Sir Charles Lyell |
Feb. 22, 1512 – Italian cartographer and explorer Amerigo
Vespucci died at the age of 57 in Seville, Crown of
Castile, in present-day Spain.
Feb. 22, 1627 – Dutch explorer Olivier van Noort died at the
age of 68 or 69.
Feb. 22, 1732 - George Washington, the first President of
the United States, was born in Westmoreland County, Va.
Feb. 22, 1777 – Revolutionary War leader and Georgia’s first
Provisional Governor Archibald Bulloch died under mysterious circumstances just
hours after Georgia's Council of Safety granted him the powers of a dictator in
expectation of a British invasion.
Feb. 22, 1788 – German philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer was
born in Danzig, now Gdansk, in Poland.
Feb. 22, 1819 - Spanish minister Do Luis de Onis and U.S.
Secretary of State John Quincy Adams signed the Florida Purchase Treaty, in
which Spain agreed to cede the remainder of its old province of Florida to the
United States. Formal U.S. occupation began in 1821, and General Andrew
Jackson, the hero of the War of 1812, was appointed military governor. Florida
was organized as a U.S. territory in 1822 and was admitted into the Union as a
slave state in 1845.
Feb. 22, 1836 – The advance of Santa Anna’s Army reached the
heights of the Alazan, overlooking the city of San Antonio.
Feb. 22, 1847 – During the Mexican–American War, the Battle
of Buena Vista took place at the Angostura Pass in Mexico, and 5,000 American
troops defeated 15,000 Mexicans.
Feb. 22, 1851 - Alabama author Kate Upson Clark was born in
Camden, Ala.
Feb. 22, 1855 - The U.S. Congress voted to appropriate
$200,000 for continuance of the work on the Washington Monument. The next
morning the resolution was tabled, and it would be 21 years before the Congress
would vote on funds again. Work was continued by the Know-Nothing Party in
charge of the project.
Feb. 22, 1859 - U.S. President James Buchanan approved the
Act of February 22, 1859, which incorporated the Washington National Monument
Society "for the purpose of completing the erection now in progress of a
great National Monument to the memory of Washington at the seat of the Federal
Government."
Feb. 22, 1860 - Organized baseball’s first game was played
in San Francisco, Calif.
Feb. 22, 1861 - President-Elect
Abraham Lincoln delivered speeches at Harrisburg, Pa. Due to death threats,
Lincoln left for Washington City, incognito, under the protection of the well-known
detective, Allen Pinkerton. Lincoln arrived unceremoniously in Washington the
next morning.
Feb. 22, 1862 – Jefferson Davis was officially inaugurated
for a six-year term as the President of the Confederate States of America in
Richmond, Va. He was previously inaugurated as a provisional president on
February 18, 1861.
Feb. 22, 1862 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought at Independence and Post Oak, Mo.; at Kearnstown,
Va. and at Arkansas Bay, Texas. A Federal expedition was conducted to Vienna
and Flint Hill, Va.
Feb. 22, 1863 – During the Civil War, Federal cavalry
attacked Tuscumbia, Ala.
Feb. 22, 1863 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought on the Manchester Pike, Tenn. and at Coombs Ferry,
Kentucky.
Feb. 22, 1864 – After getting captured by the Union at
Campbell’s Station, Noah Dallas Peacock (Lewis Lavon Peacock’s older brother)
was admitted to Asylum General Hospital in Nashville and was transferred to
Louisville Military Prison six days later.
Feb. 22, 1864 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought at Luna Landing, Ark.; at Dalton and Whitemarsh
Island, Ga.; at near Okolona, Miss. (At Ivey’s Farm); on the Tallahatchie River
in Mississippi; at Lexington and Warrensburg, Mo.; along Calfkiller Creek and
Powell’s Bridge, Tenn.; in the vicinity of Indianola, Texas; at Gibsons’s and
Wyerman’s Mills, both on Indian Creek, Va. Confederates also raided Mayfield,
Ky.
