and on
Christmas Day, he was crowned King of England in Westminster Abbey.
Sept. 28, 1542 - San Diego, Calif. was discovered by
Portuguese navigator Juan Rodriguez Cabrillo.
Sept. 28, 1779 – During the American Revolution, Samuel
Huntington was elected President of the Continental Congress, succeeding John
Jay.
Sept. 28, 1781 – During the Revolutionary War, American
forces under General George Washington, backed by a French fleet, began the
siege of Yorktown, Va. British General Lord Charles Cornwallis surrendered on
October 17, effectively ending the War for Independence. Peace negotiations
began in 1782, and on September 3, 1783, the Treaty of Paris was signed,
formally recognizing the United States as a free and independent nation after
eight years of war
Sept. 28, 1787 – The newly completed United States
Constitution was voted on by the U.S. Congress to be sent to the state
legislatures for approval.
Sept. 28, 1789 - In the U.S., the first Federal Congress
passed a resolution that asked President George Washington to recommend to the
nation a day of thanksgiving. Several days later Washington issued a
proclamation that named Thursday, Nov. 26, 1789 as a "Day of Publick
Thanksgivin." The fixed-date for Thanksgiving Day, the fourth Thursday of
November, was established on Dec. 26, 1941.
Sept. 28, 1824 – During his tour of the United States, the Marquis
de Lafayette visited Philadelphia and gave a speech at the State House
(Independence Hall) under Philadelphian architect William Strickland's
Triumphal Arches.
Sept. 28, 1856 – Kate Douglas Wiggin was born in
Philadelphia. She is best known for her 1903 novel, “Rebecca of Sunnybrook
Farm.”
Sept. 28, 1861 – During the Civil
War, a skirmish was fought near Bailey’s Crossroad, Va.
Sept. 28, 1863 - Union Generals Alexander M. McCook and
Thomas Crittenden lost their commands and were ordered to Indianapolis, Indiana
to face court of inquiry charges following the Federal defeat at the Battle of
Chickamauga. In February 1864, a military court cleared McCook and Crittenden,
but their careers as field commanders were over. By quickly removing McCook and
Crittenden, Rosecrans had been trying to save his own job, but within weeks
after firing the generals, Rosecrans was himself replaced by Thomas.
Sept. 28, 1864 - Confederate forces under General Sterling
Price forced Union defenders away from Fort Davidson at Pilot Knob, Missouri.
Sept. 28, 1868 - Confederate General Thomas Carmichael
Hindman Jr. passed away at the age of 40 in Helena, Ark. after being shot
multiple times by one or more unknown assailants.
Sept. 28, 1870 - Confederate General Robert E. Lee suffered
a stroke. He died on October 12, 1870.
Sept. 28, 1871 – Brazilian Parliament passed the Law of the
Free Womb, granting freedom to all new children born to slaves, the first major
step in the eradication of slavery in Brazil.
Sept. 28, 1886 – John W. Leslie was commissioned as Monroe
County, Alabama’s Circuit Court Clerk.
Sept. 28, 1892 - The first nighttime football game in the
U.S. took place under electric lights. The game was between the Mansfield State
Normal School and the Wyoming Seminary.
Sept. 28, 1894 – Monroe County, Ala. tax collector W.J.
Robinson died, and his son F.E. Robinson was appointed to fill his unexpired
term.
Sept. 28, 1905 – The Monroe Journal reported that the new
ginnery built by H.E. Hudson began operations a few days prior. “The gasoline
engine which furnishes the motive power is quite a novelty and attracts many
visitors,” the paper said. “The samples of cotton turned out are pronounced by
experts to be superb.”
Sept. 28, 1908 - Alabama author J. Max McMurray was born.
Sept. 28, 1912 – Alabama native W.C. Handy published
“Memphis Blues,” and it was the first written blues arrangement that Handy
published. He sold the rights to a sheet music publisher for $50, to pay his
debt to the printer. The publisher added lyrics, and it became one of the most
popular songs of 1912; dance hall bandleaders bought the sheet music in record
numbers.
Sept. 28, 1914 – The second series of “The Adventures of
Kathlyn” was shown at the Arcade Theatre in Evergreen, Ala.
Sept. 28, 1915 – Monroe County High School’s girls baseball
team played their first game of the season on this Tuesday afternoon and beat
the “town girls” 8-7.
Sept. 28, 1916 – The Monroe Journal reported that Henry
Jones held the position of professor of mathematics and history and was also
director of athletics at Monroe County High School.
Sept. 28, 1916 – The Monroe Journal reported that Monroe
County Engineer C.E. Barker said that about 100 men were employed on the public
roads in various sections of the county, under the arrangements recently made
for extending relief to those rendered destitute by reason of storm and flood
disaster. Crews of considerable size had been organized and put to work at and
in the vicinity of Perdue Hill and Franklin, while smaller squads were working
in other communities. Each person so employed was to be paid a reasonable daily
wage in cash.
