Dwayne Lamont Salter |
Aug. 22, 565 – On this day, the Irish monk Saint Columba is
said to have made the first sighting of the Loch Ness "monster."
Aug. 22, 1138
– The Battle of the Standard was fought between Scotland and England.
Aug. 22, 1607 – English explorer Bartholomew Gosnold passed
away at either the age of 35 or 36 in Jamestown, Va. He was instrumental in the
founding of the Virginia Company of London and Jamestown in colonial America.
He led the first recorded European expedition to Cape Cod and is considered by
Preservation Virginia to be the "prime mover of the colonization of
Virginia".
Aug. 22, 1654
– Jacob Barsimson arrived in New Amsterdam. He was the first known Jewish
immigrant to America.
Aug. 22, 1770 – James Cook named and landed on Possession
Island, Queensland and claimed the east coast of Australia as New South Wales
in the name of King George III.
Aug. 22, 1773
– French botanist and explorer Aimé Bonpland was born in La Rochelle, France.
Aug. 22, 1775 - The American colonies were proclaimed to be
in a state of open rebellion by England's King George III.
Aug. 22, 1776 - British General William Howe's large army arrived
on Long Island between Gravesend and New Utrecht with “near twenty four
thousand men ready to land in a moment,” according to one observer. General
William Howe’s large army came to Long Island hoping to capture New York City
and gain control of the Hudson River, a victory that would divide the
rebellious colonies in half.
Aug. 22, 1777 – During the American Revolutionary War,
British forces abandoned the Siege of Fort Stanwix after hearing rumors of
Continental Army reinforcements.
Aug. 22, 1780 – James Cook's ship HMS Resolution returned to England (Cook
having been killed on Hawaii during the voyage).
Aug. 22, 1791
– The Haitian Slave Revolution in Saint-Domingue, Haiti began.
Aug. 22, 1831 – Nat Turner's slave rebellion commenced just
after midnight in Southampton County, Va., leading to the deaths of more than
50 whites and several hundred African Americans who are killed in retaliation
for the uprising.
Aug. 22, 1848 – The United States annexed New Mexico.
Aug. 22, 1857 – Elizabeth Huggins Josey passed away on this
day, and her grave is believed to be the oldest marked grave in the Consolation
Church Cemetery at Oakey Streak in Butler County, Ala.
Aug. 22, 1857 – National Baseball Hall of Fame centerfielder
and manager Ned Hanlon was born in Montville, Conn. During his career, he
played for the Cleveland Blues, the Detroit Wolverines, the Pittsburgh
Alleghenys, the Pittsburgh Burghers, the Pittsburgh Pirates and the Baltimore
Orioles, and he managed the Alleghenys, the Burghers, the Pirates, the Orioles,
the Brooklyn Superbas and the Cincinnati Reds. He was inducted into the Hall of
Fame in 1996.
Aug. 22, 1861 – During the Civil
War, the Federal vessel USS Lexington captured the steamers CSS W.B. Terry and
the mail steamboat Samuel Orr at Paducah, Ky.
Aug. 22, 1862 – During the Civil War, a skirmish occurred at
Trinity, near Decatur, Ala.
Aug. 22, 1862 – During the Civil War, Capt. Pinckney D.
Bowles of the Conecuh Guards was promoted to major when Major Charles L. Scott
resigned. Also, 2nd Lt. John G. Guice was promoted to first lieutenant.
Aug. 22, 1862 - President Abraham Lincoln wrote a carefully
worded letter in response to an abolitionist editorial by Horace Greeley, the
editor of the influential New York Tribune, and hinted at a change in his
policy concerning slavery. In the letter Lincoln stated "If I could save
the Union without freeing any slave, I would do it; and if I could save it by
freeing all the slaves, I would do it; and if I could save it by freeing some
and leaving others alone, I would also do that" and "I intend no
modification of my oft-expressed personal wish that all men everywhere could be
free."
Aug. 22, 1862 – During the Civil War, skirmishes were fought
with Sioux Indians near Fort Ridley, Minnesota; and at Catlett Station,
Freeman’s Ford, Hazel River and along the Rappahannock River in Virginia.
Aug. 22, 1863 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought with Indians at San Pedro Crossing in the Arizona
Territory; on Big Creek, near Pleasant Hill, in Missouri; at Stafford
Courthouse, Va.; and at Huntersville, W.Va.
Aug. 22, 1863 – During the Civil
War, a month-long Federal operation against Snake Indians from Fort Lapwai to
the Meadows in the Idaho Territory began.
Aug. 22, 1863 – During the Civil
War, the Federal battery named Swamp Angel blew up while firing rounds into
Charleston, S.C.