Feb. 22, 1864 – At the Battle of West Point, Miss., Confederate
General Nathan Bedford Forrest routed a Union force three times the size of his
army, helping to end Union General William T. Sherman's expedition into
Alabama. Union General William Sooy Smith retreated back to Memphis due to
another Confederate force blocking his way to Meridian. This battle forced
Union General Sherman to return to Vicksburg. The Confederates suffered 144 men
killed, wounded, or missing, while the Union lost 324.
Feb. 22, 1865 – During the Civil War, a skirmish occurred at
Tuscumbia, Ala.
Feb. 22, 1865 – During the Civil War, a three-day Federal
operation between Pine Bluff and Meto, Ala. began.
Feb. 22, 1865 – During the Civil War, a four-day Federal
operation from Barrancas to Milton, Fla. began
Feb. 22, 1865 – During the Civil War, skirmishes were fought
at Northeast Ferry and Smith’s Creek, N.C. and at Camden and along the Wateree
River, S.C.
Feb. 22, 1865 – During the Civil War, the last major port of
the Confederate States of America was effectively lost as Wilmington, N.C. was
evacuated by Confederate forces. Every available railroad car and engine was
pressed into service as the Confederates removed every scrap of military
material that could be hauled. Finally, burning the stores that could not be
removed, Gen. Braxton Bragg and his soldiers abandoned the town. As fast as
they were leaving, Federal forces under Brig. Gen. Terry began occupying the
city.
Feb. 22, 1869 – The Escambia County (Ala.) Commission held
its first ever meeting at Pollard, the county seat at that time.
Feb. 22, 1874 – National Baseball Hall of Fame umpire Bill
Klem was born in Rochester, N.Y. Known as the “Father of Baseball Umpires,” he
was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1953.
Feb. 22, 1875 – Sir Charles Lyell, the “Father of Modern
Geology,” died in London, England. A close friend of Charles Darwin, Lyell
visited Claiborne, Ala. in 1846 to study the Eocene fossil beds there.
Feb. 22, 1878 – Frank Woolworth opened the first of his
“five cent” stores, “Woolworth’s Great Five Cent Store,” in Utica, N.Y.
Feb. 22, 1885 - The Washington Monument was officially
dedicated in Washington, D.C. It opened to the public in 1889.
Feb. 22, 1889 – United States President Grover Cleveland
signed a bill admitting North Dakota, South Dakota, Montana and Washington as
U.S. states.
Feb. 22, 1892 – Pulitzer Prize-winning poet Edna St. Vincent
Millay was born in Rockland, Maine.
Feb. 22, 1893 - The first Alabama-Auburn football game was
played in Birmingham, Alabama's Lakeview Park before a crowd of 5,000 spectators.
Auburn won this first game, 32-22. The rivalry continued until 1907 when the
games were stopped, with the renewal of the series not coming until 1948.
Feb. 22, 1896 - U.S. Marshall E.R. Morrisette was
circulating among his Monroeville, Ala. friends on this Saturday, according to
The Monroe Journal.
Feb. 22, 1906 – The Monroe Journal reported, in news from
the Jones Mill community, that Middleton Bros. had closed their old saw mill
which was located one mile south of Jones Mill and were in the process of
constructing a new one at Lufkin.
Feb. 22, 1906 – The Monroe Journal reported that Sniders
Crossing expected to soon have the first telegraph operator between Manistee
and the Junction.
Feb. 22, 1906 – The Monroe Journal reported, in news from
the Buena Vista community, that the store belonging to Wash Watson and sons had
burned and was a total loss. The fire was allegedly started by two arsonists,
including a black man who had been “whipped” by the “Watson boys” for a
misdemeanor several months before. The guilty parties were arrested, but one of
them, a young white man, escaped while being transported to the jail in Camden.
