Army SFC James Kenneth Sutton |
Feb. 25, 1692 – During the events leading up to the Salem
witchcraft trials, Mary Sibley, a neighbor of the Samuel Parris family, told
John Indian, the husband of Tituba, the recipe to make a "witch cake"
of rye meal and the girls' urine to feed to a dog in order to discover who is
bewitching the girls, according to English folk "white magic"
practices.
Feb. 25, 1692 – German author and
adventurer Karl Ludwig von Pöllnitz was born in Issum, a municipality in the district of Kleve, in North
Rhine-Westphalia, Germany.
Feb. 25, 1707 – Comic playwright
Carlo Goldoni was born in Venice, Italy.
Feb. 25, 1710 – French soldier and explorer Daniel
Greysolon, Sieur du Lhut died of gout in Montreal and was buried in the
Recollet church.
Feb. 25, 1779 - The British surrendered Fort Sackville in
present-day Indiana, marking the beginning of the end of British domination in
America's western frontier.
Feb. 25, 1793 - The department heads of the U.S. government
met with U.S. President George Washington for the first Cabinet meeting on U.S.
record.
Feb. 25, 1836 – Samuel Colt received U.S. Patent No. 138
(later 9430X) for a "revolving-cylinder pistol,” better known as the “Colt
revolver.”
Feb. 25, 1836 - A two-hour engagement occurred when Santa
Anna’s troops attempted to occupy jacales (picket and thatch huts) located near
the southwest corner of the Alamo compound. Members of the garrison ventured
out and burned the jacales on this night. Santa Anna’s soldiers
constructed artillery batteries south of the Alamo. James W. Fannin left Goliad
with a relief column bound for the Alamo.
Feb. 25, 1841 – Painter Pierre-Auguste Renoir was born
Limoges, France.
Feb. 25, 1862 - The U.S. Congress passed the Legal Tender
Act. The act authorized the use of paper notes to pay the government's bills.
This ended the policy of using only gold or silver in transactions, and it
allowed the government to finance the enormously costly Civil War long after
its gold and silver reserves were depleted.
Feb. 25, 1862 – The USS Monitor was commissioned. Designed
by Swedish engineer John Ericsson, the Monitor had an unusually low profile,
rising from the water only 18 inches. The flat iron deck had a 20-foot
cylindrical turret rising from the middle of the ship; the turret housed two
11-inch Dahlgren guns. The ship had a draft of less than 11 feet so it could
operate in the shallow harbors and rivers of the South.
Feb. 25, 1862 – During the Civil
War, a skirmish was fought at Keetsville, Mo. Nashville, Tennessee also changed
hands without a shot being fired. As a result of General U.S. Grant’s armies’
capture of Ft. Donelson and Ft. Henry, the city had basically become militarily
indefensible. Close to three months of sustained Federal operations in Loudoun
County, Va. began.
Feb. 25, 1863 - Skirmishes at
Chantilly, Hartwood Church, Winchester, Strasburg, and Woodstock, VA.
Feb. 25, 1864 – Maj. Edmund W. Martin of Sparta, Ala. was
wounded by a shell fragment at the Battle of Dalton, Ga.
Feb. 25, 1864 – At the Battle of Dalton, Georgia, Union
General George Thomas ceased his attack on Confederate Joseph Johnston's
troops. The Union had begun the offensive the previous day.
Feb. 25, 1864 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought at Buzzard Roost and Rocky Face Ridge, Ga.; and at
Hudsonville, Miss. (Located in present day Marshall County, nine miles
northeast of Holly Springs). A two-day Federal operation between Whiteside,
Tenn. and Frick’s Gap, Ga. began.
Feb. 25, 1865 – Union Brigadier General James Veatch assumed
command of Federal forces on Dauphin Island, Ala.
Feb. 25, 1865 – After getting captured by the Union on Dec.
8, 1863, Noah Dallas Peacock (Lewis Lavon Peacock’s older brother) was
exchanged at City Point, Va.
Feb. 25, 1865 – Joseph G. Sanders, aka “The Turncoat of Dale
County,” was ordered to take 20 men and proceed to the East Pass at Santa Rosa
Island, where he was to recruit new soldiers for his regiment, as well as
“confiscate” cattle and horses belonging to “Rebel” civilians in nearby Walton
and Holmes counties. He was given 14 days to perform this mission, after which
he was ordered to return to Pensacola. But instead of obeying this directive,
Sanders and his men made their way into the Forks of the Creek Swamp near
Campbellton, where they hid out and waited for an opportunity to attack the
small town of Newton, which was then the county seat of Dale County. Sanders
knew that the courthouse there contained records of his former Confederate
service (and those of other men in his unit), and he apparently wished to
destroy them.