Sept. 28, 1918 - The course of history was nearly averted
when British soldier Henry Tandey allegedly spared the life of an injured Adolf
Hitler, while fighting during World War I. Tandey would tell his compatriots
that he aimed at the future German dictator, but did not pull the trigger
because he could not shoot a wounded man. While the veracity of the encounter
remains debated to this day, Hitler, himself, claimed the tale was true during
a meeting with British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain in 1938.
Sept. 28, 1919 - The New York Giants beat Philadelphia
Phillies 6-1 in a day game that lasted 51 minutes. The time set a National
League record.
Sept. 28, 1920 - Eight members of the Chicago White Sox were
indicted in what was called the "Black Sox" scandal. They were
accused of throwing the 1919 World Series against the Cincinnati Reds.
Sept. 28, 1926 – Country comedian Jerry Clower was born in Liberty,
Miss.
Sept. 28, 1928 – Scottish bacteriologist Alexander Fleming
peered into a petri dish at his basement laboratory in London and noticed a
blue-green mold growing. The mold, he observed, was killing the staph bacteria
he’d been cultivating in that petri dish. He called the mold “Penicillin,”
which is now considered the world’s first “miracle drug,” and it sparked the
modern era of antibiotic development.
Sept. 28, 1928 - Author Judith Paterson was born in
Montgomery, Ala.
Sept. 28, 1929 - A movie version of Alabama author Octavus
Roy Cohen's book “The Lady Fare”
was released.
Sept. 28, 1939 – The Monroe Journal reported that W.M.
Mullins of Wetumpka, Ala. had replaced Frank Sheffiled as manager of the
Alabama Water Service Co. in Monroeville. Sheffiled had been manager for about
a year prior to resigning.
Sept. 28, 1939 – Prominent Monroeville, Ala. merchant A.H.
Johnson passed away at his home around 9 p.m. after a heart attack. Born and
raised at Franklin, he worked on steamboats on the Alabama River, ran a
mercantile business at Franklin and ran a dry goods store in Monroeville.
Sept. 28, 1940 - Alabama author James P. White was born.
Sept. 28, 1941 - The Boston Red Sox's Ted Williams played a
double-header against the Philadelphia Athletics on the last day of the regular
season and got six hits in eight trips to the plate, to boost his batting
average to .406 and became the first player since Bill Terry in 1930 to hit
.400.
Sept. 28, 1942 - Author Sena Jeter Naslund was born in
Birmingham, Ala.
Sept. 28, 1944 – The Evergreen Courant reported that Pvt.
Luther McDonald of Castleberry, Ala., who was stationed at Chatham Field, Ga.
as a B-24 bomber mechanic and gunner, was a member of the Chatham Field
football team. This team was composed of former college and high school players
from all over the United States, and had several all-Americans on this year’s
squad. The team’s coach and “backfield ace” was Lt. William “Tarzan” White, a
former All-American at the University of Alabama. McDonald, who played on the
1937, 1938 and 1939 teams at Conecuh County High School in Castleberry, was the
team’s starting right tackle.
Sept. 28, 1944 – The Evergreen Courant reported that during
the past week relatives of Curtis Ashley Carter had received from the U.S.
Maritime Service the Mariner’s Medal, who had been posthumously awarded to the
late C.A. Carter. Carter was reported missing April 8, 1942. He was in the
Maritime Service and, at the time he was reported missing, was on duty on an
oil tanker. All other members of the crew have been accounted for as prisoners
of war of the Japanese government.
Sept. 28, 1944 – The Evergreen Courant reported that a
telegram from the Adjutant General’s office, dated Sept. 15, to Mrs. Bryant
Covan informed her that her husband, Staff Sgt. Bryant Covan, who had
previously been reported as missing in action, was a prisoner of war of the
German Government at Stalag Luft 4, Germany. S-Sgt. Covan was reported missing
over Austria June 26. He was an aerial gunner on a B-24.
Sept. 28, 1944 – The Evergreen Courant reported that Mr. and
Mrs. E.H. Cowart had been informed by a telegram from the War Department that
their son Pfc. Elly H. Cowart Jr., who was reported wounded sometime before,
had recovered and had returned to active duty. Mr. and Mrs. Cowart also
received that week the Purple Heart which was awarded their son, who was with
combat engineers in France. They received letters from him regularly since he
was wounded but none of these gave any details concerning the nature of his
injuries. He was wounded July 25 and returned to active duty Aug. 22.
Sept. 28, 1954 - Alabama author James H. Street died in
Chapel Hill, N.C.
Sept. 28, 1955 - The World Series was televised in color for
the first time. The game was between the New York Yankees and the Brooklyn
Dodgers.
Sept. 28, 1960 - At Boston’s Fenway Park, Red Sox star Ted
Williams hit a home run in the last at-bat of his 21-year career. He finished
his career with a total of 521 home runs.
Sept. 28, 1967 – Repton High School fullback Gary Boatwright
scored five touchdowns and ran for 256 yards in a 49-0 win over Century, Fla.