Feb. 22, 1906 – The Monroe Journal reported that the store
of Julius Farish in Beatrice, Ala. had been burglarized during the previous
week.
Feb. 22, 1906 - Mrs. J.A. Murphey of the Mt. Union had the
misfortune to lose her smoke house and all her meat to a fire on this Thursday.
Feb. 22, 1906 – Reddin Wade married Johnnie Peacock at her
parents’ home near Pine Apple on this Thursday afternoon. Justice G.W. Pugh
officiated, and a host of relatives and friends were present to “wish them
happiness,” according to The Monroe Journal.
Feb. 22, 1909 – W. Hicks was jailed for the nighttime murder
of John Askew of Andalusia, Ala. near Travis Bridge in eastern Conecuh County,
Ala.
Feb. 22, 1912 – Around 3 a.m., Evergreen, Ala. was struck by
an “embryo cyclone” that did considerable damage. E.C. Lee was picked up by the
wind and thrown into an outbuilding, breaking one of his arms. Large trees in
Evergreen were uprooted and fences were blown away. The Agricultural School was
also badly damaged.
Feb. 22, 1915
– During World War I, the Imperial German Navy instituted unrestricted
submarine warfare.
Feb. 22, 1916 – Both of Evergreen, Alabama’s banks, as well
as the post office, were closed on this Tuesday in observance of George Washington’s
birthday.
Feb. 22, 1917 – The Monroe Journal reported, under the
headline “Mr. Blacksher Resigns,” that somewhat to the surprise and greatly to
the regret of his many friends, J.U. Blacksher had tendered to the governor his
resignation as a member of the Monroe County Board of Revenue. Increasing
demands on his time and energies by extensive private interests, however,
necessitated the step. J.W. Jones of Roy was promptly named by the governor to
fill the vacancy.
Feb. 22, 1917 – The Monroe Journal reported that Dr. T.E.
Dennis’ “handsome” new dwelling on North Main Street had received the finishing
touches from the hands of the painters and was practically ready for occupancy.
This home, with its “beautifully shaded lawn and its elegant appointments,” was
one of the “show places” of the city.
Feb. 22, 1917 – The Monroe Journal reported that the Monvil
Park residence section was beginning to “attract the attention its advantageous
situation merited. Located on the new State Highway and near both high school
and city school, building lots were coming into demand.”
Feb. 22, 1917 – The Monroe Journal reported that Miss Jennie
Faulk was back from market and was arranging for a magnificent display of
seasonable millinery and ladies goods.
Feb. 22, 1917 - Sergeant Benito Mussolini was wounded by the accidental explosion of a mortar bomb on the Isonzo section of the Italian Front in World War I.
Feb. 22, 1924 – U.S. President Calvin Coolidge became the
first President to deliver a radio broadcast from the White House.
Feb. 22, 1925 – Poet Gerald Stern was born in Pittsburgh,
Pa.
Feb. 22, 1928 – “Rope,”
a dramatic version of Alabama author T. S. Stribling's book “Teeftallow,” opened on Broadway.
Feb. 22, 1932 - The U.S. War Department announced the
creation of the "Order of the Purple Heart." The announcement was
made on George Washington's 200th birthday. On August 7, 1782, George
Washington had created the "Purple Heart" with the "Badge of
Military Merit."
Feb. 22, 1934 – National Baseball Hall of Fame second
baseman and manager Sparky Anderson was born in Bridgewater, S.D. He went on to
play for the Philadelphia Phillies and managed the Cincinnati Reds and the
Detroit Tigers. He was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 2000.
Feb. 22, 1936 - T.L. Brantley’s car was hit in Repton by
Passenger Train No. 4 on this Saturday afternoon. Brantley was the only
occupant of the car and received some severe cuts and bruises and several
broken ribs. He was given first aid treatment at Dr. Carter’s office after
which he was carried to Carter’s Hospital. The car was completely demolished.
