James Adams Stallworth |
Jan. 21, 1527 – Spanish explorer
Juan de Grijalva died in Nicaragua.
Jan. 21, 1738 - Ethan Allen, future
Revolutionary War hero and key founder of the Republic of Vermont, was born in
Litchfield, Connecticut.
Jan. 21, 1789 – The first American novel, “The Power of
Sympathy” or the “Triumph of Nature Founded in Truth,” was printed in Boston.
Jan. 21, 1793 – France’s King Louis XVI was beheaded for
treason in Paris, one of tens of thousands of victims of the French Revolution.
Jan. 21, 1795 – English navigator and explorer Samuel Wallis
was born near Camelford, Cornwall.
Jan. 21, 1812-ca. – Joseph Tarpley Peacock, the first son of
Levi and Martha Peacock and the father of Lewis Lavon Peacock, was born in
Wilkinson County, Ga.
Jan. 21, 1813 – General, explorer and politician John C.
Frémont was born in Savannah, Ga.
Jan. 21, 1815 - Alabama author Joseph Glover Baldwin was
born in Friendly Grove Factory, Va.
Jan. 21, 1824 – Civil War general Thomas Jonathan
“Stonewall” Jackson was born in Clarksburg, Va.
Jan. 21, 1846 – Confederate veteran Robert Baxter Platt Jr.
was born in Evergreen, Ala. During the Civil War, he served in Co. H of the 1st
Mississippi Cavalry and was awarded the Southern Cross of Honor. After the war,
he was a Methodist minister and a cotton broker. He passed away on March 29,
1934 and is buried in the Confederate Cemetery in Chattanooga, Hamilton County,
Tenn.
Jan. 21, 1846 – The Alabama legislature selected Montgomery
as the state’s new capital and later began its first session there on Dec. 6,
1847.
Jan. 21, 1846 - The first issue of the "Daily
News," edited by Charles Dickens, was published.
Jan. 21, 1861 – James Adams Stallworth of Evergreen, Ala.,
who began serving in the U.S. Congress in March 1857, withdrew with the rest of
the Alabama delegation when Alabama seceded from the Union at the start of the
Civil War.
Jan. 21, 1861 – Former U.S. Secretary of War and the future
president of the Confederacy, Jefferson Davis of Mississippi, bid farewell in a
speech in the U.S. Congressional Chambers and resigned from the U.S. Senate.
Four other Southerners also resigned, including Clement C. Clay Jr. and
Benjamin Fitzpatrick of Alabama and Stephen R. Mallory and David L Yulee of
Florida.
Jan. 21, 1862 – During the Civil War, Union Brig. Gen John
Alexander McClernand returned to his base of operations at Columbus, Ky.
Jan. 21, 1863 - Rebels recaptured Sabine Pass, Texas, and
opened an important port for the Confederacy. Two Confederate ships, the Bell
and Uncle Ben, drove away two Union ships, the Morning Light and Velocity. The
event is known as the First Battle of Sabine Pass.
Jan. 21, 1863 – A skirmish was fought in the vicinity of
Columbia, Mo. and on the Shelbyville Pike, Tenn. A three-day Federal
reconnaissance began between Murfreesborough and Cainsville, Tenn. Union Maj.
Gen. Fitz John Porter was officially cashiered from the Union Army by order of
President Lincoln. This order would be revoked in 1879 after a military review,
and Porter would be reinstated as a Colonel in the Regular Army in 1886 without
any back pay.
Jan. 21, 1864 – During the Civil war, a five-day Federal
operation began between Waldron and Baker’s ‘Springs, Ark., and a two-day
Federal operation began between Rossville and Dalton, Ga. A Federal
reconnaissance was conducted from Chattanooga to Ooltewah, Tenn., and
skirmishes were fought at Strawberry Plaines and Armstrong’s Ferry, Tenn. A
five-day Federal reconnaissance began on the Matagorda Peninsula, Texas.
Jan. 21, 1865 - A two-day Federal operation began from
Brashear City to Bayou Sorrel, La.
Jan. 21, 1869 – Russian mystic Grigori Rasputin was born in Pokrovskoye, Siberia.
Jan. 21, 1884 – Roger Nash Baldwin, one of the founders of
the American Civil Liberties Union, was born in Wellesley, Mass.
