Wilcox Mineral Springs |
Sept. 7, 1776 – During the American Revolutionary War,
according to American colonial reports, Ezra Lee made the world's first
submarine attack in the Turtle,
attempting to attach a time bomb to the hull of British Admiral Richard Howe’s
flagship, the HMS Eagle, in New
York Harbor (no British records of this attack exist). The bomb exploded but
did not do damage to either craft. This is considered the first use of a
submarine in warfare.
Sept. 7, 1778 – During the American Revolutionary War,
France invaded Dominica in the British West Indies, before Britain was even
aware of France's involvement in the war.
Sept. 7, 1813 - The nickname "Uncle Sam" was first
used as a symbolic reference to the United States when a reference to it
appeared in an editorial in the New York's Troy Post. Samuel Wilson, a meat
packer in New York, supplied barrels of beef to the US Army during the War of
1812, and marked them with the initials "U.S." for United States.
Soldiers began referring to the food as "Uncle Sam's," and a local
newspaper picked up the story.
Sept. 7, 1815 – Scottish explorer and surveyor John McDouall
Stuart was born in Dysart, Fife, Scotland.
Sept. 7, 1825 – Benjamin Hunt was commissioned as Monroe
County, Alabama’s Sheriff.
Sept. 7, 1825 – During his tour of the United Sates, the
Marquis de Lafayette left Washington D.C. and returned to France on the frigate
USS Brandywine.
Sept. 7, 1831 – Samuel McColl was commissioned for his
second of three terms as Monroe County, Alabama’s Circuit Court Clerk, and
George Medlock was commissioned as Monroe County’s Sheriff.
Sept. 7, 1861 – During the Civil
War, a skirmish was fought with Indians near the Santa Ana Canyon in
California.
Sept. 7, 1861 – During the Civil
War, a Federal expedition to Big Springs, Mo. took place.
Sept. 7, 1862 – During the Civil War,
Federal forces occupied Bowling Green, Ky.; and Federal forces surrendered the
outpost of Shepherdsville, Ky.
Sept. 7, 1862 – During the Civil
War, a two-day Federal operation began between Carrollton and Saint Charles
Courthouse in Louisiana.
Sept. 7, 1862 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought at Point of Rocks, Md.; at Lancaster, Mo.; at
Riggin’s Hill (near Clarksville,) Murfreesborough and Pine Mountain in Tennessee;
and at Darkesville, W.Va.
Sept. 7, 1863 – Confederates evacuated Battery Wagner on
Morris Island near Charleston, S.C.
Sept. 7, 1863 - Union forces arrived at Sabine Pass, Texas.
The next day their attack was thwarted by a small Confederate force.
Sept. 7, 1863 – During the Civil War, a skirmish occurred at
Stevenson in Jackson County, Ala.
Sept. 7, 1863 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought at Ashley’s Mills or Ferry Landing in Arkansas; at
Bath, W.Va.; at Morgan’s Ferry on the Atchafalaya River in Louisiana; at Holly
Springs and another at Jacinto (or Glendale) in Mississippi; and on Battery
Island, S.C.
Sept. 7, 1863 – During the Civil
War, a Federal expedition to Big Lake, in Mississippi County, Ark. took place,
and a Federal expedition from Springfield, Mo. into Arkansas and the Indian
Territory began.
Sept. 7, 1863 – During the Civil
War, an engagement was fought in Charleston Harbor, S.C. as the USS Ironsides
and five monitors attacked the Confederate batteries at Moultie and Sullivan’s
Island.
Sept. 7, 1863 – During the Civil
War, Federal reconnaissance was conducted toward Chattanooga and a skirmish was
fought in Lookout Valley, Tenn. A three-day Federal operation also began that
would result in the capture of Cumberland Gap, Tenn.
Sept. 7, 1864 – During the Civil War, in preparation for his
“March to the Sea,” Union General William T. Sherman ordered the residents of
Atlanta, Ga., to evacuate the city. Between September 11 and 16 about 446
families (about 1,600 people) left their homes and possessions. Sherman wrote,
"I have deemed it to the interest of the United States that the citizens
now residing in Atlanta should remove, those who prefer it to go South, and the
rest North."
