Edward DeWelden Brenneman |
Aug. 14, 1040
– King Duncan I was killed in battle against his first cousin and rival Macbeth.
The latter succeeded him as King of Scotland.
Aug. 14, 1720 – The Spanish military Villasur expedition was
wiped out by Pawnee and Otoe warriors near present-day Columbus, Nebraska.
Aug. 14, 1776 - The city of Boston observed the 11th
anniversary of the popular resistance that prevented the execution of the Stamp
Act there on this day in 1776. The celebration included the erection of a pole
at the site of the original “Liberty Tree.”
Aug. 14, 1779 - An expedition from Massachusetts attacked a
British garrison at Castine on the Penobscot Peninsula. The plan ended in
disaster as Commodore Dudley Saltonstall retreated and burned his own ships.
Aug. 14, 1828 – Frederick Williams became the postmaster at
Burnt Corn, Ala.
Aug. 14, 1834 - Nineteen-year-old Richard Henry Dana, author
of “Two Years Before the Mast,” began his two-year stint as a seaman. During
his two years at sea, he sailed to California, then around Cape Horn, then back
to Boston. In 1840, he published “Two Years Before the Mast,” a highly popular
autobiographical account of the abuse endured by seamen.
Aug. 14, 1839 – Union surgeon Edward DeWelden Brenneman was
born on this day in Lancaster, Pa. He would go on to receive his medical degree
from the University of Pennsylvania in 1861. In July 1863 at the Battle of
Gettysburg, Brenneman would amputate Confederate soldier Mitchell Burford
Salter’s right arm. Salter was a member of the Conecuh Guards, and the bone
from his amputated arm is currently on display at the National Museum of Health
and Medicine in Washington, D.C.
Aug. 14, 1842 – The Second Seminole War ended with the
Seminoles forced from Florida to Oklahoma.
Aug. 14, 1848 – The Oregon Territory was organized by act of
Congress.
Aug. 14, 1851 – John Henry “Doc” Holliday was born in
Griffin, Ga.
Aug. 14, 1861 - Just months after
he surrendered Fort Sumter, Union General Robert Anderson was named commander
of the Department of the Kentucky. Released by Confederates nearly six weeks
after the surrender of Fort Sumter, Anderson was promoted to brigadier general.
He was given command of the Department of Kentucky and carefully maintained the
balance of neutrality in the state.
Aug. 14, 1862 - Confederate General Edmund Kirby Smith began
an invasion of Kentucky as part of a Confederate plan to draw the Yankee army
of General Don Carlos Buell away from Chattanooga, Tenn. and to raise support
for the Southern cause in Kentucky. Smith led 10,000 troops out of Knoxville,
Tennessee, on August 14 and moved toward the Cumberland Gap—the first step in
the Confederate invasion of Kentucky. After a Federal force evacuated the pass
in the face of the invasion, Smith continued north.
Aug. 14, 1862 – During the Civil
War, under orders from Halleck, McClellan withdrew from the Peninsula.
Aug. 14, 1862 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought at Grande Robde Prairie in the Oregon Territory;
near Barry, Mo.; and near Mount Pleasant, Tenn.
Aug. 14, 1863 - A temporary Union jail in Kansas City
collapsed. Confederate guerrilla leader William 'Bloody Bill" Anderson's
14-year-old sister was killed and his other two sisters were injured.
Pro-Confederate William C. Quantrill exacted revenge on Lawrence, Kansas on
August 21. The band killed 150 residents and much of the town was burned.
Aug. 14, 1863 – During the Civil
War, Union troops advanced on Little Rock, Ark., and an engagement took place
at West Point, Ark.
Aug. 14, 1863 – During the Civil War,
skirmishes were fought at Washington, N.C.; at Jack's Fork, Sherwood and
Wellington, Mo.; and at Craven's Plantation, Miss.
Aug. 14, 1863 – Poet Ernest Thayer
was born in Lawrence, Mass. He is best known for his 1888 poem, “Casey at the
Bat.”
Aug. 14, 1864 - Union General Ulysses S. Grant's troops
began attacking Confederate fortifications around Deep Bottom Run.