Sept. 28, 1980 – Aubrey Brown Boykin, 71, of Evergreen, Ala.
died on this Sunday evening in a local hospital after a long illness. He was a
prominent local businessman and civic leader. He and his wife, Luella, operated
Conecuh County’s leading jewelry store for over 30 years. Boykin also served as
an artillery officer in the 31st (Dixie) Division of the U.S. Army in combat
areas of the Pacific Theatre during World War II. He was also a Mason and a
Shriner.
Sept. 28, 1987 - The first episode of "Star Trek: The
Next Generation," a two-hour pilot called “Encounter at Farpoint,” aired
to 27 million viewers.
Sept. 28, 1989 – The Evergreen Courant reported that the
Evergreen (Ala.) City Council had voted unanimously to promote Darrell Davis to
Wastewater Superintendent. Davis had been employed by the city for a number of
years prior to his promotion and held the required Class I Certification in
Wastewater Treatment and the Class II Certification in Water Treatment. Freddie
Stallworth was the city personnel director at the time; Curtis Hamilton was
city administrator and Lee F. Smith was mayor.
Sept. 28, 1995 - Randy Myers of the Chicago Cubs was charged
by a 27-year-old man while standing in the outfield. Myers saw him coming,
dropped his glove and knocked the man down with his forearm.
Sept. 28, 1998 – Despite bad weather caused by Hurricane
George, pharmacists Ronnie Philen and Lynn Lowery Powell opened their new
business, Village Pharmacy on this Monday. A ribbon-cutting for the new
business was held on Oct. 26, 1998.
Sept. 28, 2001 - Courtney Love filed a claim against Geffen
Records and two musicians from her late husband's band, Nirvana. The suit was
aimed at invalidating a 1997 agreement over the group's body of work. Love
claimed that she signed the deal while she was distressed.
Sept. 28, 2004 – The Stanford House at Pine Apple in Wilcox
County, Ala. was added to the Alabama Register of Landmarks and Heritage.
Sept. 28, 2004 - Nate Olive and Sarah Jones arrived at the
U.S.-Mexico border to complete the first known continuous hike of the
1,800-mile trail down the U.S. Pacific Coast. They started the trek on June 8.
Sept. 28, 2012 – The “Solomon Kane” movie, directed by
Michael J. Bassett and starring James Purefoy, was released in the U.S.
Daily Rainfall Observations from SW Alabama for Wed., Sept. 28, 2016
Rainfall (Past 24 Hours): 0.00 inches
Week to Date Rainfall: 0.60 inches
Month to Date Rainfall: 3.70 inches
Fall to Date Rainfall: 0.60 inches
Year to Date Rainfall: 45.40 inches
Notes: Today in the 272nd day of 2016 and the seventh day of Fall. There are 94 days left in the year.
Readings taken at 0700 hours Central Standard Time (1300 GMT) daily, just west of the Monroe-Conecuh County line and south of U.S. Highway 84, near Excel, Alabama, USA, in the vicinity of Lat 31.42834N Lon 87.30131W. Elevation 400 feet above sea level. CoCoRaHS Station No. AL-MN-4, Station Name: Excel 2.5 ESE.
Week to Date Rainfall: 0.60 inches
Month to Date Rainfall: 3.70 inches
Fall to Date Rainfall: 0.60 inches
Year to Date Rainfall: 45.40 inches
Notes: Today in the 272nd day of 2016 and the seventh day of Fall. There are 94 days left in the year.
Readings taken at 0700 hours Central Standard Time (1300 GMT) daily, just west of the Monroe-Conecuh County line and south of U.S. Highway 84, near Excel, Alabama, USA, in the vicinity of Lat 31.42834N Lon 87.30131W. Elevation 400 feet above sea level. CoCoRaHS Station No. AL-MN-4, Station Name: Excel 2.5 ESE.
Tuesday, September 27, 2016
The Evergreen Courant's News Flashback for Sept. 27, 2016
Dr. Eugene Allen Smith |
76 YEARS AGO
SEPT. 26, 1940
Luman Hall, local man, died
Friday night as a result of gunshot wounds which officers said were inflicted
by W.B. Owens of Monroeville. The shooting took place in the street between
Millsap Stables and Nielsen Packing plant.
He died enroute to the
hospital at Repton where he was being carried for treatment.
Evergreen’s National Guard
unit, Battery “C” of the 117th Field Artillery, was among those
affected by the second call issued by the President on Sept. 19. State military
headquarters estimated that between 2,000 and 2,500 National Guardsmen, all a
part of the 31st Division, would be affected by the mobilization
scheduled for Nov. 25.
The local unit will entrain
on or soon after the mobilization date for one year’s active duty in Camp
Blanding, Fla., located 30 miles north of Jacksonville.
Prominent Owassa Citizen Dies
Of Heart Attack: Loderick Alonzo Griffin, 72, died suddenly at his home at
Owassa at 2:50 o’clock Tuesday morning of heart attack. Mr. Griffin served as
passenger conductor on the L&N Railroad for a period of 35 years, having
retired about 15 years ago.
The top of the Brewton county
jail was serious damaged by fire Tuesday night, necessitating the removal of
its prisoners.
Fourteen of the prisoners
from the damaged jail were transferred to the Conecuh County Jail. The fire was
said to have started by faulty wiring.