Feb. 25, 1865 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought at Piketon, Ky. and at West Crossroads, S.C.
Federal forces occupied Camden, SC. Skirmish West’s Crossroads, SC
Feb. 25, 1866 – Miners in Calaveras County, Calif.
discovered what is now called the Calaveras Skull, human remains that
supposedly indicated that man, mastodons and elephants had co-existed.
Feb. 25, 1873 – Enrico Caruso, the first recording start in
music history, was born in Naples.
Feb. 25, 1877 – Irish seaman and explorer Tom Crean was born
in Gurtuchrane,
Annascaul, County Kerry, Ireland.
Feb. 25, 1896 – Publisher John C. Farrar was born in
Burlington, Vermont.
Feb. 25, 1900 – Around 4:05 a.m., a northbound “double-header”
train loaded with Mardi Gras revelers derailed due to damaged rail switch north
of Flomaton, Ala. Fireman Sol Abner was crushed to death during the incident as
he tried to jump between the two engines. Engineer Henry Copeland was only
slightly injured.
Feb. 25, 1913 - The 16th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution
was ratified. It authorized a graduated income tax.
Feb. 25, 1914 – Snowed in Monroeville and Jeddo in Monroe
County, Ala.
Feb. 25, 1915 - The Excel Dramatic Club gave a “pleasing
presentation” of the three-act comedy, “Topsy Turvy” at the high school
auditorium.
Feb. 25, 1916
– During World War I, German troops seized Fort Douaumont, the most formidable
of the forts guarding the walled city of Verdun, France, four days after
launching their initial attack.
Feb. 25, 1917 – English novelist Anthony Burgess was born in
Manchester, England. He would publish “A Clockwork Orange” in 1962.
Feb. 25, 1919 – National Baseball Hall of Fame outfielder
Monte Irvin was born in Haleburg, Ala. in Henry County near Dothan. He grew up
in Orange, N.J. and went on to play for the New York Giants and the Chicago
Cubs. He was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1973.
Feb. 25, 1930 – In Lovecraftian fiction, all of the
inhabitants of Stillwater, Manitoba disappeared and only one body from the town
was ever found. The town first appeared in 1933’s “The Thing That Walked on the
Wind” by August Derleth.
Feb. 25, 1930 – Claude Eugene Fountain, 31, the son of Mrs.
Alex Fountain, was accidentally killed near Birmingham, Ala. on this Tuesday in
a mine where he was employed. The Journal reported that that death was caused
by a falling rock. His body was brought to Beatrice for burial. Born on March
19, 1898, he was buried in the Pineville Baptist Cemetery.
Feb. 25, 1932 – Adolf Hitler obtained German citizenship by
naturalization, which allowed him to run in the 1932 election for
Reichspräsident.
Feb. 25, 1934 – National Baseball Hall of Fame infielder and
manager John McGraw died at the age of 60 in New Rochelle, N.Y. During his
career, he played for the Baltimore Orioles, the St. Louis Cardinals and the
New York Giants and he also managed the Orioles and the Giants. He was inducted
into the Hall of Fame in 1937.
Feb. 25, 1937 – Evergreen High School’s boys and girls
basketball teams played Lyeffion in Lyeffion, Ala.
Feb. 25, 1937 – The Evergreen Courant reported that the fund
for erecting a memorial marker over the grave of Philip “Old Buck” Samuel was
“progressing rapidly” with contributions coming in from four different states,
including Kentucky, Tennessee, Mississippi and Louisiana. The article described
Samuel as an “aged Evergreen eccentric.”
Feb. 25, 1939 – Major League Baseball pitcher Denny Lemaster
was born in Corona, Calif. He would go on to play for the Milwaukee/Atlanta
Braves, the Houston Astros and the Montreal Expos.
Feb. 25, 1940 – National Baseball Hall of Fame third baseman
Ron Santo was born in Seattle, Wash. He would go on to play for the Chicago
Cubs and the Chicago White Sox. He was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 2012.
Feb. 25, 1941 – During the “February strike,” in occupied
Amsterdam, a general strike was declared in response to increasing anti-Jewish
measures instituted by the Nazis.
Feb. 25, 1942 – Pro Football Hall of Fame defensive end Carl
Eller was born in Winston-Salem, N.C. He would go on to play for the Minnesota
Vikings and the Seattle Seahawks.
Feb. 25, 1943 – Former Beatle George Harrison was born in
Liverpool, England.
Feb. 25, 1951 – Major League Baseball center fielder Cesar
Cedeno was born in Santo Domingo, Domician Republic. He would go on to play for
the Houston Astros, the Cincinnati Reds, the St. Louis Cardinals and the Los
Angeles Dodgers.
