John Wesley Hardin's postmortem photo. |
Aug. 19, 1561
– Mary, Queen of Scots, who was 18 years old, returned to Scotland after
spending 13 years in France.
Aug. 19, 1612 – The "Samlesbury witches," three
women from the Lancashire village of Samlesbury, England, were put on trial,
accused of practicing witchcraft, one of the most famous witch trials in
British history.
Aug. 19, 1692 – In connection with the Salem witchcraft
trials, George Jacobs Sr., Martha Carrier, George Burroughs, John Willard and
John Proctor were hanged on Gallows Hill in Salem, Province of Massachusetts
Bay. Elizabeth Proctor was not hanged because she was pregnant.
Aug. 19, 1779 - A Patriot force
consisting of 300 men led by Major Henry “Light Horse Harry” Lee assaulted the
defensive positions of the British at Paulus Hook, New Jersey, now known as
Jersey City.
Aug. 19, 1782 – During the American Revolutionary War, at the
Battle of Blue Licks, the last major engagement of the war took place, almost
10 months after the surrender of the British commander Charles Cornwallis
following the Siege of Yorktown.
Aug. 19, 1812
– During the War of 1812, the American frigate USS Constitution defeated the British frigate HMS Guerriere off the coast of Nova
Scotia, Canada earning the nickname "Old Ironsides."
Aug. 19, 1819 – Sparta attorney John E. Graham was admitted
to practice before the Supreme Court of Alabama.
Aug. 19, 1829 - French painter and physicist Louis Daguerre
presented his photographic process to the French Academy of Sciences.
Aug. 19, 1836 – Confederate veteran Dr. John Augustus Baldwin
was born in Lumpkin, Stewart County, Ga., and he went on to graduate from
Atlanta Medical College (now Emory University) in 1859. A year later, according
to the 1860 census, he was living with the family of silversmith T.P. Godwin in
Butler County. Sources say that for some time, Baldwin worked as a doctor in
the Garland community.
Aug. 19, 1839
– The French government announced that Louis Daguerre's photographic process
was a gift "free to the world".
Aug. 19, 1848 – The New York Herald broke the news to the
East Coast of the United States of the gold rush in California (although the
rush started in January).
Aug. 19, 1861 – The first ascent of Weisshorn, the fifth
highest summit in the Alps, took place.
Aug. 19, 1861 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought at Klapsford and Charleston, Mo.
Aug. 19, 1861 – During the Civil
War, Henry Halleck was promoted to Major General.
Aug. 19, 1862 – Noah Dallas Peacock (Lewis Lavon Peacock’s
older brother) enlisted in Co. F, 15th Ala. Infantry at Newton, Ala. At the
time, the unit was serving with the Army of Northern Virginia; but Noah took
sick almost immediately, missing out on the Battle of Sharpsburg (Antietam) on
Sept. 17, 1862. He got out of the hospital on Oct. 8.
Aug. 19, 1862 - Dakota (Sioux) warriors decided to bypass
Fort Ridgely during an uprising in Minnesota. It was the third day of the
uprising. It would be two months before Union troops would subdue the
rebellion. More than 500 whites were killed and 2,000 Indians were captured. On
December 26, 1862, 38 Dakota warriors were executed for their role in the
uprising.
Aug. 19, 1863 – During the Civil War, 300 men under the
command of William Quantrill, popularly known as Quantrill's Raiders, left
Blackwater Creek, Mo., heading for Lawrence, Kansas.
Aug. 19, 1864 – During the Civil War, another skirmish
occurred near Antioch Church, Ala.
Aug. 19, 1864 – During the Civil
War, a skirmish was fought at Milton, Fla.
Aug. 19, 1864 - Union General Ulysses S. Grant's attack at
Deep Bottom Run, which began five days earlier, failed.
Aug. 19, 1864 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought at Red Oak, the Flint River and Jonesborough in Georgia;
at Smith's Mill, Ky.; at Hurricane Creek, Miss.; and at Berryville and on the
Berryville and Winchester Pike in Virginia.
Aug. 19, 1864 – During the Civil
War, President Lincoln met with Frederick Douglass for a second time. He asked
for Douglass's assistance in moving slaves north in case the war was
unsuccessful.
Aug. 19, 1871 – Aircraft pioneer Orville Wright was born in
Dayton, Ohio.