Jan. 21, 1885 – Italian engineer and explorer Umberto Nobile
was born in Lauro, in the southern Italian province of Avellino.
Jan. 21, 1895 – A man and a woman were killed by lightning
near Suggsville, Ala. on this Monday. They were among 10 people who had “taken
shelter from the rain in a small house, and it was said that “electricity came
down the chimney and passed out at the door knocking” all of them down and
killing two.
Jan. 21, 1905 – Fashion designer Christian Dior was born in
Granville, France.
Jan. 21, 1915 – The Monroe Journal carried a story about
Judge T.L. Sowell’s gold watch, which the judge’s father bought in New York
City in 1847. During Wilson’s raid through Alabama in 1865, Judge Sowell’s
father hid the watch in a glass jar with other valuables and buried them in the
woods near his home in Monroe County, where they remained safe for three
months. Judge Sowell received the watch, which was made in Liverpool, England,
for his 21st birthday.
Jan. 21, 1918 - “The Eyes of Mystery,” a movie
version of Alabama author Octavus Roy Cohen's book “The House in the Mist,”
was released.
Jan. 21, 1924 - In Moscow on this evening, shock and
near-hysterical grief greeted the news that Vladimir Ilyich Lenin, leader of
the radical socialist Bolshevik movement that toppled the czarist regime in
1917 and head of the first government of the Union of Soviet Socialist
Republics (U.S.S.R.), had died of a massive cerebral hemorrhage.
Jan. 21, 1925 – Austrian-born English novelist Eva Ibbotson
was born in Vienna, Austria.
Jan. 21, 1936 - The pouring of the concrete on the
Monroeville, Ala. square paving project started on this Tuesday afternoon.
Although the gaps to be filled were prepared for the concrete several weeks
before, work had been held up because of the weather and also the lack of some
of the necessary materials.
Jan. 21, 1936 - Work began on this Tuesday on the foundation
of the new Eastern Star Hall to be erected in the southern part of Monroeville,
Ala. It was hoped to be ready for use within 60 days.
Jan. 21, 1937 – The Monroe Journal reported that Judge F.W.
Hare had presided over Circuit Court in Mobile, Ala. during the past week. He
was spending the week of Jan. 21 in Brewton where he was holding a non-jury
term of court in Escambia County.
Jan. 21, 1937 – The Monroe Journal reported that at a
regular annual meeting of the stockholders of the Peoples Bank of Frisco City,
held the previous week, the following officers and directors were elected for
1937: President, J.B. Barnett; vice-president, J.J. McWilliams; cashier, W.A.
Giddens; assistant cashier, J.A. Hayles; directors, J.B. Barnett, J.J.
McWilliams, O. McNeil, W.M. Williams, John T. Lee, C.A. Florey, W.A. Giddens
and Q. Salter.
Jan. 21, 1938 - Alabama author Julia Fields was born in
Perry County, Ala.
Jan. 21, 1940 – The Gloria Colita (Colite?), a 125-foot
schooner, sailed from Mobile on this day, loaded with a cargo of lumber bound
for Guantanamo, Cuba. On Sun., Feb. 4, 1940, the Coast Guard cutter Cartigan
found the Gloria Colita “adrift, crippled and unmanned” with everything in
order about 150 to 200 miles south of Mobile in the Gulf of Mexico.
Jan. 21, 1952 – William Shawn took up the reins of The New
Yorker, after the death of his predecessor and the magazine's founder, Harold
Ross.
Jan. 21, 1952 – Pulitzer Prize-winning American critic,
scholar and essayist Louis Menand was born in Syracuse, N.Y.
Jan. 21, 1954 - The first nuclear-powered submarine, USS
NAUTILUS, was launched by First Lady Mamie Eisenhower, who broke the
traditional bottle of champagne across the ship's bow.
Jan. 21, 1965 – The Evergreen Courant reported that The Birmingham
News had named Repton High School as the 1964 Division 1-A football champions
after the Bulldogs finished the season with a 5-1-3 overall record. Repton’s
head coach during the 1964 season was Gene Madison, and players on that game
included Capt. Jimmy Bradley, Nicky Thompson, Robert Lowery, Dwight Jerkins and
Glenn Baggett. The results of Repton’s games in 1964 included, Baker (Fla.),
won, 7-0; Excel, won, 14-6; Lyeffion, 0-0; Coffeeville, 0-0; Red Level, 12-12;
McKenzie, lost, 13-6; Dozier, won, 31-0; Coffee Springs, won, 49-0; and Zion
Chapel, won, 49-0.
