Sept. 13, 1609 – Henry Hudson reached the river that would
later be named after him – the Hudson River.
Sept. 13, 1781 - In North Carolina, in what is now known as
the Battle of Lindley’s Mill or the Battle of Cane Creek, General Butler and
300 militiamen set an ambush at Lindley's Mill in an attempt to free captured
Governor Burke and 13 high-ranking Whig officials. The battle closed the war in
North Carolina a month before Lord Cornwallis surrendered at Yorktown.
Sept. 13, 1782 – During the American Revolutionary War,
Franco-Spanish troops launched the unsuccessful "grand assault"
during the Great Siege of Gibraltar.
Sept. 13, 1788 - The Constitutional Convention decided that
the first federal election was to be held on the following February. On that
day George Washington was elected as the first president of the United States.
In addition, New York City was named the temporary national capital.
Sept. 13, 1800 – French-English general and explorer Claude
Martin died at the age of 55 in Lucknow, India.
Sept. 13, 1806 - Charles James Fox, first foreign secretary
of the United Kingdom and vocal supporter of American independence, died in
Chiswick, Devon, England.
Sept. 13, 1812 – During the War of 1812, a supply wagon sent
to relieve Fort Harrison was ambushed in the Attack at the Narrows.
Sept. 13, 1814 – In a turning point in the War of 1812, the
British failed to capture Baltimore. During the battle, Francis Scott Key
composed his poem "Defence of Fort McHenry," which is later set to
music and becomes the United States' national anthem.
Sept. 13, 1819 – Pianist and composer Clara Schumann was
born Clara Wieck in Leipzig, Germany.
Sept. 13, 1850 – The first ascent of Piz Bernina, the
highest summit of the eastern Alps, took place.
Sept. 13, 1851 – Dr. Walter Reed was born on Sept. 13, 1851
in Gloucester County, Va. He would serve as post surgeon at Mount Vernon
Arsenal and Barracks in the 1880s.
Sept. 13, 1855 – William J. Grissett was commissioned as
Monroe County, Alabama’s Sheriff.
Sept. 13, 1861 – During the Civil
War, a skirmish was fought at Booneville, Missouri.
Sept. 13, 1861 – During the Civil
War, at the Battle of Lexington, Missouri (which is also known as the Battle of
the Hemp Bales) in Lafayette County, Mo., was fought between Union Col. James
A. Mulligan and Confederate Major General Sterling Price. The U.S. garrison was
about 3,500; Price had about 12,000 Missouri State Guards. Union losses were
over 1,700; Confederate losses around 100.
Sept. 13, 1862 - During the Civil War, Union soldiers with
the 27th Indiana found a copy of Confederate General Robert E. Lee's orders and
battle plans (Special Order No. 191) for the Antietam campaign in a field
outside Frederick, Maryland. But, Union General George B. McClellan was slow to
react and lost the advantage that the intelligence had provided.
Sept. 13, 1862 – During the Civil
War, a three-day Federal operation between Pass Manchac and Ponchatoula in
Louisiana began.
Sept. 13, 1862 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought at Catoctin Mountain, Middletown, Jefferson, and
South Mountain in Maryland; near Bragg’s Farm, near Wahley’s Mill, in Missouri;
at Newtonia and on Strother Fork of the Black River in Missouri; near Iuka,
Mississippi; and at Flour Bluff, Texas. The Confederate siege against Harper's
Ferry, W.Va. also continued.
Sept. 13, 1863 – Federals conducted reconnaissance from
Henderson’s Gap, Ala., to La Fayette, Ga.
Sept. 13, 1863 – During the Civil War, skirmishes were
fought near Summerville, Ga.; near Salem, Mo.; near Lowndes’ Mill and Comvahee
River in South Carolina; at Paris, Tenn.; and at Brandy Station, Muddy Run,
Stevensburg, Pony Mountain, and Culpeper Court House in Virginia.
Sept. 13, 1863 – During the Civil
War, Federal expeditions were conducted from from Fort Larned, Kansas to
Booth’s Ranch, on the Arkansas River, in Kansas and along the shore of Lake
Ponchartrain, La.
Sept. 13, 1864 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought near Searcy, Ark.; at near Bayou Maringouin, La.;
at Longwood, Mo.; at Locke's Ford, near Berryville, Abraham's Creek (near
Winchester) and Gilbert's Ford in Virginia; and at Bunker Hill, W.Va. A five-day
Federal operation from Morganza to Fausse River in Louisiana began.
