Barbara Ann Allen Rainey |
July 13, 1585 - A group of 108 English colonists, led by Sir
Richard Grenville, reached Roanoke Island, N.C.
July 13, 1787 – The Continental Congress, under the Articles
of Confederation, enacted the Northwest Ordinance establishing governing rules
for the Northwest Territory, procedures for the admission of new states and
limited the expansion of slavery.
July 13, 1793 – English poet John Clare was born in
Helpston, Northamptonshire.
July 13, 1798 – English Romantic poet William Wordsworth
first saw the ruins of Tintern Abbey while on a walking tour of Wales with his
sister, Dorothy. This experience inspired his poem “Lines Composed a Few Miles
above Tintern Abbey, On Revisiting the Banks of the Wye during a Tour. July 13,
1798.” Wordsworth claimed the 1,200 lines came to him with the greatest of
ease, entirely in his head.
July 13, 1824 - Marquis de Lafayette left France on the
American merchant vessel Cadmus, headed to America for his extended tour of the
United States.
July 13, 1832 - Henry Schoolcraft discovered the source of
the Mississippi River in Minnesota.
July 13, 1861 - Union General George B. McClellan
distinguished himself by routing Confederates under General Robert Garnett at
the Battle of Corrick's Ford in western Virginia. The battle ensured Yankee
control of the region, secured the Union's east-west railroad connections, and
set in motion the events that would lead to the creation of West Virginia. The
battle resulted in 70 Confederate casualties (including the death of Garnett,
the first general officer to die in the war) and 10 Union casualties.
July 13, 1861 – During the Civil War, Federal forces
descended upon Romney, West Virginia
July 13, 1861 – During the Civil
War, Confederate General Pegram surrendered his command in West Virginia.
July 13, 1862 – During the Civil
War, Confederate General Nathan Bedford Forrest defeated a Union army at
Murfreesboro, Tenn. and captured the Union garrison. A skirmish was also fought
near Wolf River, Tenn.
July 13, 1862 – During the Civil
War, Confederates advanced from Hanover Courthouse to Gordonsville, Va. A skirmish
was also fought at Rapidan Station, Va., where Federal forces destroyed the
railroad bridge over the Rapidan River.
July 12, 1862 – During the Civil
War, Abraham Lincoln read a draft of the Emancipation Proclamation to Secretary
of State William Seward and Secretary of the Navy Gideon Welles, both strong
abolitionists. Seward began talking about the problems it would cause. Welles
sat there dumbfounded.
July 13, 1863 - A nine-day Federal military operation began
in and about Huntsville, Ala.
July 13, 1863 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought at Donaldsonville, Louisiana.
July 13, 1863 – During the Civil
War, in Maryland, the Confederate Army of Northern Virginia pulled out of its
defensive position north of the Potomac River and during the night crossed over
the river to Virginia.
July 13, 1863 – During the Civil
War, Confederate Major General John Stevens Bowen died near Raymond, Miss. from
an illness that developed during the Vicksburg siege. Natchez, Miss. was occupied
by Federal forces. Aided by gun boats, Yazoo City, Miss. was occupied by
Federal forces. Both Natchez and Yazoo City were occupied without fighting.
July 13, 1863 – During the Civil
War, Morgan’s raiders entered Ohio and headed in the direction of Cincinnati
and Hamilton. Martial law was declared in Cincinnati, Covington and Newport,
Ohio.
July 13, 1863 – During the Civil
War, a Federal operation took place between Newport Barracks and White Oak
River, N.C.
July 13, 1863 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought in Tennessee on the Forked Deer River and at
Jackson.
July 13, 1863 – During the Civil
War, a 12-day Federal operation began from Fayetteville, W.Va. to Wytheville, Va.
July 13, 1863 – In what is now
known as the “New York City Draft Riots,” opponents of conscription began three
days of rioting in New York City, which would be later regarded as the worst in
United States history. Order was not restored until Union soldiers returned
from Gettysburg, and the riots resulted in more than 1,000 casualties.