91 YEARS AGO
SEPT. 30, 1925
Coming! - Birth of a Nation –
ARCADE THEATRE – Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, Oct. 26-27-28.
R.J. Newton left Sunday
afternoon for Birmingham where he will finish his course in pharmacy. He will
return about the first of February, after standing the examination of the State
Board of Pharmacy, and will resume his connection with the Conecuh Drug Co. His
many friends will miss him during his absence.
Mrs. Carol King, popular
probate clerk, is on the sick list this week.
EVERGREEN BAKERY CHANGES
HANDS: Mr. R.C. McCracken of Camden has recently purchased the Evergreen
Bakery, and has moved his residence to our city.
Mr. C.N. Brown, from whom he
made the purchase, will remain with him for some time.
Miss Guice Stevens left
Monday to attend school at the Peabody.
Mr. J.E. Witherington of the
Sunny Side Farm has returned from a visit to her son at Dothan.
FLAT ROCK: Mr. Kermit Weaver
motored through Flat Rock Sunday morning on a mule.
SOCIETY HILL: The school is
progressing nicely with Mr. Poole and Mr. Richards as teachers.
106 YEARS AGO
SEPT. 28, 1910
An important meeting of Camp Wm.
Lee, U.C.V., will be held at the courthouse next Saturday.
Gen. Geo. W. Gordon,
commander of the United Confederate Veterans, recently issued an order
announcing the appointment of Judge Austill of Mobile to be brigadier general
of the second brigade, Alabama Division, to fill the vacancy caused by the
death of Gen. P.D. Bowles.
In a difficulty between C.A.
Watford, section foreman of the railroad, and John Powell, an employee at the
saw mill, on Saturday night last, the later sustained a dangerous and painful
wound in the abdomen. Watford was promptly arrested. Powell is still under the
care of a physician, but is doing as well as could be expected.
The dedication of the
Methodist church by Bishop Candler on last Sunday was a notable occasion. A
large congregation was present, many persons coming from adjoining counties.
The story of I. Long &
Sons will be closed on Oct. 4, in observance of Jewish New Year, it being the
first day of the year according to the Hebrew calendar.
G.W. Salter Sr. of Monroe
County is visiting the family of his son, the editor of this paper.
R.R. Martin has removed to
Castleberry with his family and has engaged in the drug business.
121 YEARS AGO
SEPT. 26, 1895
THE CONECUH RECORD
MURDER AND ROBBERY: The discovery of the skeleton of the
mail driver, Silas Hobley, near Belleville last Monday, brings to light one of
the most atrocious murders and daring robberies that has ever been known in the
history of Conecuh County. Immediately after it was discovered that this mail
driver had been murdered, Postmaster Wiggins wired the department, and last
week received the following telegram:
“CHATTANOOGA, Sept. 18, 1895, Postmaster, Evergreen,
Ala.:
“Reward of $500 will be paid for arrest and conviction in
United States Court of person robbing the mails. Get local authorities to take
hold of the matter at once. Write department. WHITESIDE, Inspector.”
Suspicions indicates parties who are said to have
committed the Castleberry burglaries, and our citizens are very indignant over
the foul crime.”
“On the afternoon of the 18th of September
1863, about dusk, I encamped on the plain on Chickamauga,” said Mr. James M.
Sims, the hardware man, “footsore and weary, I slept on my arms in the open
air, and rose the next morning to find the ground covered with frost, and my
limbs dumb with cold.” Mr. Sims was very anxious to attend the exercise
recently held on that historic plain, but business prevented.
Messrs. Oscar Riley and Lewis Crook will leave on Monday
for Marion, where they will enter the Marion Military Institute for the coming
session.
136 YEARS AGO
SEPT. 25, 1880
CONECUH-ESCAMBIA STAR
Dr. E.A. Smith, State
Geologist, was in Evergreen this week. He has been making a tour through
Alabama and Florida in the interests of agriculture.
We are informed that Col.
J.F. Tate proposes to establish a night school for young men in Evergreen,
commencing about 1st of October. The young men of our town ought to
attend, for we are satisfied that Col. Tate will instruct them thoroughly in
every course of study.
Evergreen and vicinity has
three steam cotton gins in operation. Each is run daily to its full capacity.
The town was crowded with
wagons yesterday (Friday), laden with cotton. Consequently, our merchants were
all busy.
Several small fisticuffs have
taken place during the past week between some of our inhabitants. No names
called.
EVERGREEN ACADEMY – The
exercises of this school will be resumed on Mon., Sept. 6. A full corps of
teachers in all departments. J.F. Tate, principal; Mrs. S.U. Sampey, Mrs. J.F.
Tate, and Miss Alice Mertins, assistants. Rates of tuition: $2, $2.50 and $3
per month. Board can be obtained at $10 per month. For further information,
address the principal, J.F. Tate, Evergreen.
United States Deputy Marshall
Ed. S. Marshal brought in 13 men, arrested in Conecuh County for cutting timber
on government funds. Eleven of them were committed for trial. – Mobile Gazette,
Sept. 20th.