Aug. 14, 1864 – During the Civil
War, multiple skirmishes were fought at New Market Road, Bailey's Creek,
Charles City Road, Gravel Hill and Fussell's Mill in Virginia with more skirmishing
near Strasburg, Va. Heavy skirmishing also occurred at Dalton, Georgia; and
skirmishes were also fought at Hurricane Creek and Lamar in Mississippi.
Aug. 14, 1865 - Mississippi conventions
passed an ordinance voiding the secession ordinance of 1861.
Aug. 14, 1879 – Former Monroe Journal publisher Horace Hood
began publishing The Montgomery Journal in Montgomery, Ala.
Aug. 14, 1885 – The Monroe Journal reported that U.S.
Marshal Allen had appointed J.S. Hines of Perdue Hill as deputy marshal for
Monroe County.
Aug. 14, 1885 – The Monroe Journal reported that The
Evergreen Star had begun publication in an “enlarged form” with seven columns
and new, large type.
Aug. 14, 1896 - Gold was discovered in Canada's Yukon
Territory. Within the next year more than 30,000 people rushed to the area to
look for gold.
Aug. 14, 1896 – The Monroe Journal reported that the
“extreme warm weather for the past few days has injured the cotton crop considerably,
and is causing it to open very fast.”
Aug. 14, 1896 - The Monroe Journal reported that the Alabama
River steamer Tinsie Moore had come off the docks where she had been thoroughly
overhauled and repaired, inside and out, preparatory to beginning her fall
trade. She was to make her initial trip to Montgomery and all way landings,
leaving Mobile on the afternoon of Aug. 15.
Aug. 14, 1896 – The Monroe Journal reported that at the
recent term of the commissioners court, the voting places known as Seigler’s
Mill and Hunter’s Mill, in Beat 2, were abolished and a new one established at
the school house in Section 14, Township 5, Range 6.
Aug. 14, 1896 – The Monroe Journal reported that Capt.
Wiggins had had his new residence neatly painted, and it presented “a most
attractive appearance.”
Aug. 14, 1896 - During a thunderstorm near River Ridge on
this Friday, four children of W.A. Griffin were severely shocked by lightning.
One of them, a young lady, sustained painful injuries, according to The Monroe
Journal.
Aug. 14, 1905 – Mrs. Craighead, the wife of Mobile Daily
Register editor, the Hon. Erwin Craighead, was scheduled to address the people
of Monroeville, Ala. in the Circuit Court Room at 8 p.m. on this Monday on the
subject of “School Improvement Associations.”
Aug. 14, 1905 – The Monroe County Board of Education held a
special meeting in Monroeville, Ala. Superintendent J.D. Forte, Secretary J.A.
Barnes, E.J. Hardy and T.B. Nettles were in attendance.
Aug. 14, 1907 – The Evergreen Courant reported that a
cavalry company was to be organized in Evergreen within the next 10 days. E.C.
Barnes and J.A. Rumbley were the recruiting officers, and prospective troopers
were instructed to see them and join the troops at once. There were only three
states in the Union that had cavalry troops - Illinois, New York and
Pennsylvania – and Alabama was to be the fourth. The Courant also reported that
Capt. Duke Guice of Greenville was in Evergreen looking for recruits for a
cavalry company that week.
Aug. 14, 1911 - C.S. Thames, who had been employed in Reid’s
barber shop for several months, died suddenly on this Monday night, the cause
of his death being acute indigestion. The body was taken to Red Level for
interment. The young man was about 27 years of age and bore an excellent
reputation for honesty, sobriety and thrift. He was a member of the Masonic and
Woodmen orders.
Aug. 14, 1914 – During World War I, the Battle of Lorraine
started and resulted in an unsuccessful French offensive designed to recover
the lost province of Moselle from Germany.
Aug. 14, 1915 – Charles Morris and Walter Murphee were
charged with highway robbery and placed in the Conecuh County Jail after they
allegedly robbed I.S. Hyde of Herbert, Ala. of $23.50 around 2 p.m. on this
Saturday near the home of Mrs. Temple Rutland. Hyde returned to Herbert,
described the two robbers to his neighbors, who caught Morris and Murphee when
they appeared in Herbert later that night.
Aug. 14, 1915 – A baseball game was played in Conecuh County’s
Bowles community on this Saturday afternoon and was attended by Edgar Adams,
J.T. Bolton, Percy Burnie and Clinton Sanders.