Feb. 25, 1957 - The U.S. Supreme Court ruled, 6-3, that
baseball was the only professional sport exempt from antitrust laws.
Feb. 25, 1958 – The Washington Senators traded Mobile,
Alabama’s Milt Bolling to the Cleveland Indians for Pete Mesa. It didn't work
out, however, as a month later the Indians swapped him with the Detroit Tigers
for Pete Wojey and $20,000. He became teammates with his brother, Frank
Bolling, a five-year veteran for the Tigers as their starting second baseman.
Feb. 25, 1960 - Alabama author Lillian Hellman's play “Toys in the Attic” opened on Broadway.
Feb. 25, 1960 – The Monroe Journal reported that the
Blacksher Athletic Club had organized at Uriah, Ala. to “foster good
sportsmanship among athletes and spectators at Uriah.” Tommy Mason was named
president of the new group, which listed 12 charter members. Other officials
include Frank Staunton, vice president; J.W. Farrell, secretary; John
Weatherford, treasurer.
Feb. 25, 1960 – The Monroe Journal reported that Miss Alice
Lee of Monroeville, Ala. had spoke recently at a meeting of the Symposium Club
in the home of Mrs. C.C. Ward. She presented a review of the book, “South of
Appomattox.”
Feb. 25, 1968 – During the Vietnam War, 135 unarmed citizens
of Hà My village in South Vietnam's Quảng Nam Province were killed and buried en
masse by South Korean troops in what would come to be known as the Hà My
massacre.
Feb. 25, 1969 – Army SFC James Kenneth Sutton, 27, of
Andalusia, Ala. was killed in action in Quang Tri, Vietnam. Born on July 26,
1941, he was buried with full military honors at the Bethany Baptist Church
Cemetery. He was serving in the Army’s 5th Special Forces Group in Vietnam when
killed.
Feb. 25, 1971 - In both houses of
Congress, legislation was initiated to forbid U.S. military support of any
South Vietnamese invasion of North Vietnam without congressional approval.
Feb. 25, 1972 - U.S. troops clashed
with North Vietnamese forces in a major battle 42 miles east of Saigon, the
biggest single U.S. engagement with an enemy force in nearly a year.
Feb. 25-28, 1975 – Conecuh County High School was scheduled
to host the Regional I, Area 2, Class A Basketball Tournament in Castleberry,
Ala. CCHS and Lyeffion High School were the only two Conecuh County schools in
the tourney. CCHS had a 17-8 overall record, and Lyeffion was 8-11 overall.
Feb. 25, 1976 – Actress and screenwriter Rashida Jones was
born in Los Angeles, Calif.
Feb. 25, 1976 – Professional basketball player Samaki Walker was born in Columbus, Ohio. He
went on to play for Louisville, the Dallas Mavericks, the San Antonio Spurs,
the Los Angeles Lakers, the Miami Heat, the Washington Wizards and the Indiana
Pacers.
Feb. 25, 1985 – Troy State University athletic trainer
Marshall Smith was the guest speaker at the Evergreen High School Quarterback
Club meeting, which began at 7 p.m. in the Old Armory behind the school. He
presented a program on knees, knee injuries and knee braces.
Feb. 25, 1987 – Southern Methodist University's football
program became the first college football program to receive the death penalty
by the NCAA's Committee on Infractions. It was revealed that athletic officials
and school administrators had knowledge of a "slush fund" used to
make illegal payments to the school's football players as far back as 1981.
Feb. 25, 1989 - Jerry Jones, the owner of the Dallas
Cowboys, fired head coach Tom Landry after a 29-year career.
Feb. 25, 1990 - The television program “Far Below,” teleplay by Alabama author
Robert McDowell, was broadcast as part of the “Monsters” series.
Feb. 25, 1991 – During the Gulf War, an Iraqi scud missile
hit an American military barracks in Dhahran, Saudi Arabia killing 28 U.S. Army
Reservists from Pennsylvania.
Feb. 25, 1995 - Major League Baseball announced that regular
season games would be played in Hawaii for the first time.
Feb. 25, 2010 – J.F. Shields High School’s varsity girls
basketball team won the school’s first state title in girls basketball by
beating Sunshine, 56-43, in Birmingham. Shields’ head coach that season was
Herbert Blackmon, and players on the team included Brittany Andrews, Tymira
Castopheny, Carneshia Huff, Mariah Jones, Dahricia McIntosh, April Montgomery,
Ayannta Nettles, Desaray Nettles, Japlessa Prim, Shannon Richardson, Ty’ka Robinson,
Tykeria Rodgers, Kamesha Stallworth, Tachina Walker and Brandi Wiggins.
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