Aug. 19, 1879 – Charles Roberts, who was in the Monroe
County (Ala.) Jail on murder charges, led a jail break involving five inmates
around 3 p.m. Roberts apparently used a bar of iron that he broke from the wall
of his cell to pry the large iron bolt from the lock of his cell, made his way
into the hallway between cells, found the keys to the other cells and released
J.W. (G.W.?) Collins, Jeff Powell, Tom Riley and George King. Roberts later
claimed that he paid a black jail inmate named Sandy five dollars for him to
use a long string with a hook on the end to get the keys and opened the cells.
Aug. 19, 1880 – R.F. Wallace was commissioned as Monroe
County, Alabama’s Circuit Court Clerk.
Aug. 19, 1886 - A heavy wind and rain storm blew from the
southwest on this Thursday evening, according to The Monroe Journal.
Aug. 19, 1895 – Outlaw gunfighter John Wesley Hardin, who
lived for about 18 months in Pollard, Ala., was shot to death by off-duty
policeman John Selman Sr. in the Acme Saloon in El Paso, Texas.
Aug. 19, 1896 - Army Pvt. Andrew E. Snow of Uriah, Ala., who
died on Jan. 11, 1919 from disease during World War I at Fort Logan H. Roots,
Ark., was born.
Aug. 19, 1900
– French author and adventurer Gontran de Poncins was born in Southeast France.
Aug. 19, 1902 – Poet Ogden Nash was born in Rye, New York.
Aug. 19, 1905 – Capt. Charles William “Steamboat Charlie”
Locklin Sr. passed away at the age of 77 at his residence at Perdue Hill, Ala.
and he was buried at McConico Cemetery with Masonic honors conducted to Alabama
Lodge No. 3. He was a prominent warehouse clerk, steamboat captain, planter and
trade company president. He was known as "Captain" because of the
steamboats that he owned and operated. His line of steamers traveled the
Alabama River between Mobile and Montgomery, carrying goods and passengers.
During the War Between the States, the Confederate government chartered his
steamers. They transported Confederate troops and munitions between Montgomery
and Mobile, Alabama. Although Captain Locklin was an owner of several river
steamers, the only one named in family papers is the St. Nicholas, which the
Northern Army burned during the War Between the States. Born on Oct. 15, 1827,
he was buried in the McConnico Cemetery at Perdue Hill.
Aug. 19, 1905 – A brand new Munger system steam ginnery
plant was put into operation on this Saturday at the Kyser-Betts Mercantile Co.
in Burnt Corn, Ala. The plant could turn out 20 finished bales of cotton per
day.
Aug. 19, 1909 - The Philadelphia Phillies were rained out a
Major League record tenth consecutive day.
Aug. 19, 1914 – Capt. J.C. Cheney and Montgomery Advertiser
cartoonist Frank M. Spangler were guests of C.P. Deming and John Cunningham at
the Country Club in Evergreen, Ala.
Aug. 19, 1914 – Bertha Johnson of Conecuh County, Ala.
accepted a position as telegraph operator with the L&N Railroad and was
believed to be the youngest female telegraph operator on the railroad at the
time.
Aug. 19-20, 1916 - J.M. Stapleton, who was teaching at the
Grimes school house, spent this Saturday and Sunday at Roy, Ala.
Aug. 19, 1917 - Team managers John McGraw and Christy
Matthewson were arrested for breaking New York City's blue laws. The crime was
their teams were playing baseball on Sunday.
Aug. 19, 1919
– Afghanistan gained full independence from the United Kingdom.
Aug. 19, 1919 - In a break with conventional practice, U.S. President
Woodrow Wilson appeared personally before the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee to argue in favor of its ratification of the Versailles Treaty, the
peace settlement that ended the First World War.
Aug. 19, 1921 - Ty Cobb of the Detroit Tigers recorded his
3,000 career hit.
Aug. 19, 1921 – “Star Trek” TV series creator Gene Roddenberry
was born in El Paso, Texas.
Aug. 19, 1926 – Evergreen’s baseball team was scheduled to
play Atmore in Brewton on this Thursday afternoon. These teams met in one of
the best games seen in South Alabama on Thurs., Aug. 12, in Atmore, which
resulted in a 2-2 tie. That game went 11 innings and was full of thrills and good
plays throughout. The game at Brewton on Thurs., Aug. 19, was to be hard fought
and was expected to attract the largest crowd of the whole season. Fans from
all nearby towns, as well as large delegations from the contending towns were
expected to be in attendance at the game.