Feb. 22, 1937 – Bolling “Bo” Herbert, the Route One,
Evergreen mail carrier, lost control of his automobile and crashed into the
home of Maury Thames on Cary Street in Evergreen, Ala. He suffered minor
injuries, mostly bruises, and was “severely shaken up.”
Feb. 22, 1939 – Former Confederate soldier Hugh Ellis
Courtney died in Montgomery, Ala. and was buried in Pine Crest Cemetery in
Mobile, Ala. He was born on Feb. 13, 1842 in Mississippi and enlisted at
Pineville in Monroe County, Ala. on March 15, 1861. He re-enlisted on May 13,
1861 and was listed as sick at Hugunot Springs on July 15, 1861. He was wounded
at Chancellorsville on May 2, 1863 and was as admitted to the 2nd Div. Ala.
General Hospital at Richmond, Va. on June 6, 1863. He was listed as a POW at
the Wilderness on May 5, 1864 before being forwarded to Point Lookout, Md. on
May 18, 1864 and to Elmira Prison, N.Y. on Aug. 15, 1864. He took the Oath of
Allegiance on April 30, 1865 and stated that he desired to “return to Bell Landing,
where his relatives reside.” He was paroled on June 14, 1865. He was almost 5-8
with a fair complexion, auburn hair and blue eyes.
Feb. 22, 1943 – Construction of the USS Eldridge began at
the Federal Shipbuilding and Drydock Co. in Newark, N.J.
Feb. 22, 1943 – During World War II, members of the White
Rose resistance, Sophie Scholl, Hans Scholl and Christoph Probst were executed
in Nazi Germany.
Feb. 22, 1945 – The Monroe Journal reported that news had
been received by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. L.A. Hayles of Uriah, that their
son, Sgt. Floyd Hayles, was a prisoner of war in Germany. Sgt. Hayles entered
the service in February 1943 and went overseas July 3 of that year. He took
part in some major engagements, was wounded on June 14, 1944 in France and was
reported missing in action Sept. 18, 1944.
Feb. 22, 1945 – The Monroe Journal reported that Mr. and Mrs.
J.D. Forte of Beatrice had received word that their son, John D. Forte, had
been awarded the Combat Infantry Badge and Battle Star. He was serving with the
Army in the Pacific.
Feb. 22, 1945 – The Monroe Journal reported that Lt. William
H. Walding of Monroeville, navigator of a B-17 Flying Fortress of the 95th
Bombardment Group in England, had been awarded the 3rd Oak Leaf
Cluster to the Air Medal for meritorious achievement in bombing attacks on
vital German targets. He was the son of Mr. and Mrs. E.H. Walding. His wife,
Betty Walding, lived in Indianapolis, Ind.
Feb. 22, 1947 - Alabama author Richard North Patterson was
born in Berkeley, Calif.
Feb. 22, 1950 - Thomas Mason Mills, age 74, widely known and
highly respected citizen of Evergreen, Ala., died in his sleep at the home of
his son, Carl H. Mills, in Pensacola on this Wednesday. Mills was born in
Wilcox County at Pineapple on March 6, 1875. He spent his early life in that
community and in Butler County. He moved to Evergreen about 35 years before his
death and made his home there until about one month before his death when he
moved to live with his son in Pensacola because of his failing health. He was
for many years connected with the L.L. Moorer Store, large mercantile
establishment in Evergreen in former years.
Feb. 22, 1951 – The Evergreen Courant reported that
chances were good that the construction of the proposed Conecuh County hospital
under the Hill-Burton Act would get underway that year or early in 1952. This
statement was made that week by Clay H. Dean, Director of the hospital planning
division of the State Department of Public Health in a letter to the Conecuh
County Hospital Association.
Feb. 22, 1957 – Ngô Đình Diệm of South Vietnam survived a
communist shooting assassination attempt in Buôn Ma Thuột.