Aug. 22, 1863 – During the Civil
War, a three-day Federal operation from Tracy City, Tenn. to the Tennessee
River began.
Aug. 22, 1864 – During the Civil War, the Battle of Weldon,
Va., ended. The battle began when Union General Ulysses S. Grant attempted to
cut Confederate lines into Petersburg, Va.
Aug. 22, 1864 – During the Civil War, the siege of Fort
Morgan in Mobile Bay, Ala. continued.
Aug. 22, 1864 – During the Civil
War, a four-day Federal expedition aboard the steamers, Dove and Homeyer, up
the Saint Francis River to Mount Vernon, Ark. began.
Aug. 22, 1864 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought in Yell County, Ark.; at Canton and Roaring Spring
in Kentucky; on the Vaughan Road in Virginia; and at Charlestown, W.Va.
Aug. 22, 1864 – During the Civil
War, an eight-day Federal operation in La Fayette County, Mo. began.
Aug. 22, 1886 – The Rev. E.E. Cowan filled his regular
appointment at the Methodist church on this Sunday, according to The Monroe
Journal.
Aug. 22, 1893 – Writer Dorothy Parker was born Dorothy
Rothschild in Long Branch, N.J.
Aug. 22, 1895 – The Monroe Journal reported that Prof. N.J.
Ivey of Monroe County’s Fork community had been elected principal of the Perdue
Hill High School.
Aug. 22, 1895 – The Monroe Journal reported that Claiborne
farmer W.S. Moore had produced the first bale of the 1895 cotton crop in Monroe
County, having already gathered and shipped three bales.
Aug. 22, 1895 – Hungarian pilot and explorer László Almásy
was born in Borostyánkő, Austria-Hungary. He was the basis for the protagonist
in both Michael Ondaatje's novel “The English Patient” (1992) and the movie
adaptation of the same name (1996).
Aug. 22, 1896 - The “heavens were obscured with clouds,
hence a good observation of the partial lunar eclipse could not be secured on”
this Saturday night, according to The Monroe Journal.
Aug. 22, 1900 - Confederate heroine Emma Sansom passed away
at the age of 53 in Upshur County, Texas and she was buried in Little Mound
Cemetery. In 1863, the 16-year-old Sansom helped Confederate general Nathan
Bedford Forrest cross Black Creek near Gadsden as he pursued Union forces led
by Col. A.D. Streight. Later in 1863, Sansom was awarded a gold medal by the
Alabama legislature for her actions. (Some sources say she died on Aug. 9,
1900.)
Aug, 22, 1902 – In Hartford, Conn., Theodore Roosevelt
became the first President of the United States to ride in an automobile.
Aug. 22, 1902 - Arthur Patterson died at Clearwater, Fla. on
this day of consumption. The young man was well known and had many friends in
Evergreen who were expected to learn this sad news with deep regret. He
formerly clerked for Wild Bros. and was a nephew of Rev. E.A. Dannelly. His
remains were taken to Camden for burial on Sun., Aug. 24.
Aug. 22, 1905 – “One of the bloodiest tragedies” in Monroe
County, Ala. history occurred near Tunnel Springs on this Tuesday morning,
resulting in the deaths of three men. Sometime before the incident, Groffery
Talley, who operated a saw mill at Tunnel Springs, assumed a debt for Oliver
Lett, who agreed to work off the debt at Talley’s sawmill. Lett later quit,
saying he’d worked off the debt, but Talley disagreed. On this Tuesday morning,
Talley sent his foreman, Harry Helton, and John Helton to see Lett and demand
that Lett either return to work or pay the balance of his debt. The Helton’s
went to Lett’s house “at an early hour,” and Lett agreed to go with them as
soon as he put on his shoes. Lett invited the Heltons inside his house, but
when John Helton walked through the door, Lett fired a load of buckshot into
his chest, killing him instantly. Lett also fired at Harry Helton, wounding him
in the face and head. Helton “gave the alarm” and a posse soon returned to
Lett’s house only to find that Lett had taken refuge in a relative’s house a
short distance away. When the posse arrived at the relative’s house with Talley
in the lead, Lett shot Talley, inflicting a mortal wound. The posse laid siege
to the house, and after several hours, Lett “was finally overcome.” Monroe
County Sheriff Fountain went to the scene as soon as he heard about what was
going on, but when he arrived he “found Lett dead and his body literally
riddles with bullets.” Talley died the next day.
Aug. 22, 1909 – Pro Football Hall of Fame center and
linebacker Mel Hein was born in Redding, Calif. He went on to play for
Washington State and the New York Giants. He was inducted into the Hall of Fame
in 1963.