Anti-draft riots also take place in Troy, N.Y.; Boston, Mass.; Portsmouth, N.H.;
Wooster, Ohio; and Rutland, Vt.
July 13, 1864 – During the Civil War, skirmishes occurred
near Greenpoint, Ten Islands and near the Coosa River at Stone’s Ferry, Ala.
July 13, 1864 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought near Brownsville, Ark.; at Bell Mines, Ky.; at
Rockville, Md.; at Camden Point and at Versailles, Mo.; and at Port Gibson,
Miss.
July 13, 1864 – During the Civil
War, a four-day Federal operation from Helena, Ark., to Buck Island, in the
Mississippi River, began. A Federal operation also took place in the vicinity
of Pine Bluff, Ark.
July 13, 1864 – During the Civil
War, in Georgia, Sherman prepared to advance his whole force across the
Chattahoochee River and then around the north side of Atlanta.
July 13, 1864 – During the Civil
War, a three-day Federal operation between Munfordville to Big Spring, Ky.
began.
July 13, 1864 – During the Civil
War, Federal forces occupied a strong position at Harrisburg, Miss., in the
immediate vicinity of Tupelo, Miss.
July 13, 1865 – In the aftermath of the Civil War, President
Andrew Johnson named William Marvin as provisional governor of Florida.
July 13, 1868 - The Alabama
legislature ratified the 14th amendment to the U.S. Constitution, thereby
meeting one of the requirements for readmission to the Union. In part, the
amendment guaranteed that states could not abridge citizenship rights of
"persons born or naturalized in the United States," which included
freedmen.
July 13, 1885 – Still apparently feeling the effects of his
Civil War wound, Noah Dallas Peacock (Lewis Lavon Peacock’s older brother)
applied for a Confederate pension, deposing that he was unable to earn a
livelihood on account of his bad leg. The pension was granted on July 20.
July 13, 1886 – The Hon. N.A. Agee “had the misfortune to
lose a horse” on this Tuesday night, according to The Monroe Journal. “He drove
the horse from Perdue Hill Monday to attend County court and during the day it
became sick and died Tuesday night.”
July 13, 1896 - Philadelphia’s Ed Delahanty became the
second Major League player to hit four home runs in a single game.
July 13, 1896 - The Monroe County Commissioners Court
convened on this Monday in special session, and the full board was in
attendance.
July 13, 1905 – The Monroe Journal reported that recent West
Point graduate, Army Lt. Charles L. Scott, was home on leave until Oct. 13,
when he was to report to his command, the 12th U.S. Cavalry, stationed at Camp
Thomas, near Chickamauga Park. Scott was the son of the Hon. Rob G. Scott of
Mt. Pleasant.
July 13, 1905 – W.B. Jones announced in The Monroe Journal
that he would be operating a new hack line from Monroeville to Monroe Station,
meeting all trains daily.
July 13, 1909 – The Nashville Americans played Greenville’s
baseball team in Greenville, Ala.
July 13, 1914 - Friedrich von Wiesner, an official of the
Austro-Hungarian Foreign Office, reported back to Foreign Minister Leopold von
Berchtold the findings of an investigation into the assassination of Archduke
Franz Ferdinand, heir to the Austrian throne, and his wife Sophie the previous
June 28, in Sarajevo, Bosnia.
July 13, 1915 – The Evergreen City School’s board of
trustees elected the following teachers, all female, for the coming school year
– Ethel King, principal; Willie Cunningham, Sue Stallworth and Mae Simmons,
teachers; and Mary McCreary, assistant.
July 13, 1916 – The Monroe Journal reported, under the
headline “SEVERE DAMAGE BY STORM,” that “the heavy rainfall and high winds of
last week caused great damage to growing crops both of corn and cotton
throughout the county. Injury to corn is estimated at 40 to 50 percent, while
the damage to cotton is largely problematical. The ground is so wet that it is
impractical to press the fight against the boll weevils and these pests may so
infest the fields in the meantime as to make the fight not worthwhile. Crops in
the river and creek bottoms are underwater and on the uplands corn was blown to
the ground in hopeless confusion. Much timber was felled in some sections
seriously interfering with further cultivation. Roads and bridges withstood the
strain with remarkably little injury. Those sections of roads that have been
completed and traveled for several months were practically injured, while the
more recent fills sustained greater damage.”