Sept. 13, 1865 – Joseph Ganes Sanders, the “Turncoat of Dale
County,” resigned from the U.S. Army and he returned home to Dale County, where
he planned to resume his gristmill work.
Sept. 13, 1876 – Author Sherwood
Anderson was born in Camden, Ohio.
Sept. 13, 1877 – German explorer Wilhelm Filchner was born
in Bayreuth, Germany.
Sept. 13, 1892 - Three women passed entrance exams to earn
admission to the junior class at Auburn, making the college the first in
Alabama and the second in the Southeast to become coeducational. The young
ladies, one of whom was the daughter of the Auburn president, were allowed on
campus only when attending class.
Sept. 13, 1894 – British novelist, playwright and essayist
John Boynton – known as J.B. Priestley – was born in Bradford, Yorkshire.
Sept. 13, 1899 - Henry Bliss became the first American to
die in an auto accident when he was run over by a taxicab as he exited a streetcar
in New York City.
Sept. 13, 1899 – Mackinder, Ollier and Brocherel made the first
ascent of Batian (17,058 feet), the highest peak of Mount Kenya.
Sept. 13, 1904 – Gabby Street of Huntsville, Ala.
made his Major League debut, taking the field for the Cincinnati Reds.
Sept. 13, 1906 – Excel Masonic Lodge No. 655 was
established. The lodge’s original officers include G.W. Salter Sr., H.R. White,
R.L. Casey, J.F. Kelly, Riley Kelly, E. Parvin, J.C. Griffin, L.B. Cohron and
William Williams. The lodge began with 10 charter members.
Sept. 13, 1911 – Bill Monroe, the “Father of Bluegrass,” was
born in Rosine, Ky.
Sept. 13, 1913 - The movie “The Clown's Daughter,” screenplay written by Alabama author Marie
Stanley under her maiden name Marie Layet, was released.
Sept. 13-14, 1913 - Mobile was visited by a storm on this
Saturday and Sunday when 11 inches of rain fell.
Sept. 13, 1914 – During World War I, South African troops
opened hostilities in German south-west Africa (Namibia) with an assault on the
Ramansdrift police station.
Sept. 13, 1914 – During World War I, the Battle of Aisne
began between Germany and France.
Sept. 13, 1914 - In Washington, D.C., the former British
diplomat Sir Roger Casement secretly met with Franz von Papen, the German
military attaché, to seek Germany’s support in the effort to win independence
from British rule for Ireland.
Sept. 13, 1915 – “Probably the largest crowd that ever
attended a session of commissioners court” assembled in Evergreen on this
Monday. “Most of them were here in the interest of improving public roads in
various sections. All who cared to be heard were given a patient hearing.”
Sept. 13, 1915 – The Conecuh County “commissioners court”
awarded local contractors Fowler & Watson the contract to construct a road
from Burnt Corn Creek to Bermuda and from the “stage road” to Repton.
Sept. 13, 1915 – The Monroe County High School opened its
fourth annual session in Monroeville, Ala. with 95 pupils present, compared to
74 in 1914. Opening exercises were held in the auditorium and speakers included
the Rev. C.W. Henson, Mr. Henson, attorneys A.C. Lee and L.S. Biggs,
Superintendent Barnes, County Board of Education Chairman C.W. Jackson, and
Prof. Harris.
Sept. 13, 1918 – During World War I, Army Pvt. Newton Urisa
Blackman, 22, of Evergreen killed in action in France while serving with Co. B,
165th Infantry, 42nd Division. Born in Conecuh County on
Jan. 15, 1896, he was buried in Arlington National Cemetery in Arlington, Va. (Some sources say that he was killed on Sept. 15, but most agree that he was killed on Sept. 13.)
Sept. 13, 1922 - In El Azizia, Libya, the highest shade
temperature was recorded at 136.4 degrees Fahrenheit.
Sept. 13, 1923 - George Burns of the Boston Red Sox
performed the third unassisted triple play in Major League Baseball history.
Sept. 13, 1932 - Joe McCarthy became the first manager to
win pennants in both baseball leagues when his New York Yankees clinched the
American League pennant.
Sept. 13, 1933 – Frank DuBose, 18, escaped from Atmore
Prison, where he was serving a four-year sentence for grand larceny and perjury
under the name of Thomas Mason. He would be arrested in Chicago over six years
later on Dec. 13, 1939.
Sept. 13, 1934 – The Monroe Journal reported that boxers
from C.C.C. Camp 230 at Uriah and boxers from Pensacola, Fla. met in a
three-bout tourney in the recreation hall of Co. 230. The curtain raiser was
between Ed. Lis of Uriah, 110 lbs., and Frank Barberi of Pensacola, 118 lbs.