Aug. 19, 1930 – Memoirist Frank McCourt was born in
Brooklyn, New York. He is best known for his 1996 book, “Angela’s Ashes.”
Aug. 19, 1932 - Jones Wylie Thurmond won the Conecuh
County checker championship. The Castleberry bank president won the title late
on this Friday with a 25 to 20 victory over Haskew Page in the finals. The new
champion, who was jocularly accused of playing checkers for a living and being
a banker on the side, had previously beaten Ira Price, 10 to 1, and Forrest
Castleberry, 15 to 13, to win his way into the finals. In a team match in
Castleberry on Aug. 23, Castleberry easily defeated Repton, principally through
the effective playing of Page. The Repton team which made the trip over was
composed of G.W. Reid, W.R. Boulware, James Stacey and “Bo” Long.
Aug. 19, 1934 – Luverne’s baseball team captured the Central
Alabama League second half title by beating Evergreen, 4-3, in Evergreen, Ala.
Aug. 19, 1934 – The creation of the position Führer was
approved by the German electorate with 89.9 percent of the popular vote, and
Adolf Hitler was approved for sole executive power in Germany as Fuehrer.
Aug. 19, 1941 - Alabama author James Agee's and Walker
Evans' book “Let
Us Now Praise Famous Men” was published.
Aug. 19, 1945
– During the August Revolution, Viet Minh led by Ho Chi Minh took power in Hanoi,
Vietnam.
Aug. 19, 1946 - William Jefferson “Bill” Clinton, the 42nd
President of the United States, was born in Hope, Arkansas.
Aug. 19, 1951 - The St. Louis Browns sent a midget to the
plate in the bottom half of the first inning against the Detroit Tigers. Eddie
Gaedel, wearing the number 1/8 and standing only three feet, seven inches tall,
walked on four consecutive pitches and was then replaced by a pinch-runner.
Aug. 19, 1957 - The New York Giants Board of Directors voted
to move the team to San Francisco in 1958.
Aug. 19, 1957 - The Rev. Clayton C. Pruette, 53, of
Columbiana, former pastor of the Frisco City First Baptist Church, died at a
Birmingham hospital on this Monday at 4 a.m. following a short illness.
Aug. 19, 1958 – Pro Football Hall of Fame offensive tackle
Anthony Munoz was born in Ontario, Canada. He went on to play for Southern Cal
and the Cincinnati Bengals. He was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1988.
Aug. 19, 1960 - The Soviet
Union launched the satellite Sputnik 5 into Earth orbit, with two dogs (Belka
and Strelka), 40 mice, two rats and a variety of plants. They became the first
living organisms to safely return from space.
Aug. 19, 1964 - The first American tour by the Beatles began
in San Francisco, Calif. The tour would cover 26 cities.
Aug. 19, 1965 – The Monroe Journal reported that workers had
turned the future site of the Claiborne Lock and Dam into an unrecognizable
place in about three months. H.N. Rogers & Sons Co. of Memphis, Tenn.,
contractor for the portion of the project for excavating the lock area and
constructing embankments on the east side of the river, had been working two
shifts of men, about 22 men in the daytime and about 15 men at night, since the
first of May. An official of the company said during the previous week that
about 250,000 yards of dirt had been moved since work was started.
Aug. 19, 1965 – The Monroe Journal reported that, although
the season would not open until Sept. 9, football was evident at Monroe County
High School where light workouts were being held twice daily. Coach Ronald Dees
and assistant Terry Wilkerson were expecting the new Tiger team to be improved
over 1964’s 5-5 campaign, but as of Aug. 19 point, only a “fair” tag could be
placed on the Tigers. But a number of opposing coaches disagreed and rated the
1965 edition at MCHS as a top contender for the county and Pine Belt
Conference. Top players on MCHS’s team that year included Steve Abrams, Butch
Andress, Kennon Ballard, Shelton Bayles, Johnny Brannon, Roger Brown, Bobby
Colquett, George Duncan, Olen Dunkin, Danny Ikner, Ronnie Martin, Frank
McCreary, Randy McDonald, John McKnight, Tommy McMillen, Mike McMillon, Phillip
Owens, David Pearson, Benny Ray Powell, John Sawyer, Mike Segers and Curt
Wideman.
Aug. 19, 1968 - A Harris survey
indicated that 61 percent of those polled were against calling a halt to the
bombing in Vietnam.