Feb. 22, 1960 – The top three winners in the senior division
of the annual Beta Club Beauty Revue at Excel High School on this Monday night
were Maxine Wiggins, second place; Sandra Roberson, first place; and Shelby
Kilpatrick, third place.
Feb. 22, 1960 - Extensive construction plans for the two
Monroeville schools had been submitted to the State Department of Education and
initial work was awaiting approval of the State Building Commission. This
information highlighted a report of a survey of schools in Monroeville and
throughout Monroe County as presented by Dr. John Abbott of Monroeville to the
local Parent-Teacher Association at a meeting on this Monday night. He said the
plans called for construction of a cafeteria and four new classrooms at Monroe
County High School and three classrooms and an auditorium at Monroeville
Elementary School.
Feb. 22-25, 1961 – The Class A, District I Basketball
Tournament was held at T.R. Miller High School in Brewton, Ala. Sixteen teams
participated in the tourney, including Castleberry, Chatom, Coffeeville, Excel,
Fairhope, Lyeffion, Miller, Monroeville, Repton and Silas.
Feb. 22, 1962 – “A Gift
of Time,” a dramatic version of Alabama author Lael Tucker
Wertenbaker's book “Death of a Man,”
opened on Broadway.
Feb. 22, 1965 - General William Westmoreland, commander of
Military Assistance Command Vietnam, cabled Washington, D.C., to request that
two battalions of U.S. Marines be sent to protect the U.S. airbase at Da Nang.
Feb. 22, 1966 – Conecuh County High School, led by head
coach Wayne Pope, beat Beatrice, 89-53, on this Tuesday night in the opening
round of the Area Class A Basketball Tournament in the Monroe County Coliseum
in Monroeville, Ala. Ronald Reeves led CCHS with 20 points; Rodney Wilson
scored 14; and Donald Janes scored 13. Brown led Beatrice with 23, and Booker
scored 11. Also that night, Fruitdale beat Lyeffion, 43-40. Booker led Lyeffion
with 18 points, and Wilson scored 12. Joe Mason was Lyeffion’s head coach.
Feb. 22, 1967 – The Conecuh County Training School played
the Mobile County Training School in Bay Minette, Ala. with the winner to
advance to the state basketball tournament.
Feb. 22, 1967 - Operation Junction
City was launched to ease pressure on Saigon.
Feb. 22, 1968 - The American war
effort in Vietnam was hit hard by the North Vietnamese Tet Offensive, which
ended on this day in 1968.
Feb. 22, 1973 – Evergreen High School’s boys basketball
team, led by head coach Charles Branum, beat Monroeville, 60-44, in the 3A
Region 1, Area 2 tournament.
Feb. 22, 1975 – Evergreen, Alabama’s new “Avenue of Flags”
was to be seen for the first time on this Saturday, when the flags were to fly
to honor the birthday of the nation’s first president, George Washington. The project
was led by the Pilot Club which set a goal of 50 flags to fly in the park area
between West Front Street and the L&N Railroad in downtown Evergreen.
Actually, a total of 72 flags, costing $25 each, were donated.
Feb. 22, 1987 – Vickie Lynn Pittman of East Brewton, Ala.
was murdered. Her body was discovered near Brooklyn, Ala. in March 1987 and she
was buried in the Elim Cemetery in Escambia County.
Feb. 22, 1995 - The NFL and CBS Radio agreed to a new
four-year contract for an annual 53-game package of games.
Feb. 22, 2006 – Iraqi journalist Atwar Bahjat was murdered
at the age of 29 in Samarra.
Feb. 22, 2010 - A copy of "Action Comics #1,"
which featured the first appearance of Superman, sold at auction for $1
million.
Feb. 22, 2010 - Ali Congdon of Bermuda fielded the Reserve
Grand Champion during the 65th Annual Conecuh County Steer &
Heifer Show on this Monday at Breaking Ridge Farms in Evergreen, Ala. The steer
tipped the scales at 1,110 pounds and sold for $1.50 per pound.
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