July 13, 1916 - The Conecuh Record reported that the
Recruiting Headquarters of the Second Regiment was presently located at Herlong
& Barnes Drug store in Greenville, Ala. Any young man of Conecuh County
wishing to join any of the companies in this regiment would be physically
examined and sworn in at Greenville. Elsewhere in the paper that week, readers
learned that “Captains Chapman and Baird are in the city looking for recruits
for the first regiment and any young man wishing to enlist will do well to see
them.”
July 13, 1916 – In the Pineapple community, J.C. Wright and
son Radcliff and Dr. Watkins were busy repairing the telephone line on this
Thursday. Joe Hennington was also putting up a telephone line for himself and
Levi Wilkinson to connect with Dr. Watkins.
July 13, 1916 – The Conecuh Record reported that J.T.
Salter had erected a first-class cattle dipping vat at Annex, “which the people
show their appreciation by patronizing same.” There had been over 200 head
dipped since the completion three weeks before.
July 13, 1916 – The Conecuh Record reported that C.P.
Deming Jr. had purchased the City Drug store.
July 13, 1916 – The Conecuh Record reported that the
Evergreen Pharmacy had moved into new quarters, which were “much larger than
the old store.”
July 13, 1919 – The British airship R34 landed in Norfolk,
England, completing the first airship return journey across the Atlantic in 182
hours of flight.
July 13, 1919 – Twenty-one dipping vats were blown up with
dynamite in the lower end of Monroe County by unknown parties, and stock owners
offered a $1,000 reward for those responsible.
July 13, 1923 – The Hollywood Sign was officially dedicated
in the hills above Hollywood, Los Angeles, California. It originally reads
"Hollywoodland " but the four last letters were dropped after
renovation in 1949. Originally built as an advertisement for the "Hollywoodland"
housing community, the landmark has since become an icon of the entertainment
industry. Over the years, the sign was subject to a conspiracy to steal its
letters, the deterioration and loss of the "H" and two
"O's", and, ultimately, adoption by the Hollywood Chamber of
Commerce, which dropped the "land" portion of the sign.
July 13, 1933 - J.U. Blacksher visited Monroeville from
Mobile on this Thursday.
July 13, 1939 – Evergreen’s baseball team was scheduled to
play a double header against Atmore in Atmore, Ala. on this Thursday afternoon.
July 13, 1940 - Author Dorothy Baughman was born in
Prattville, Ala.
July 13, 1942 - Harrison Ford, who played Indiana Jones and
Han Solo, was born in Chicago, Ill.
July 13, 1944 - Erno Rubik, the creator of Rubik's Cube
puzzle, was born in Budapest, Hungary.
July 13, 1960 - John F. Kennedy won the Democratic
nomination to run for president of the United States, beating Senator Lyndon
Johnson.
July 13, 1968 - Governor Nelson
Rockefeller of New York, a Republican presidential candidate, revealed a
four-stage peace plan that, he argued, could end the Vietnam War in six months
if North Vietnam assented to it.
July 13, 1969 - Former Alabama Governor George Wallace
criticized President Richard Nixon for his handling of the Vietnam War and said
he favored an all-out military victory if the Paris talks failed to produce
peace soon. Wallace had run unsuccessfully against Nixon as a third party
candidate in the 1968 presidential election.
July 13, 1972 - Carroll Rosenbloom, owner of the Baltimore
Colts, and Robert Irsay, owner of the Los Angeles Rams, traded teams.
July 13, 1972 - The list of qualified voters for the City of
Monroeville, said to have been the largest ever, appeared in this day’s issue
of The Journal as the municipality prepared for the Aug. 8 general election.
The list contained approximately 3,283 names, some 800 more than were listed
four years before prior to the last general municipal election.