Today in History for Sept. 27, 2016
Thomas Nast |
Sept. 27, 1777 – Lancaster, Pennsylvania was the capital of
the United States, for one day.
Sept. 27, 1779 - The Continental Congress appointed John
Adams to travel to France as minister plenipotentiary in charge of negotiating treaties
of peace and commerce with Great Britain during the Revolutionary War.
Sept. 27, 1779 - The former president of the Continental
Congress, John Jay, was appointed minister to Spain and tasked with winning
Spanish support for the American Revolution and Spain’s recognition of
America’s independence. For more than two years, Jay negotiated for Spanish
support of the American cause but was only successful in getting occasional
loans and a supply of war materials. His inability to gain recognition of American
independence was the result of Spain’s fear that the revolution might spread to
Spanish-controlled colonies in the Americas.
Sept. 27, 1822 – Jean-François Champollion announced that he
has deciphered the Rosetta stone.
Sept. 27, 1830 - The Treaty of Dancing Rabbit Creek was a
signed between the Choctaw Indian tribe and the United States Government. This
was the first removal treaty carried into effect under the Indian Removal Act.
Under the treaty, the Choctaw Nation ceded to the United States all their land
east of the Mississippi River, about 11 million acres, including parts of west
Alabama in exchange for about 15 million acres in the Indian territory,
present-day Oklahoma. Not all Choctaws moved west, however, and descendants
living in Alabama are recognized by the state as the MOWA Band of Choctaw
Indians, who have their tribal office at McIntosh.
Sept. 27, 1840 – Thomas Nast, often called the “Father of
the American Cartoon,” was born in Landau, Germany. Nast moved to New York when
he was six, and he later spoke out firmly on behalf of the Union at the dawn of
the Civil War, drawing cartoons for Harper's that showed the horrors
of slavery. Lincoln called him his "best recruitment sergeant," and
Grant credited his re-election victory in 1868 to "the sword of Sherman
and the pencil of Nast."
Sept. 27, 1854 – James A. Hightower was commissioned as
Monroe County, Alabama’s Sheriff.
Sept. 27, 1861 – During the Civil
War, a skirmish was fought near Norfolk, Mo.
Sept. 27, 1864 - A guerilla band led by William “Bloody
Bill” Anderson sacked the town of Centralia, Missouri, killing 22 unarmed Union
soldiers before slaughtering more than 100 pursuing Yankee troops led by Major
A.V.E. Johnston. A month later, Anderson was killed attempting a similar attack
near Albany, Missouri.
Sept. 27, 1888 – The Central News Agency of London received
the famous “Dear Boss” letter, which was a message allegedly written by the
notorious serial killer, “Jack the Ripper.” It was the first time the
"Jack the Ripper" name had been used to refer to the killer.
Sept. 27, 1905 – Monroe County Sheriff Fountain left
Monroeville, Ala. on this Wednesday for St. Louis where he went “to purchase
choice horses for the local market.”
Sept. 27, 1905 – German physics journal “Annals of Physics”
published Albert Einstein’s “Does the Inertia of a Body Depend Upon Its Energy
Content?,” which produced arguably the most famous equation in all of physics,
E=mc2. The paper was one of four Einstein published that year — papers that
subsequently have been nicknamed the Annus Mirabilis papers — four
remarkable papers that added up to a miraculous year for both Einstein and
physics and changed our views on space, time, and the fundamental nature of
matter.
Sept. 27, 1906 - Following several days of heavy
rains, a powerful hurricane wreaked havoc on the Gulf Coast, killing
dozens in the Mobile, Ala. area and causing millions of dollars in property
damage. The editor of The Mobile Register called the
hurricane "the greatest storm in the history of the city and by far the
most damaging."
Sept. 27, 1911 - Author Harriet
Hassell was born in Tuscaloosa, Ala.
Sept. 27, 1915 – Blake Webb, age
seven, died at the Orphans Home in Evergreen, Ala. His remains were shipped to
Flomaton for burial.
Sept. 27, 1915 – George Moore was
killed instantly and his brother, William Moore, was severely injured in an
automobile accident on the Manistee & Repton Railroad early on this Monday
morning. They were traveling along the tracks for an inspection, and the
accident occurred “on the grade about two miles from town (Monroeville, Ala.).”
Sept. 27, 1919 – The first ever high school football game in
the history of Monroe County, Ala. was played when Monroe County High School’s
team faced the “Town Boys” in Monroeville.
Sept. 27, 1923 - Lou Gehrig of the New York Yankees hit his
first of 493 career home runs.
Sept. 27, 1926 – American Legion Post No. 61 was formed in
Monroeville, Ala.
Sept. 27, 1930 - Hack Wilson of the Chicago Cubs hit two
home runs to give him 56 for the year.
Sept. 27, 1931 – “The Big Gamble,” a movie version
of Alabama author Octavus Roy Cohen's book “The Iron Chalice,” was
released.
Sept. 27, 1935 – The first ever night football game in
Monroe County, Ala. history was played on this day at J.U. Blacksher High
School at Uriah, the first school in the county to have a lighted field.
