Moses Denson of Vredenburgh, Ala. |
July 6, 1415 – Czech priest Jan Hus was burned at the stake
by the Catholic Church for heresy because he supported many of the reforms
urged by John Wycliffe, who believed that the Bible, not the Catholic Church,
was the supreme authority in spiritual matters.
July 6, 1484
– Portuguese sea captain Diogo Cão found the mouth of the Congo River.
July 6, 1535 – Sir Thomas More was beheaded in the Tower of
London for refusing to recognize his longtime friend King Henry VIII as the
head of the Church.
July 6, 1699 - Captain William Kidd, the pirate, was
captured in Boston, Mass. and deported back to England.
July 6, 1747 - John Paul Jones, the United States' first
well known naval fighter in the American Revolutionary War, was born in
Kirkcudbrightshire, Scotland.
July 6, 1775 - One day after restating their fidelity to
King George III and wishing him “a long and prosperous reign” in the Olive
Branch Petition, Congress issued a declaration setting “forth the causes and
necessity of their taking up arms” against British authority in the American
colonies.
July 6, 1777 – During the American Revolutionary War’s Siege
of Fort Ticonderoga, after a bombardment by British artillery under General
John Burgoyne, American forces retreated from Fort Ticonderoga, New York.
General St. Clair led American forces away from the fort, and the British took
the fort without firing a single shot.
July 6, 1779 – During the Battle of Grenada, the French
defeated British naval forces during the American Revolutionary War.
July 6, 1785 – The dollar was chosen as the monetary unit of
the United States.
July 6, 1846 - Author Howard Weeden was born in Huntsville,
Ala.
July 6, 1854 – The first official convention of the
Republican Party was held in Jackson, Michigan.
July 6, 1861 – A Mississippi riverboat pilot named Samuel
Clemens traveled to Nevada with his brother Orion, who had been appointed the
territorial secretary of Nevada.
July 6, 1861 – During the Civil
War, a skirmish was fought at Middle Fork Ridge, West Virginia.
July 6, 1861 – During the Civil
War, at a Cuban port, CSS Sumter, deposited seven prizes taken in her first
Federal commerce raiding foray.
July 6, 1862 - Writing under the name
of Mark Twain, 25-year-old Samuel Clemens began publishing news stories in the
Territorial Enterprise in Virginia City, Nevada.
July 6, 1862 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought at Bayou Cache and at Grand Prairie, Arkansas; and
at Salem, Missouri.
July 6, 1862 – During the Civil
War, a four-day Federal operation began between Blackwater and Chapel Hill,
Missouri. A three-day Federal operation also began between Waynesville and Big
Piney, Missouri.
July 6, 1862 – During the Civil
War, from North Carolina, Union Major General A.E. Burnside sailed with
reinforcements for the Army of the Potomac on the James River in Virginia.
July 6, 1863 - During the Civil
War, at Huntington, Indiana, the Knights of the Golden Circle, a Copperhead
group, forced their way in the depot and seized weapons and ammunition.
July 6, 1863 – During the Civil
War, Morgan’s raiders briefly occupied Garnettsville, Kentucky.
July 6, 1863 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought at Boonsborough, Hagerstown and Williamsport in
Maryland and near Trenton, N.C. Skirmishes were also fought at Jones’ and
Messigner’s Ferry as Union Major General William T. Sherman marched his Federal
forces toward Jackson, Mississippi.
July 6, 1863 – During the Civil
War, Rear Admiral John A. Dahlgren relieved Rear Admiral Samuel F. Du Pont. The
transfer came after considerable friction between Du Pont and the Secretary of
the Navy Welles over responsibility for the failure of the attack on
Charleston, South Carolina. It marked the end of the Du Pont’s naval career.
July 6, 1864 - Confederate General Jubal Early's troops
crossed the Potomac River and captured Hagerstown, Maryland. After demanding
and receiving $20,000, Early's troops moved toward Washington where they were
turned away by troops from Grant's army. Early had sought to threaten
Washington, D.C., and thereby relieve pressure on General Robert E. Lee, who
was fighting to keep Ulysses S. Grant out of Richmond, Virginia.
July 6, 1864 - Union General-in-Chief Lt. Gen. Ulysses S.
Grant dispatched two brigades under Brig. Gen. James B. Ricketts in reaction to
a raid by Lt. Gen. Jubal A. Early. This lead to the Battle of Monocacy on July
9.
July 6, 1864 – During the Civil
War, an action against Indians took place at Fort Goodwin, in Southeastern
Arizona.