Aug. 22, 1914 - As French and German forces faced off on the
Western Front during the opening month of the First World War, the isolated
encounters of the previous day moved into full-scale battle in the forests of
the Ardennes and at Charleroi, near the junction of the Sambre and Meuse
Rivers.
Aug. 22, 1915 - Dr. P.E. Burroughs of Nashville, Tenn., “one
of the greatest Bible scholars in the south,” spoke at Monroeville Baptist
Church on this Sunday morning.
Aug. 22, 1916 - Through the efforts of local citizens, J.T.
Mangum of Selma was scheduled to deliver a stereopticon lecture at the High
School auditorium on tis Tuesday evening, “descriptive of his trip to Africa
and points of interest in Europe a few years ago in company with Bishop Walter
R. Lambuth, superintendent of mission work of the M.E. Church, South, in the
Dark Continent.” Mangum’s lecture was to “be illustrated with stereopticon
views of scenes in London, Paris and other cities of the Old World as well as
of primitive conditions in Africa as they are found in native villages.”
Aug. 22, 1916 - Dr. G.H. Harper of Uriah visited
Monroeville, Ala. on business on this Tuesday.
Aug. 22, 1917 – The Evergreen Courant reported that Prof.
Bennett was in Evergreen the previous week arranging to move his family. They
were to occupy the residence recently vacated by F.S. Stallworth.
Aug. 22, 1918 – During World War I, Army Pvt. Edward
Williams of River Falls, Ala. “died of disease.”
Aug. 22, 1920 – Science fiction and horror writer Ray Bradbury
was born in Waukegan, Illinois.
Aug. 22, 1922 – Michael Collins, Commander-in-chief of the Irish
Free State Army, was shot dead during in an ambush by anti-Treaty forces at Béal
na Bláth, County Cork during the Irish Civil War.
Aug. 22, 1926 - John Bigger died quite suddenly at his home
in Monroeville on this Sunday evening, aged 66 years. Bigger had resided in Monroeville
with his family for some eight years past, successfully engaged in farming.
Some months before his death he engaged in the mercantile business, conducting
an extensive trade in grain and feedstuffs.
Aug. 22, 1935 – Pulitzer
Prize-winning novelist Annie Proulx, author of “The Shipping News,” was born in
Norwich, Connecticut.
Aug. 22, 1939 – National Baseball Hall of Fame left fielder
and first baseman Carl Yastrzemski was born in Southampton, N.Y. He played his
entire career for the Boston Red Sox (1961-1983), and was inducted into the
Hall of Fame in 1989.
Aug. 22, 1941 – Pro Football Hall of Fame coach Bill
Parcells was born in Englewood, N.J. He was inducted into the Hall of Fame in
2013.
Aug. 22, 1943 - Alabama author Robert Inman was born in
Elba, Ala.
Aug. 22, 1944 - A primary election to name a mayor and
members of the town council was to be held in Monroeville on this day, and a
second primary election was to be held on Sept. 5, if necessary. Persons
desiring to become candidates had to file a declaration before midnight on Aug.
10.
Aug. 22, 1953 – Major League Baseball third baseman Jim
Tabor, a native of New Hope, Ala., died of a heart attack at the age of 36 in
Sacramento, Calif. During his career, he played for the Boston Red Sox and the
Philadelphia Phillies.
Aug. 22, 1956 – National Baseball Hall of Fame designated
hitter, infielder and manager Paul Molitor was born in Saint Paul, Minnesota.
During his career, he played for the Milwaukee Brewers, the Toronto Blue Jays
and the Minnesota Twins. He was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 2004.
Aug. 22, 1957 – The Evergreen Courant reported that
Evergreen took the pennant at the end of regular season play in the Conecuh
County Amateur Baseball League. The final league standings showed Evergreen in
first place, Garland, second; Paul, third; Castleberry, fourth; Red Level,
fifth; and Lyeffion, sixth. Bernard Powell was the league’s president.
Aug. 22, 1957 – The Evergreen Courant reported that there
were no new developments to report regarding the beating of four blacks in
Evergreen, Ala. two weeks before by assailants dressed in what appeared to be
Ku Klux Klan regalia. Local Klan leaders denied any knowledge of the beating,
and local Klan members reported that they hadn’t taken part in the incident.
The beatings received widespread media attention, and “calls from all over the
country flooded” the Conecuh County Sheriff’s office seeking information about
the incident.
Aug. 22, 1957 – The Evergreen Courant reported that work was
scheduled to begin within the next week on the Conecuh County Lake as workers
were set to begin the erection of a dam at Tomlinson’s Mill, about seven miles
north of Evergreen, Ala. Marion Wilkins was Conecuh County’s County Engineer.