Blacksher played Repton, but the final score is unknown. The game likely ended
in a 0-0 tie.
Sept. 27, 1935 – In their first game of the season,
Evergreen High School beat Frisco City, 13-2, in Frisco City, Ala.
Sept. 27, 1940 - William Henry Hasty, believed to have been
Monroe County, Alabama’s last surviving Confederate veteran, passed away. Born
on Sept. 9, 1846, he served as 5th Sgt. with Co. F of the 36th Alabama Regiment
and would go on to become a Methodist minister. He is buried in Excel Cemetery.
Sept. 27, 1941 – Alabama baseball great Virgil Trucks made
his Major League Baseball debut with the Detroit Tigers.
Sept. 27, 1949 – National Baseball Hall of Fame third
baseman Mike Schmidt was born in Dayton, Ohio. He played his entire career,
1972-1989, for the Philadelphia Phillies. He was inducted into the Hall of Fame
in 1995.
Sept. 27, 1950 - Alabama native Joe Louis, a former
heavyweight boxing champion who had announced his retirement in March 1949,
returned to fight for the heavyweight title, but lost to then-champion Ezzard
Charles in a 15-round decision.
Sept. 27, 1951 – The Evergreen Courant reported that Army
Cpl. Johnny R. Stowers of Evergreen, Ala. had joined the Army’s 1st Cavalry
Division on the front lines in Korea.
Sept. 27, 1953 - The St. Louis Browns baseball team played
their final game before moving to Baltimore to become the Orioles.
Sept. 27, 1963 – Frisco City (Ala.) High School quarterback
Joe Kelly was named the Birmingham Post-Herald’s “Back of the Week” for his
performance in a 21-12 win over Jackson High School.
Sept. 27, 1964 – The Houston Colt .45s played their final
game at Colts Stadium. They lost 1-0 to Los Angeles in 12 innings.
Sept. 27, 1964 - The Warren Commission issued a report on
the assassination of U.S. President John F. Kennedy in November of 1963. The
report concluded that Lee Harvey Oswald had acted alone.
Sept. 27, 1973 - Nolan Ryan of the California Angels struck
out 16 batters for the Minnesota Twins. The feat established a modern day
single season mark of 383 strikeouts in a season.
Sept. 27, 1989 - Two men went over the 176-foot-high Niagara
Falls in a barrel. Jeffrey Petkovich and Peter Debernardi were the first to
ever survive the Horshoe Falls.
Sept. 27, 1990 - The deposed emir of Kuwait addressed the
U.N. General Assembly and denounced the "rape, destruction and
terror" that Iraq had inflicted upon his country.
Sept. 27, 1994 - Alabama author Paul Ramsey died in
Chattanooga, Tenn.
Sept. 27-28, 1995 – The Conecuh County Sheriff’s Department
conducted a two-day marijuana hunt and eradication operation in Conecuh County,
Ala. During the operation, the department used two fixed-wing aircraft and one
helicopter to search for marijuana plants. In all, the operation netted and
destroyed 93 plants with a street value of $196,000.
Sept. 27, 1996 - Barry Bonds of the San Francisco Giants
became the second Major League Baseball player to record 40 home runs and 40
stolen bases in the same year.
Sept. 27, 1998 - Mark McGwire of the St. Louis Cardinals set
a Major League Baseball record when he hit his 70th home run of the season.
Sammy Sosa of the Chicago Cubs ended the season with 66 home runs. Both players
surpassed Roger Maris' record of 61.
Sept. 27, 1998 - Greg Vaughn of the San Diego Padres hit his
50th home run of the season. It marked the first time that four players
finished the regular season with 50 or more home runs.
Sept. 27, 1999 – In the last game was played at Tiger
Stadium, the Detroit Tigers defeated the Kansas City Royals, 8-2.
Sept. 27, 2000 - Donovan McNabb of the Philadelphia Eagles
signed a 12-year contract that involved a $20.5 million signing bonus. The deal
made McNabb the highest paid NFL player in history.
Sept. 27, 2002 – Sparta Academy beat Escambia Academy,
35-25, at Stuart-McGehee Field in Evergreen, Ala. Brandon Burleson led Sparta
with 103 yards and a touchdown.
Sept. 27, 2003 - Javier Lopez of the Atlanta Braves became
the first catcher to hit 42 home runs in a season.
Sept. 27, 2004 – The Conecuh County (Ala.) Commission met on
this Monday morning and discussed the damage to the county caused by Hurrican
Ivan. The commission voted unanimously to approve a request from County
Engineer Winston Foshee, who asked for permission to accept emergency bids for
debris removal from county roads to avoid having to advertise for the bids and
to speed up the clean-up process.
Sept. 27, 2009 - The Detroit Lions defeated the Washington
Redskins to end a 19-game losing streak dating back to December, 2007.