July 13, 1972 – The Monroe Journal reported that Riley Kelly
of Excel was among the Alabama poets receiving honorable mention for their
entries in the 13th annual convention contest at the 1972 annual
convention of the National Federation of State Poetry Societies at Kentucky
Southern College during the previous week.
July 13, 1973 – Alexander Butterfield revealed the existence
of the "Nixon tapes" to the special Senate committee investigating
the Watergate break in.
July 13, 1976
– German SS officer Joachim Peiper died at the age of 61 in Traves, Haute-SaĆ“ne,
France.
July 13, 1977 - Lightning struck three times on this night,
hitting Con Edison substations and shutting down the power grid and causing a
massive, 25-hour blackout in New York City. The city went dark at about 9:30
p.m. Kennedy and LaGuardia airports had to be shut down for eight hours,
tunnels in and out of the city were closed, and thousands of people had to be
evacuated from the subways.
July 13, 1979 – Castleberry, Ala. Mayor Forrest Moore
Castleberry passed away at the age of 76 in a Monroeville hospital. A native of
Castleberry and the town’s mayor continuously since 1963, he attended the
University of Alabama and worked as a journalist from 1923 to 1963, working at
newspapers in Alabama and Florida. During his career, he worked for The
Evergreen Courant, The Birmingham News, The Montgomery Advertiser-Journal, The
Mobile Press Register and as the Montgomery bureau chief for United Press
International. He also, at one time, represented Conecuh County in the state
legislature.
July 13, 1979 – Circuit Judge Robert E.L. Key administered
the oaths of office to Conecuh County Tax Collector J. Marvin Johnston and Tax
Assessor Delma E. Bowers. Johnston was entering his third term in office,
having first been elected in 1966, re-elected in 1972 and in 1978. Bowers was
entering his fourth term in office, having first been elected in 1960 and re-elected
in 1966, 1972 and 1978.
July 13, 1980 – Local weather reporter Earl Windham reported
a high temperature of 102 degrees in Evergreen, Ala.
July 13, 1982 – Barbara Ann Allen Rainey, the first female
pilot in the history of the U.S. Armed Forces, was killed in a plane crash at
Middleton Field in Evergreen, Ala. Rainey, who was a flight instructor, along
with her trainee Ensign Donald Bruce Knowlton were practicing touch-and-go
landings at Middleton Field, when the aircraft banked sharply, lost altitude,
and crashed. Rainey, who was 33 years old, and Knowlton were both killed in the
crash.
July 13, 1982 – Major League Baseball’s All-Star Game was
played outside the United States for the first time when it was played in
Montreal, Canada.
July 13, 1984 - Sportscaster Howard Cosell asked to be
released from his duties on "Monday Night Football." He said that he
was "tired of being tied to the football mentality."
July 13, 1985 – Vice President George Bush became the Acting
President for the day when President Ronald Reagan underwent surgery to remove
polyps from his colon.
July 13, 1995 - Geddy Lee of Rush sang "Oh Canada"
before the All-Star Game at Baltimore's Camden Yards.
July 13, 1998 - "Image of an Assassination" went
on sale. The video documentary is of Abraham Zapruder's home video of U.S.
President Kennedy's assassination in Dallas.
July 13, 2004 - Author Catherine Rodgers died in Auburn,
Ala.
July 13, 2009 - President Barack Obama nominated Dr. Regina
M. Benjamin to be Surgeon General of the United States. A graduate of Morehouse
College and the University of Alabama at Birmingham, Benjamin specialized in
Family Medicine at the Medical Center of Central Georgia. Founder and CEO of
the BayouClinic in Bayou La Batre, Ala., Benjamin since 1990 had been providing
health care to the low-income community.
July 13, 2010 - George Steinbrenner, the larger-than-life,
longtime owner of the New York Yankees, who re-established the team as one of
baseball’s most successful franchises, died of a heart attack at age 80 in
Tampa, Florida. Under Steinbrenner, who owned the team from 1973 until his
death, the Yankees won seven World Series championships and 11 American League
pennants. Nicknamed “the Boss,” the influential, demanding and controversial
owner also built the Yankees into baseball’s first billion-dollar team.
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