Jan. 21, 1965 – Conecuh County’s 1965 Junior Miss, Sally
Oswald, was to participate in the State Junior Miss Finals in Birmingham, Ala.
on this Thursday.
Jan. 21, 1968 – The Battle of Khe Sanh, one of the most
publicized and controversial battles of the Vietnam War, began, 14 miles below
the DMZ and six miles from the Laotian border. Luther Upton was there with the
U.S. Marine Corps.
Jan. 21, 1973 - The AFC beat the NFC, 35-31, in the NFL Pro
Bowl in Dallas. The game had been played in Los Angeles since 1942.
Jan. 21, 1976 – Singer-songwriter and actress Emma Bunton of
the Spice Girls was born in Finchley, London, England.
Jan. 21, 1976 – Olympic baseball player Patrick de Lange was
born in Amsterdam.
Jan. 21, 1977 – United States President Jimmy Carter
pardoned nearly all American Vietnam War draft evaders, some of whom had
emigrated to Canada.
Jan. 21, 1979 - The Pittsburgh Steelers beat the Dallas
Cowboys, 35-31, in Super Bowl XIII. The Steelers became the first team to win
three Super Bowls.
Jan. 21, 1983 - In his second D.B. Cooper copycat incident,
Glenn K. Tripp, while still on probation, hijacked Northwest Flight 608 en
route and demanded to be flown to Afghanistan. When the plane landed in
Portland he was shot and killed by FBI agents.
Jan. 21, 1983 – The Evergreen Chamber of Commerce held its
annual “Promotion Banquet” at 7 p.m. at the Old L&N Depot in Evergreen.
Escambia County native Dr. Stanley Wilson, Vice President for Agriculture, Home
Economics and Veterinary Science at Auburn University, was the guest speaker.
Jan. 21-22, 1983 – Missy Price, Conecuh County’s Junior
Miss, represented Conecuh County in the 1983 Alabama Junior Miss Pageant at Lee
High School in Montgomery, Ala.
Jan. 21, 1986 - Former Major League player, Randy Bass,
became the highest-paid baseball player in Japanese history. Bass signed a
three-year contract for $3.25 million. He played for the Hanshin Tigers.
Jan. 21, 1993 – National Baseball Hall of Fame second
baseman Charlie Gehringer died at the age of 89 in Bloomfield Hill, Mich. He
played his entire career for the Detroit Tigers. He was inducted into the Hall
of Fame in 1949.
Jan. 21, 1994 – Episode No. 14 of “The X-Files” – entitled
“Gender Bender” – aired for the first time.
Jan. 21, 1994 – The New Evergreen (Ala.) Commercial Historic
District was placed on National Register of Historic Places.
Jan. 21, 1994 – Sparta Academy’s varsity boys basketball
team beat Catherine Academy, 72-69, in Evergreen. Britt Ward, a senior, led
Sparta with 27 points, and James Johnson followed with 16 points.
Jan. 21, 1997 - Don Mattingly of the New York Yankees
officially announced his retirement.
Jan. 21, 1998 – Betty Lou Dougherty, 57, of Asheville, N.C.
was last seen after visiting Montgomery, Gulf Shores, Tuscaloosa and Hamilton.
Her rental car was found in the Range, Ala. community in February 1998, and her
family hired a private investigator to find the woman in March 1998.
Jan. 21, 2010 – The Evergreen Courant reported that Reid
State Technical College in Evergreen, Ala. was to be featured in a segment of
“On the Job,” a Montgomery-produced television program airing weekly on Alabama
Public Television and WSFA-TV 12.2.
Jan. 21, 2012 - The 1964 Miller-Meteor Cadillac hearse that
carried President Kennedy’s body from Parkland Memorial Hospital to Love Field
for the flight to Washington, D.C. was sold at auction. Stephen Tebo paid
$176,000 at the Barrett-Jackson Collector Car Event in Scottsdale, AZ.
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