Daily Rainfall Observations from SW Alabama for Tues., Sept. 27, 2016
Rainfall (Past 24 Hours): 0.00 inches
Week to Date Rainfall: 0.60 inches
Month to Date Rainfall: 3.70 inches
Fall to Date Rainfall: 0.60 inches
Year to Date Rainfall: 45.40 inches
Notes: Today in the 271st day of 2016 and the sixth day of Fall. There are 95 days left in the year.
Readings taken at 0700 hours Central Standard Time (1300 GMT) daily, just west of the Monroe-Conecuh County line and south of U.S. Highway 84, near Excel, Alabama, USA, in the vicinity of Lat 31.42834N Lon 87.30131W. Elevation 400 feet above sea level. CoCoRaHS Station No. AL-MN-4, Station Name: Excel 2.5 ESE.
Week to Date Rainfall: 0.60 inches
Month to Date Rainfall: 3.70 inches
Fall to Date Rainfall: 0.60 inches
Year to Date Rainfall: 45.40 inches
Notes: Today in the 271st day of 2016 and the sixth day of Fall. There are 95 days left in the year.
Readings taken at 0700 hours Central Standard Time (1300 GMT) daily, just west of the Monroe-Conecuh County line and south of U.S. Highway 84, near Excel, Alabama, USA, in the vicinity of Lat 31.42834N Lon 87.30131W. Elevation 400 feet above sea level. CoCoRaHS Station No. AL-MN-4, Station Name: Excel 2.5 ESE.
The Evergreen Courant's Sports Flashback for Sept. 26, 2016
President Franklin D. Roosevelt |
31 YEARS AGO
SEPT. 26, 1985
The Sparta Academy Warriors
hurled a 19-0 shutout at Chambers Academy here Friday night.
Danny Reed scored once and
passed for another touchdown to pace Sparta. He returned the second half kickoff
86 yards for a score and threw a 10-yard pass to Tim Wilson for another score.
Chad Grace plunged over from the one for the other touchdown and Jeff Walker
kicked the extra point.
(Other top Sparta players in
that game included Lee Adams, Scott Adams, Jeff Carrier, Chris Cook, Tommy
Conway, Thad Ellis, Chad Grace, Mike Osban, Lynn Ralls, Jim Reed, Mark Rigsby,
Scott Salter, Jeff Walker, Brad Watts, Lee Wild and Tim Wilson.)
The Evergreen Aggies lost
their first game of the season last week to the Monroeville Tigers by the score
of 27-7.
The Aggies got their only
score of the game with 2:43 left (in the fourth quarter) when James Harvey
threw a 10-yard touchdown pass to Daryl Dryer. The extra point was good by
Marion Oliver, making the final score 27-7 in favor of Monroeville.
In spite of being denied the
privilege of a prep rally, the Castleberry Blue Devils never let their spirit
fall below the line of McKenzie. This devilish bundle of dynamite pulled
together to blow McKenzie’s pride away, by defeating them, 14-12.
The top defensive player,
with a total of 14 solo tackles and two assists, was Dempsey Kennedy.
The top rusher for the night
was Cedric Philyaw with a total of 104 yards.
(Other top Conecuh County
High School players in that game included Willie Jenkins, Bruce Madden, Wade
Laster and Steve Smith.
46 YEARS AGO
SEPT. 24, 1970
Aggies maul Tigers 22-6 for
second win: The Evergreen Aggie infantry shot down the Monroe County High Tiger
air corps 22-6 in Monroeville Friday night. The win was the second of the
season for the unbeaten Aggies and their third consecutive triumph over the
Tigers.
(Top players for Evergreen in
that game included Sammy Brown, Ronald Jones, Andrew McMillian, Frank
McMillian, Whalen Oliver, Larry Peacock, Eddie Reeves, John Robinson, Tim
Skipper, Reggie Smith, Robert Ward and Richard Wilson. Wendell Hart was
Evergreen’s head coach.)
Coach J.H. Brown’s Lyeffion
High School Yellow Jackets will be after their second win of the season when
they meet the Frisco City Whippets at 7:30 Frida night on the Lyeffion field.
The Jackets downed McKenzie
last week to bring their record to 1-2 after losing to Excel and Repton.
Coach Victor Ray Norris’
Repton High School Bulldogs will be after their second win of the season when
they entertain the Lowndes County High School Red Devils of Ft. Deposit at 7:30
Friday night.
The Bulldogs are 1-1 with a
12-0 win over Lyeffion in the opening game and a close 20-12 loss to powerful
Excel last week.
Coach Wendell Hart’s
Evergreen High School Aggies are on top of the standings in the 3A Division of
the South Alabama Conference.
(Other teams in the
conference included Elba, Geneva, Pike County, Andalusia, Opp, Troy and
Greenville.)
61 YEARS AGO
SEPT. 29, 1955
Andalusia Bulldogs Not All
Bark; Unleash Powerful Running Attack To Beat Aggies 28-6: The Evergreen Aggies
played their hearts out, but proved to be no match for the mighty Andalusia
Bulldogs who brought a powerful line and a stable of fleet backs to perform
before a near capacity crowd at Brooks Stadium Friday night.
Evergreen drew first blood
Friday night at Brooks Stadium on a blocked kick and 40-yard run by Tommy
Watts, (Ronnie) Edson pushing over the TD from two yards out.