The judges awarded the decision to the Pensacola boy after three rounds of hard
fighting. The second bout was a fast one and had the audience on its toes from
start to finish. Jerry Caggiano of Uriah, 144 lbs., was the winner. His
opponent, Louis Bond of Pensacola, tipped the scales at 146 lbs. In the final
bout featuring “Pete” Malango of Uriah, 151 lbs., and Frank Stearns of
Pensacola, 156 lbs., the decision was rendered in Malango’s favor.
Sept. 13, 1934 – The Monroe Journal reported that George
Thomas Jones had returned from a visit to relatives in Waynesboro, Ga.
Sept. 13, 1934 – The Monroe Journal reported that the Monroe
County Board of Education had authorized the collection of a matriculation fee
of $5 from each high school pupil enrolling in the accredited high schools of
the county. Monies received from these
sources were to constitute an incidental fund subject to local school use for
fuel, lights, water, crayon, brooms, janitor service, library supplies,
laboratory supplies, repairs and other necessary incidental expenses. The funds
derived from fees were absolutely essential if standard accredited high schools
were to be provided for in the county.
Sept. 13, 1936 - 17-year-old Cleveland Indians pitching ace
"Rapid" Robert Feller struck out 17 batters in a game, setting a new
American League record. Feller allowed just two hits in the game to help his
team to a 5-2 victory over the Philadelphia A’s.
Sept. 13, 1939 - The Alabama legislature
outlawed open-range livestock grazing in Alabama, effective March 1, 1941,
although counties are given the option of holding referendums on allowing
cattle to range free within county boundaries. Closing of the
range in Alabama began shortly after the Civil War, when fencing of
livestock was required in certain agricultural districts, and various
local-option measures followed in subsequent years. In 1951, the legislature,
in what by then was largely a symbolic act, took away local option, thereby
permanently closing the open range.
Sept. 13, 1939 – Baseball Hall of Fame pitcher
Early Wynn of Hartford (Geneva County), Ala. made his Major League debut,
taking the field for the Washington Senators.
Sept. 13, 1945 - In accordance with
the Potsdam Agreements at the end of WWII, 5,000 British troops of the 20th
Indian Division, commanded by Gen. Douglas Gracey, arrive in southern Indochina
to disarm the defeated Japanese forces.
Sept. 13, 1946 - Ted Williams of the Boston Red Sox hit his
only inside-the-park home run.
Sept. 13, 1948 - A radio
version of Alabama author Lillian Hellman's play “Another Part of the Forest”
was broadcast on “The Lux Radio Theatre” series.
Sept. 13, 1953 – Kilby Prison parolee Willie Miles, 36,
allegedly raped a 59-year-old widow at her rural home on this Sunday night
around 7:30 p.m. Miles, who lived at Skinnerton, allegedly broke into the
woman’s house, beat, choked and raped her. The woman reported the crime the
next day, and Conecuh County Sheriff John H. Brock arrested Miles for rape,
which he admitted to.
Sept. 13, 1963 - Baseball Hall of Fame pitcher
Early Wynn of Hartford, Ala. made his last Major League appearance, taking the
field one last time for the Cleveland Indians.
Sept. 13, 1964 – South Vietnamese Generals Lâm Văn Phát and
Dương Văn Đức failed in a coup attempt against General Nguyễn Khánh.
Sept. 13, 1964 - Dissident South
Vietnamese army officers attempted to overthrow General Nguyen Khan’s
government in Saigon, calling their movement the People’s Council for the
Salvation of the Nation.
Sept. 13, 1965 - Willie Mays became the fifth player in
Major League Baseball history to hit 500 career home runs.
Sept. 13, 1968 – Evergreen High School, under head coach
Wendell Hart, beat Monroe County High School, 14-7, in Monroeville on this
Friday night. Buck Quarles scored Evergreen’s first touchdown on a five-yard
run, and Jimmy Hart added the extra point. Evergreen’s game-winning touchdown
came on a 42-yard pass play from Hart to Leon “Hoss” Hinson with Hart adding
the extra point. Other standout Evergreen players in that game included Jimmy
Bell, John Brantley, Jimmy Hamiter, Don Montgomery, Ronald Parker, Eddie Ralls,
Forrest Simpson, Hollis Tranum, Roger Waller and Charlie Wild.