July 6, 1864 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought near Benton, Arkansas; near Antietam, Maryland;
near the Little Blue, Jackson County, Missouri; near Aldie, Virginia, at Mount
Zion Church; and at Big Cacapon Bridge and at Sir John’s Run, West Virginia.
July 6, 1864 – During the Civil
War, cavalry reconnaissance continued on the Atlanta Front, with skirmishing at
Sandtown and Nickajack Creek.
July 6, 1864 – During the Civil
War, a 25-day Federal operation began in Western Missouri.
July 6, 1879 – According to The Camden Banner newspaper in
Wilcox County, Old Aunt Harriet Kaster died on this day at the age of 106.
She’d been a family servant for Mrs. M.A. Kaster of Camden for 33 years. Known
in Camden as “Old Aunt Ghosty,” she weighed just 44 pounds at the time of her
death.
July 6, 1885 – Louis Pasteur successfully tested his rabies vaccine on a
nine-year-old boy named Joseph Meister who’d been bitten by a rabid dog.
July 6, 1896 – Writer William Sydney Porter, commonly known
as “O. Henry,” hopped a train for New Orleans rather than stand trial for
embezzlement.
July 6, 1901 – Charlie “Ches” (Goatman) McCartney was born in
Milledgeville, Baldwin County, Georgia. McCartney became a somewhat famous
American itinerant wanderer who traveled up and down the eastern United States
from 1930 to 1987 in a ramshackle wagon pulled by a team of goats. He claimed
to have covered more than 100,000 miles and visited all states except Hawaii.
July 6, 1905 – The Monroe Journal reported that J.W. Fore
was nursing a bruised hand “as the result of a too vigorous encounter with a
baseball.”
July 6, 1905 – The Monroe Journal reported that the
following officers had been elected at Monroe Lodge No. 485 at Tinela: R.W.
McCants, W.M.; J.G. Lambriecht, S.W.; T.G. Reynolds, J.W.; J.R. McCants,
Treasurer; J.D. McKinley, Secretary; J.F. Rowell, S.D.; C.G. Reynolds, J.D.;
A.P. Najors, Chaplain; G.C. Nettles, Tyler. The lodge held regular
communications each month on the Friday before the second Sunday in each month
at 10 a.m.
July 6, 1905 – The Monroe Journal reported that a new post
office had been established about eight miles west of Atmore by the name of
Poarch. J.S. Nall was postmaster.
July 6, 1905 – The Monroe Journal reported that in Clarke
County, Sellers Creighton, who was about 15 years old, had been placed in jail
on charges of poisoning two of Sam Cobb’s children with “Paris Green.”
July 6, 1907 – Mexica artist Frida Kahlo was born in
Coyoacan, just outside Mexico City.
July 6, 1909 – As part of a Fourth of July celebration,
Evergreen’s baseball team beat Gantt, 8-0, in Evergreen, Ala.
July 6, 1911 - Downing Lodge at Castleberry, Ala. elected
the following officers: E. Downing Jr., Worshipful Master; R.T. Holland, Senior
Warden; L.A. Kirkland, Junior Warden; J.W. Thurmond, Secretary; J.T.
Buffington, Treasurer; R.E. Buffington, Senior Deacon; R.A. Baird, Junior
Deacon; J.A. Davis, Tyler; G.W. Jones, Chaplain; J.I. Monk and J.M. Branch,
stewards.
July 6, 1913 – Novelist and essayist Eleanor Clark was born
in Los Angeles, Calif. He won the National Book Award in 1965 for his
nonfiction book, “The Oysters of Locmariaquer.”
July 6, 1915 – A Conecuh County, Ala. jury found John Salter
and Robert Watkins guilty of the murder of Martha Lassiter (on June 23, 1915)
and sentenced them to death by hanging on Aug. 6, 1915. The trial began at 1
p.m., the taking of testimony and arguments by the state and the defense ended
at 2:55 p.m. and the jury returned a verdict at 3:20 p.m. The trial was held
before a large crowd and the main witness against Salter and Watkins was Wiley
House, who was nearly murdered along with Lassiter.
July 6, 1915 – Geo. W. Johnson brought George Salter Jr.,
the editor of The Evergreen Courant, a cucumber that was nearly 12 inches long.
July 6, 1916 – The Monroe Journal reported that the
following officers had been elected to serve Alabama Lodge No. 3 for the
ensuring year: J.F. Gaillard, worshipful master; G.W. Gaillard, senior warden;
G.R. Vaught, junior warden; J.H. Moore, treasurer; L.N. Lambert, secretary;
W.A. Farr, senior deacon; W.E. Deer, junior deacon; A.J. Locklin, R.P. Wiggins,
stewards; H.J. Coxwell, chaplain; and J.L. Marshall, marshal.