Aug. 14, 1916 - Miss Jennie Faulk left Monroeville on this
Monday for the market where she was to spend a couple of weeks selecting her
fall stock of millinery.
Aug. 14, 1917 - As World War I entered its fourth year,
China abandoned its neutrality and declared war on Germany.
Aug. 14, 1921 – H.P. Lovecraft completed “The Other Gods,”
which was originally published in the Nov. 1933 issue of The Fantasy Fan.
Aug. 14, 1925 – Journalist and humorist Russell Baker was
born in Loudoun County, Va.
Aug. 14, 1926 - The first bale of the 1926 crop of cotton to
appear in Evergreen came on this Saturday. It was grown by Will Watts on the
farm of L.L. Moorer. Evergreen Gin Co. ginned the bale and purchased the seeds
at a rate of $30 per ton, which was approximately $10 above the marked price.
Aug. 14, 1930 – National Baseball Hall of Fame manager Earl
Weaver was born in St. Louis, Mo. He played his entire career for the Baltimore
Orioles and managed the Orioles for 17 years. He was inducted into the Hall of
Fame in 1996.
Aug. 14, 1935 - U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed
the Social Security Act into law. The act created unemployment insurance and
pension plans for the elderly.
Aug. 14, 1936 – Rainey Bethea was hanged in Owensboro,
Kentucky in the last public execution in the United States.
Aug. 14, 1937 - The Detroit Tigers and the St. Louis Browns
set an American League record for most runs scored combined in a doubleheader
with 36.
Aug. 14, 1940 – On this Wednesday morning, around 2 a.m., a
fire was discovered in the rear of the barn of E.T. Millsap in Monroeville. The
fire was quickly extinguished without serious damage to the building.
Aug. 14, 1941 - The U.S. Congress appropriated the funds to
construct the Pentagon (approximately $83 million). The building was the new
home of the U.S. War Department.
Aug. 14, 1943 – National Baseball Hall of Fame outfielder
and manager Joe Kelley passed away at the age of 71 in Baltimore, Md. During
his career, he played for the Boston Beaneaters, the Pittsburgh Pirates, the
Baltimore Orioles, the Brooklyn Superbas, the Cincinnati Reds and the Boston
Doves, and he also managed the Reds and the Doves. He was inducted into the
Hall of Fame in 1971.
Aug. 14, 1945 - It was announced by U.S. President Truman
that Japan had surrendered unconditionally. The surrender ended World War II.
Aug. 14, 1945 – Humorist Steve Martin was born in Waco,
Texas.
Aug. 14, 1945
– The Viet Minh launched the August Revolution amid the political confusion and
power vacuum engulfing Vietnam.
Aug. 14, 1947 – Novelist Danielle Steel was born in New York
City.
Aug. 14, 1950 – Cartoonist Gary
Larson, the creator of “The Far Side,” was born in Tacoma, Wash.
Aug. 14, 1952 – The Evergreen Courant reported that two
soldiers from Conecuh County – Master Sgt. A.D. Clark of Castleberry and Cpl.
Franklin D. Smith of Castleberry – had been awarded the Combat Infantryman
Badge for service with the 25th Infantry Division in Korea. Clark, who joined the
Army in December 1950, was the first sergeant of HQ Co., 14th Infantry
Regiment. Smith, who joined the Army in January 1951 and arrived in Korea on
May 1, 1952, was an automatic rifleman in Co. K of the 5th Regiment.
Aug. 14, 1952 – The Courant reported that an “extra large”
egg, that weighed six ounces, from a hen owned by Ruby Wright, who lived on
Main Street in Evergreen, was cracked and revealed another complete egg inside
it. Between the two eggs, there were two yolks in addition to another two yolks
inside the inner egg.
Aug. 14, 1953 - The whiffle ball was invented.
Aug. 14, 1957 - Miss Barbara Binion, 19, of Monroeville was
selected to represent Monroe County in the 1957 Alabama “Maid of Cotton” in
October at the State Fair in Birmingham. Binion was chosen Monroe County “Maid
of Cotton” from among nine contestants at the annual Farm Bureau meeting in
Monroeville on this Wednesday night. She was the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert E. Binion of Monroeville. Alternate chosen was Miss Eldora Wasden of
Excel, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W.F. Wasden.