Aug. 22, 1957 – The Monroe Journal reported that W.S. Nash,
84, of Monroeville had been honored for over half a century of loyal service
with the Masons at recent ceremonies at the Monroeville Masonic Lodge. He was
presented with a citation and a 50-year service pin by Carl Cooper, Most
Worshipful Grand Master of the Grand Lodge of Alabama. Also participating in
the award was John Turberville, Worshipful Master of the Monroeville Lodge.
Aug. 22, 1962 - Kennedy
administration officials quoted in The
New York Times estimated that there are 20,000 guerrilla troops in South
Vietnam.
Aug. 22, 1964 – Lawrence Earl Vonderau, 20, of Brewton, Ala.
pleaded guilty before Judge Daniel H. Thomas of Mobile to holding up the Union
Bank in Repton on June 20, 1964 and robbing the bank of $16,386.
Aug. 22, 1967 - Chief of Staff of
the Air Force, General John P. McConnell, stated before a Senate Subcommittee
that adopting a graduated bombing policy in North Vietnam was a mistake.
Aug. 22, 1968 – Marine Lance Cpl. Dwayne Lamont Salter, 19,
of Evergreen, Ala. was killed in action in Quang Tri Province, South Vietnam. Born
on July 14, 1949, his tour of duty in Vietnam began on April 27, 1968 and he
was serving with L Co., 3rd Battalion, 4th Marines, 3rd
Marine Division at the time of his death. He received the National Defense Service
Medal, Purple Heart, Vietnam Campaign Medal, Vietnam Service Medal and the
Combat Action Ribbon. A 1969 graduate of Beatrice High School, he was buried in
the Lone Star Cemetery at Pine Orchard, Ala.
Aug. 22, 1968 - For the first time
in two months, Viet Cong forces launched a rocket attack on Saigon, killing 18
and wounding 59.
Aug. 22, 1972 - Delegates entering
the Republican National Convention in Miami Beach were harassed by 3,000
antiwar demonstrators, many painted with death masks.
Aug. 22, 1976 – Major League Baseball pitcher Randy Wolf was
born in West Hill, Calif. He went on to play for the Philadelphia Phillies, the
Los Angeles Dodgers, the San Diego Padres, the Houston Astros, the Milwaukee
Brewers, the Baltimore Orioles, the Miami Marlins and the Detroit Tigers.
Aug. 22, 1981 – A horse show
sponsored by the Lyeffion High School FFA and the Lyeffion Saddle Club was
scheduled to be held at the Lyeffion Saddle Club Arena, starting at 5 p.m. with
proceeds to go to the FFA Chapter.
Aug. 22, 1987 – Warrior Academy
beat Sparta Academy, 21-0, in Eutaw, Ala. Standout players for Sparta in that
game included Craig Blackburn, Kenny Bledsoe, Robbie Bolton, Jeff Carrier,
Jamie Deason, Brad Watts and Lee Wild.
Aug. 22, 1988 – The Fall Term of Circuit Court in Conecuh
County, Ala. began with Judge Robert E.L. Key presiding. Key was the 35th
Judicial Circuit’s first and only judge at the time, and this was his final
regular court term in Conecuh County before his retirement in January 1989.
Aug. 22, 1989 - Nolan Ryan of the Texas Rangers struck out
Rickey Henderson to become the first pitcher in major league history to
register 5,000 career strikeouts.
Aug. 22, 1990 - U.S. President George H.W. Bush signed an
order for calling reservists to aid in the build-up of troops in the Persian
Gulf.
Aug. 22, 1990 - The U.S. State Department announced that the
U.S. Embassy in Kuwait would not be closed under President Saddam Hussein's
demand.
Aug. 22, 1990 - The 1990-91 school year at both Monroe
Academy and Monroe County public schools was scheduled to begin.
Aug. 22, 1992
– FBI HRT sniper Lon Horiuchi shot and killed Vicki Weaver during an 11-day
siege at her home at Ruby Ridge, Idaho.
Aug. 22, 2003 – Alabama Chief Justice Roy Moore was
suspended after refusing to comply with a federal court order to remove a rock
inscribed with the Ten Commandments from the lobby of the Alabama Supreme Court
building.
Aug. 22, 2003 - Albert Pujols of the St. Louis Cardinals
went 0-5 to end a 30-game hitting streak.
Aug. 22, 2007 – The Texas Rangers defeated the Baltimore
Orioles 30–3, the most runs scored by a team in modern Major League Baseball
history. The combined run total was also Major League record.
Aug. 22, 2014 – Sparta Academy’s varsity football team was
scheduled to play Hooper Academy in a pre-season game at Davis Henry Field in
Hope Hull, Ala. The game was not to count against either team’s regular season
record. Also on this night, Hillcrest High School’s varsity football team was
scheduled to play a preseason game against Clarke County High School.
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