(Other standout Evergreen
players in that game included Walter Carrier, Cook, Wayne Frazier, Neal Hyde,
Pee Wee Hyde, Johnson, Eddie Kelley, Buck Lewis, Mason, Moorer and White.
Wendell Hart was Evergreen’s head coach.)
The McKenzie line spelled the
difference Thursday night between Repton and McKenzie as McKenzie won, 29-6, at
Repton. Blackwell’s passing and Crutchfield’s running were very good for
Repton, while the backfield combination of McKenzie was exceptional.
The Yellow Jackets from
Lyeffion pounded five times on the touchdown door Friday night and were admitted
only once, losing 13-6 to a Goshen team that made two touchdowns on punt
returns.
Doug Jones, Yellow Jacket
right halfback, gained over 180 yards rushing against Goshen, and completed 12
of 14 passes. Gabe “Tiger” Booker carried well from the quarterback slot, and
Raines proved to be a great help with his running and blocking for other
Lyeffion backs.
In preparation for tonight’s
hassle with Beatrice, Coach William Andrews has worked on timing, running,
passing and kicking. Beatrice will bring a good team over, but the recent
additions of J.E. Williams and other players just returning from National Guard
duty will help bolster the reserve strength of the Yellow Jackets.
Brewton Cyclones Take CCTS
Eagle 13-6 Saturday: In a hard fought game, the Evergreen “Eagles” were
defeated 13-6 by the Brewton “Cyclones.”
The Eagles would not accept a
white-wash so they scored in the last of the fourth quarter on a pass from
January to Wartley for the six points.
On Sat., Oct. 1, the Eagles
will face a tough opponent from Auburn, Ala. this will be a battle because it
will be the meeting of two schools whose principals are brothers-in-law. Come
early in order to be sure of a comfortable seat for this one, remember time:
Oct. 1, at 8 p.m.; place: Brooks Stadium.
McKenzie Preparing For Ft.
Deposit Friday: Coach Reid Hughes, new mentor at McKenzie High School, said
today his team is in good shape for the contest Friday night with Ft. Deposit
on the home field at McKenzie. Assistant coach at McKenzie this year is Theo Carpenter.
(Players on McKenzie’s team
that year included George Carpenter, O’Neal Davis, Dickie Dour, Jimmy Dour,
Melvin Hallford, Nelson Hooks, Jimmy Howell, Lamar Odom, Greg Pierce, Marvin
Spikes and Tommy Wright.)
76 YEARS AGO
SEPT. 26, 1940
President Okays Stadium
Project: A telegram received by The Courant Tuesday and signed by Senator
Lister Hill announced that President Roosevelt had approved the amount of
$12,358 to be used on the construction of a stadium and playground on the
campus of the Evergreen High School.
The text of the telegram
reads as follows:
“Delighted to advise Project
50134 sponsored by the City of Evergreen to construct playground and stadium on
High School campus has received Presidential approval in the amount of
$12,258.”
Plans and specifications for
this project, along with several other community projects, were submitted to
the President recently by city and county officials, and the news of the
stadium approval will be welcomed here. Plans for the stadium and playground
include concrete bleachers, a sodded playing field and a cinder path for track.
The city will share in the
expense of construction but their part will mostly be in the form of rolling
stock. The labor will be furnished by the WPA.
The definite date on which
the construction will start has not yet been set.
91 YEARS AGO
SEPT. 30, 1925
Mr. J.P. King and Andrew Jay
spent two days fishing on Conecuh River this week.
A party of 20 young people of
Evergreen enjoyed a camping at Conecuh Cabins last weekend.
Today in History for Sept. 26, 2016
T.S. Elliott |
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, 1861 – During the Civil
War, a skirmish was fought at Fort Thorn, New Mexico.
Sept. 26, 1861 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought at Hunter's Farm, near Belmont, Missouri.
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, 1867 – Lewis Lavon Peacock married Safronia
Caroline Martin at Burnt Corn, Ala.
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, 1945 - Lt. Col. Peter
Dewey, a U.S. Army officer with the Office of Strategic Services (OSS) in
Vietnam, was shot and killed in Saigon. Dewey was the head of a seven-man team
sent to Vietnam to search for missing American pilots and to gather information
on the situation in the country after the surrender of the Japanese. He would
prove to be the first of nearly 59,000 Americans killed in Vietnam
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, 1974 – Monroe Academy beat Sparta Academy, 20-6,
in Monroeville. Richard Brown was Sparta’s head coach.
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, 1986 – Sparta Academy, under head coach Mike
Bledsoe, beat South Montgomery County Academy, 30-12, at Stuart-McGehee Field
in Evergreen.
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, 1997 – Andalusia beat Hillcrest, 12-6, in
Andalusia. Dennis Anderson was Hillcrest’s head coach.
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, 2003 – Hillcrest High School, under head coach
Arlton Hudson, beat Geneva High School, 14-8, at Brooks Memorial Stadium in
Evergreen.
Sept. 26, 2006 - Facebook was openened 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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