Aug. 14, 1958 - Vic Power of the Cleveland Indians stole
home twice during the same game.
Aug. 14, 1959 - The first meeting was held to organize the
American Football League.
Aug. 14, 1961 - The Philadelphia Phillies extended their
losing streak to 17 games with a loss to the Chicago Cubs.
Aug. 14, 1964 – The Alabama North-South All-Star Football
Game was played at the University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa, and the South
Team’s roster included Frisco City High School quarterback Joe Kelly, who had
signed a scholarship to play for Ole Miss.
Aug. 14, 1964 – FBI agents arrested Lawrence Earl Vonderau,
20, and Junior Wesley Bernard, 39 (some sources say 30), both of Brewton in
connection with the robbery of the Union Bank at Repton on June 20, 1964.
Vonderau was said to have robbed the bank of $16,386, and Bernard was said to
have drove the get-away vehicle. At the time of their arrest, $2,350 of the
stolen money was recovered by the FBI from Vonderau.
Aug. 14, 1964 – NFL running back Neal Anderson was born in
Dothan, Ala. He went on to play for Graceville (Fla.) High School, the
University of Florida and the Chicago Bears.
Aug. 14, 1964 - Hanoi was reported
to be holding air-raid drills for fear of more U.S. attacks in the wake of the
Pierce Arrow retaliatory raids that had been flown in response to the Gulf of
Tonkin incident.
Aug. 14, 1965 - The advance units
of the Seventh Marines land at Chu Lai, bringing U.S. Marine strength in South
Vietnam to four regiments and four air groups.
Aug. 14, 1965 – New Evergreen High School Head Football
Coach Cliff Little was scheduled to hold a football meeting on this Saturday at
6 p.m. for all boys interested in playing that fall. They were to meet him at
Memorial Gymnasium for a get acquainted session and to receive information for
opening practice sessions. The first practice was to be held Mon., Aug. 16, at
a time to be given the boys at the meeting. It would probably be two-a-days
drills for the Aggie candidates for several days as much work had to be done
prior to the opener in Atmore on Sept. 10. Coach Little and Perry Outlaw held a
planning session on Mon., Aug. 9, before Outlaw had to report back to his
military assignment at summer camp. The assistant football and head baseball
coach planned to be in Evergreen for the Aug. 16 practice. Little said that he
had not had an opportunity to meet all of the boys, but had gone over the
expected prospects with Coach John Law Robinson, who resigned at the end of the
school year to devote his full time to his farm and beef cattle interests. The
new coach said that it is obvious that the team would be short on experience
with only four lettermen back and only a handful with any playing time. At that
time, he expected lettermen Tommy Hartley, Mike Moorer, Brent Thornley and
Arlie Phillips and such 1964 reserves as Rusty Price and Winston Bailey and
Olen Robinson, a transfer from Vigor, to for the hard corps of the squad.
Little said he looked forward to working with Coach Outlaw and with Principal
Morris Ward. He said he was counting on Ward for counsel and advice from his
years as one of the state’s top high school coaches. Coach Little urged all
boys who planned to play to be at the meeting Saturday night, Aug. 16.
Aug. 14, 1971 - St. Louis Cardinals pitcher Bob Gibson threw
the first (and only) no-hitter of his storied career, helping his team to an
11-0 victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates. It was the first no-hitter at Forbes
Field in 61 years.
Aug. 14, 1972 - Former Attorney
General Ramsey Clark reported after his tour of North Vietnam with the
International Commission of Inquiry into U.S. War Crimes in Indochina, that if
Democratic candidate George McGovern were elected president in November, all
U.S. POWs would be freed by North Vietnam within three months.
Aug. 14, 1973 – The William T. Shepard House in Opp was
added to National Register of Historic Places.
Aug. 14, 1973 - After several days
of intense bombing in support of Lon Nol’s forces fighting the communist Khmer
Rouge in the area around Phnom Penh, Operations Arc Light and Freedom Deal
ended as the United States ceased bombing Cambodia at midnight.
Aug. 14, 1974 - The NFL Players Association ended their
seven-week strike.
Aug. 14, 1975 – Local citizens thanked the Evergreen City
Council and the Conecuh County Board of Education for the recently completed
improvements to the public tennis court behind Memorial Gymnasium at Evergreen
High School. The court had been resurfaced and a new fence had been erected
around it.