Aug. 19, 1970 - Cambodia and the
U.S. signed a military aid agreement worth $40 million for the fiscal year
ending June 30, 1971.
Aug. 19, 1971 – The Evergreen Courant reported that Coach
Wendell Hart was concentrating on the front line in pre-season drills as his
Evergreen High Aggies prepped for their season opener on Sept. 3 with
traditional rival Atmore in Atmore. Hart had 29 boys working out and expected
several more in the next few days. The squad was not only short-handed, but very
shallow experience-wise. Only five lettermen from the 1970 club were back for
duty that fall. Returning lettermen were Frank McMillian, Wavey Ausby, Mike
Turner, Robert Johnson and Alvin Lee. The veteran coach said he was well fixed
in the backfield with a number of swifties ready to carry the mail. However, he
had yet to find linemen of adequate heft and quickness to assure a winning
season. The team’s schedule that season was follows: Sept. 3, at Atmore; Sept.
10, Open; Sept. 17, v. Monroeville; Sept. 24, v. Butler; Oct. 1, at Greenville;
Oct. 8, v. W.S. Neal; Oct. 15, v. Luverne; Oct. 22, at Niceville; Oct. 29, v.
T.R. Miller; Nov. 5, at Andalusia; Nov. 12, at Geneva.
Aug. 19, 1971 – The Evergreen Courant reported that Airman
First Class Billy L. Tolbert, son of Mr. and Mrs. Otis A. Tolbert of Evergreen,
had arrived for duty at Thule Air Base in Greenland. Tolbert, a security
policeman, was assigned to a unit of the Aerospace Defense Command, which
protected the U.S. against hostile aircraft and missiles. A 1965 graduate of
Evergreen High School, the airman received his B.S. degree in social science
from Troy State University.
Aug. 19, 1972 – Jim Oliver of Castleberry, Ala. brought the
first bale of the 1972 cotton crop to the Belleville Gin on this Saturday. Whit
Burt was manager of the gin, and the bale was ginned by Percy Baggett, ginner.
Net weight of the bale was 440 pounds while the seed weighed 690.
Aug. 19, 1972 - Democratic
presidential candidate George McGovern attacked U.S. pacification techniques of
applying “massive firepower and free-fire zones and [clearing] six million
people out of their homes.”
Aug. 19, 1972 - In South Vietnam,
the Nguyen Hue Offensive continued with major fighting near the northern district
capital Que Son and neighboring Fire Base Ross.
Aug. 19, 1976 – M.N. Lloyd’s Water Mill near Red Level in
Covington County, Ala. was added to the Alabama Register of Landmarks and
Heritage.
Aug. 19, 1986 - Twenty people were killed in a car bomb
explosion in Tehran. Iran initially accused "American agents,"
however they later executed an "Iraqi agent."
Aug. 19, 1995 - There was to be a benefit softball
tournament, Class C & D teams, on this day at the Evergreen Municipal Park.
All proceeds were to go to offset surgical expenses of a local teammate.
Pre-registration was to begin at 8 a.m., first pitch at 9 a.m. $100 entry fee
per team, deadline for entry fee was Aug. 16. Trophies were to be given. Kim
Baker or Kim Gary were among the organizers.
Aug. 19, 1995 - Bobby Thigpen of the Chicago White Sox got
his 40th save of season and became the eighth and fastest to record 40 saves in
a season.
Aug. 19, 1996 - Paul Molitor of the Minnesota Twins tied Lou
Gherig by hitting his 534th career double.
Aug. 19, 1998 - The first piece of the 351-foot bronze
statue of Christopher Columbus arrived in San Juan, Puerto Rico.
Aug. 19, 2002 - John Madden debuted on "Monday Night
Football."
Aug. 19, 2003 – A car-bomb attack
on United Nations headquarters in Iraq killed the agency's top envoy Sérgio
Vieira de Mello and 21 other employees.
Aug. 19, 2004 - Baseball commissioner Bud Selig received a
contract extension through 2009.
Aug. 19, 2005 – Hillcrest High School’s varsity football
team was scheduled to play a preseason game against W.S. Neal in Evergreen,
Ala. at 7 p.m. Arlton Hudson was Hillcrest’s head coach.
Aug. 19, 2009
– A series of bombings in Baghdad, Iraq killed 101 and injured 565 others.
Aug. 19, 2010 – Operation Iraqi Freedom ended with the last
of the United States brigade combat teams crossing the border to Kuwait.
No comments:
Post a Comment