July 6, 1916 – Congressman Thomas J. Heflin was scheduled to
speak at Perdue Hill, Ala. on this day during an event sponsored by the United
Daughters of the Confederacy.
July 6, 1916 - The Conecuh Record reported, under the
headline “Rain and Wind Storm,” that “not in years has this section been
visited by such a severe rain and wind storm as prevailed here Wednesday and
Thursday and which continues up to this writing – Friday – but with less
violence. Considerable damage reported near Mobile, the L&N road being a
heavy sufferer. Evidences of the destructive character of the storms are to be
seen on every hand. The dam at the Country Club was washed out and great damage
done to crops throughout the country. A large oak was blown down in Old Evergreen,
and falling across the wires put all the phones out of commission in that
section of the city.”
July 6, 1916 – The Conecuh Record reported that “the
rainfall was 18 inches in 24 hours. Several business houses were flooded, the
Evergreen Hotel being damaged by the driving rain which flooded almost every
apartment.”
July 6, 1916 – The Conecuh Record reported that “owing to
the rise in the stream which damaged some of the foundation work, Murder Creek
bridge gave way and ditched No. 3 engine and one car.”
July 6, 1916 – The Conecuh Record reported that the Second
District Agricultural School’s president, Prof. W.C. Wilburn, was expected to
arrive in Evergreen during the second week of July. Wilburn was a graduate of
Greensboro Methodist College in Greensboro, Ala., and had studied two summers
at the University of Alabama and two summers at the University of Chicago.
July 6, 1916 – The Conecuh Record reported that Walter
Huckaby, Jesse Lumley and William Pritchett had run away from the Orphanage
that week but were found in Montgomery, they having made their way on a freight
train to that city. They were returned to Evergreen, “wiser and better boys.”
July 6, 1917 – During World War I, Arabian troops led by T.
E. Lawrence ("Lawrence of Arabia") and Auda ibu Tayi captured the
port of Aqaba (in present-day Jordan) from the Ottoman Empire during the Arab
Revolt.
July 6, 1918 – During World War I, Army Sgt. Henry C. Lord,
25, of Andalusia, Ala. “died from disease.” Born on May 20, 1893, Lord was
buried in the Mount Gilead Baptist Cemetery in Covington County.
July 6, 1918 - Troops of the Czech Legion, fighting on behalf of the Allies during World War I and for the cause of their own independent Czecho-Slovak state, declared the Russian port of Vladivostok, on the Pacific Ocean, to be an Allied protectorate, having gained control of the port and overthrown the local Bolshevik administration a week earlier.
July 6, 1928 - "The Lights of New York" was previewed
in New York's Strand Theatre. It was the first all-talking movie.
July 6, 1933 – The first Major League Baseball All-Star Game
was played in Chicago's Comiskey Park. The American League defeated the
National League, 4–2.
July 6, 1933 – Korean “Mother” Nettles, who was born in
January 1859, passed away around the age of 74. Her headstone is one of the
three Isaac Nettles Gravestones in the Mount Nebo Baptist Church Cemetery near
Carlton in rural Clarke County, Ala.
July 6, 1935 – The 14th Dalai Lama was born in Taktser,
Tibet.
July 6, 1939 – The residence of E.R. Green at Burnt Corn,
Ala. was completely destroyed by fire, but Green saved his automobile and
school bus, which were parked in a garage near the dwelling.
July 6, 1941
– Nazi Germany launched its offensive to encircle several Soviet armies near Smolensk.
July 6, 1942 – Anne Frank and her family went into hiding in
the "Secret Annexe" above her father's office in an Amsterdam
warehouse.
July 6, 1944 – Vredenburgh, Ala. native and former NFL
running back Moses “Mo D” Denson was born. He played at South High School in
Akron, Ohio before going on to play for the University of Maryland-Eastern
Shore, the Montreal Alouettes of the CFL and the Washington Redskins. He played
three seasons (1970, 1971 and 1972) for the Alouettes and was part of the 1970
team that won the Grey Cup. He went on to play two seasons (1974 and 1975) for
the Redskins. He was inducted into the UM-Eastern Shore Hall of Fame in 1984.
He played at Eastern Shore during the 1967, 1968 and 1969 seasons.
July 6, 1944 - Known as 'The Day the Clowns Cried,' the
worst tragedy in the annals of circus history occurred. One hundred and
sixth-eight people were killed and many more were injured when the Big Tent
became engulfed in flames during a performance of the Ringling Brothers Circus
in Hartford, Conn.
July 6, 1944
– National Baseball Hall of Famer Jackie Robinson refused to move to the back
of a bus, leading to a court-martial.