Aug. 14, 1977 – Major League Baseball outfielder Juan Pierre
was born in Mobile, Ala. He went on to play for the Colorado Rockies, the
Florida Marlins, the Chicago Cubs, the Los Angeles Dodgers, the Chicago White
Sox, the Philadelphia Phillies and the Miami Marlins.
Aug. 14, 1979 - Lou Brock of the St. Louis Cardinals got his
3,000th hit.
Aug. 14, 1980 – The Evergreen Courant reported that Ray
Castleberry, well known Evergreen businessman, had qualified as a candidate for
Chairman of the Conecuh County Commission and would be the Republican nominee
in the November General Election. Ray was born in Evergreen and was a lifetime
resident of Conecuh County. He grew up on a family farm six miles northwest of
Castleberry and played a large part in farming operations for several years
prior to attending college. He was a graduate of Conecuh County High School in
Castleberry, Jefferson Davis State Junior College in Brewton, and the
University of South Alabama in Mobile. He had completed additional studies at
the University of Alabama in Birmingham School of Community and Allied Health
Resources.
Aug. 14, 1980 - Conecuh County High School’s Quarterback
Club was scheduled to meet on this night at seven o’clock at the school gymnasium.
All members and persons interested in the school’s athletic program were urged
to attend.
Aug. 14, 1980 - There was to be a meeting of the
Evergreen High School Quarterback Club on this night at 7:30 p.m. in the school
lunchroom.
Aug. 14, 1981 – In front of a large crowd, Evergreen, Ala.
Mayor Lee F. Smith cut the ribbon during the grand opening of the Johnson
Furniture & Salvage Co., which was located in the former American Salvage
Co. building on the corner of Rural Street and Jackson Street in downtown
Evergreen.
Aug. 14, 1982 - Bill Neal paddled across the English Channel
in a steel bathtub in 13.5 hours.
Aug. 14, 1984 – Major League Baseball catcher and manager
Spud Davis passed away in Birmingham, Ala. at the age of 79. He played for the
St. Louis Cardinals, the Philadelphia Phillies, the Cincinnati Reds and the
Pittsburgh, Pirates. He also managed the Pirates for one season.
Aug. 14, 1986 - Pete Rose of the Cincinnati Reds had his
4,256th and last basehit in a game against the San Francisco Giants.
Aug. 14, 1987 - Mark McGwire set the record for major league
home runs by a rookie when he connected for his 49th home run of the season.
Aug. 14, 1997 - Timothy McVeigh was formally sentenced to
death for the Oklahoma City bombing.
Aug. 14, 1999 – National Baseball Hall of Fame shortstop Pee
Wee Reese passed away at the age of 81 in Louisville, Ky. He played his entire
career for the Brooklyn Dodgers and the Los Angeles Dodgers. He was inducted
into the Hall of Fame in 1984.
Aug. 14, 2000 - Police in Los Angeles, Calif. fired pepper
spray and rubber bullets to clear a crowd of 9,000 people when a free concert
by Rage Against the Machine turned violent.
Aug. 14, 2003 - A blackout hit the Northeast United States,
with 21 power plants shutting down within just three minutes. Fifty million
people were affected, in some places for more than a day.
Aug. 14, 2006 - Hillcrest High School, under head football
coach Maurice Belser, opened the second full week of summer practice on this
Monday with 52 players dressed out. Hillcrest was scheduled to kick off its
regular season on Sept. 1 against Geneva County High School in Evergreen at 7
p.m. Geneva County dropped from Class 4A to Class 3A that season. Players on
Hillcrest’s team that season included receiver Conrad Atkins, receiver Blake
Bryant, John Dees, halfback Jarvis Holder, eighth-grade quarterback Justin
Nared, halfback Derrick Page, Neal Presley, Roderick Rudolph and Derrick Smith.
Aug. 14, 2007 – “Doctor Strange: The Sorcerer Supreme,” an
animated direct-to-DVD movie, was released.
Aug. 14, 2007 - Thomasville, Ala. voted to legalize alcohol
sales.
Aug. 14, 2015
– The US Embassy in Havana, Cuba re-opened after 54 years of being closed when Cuba–United
States relations were broken off.
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