Sept. 13, 1968 – Lyeffion High School, under head coach Buck
Powell, beat Repton High School, 21-13, at Lyeffion. Standout players for
Repton in that game included Andy Higdon and Joe Smith. Standout players for
Lyeffion included James Riley, Jerry Dykes and Johnny Shaw.
Sept. 13, 1968 - The largest
sustained operation inside the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) opened when U.S. and
South Vietnamese infantry and armored troops, supported by planes, artillery,
and U.S. Navy ships, moved two miles into the buffer zone to relieve enemy
pressure on Allied bases along the 40-mile stretch of South Vietnam’s northern
frontier.
Sept. 13, 1970 - The first New York City Marathon took
place. Fireman Gary Muhrucke won the race. The race was run entirely inside
Central Park.
Sept. 13, 1971 - Frank Robinson of the Baltimore Orioles hit
his 500th career home run.
Sept. 13, 1977 – “The Amityville Horror” by Jay Anson was
first published by Prentice Hall.
Sept. 13, 1978 – The Dickinson House, which was built in
1845 and is located on Dickinson Avenue in Grove Hill, was added to the
National Register of Historic Places.
Sept. 13, 1979 – The Monroe Journal reported that shelter
locations and advice for evacuees from Hurricane Frederic, which was expected
to hit the Gulf Coast late Wed., Sept. 12, had been released by the Monroe
County Civil Defense Committee. Evacuees from the coastal area and local
residents were being advised to go first to the Monroeville National Guard
Armory. When it filled, people were to be placed in Southside Baptist Church in
Monroeville, then First Baptist Church in Monroeville.
Sept. 13, 1979 – The Monroe Journal reported that David F.
Steele of Beatrice had graduated with honors during summer commencement
exercises at Auburn University. Steele, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Steele,
received a bachelor’s degree in forestry.
Sept. 13, 1979 – The Monroe Journal reported that Navy
seaman William F. Starr, son of Albert F. and Sue E. Starr of Frisco City, had
completed recruit training at the Naval Training Center in San Diego. A 1979
graduate of Frisco City High School, Starr joined the Navy in July 1978.
Sept. 13, 1981 - President Ronald Reagan declared Commodore
John Barry Day to honor a man he called one of the earliest and greatest
American patriots, a man of great insight who perceived very early the need for
American power on the sea.
Sept. 13, 1986 - Bert Blyleven of the Minnesota Twins
surrendered five homes runs. The game raised Blyleven's total to 44 for the
year setting an American League record.
Sept. 13, 1989 - Fay Vincent was named commissioner of Major
League Baseball, succeeding the late A. Bartlett Giamatti.
Sept. 13, 1996 - Alex Rodriguez of the Seattle Mariners set
a team record when he became the first player for the Mariners to reach 200
hits in a season.
Sept. 13, 1996 – In a game against the New York Yankees,
Charlie O'Brien of the Toronto Blue Jays became the first catcher in Major
League Baseball history to wear a hockey goalie-style catcher's mask.
Sept. 13, 1996 - John Wetteland of the New York Yankees
became on the second Yankee to record 40 or more saves in a season.
Sept. 13, 1998 - George Wallace, Alabama’s 45th governor and
one of the most controversial politicians in U.S. history, died of septic shock
from a bacterial infection in Jackson Hospital in Montgomery, Ala., at the age
of 79. He was buried in Greenwood Cemetery in Montgomery.
Sept. 13, 2001 - U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell named
Osama bin Laden as the prime suspect in the terror attacks on the United States
on September 11, 2001. Limited commercial flights resumed in the U.S. for the
first time in two days.
Sept. 13, 2003 - In Oakland, Calif., Frank Francisco of the
Texas Rangers, a relief pitcher, threw a chair into the right field box seats.
Two spectators were hit in the head. The game was delayed for 19 minutes. The
Athletics won the game, 7-6, in the tenth inning.
Sept. 13, 2013 – Sparta Academy recorded its first win of
the 2013 season by shutting out region opponent Sumter Academy, 28-0, at Wild
Turkey Stadium in York. Chance House scored all four of Sparta’s touchdowns and
finished the night with 140 yards rushing, which was two more rushing yards
than Sumter’s entire team. He scored on runs of three, 30, 21 and eight yards.
Sept. 13, 2013 – Hillcrest High School dropped to 0-2 in region
play after a 29-21 loss to Andalusia High School at Memorial Stadium in
Andalusia. Hillcrest quarterback Keyshawn Roache scored two rushing touchdowns
against the Bulldogs and Rajos Smith added to Hillcrest’s score with a 56-yard
run.
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