July 6, 1945 - William Rivers, well known citizen living
near Belleville, sustained fatal injuries on this Friday morning when his team
of mules ran away with him. He was taken immediately to the hospital in Repton
where he died late that afternoon. Born in 1886, Rivers was around 59 years old
and was buried in the Bethesda Baptist Church Cemetery at Nichburg in Conecuh
County.
July 6, 1946 - George Walker Bush, the 43rd President of the
United States, was born in New Haven, Conn.
July 6, 1947 – The AK-47 went into production in the Soviet
Union.
July 6, 1953 – Birmingham, Ala. native Al
Worthington made his Major League debut, taking the mound for the New York
Giants.
July 6, 1955 - South Vietnamese
President Ngo Dinh Diem declared in a broadcast that since South Vietnam had
not signed the Geneva Agreements, South Vietnam was not bound by them.
July 6, 1957 – John Lennon and Paul McCartney met for the
first time, as teenagers at the Woolton Village Fete in Liverpool, England,
three years before forming the Beatles.
July 6, 1957 - William Walter Garrett, 74, a prominent
Monroe County businessman, farmer and former state legislator, died at his home
in Uriah on this Saturday night at 10:25 p.m. Funeral services were held on
Mon., July 8, at 10 a.m. from the Uriah Methodist Church with the Rev. Don
Brown officiating. A native Monroe Countian, Garrett had lived in Uriah for the
previous 49 years. He served 16 years in the Alabama State Legislature, he was
a member of the House of Representatives from 1939-43; a member of the Senate,
1943-47; and a member of the House from 1947-55. He was a former Master of the
Blacksher Masonic Lodge No. 593 at Uriah, of which he was a member at the time
of his death.
July 6, 1964 - At Nam Dong in the
northern highlands of South Vietnam, an estimated 500-man Viet Cong battalion
attacked an American Special Forces outpost. During a bitter battle, Capt.
Roger C. Donlon, commander of the Special Forces A-Team, rallied his troops,
treated the wounded, and directed defenses although he himself was wounded
several times. After five hours of fighting, the Viet Cong withdrew. The battle
resulted in an estimated 40 Viet Cong killed; two Americans, one Australian
military adviser, and 57 South Vietnamese defenders also lost their lives. At a
White House ceremony in December 1964, President Lyndon B. Johnson presented
Captain Donlon with the first Medal of Honor of the Vietnam War.
July 6, 1969 – In an incident attributed to the Bermuda
Triangle, the “Vagabond,” a 12-meter owner-operated yacht was found adrift but
otherwise shipshape west of the Azores with no sign of its owner, Capt. Wallace
P. Williams, or its crew.
July 6, 1978 – Sunnyside Farm, also known as the
Witherington House, in Conecuh County, Ala. was added to Alabama Register of
Landmarks and Heritage.
July 6, 1978 – Pine Flat Methodist Church at Forest Home in
Butler County, Ala. was added to the Alabama Register of Landmarks and
Heritage.
July 6, 1978 – The Evergreen Courant reported that Dr. E.A.
Price of Evergreen had qualified to seek re-election as County Coroner. He was
seeking nomination in the Democratic Primary Elections of Sept. 5 and 26. He
had served in this office for nearly 40 years. He was appointed County Coroner
in the late 1930s and had been re-elected each time the office came up for
election since then, all but once without opposition.
July 6, 1978 – The Evergreen Courant reported that Harry
Booker of Belleville had qualified as a candidate for the Democratic nomination
for Member of the Conecuh County Commission, District 1, Place 2.
July 6, 1980 – Mobile, Ala. native Willie McCovey
of the San Francisco Giants made his final Major League appearance.
July 6, 1982 – NFL and Auburn University running back
Brandon Jacobs was born in Houma, La. He went on to play for Auburn, Southern
Illinois, the New York Giants and the San Francisco 49ers.
July 6, 1983 - Fred Lynn of the California Angels hit the
first grand slam in an All-Star game. The American League defeated the National
League, 13-3.
July 6, 1994 - A movie version of Alabama author Winston
Groom's book “Forrest
Gump” was released.
July 6, 1995 – The Monroe Journal reported that about 200
Monroe County men and boys spent two days at the Promise Keepers Conference in
the Georgia Dome in Atlanta, Ga. They were among 68,000 participants from
southeastern states at the regional gathering.
July 6, 2000 - A jury awarded former NHL player Tony Twist
$24 million for the unauthorized use of his name in the comic book Spawn and
the HBO cartoon series. Co-defendant HBO settled with Twist out of court for an
undisclosed amount.
July 6, 2005 - Alabama author James Haskins, a native of
Demopolis, died in Gainesville, Fla. at the age of 63.
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