Sept. 7, 1864 – During the Civil
War, Federal expeditions were conducted to Grand Lake, Grand River, Lake Fausse
Pointe, Bayou Pigeon and Lake Natchez in Louisiana.
Sept. 7, 1864 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought at Centralia, Mo.; near Winchester and Brucetown in
Virginia; and near Homersville and Gayoso in Missouri.
Sept. 7, 1865 – During the Civil
War, a skirmish was fought with Indians at Powder River in the Montana
Territory.
Sept. 7, 1870 – Russian pilot, explorer, and author
Aleksandr Kuprin was born in Narovchat, Penza, Governorate, Russian Empire.
Sept. 7, 1876 – In Huntsville, Ala., legend says that Jesse
James robbed the First National Bank of $10,000 at two o’clock in the
afternoon. This robbery was never committed or even attempted, but the legend
persists.
Sept. 7, 1876
– In Northfield, Minn., Jesse James and the James–Younger Gang attempted to rob
the town's bank but are driven off by armed citizens.
Sept. 7, 1881 - Alabama author Sidney Lanier passed away
from complications from tuberculosis at the age of 39 in Lynn, N.C.
Sept. 7, 1887 – Modernist poet Edith Sitwell was born in
Scarborough, England.
Sept. 7, 1893 – The Evergreen Star reported that since it
had been decided that the agricultural school would be located in Evergreen,
many improvements had been made on the local academy. Work had been in progress
for the past month, and everything was expected to be ready for opening on the
following Monday. Besides the improvements on the house, 75 new double desks
had been purchased and 275 students could be seated. In this connection, and at
the suggestion of The Star, the matriculation fees had been made payable
monthly.
Sept. 7, 1893 – In this day’s edition of The Evergreen Star,
J.A. McCreary, the secretary of the board of directors of the Evergreen
Academy, announced that the school would open on Mon., Sept. 11. There was to
be a matriculating fee of $2.50 or $5 charge for each scholar entering the
school, established by the board of directors and payable in advance. This fee
or more was charged in every regulated school, whether the tuition was free or
not. On account of the stringency of money, those of the board that could be
gotten together decided to allow all those who do not feel able to pay the
whole fee in advance to pay at the beginning of each scholastic month.
Sept. 7, 1893 – This day’s edition of The Evergreen Star
carried the following announcement under the headline “SCHOOL BOARDERS” - The
Farmers’ Hotel will be prepared on the opening of the school to take as many as
half a dozen young men to board. Rates reasonable. Apply to Mrs. M.E. Cobb.
Sept. 7, 1895 - A “negro employee on Mr. Geo. Watson’s
place” near Burnt Corn, Ala. on this Saturday night was shot and killed by
unknown parties “while dressing in his house.”
Sept. 7, 1896 - County court was scheduled to convene on
this Monday in Monroeville.
Sept. 7, 1903 – Writer Margaret Landon was born in Somers,
Wisc.
Sept. 7, 1905 – The Monroe Journal reported that W.L. Durden
of Franklin, Ala. had recently obtained a patent on an improved nut lock for
railroad rails and was negotiating for the sale of his invention.
Sept. 7, 1905 – The Monroe Journal reported that Drs.
McMillan and Smith had moved their offices into the old courthouse in the suite
of rooms formerly occupied by the late H.W. Jones. The Journal also reported
that McCreary Brothers had moved its store into the Russell building.
Sept. 7, 1907 - Old Town’s baseball team “crossed bats” with
Brownville on this Saturday, and Brownville was defeated.
Sept. 7, 1908 – Pro Football Hall of Fame head coach Paul
Brown was born in Norwalk, Ohio. During his career, he served as the head coach
for Ohio State University, the Cleveland Browns and the Cincinnati Bengals. He
was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1967.
Sept. 7, 1909 – Evergreen, Alabama’s Second District
Agricultural School and City School opened with a “fairly good enrollment of
pupils.” Henry T. Lile was the president of the Agricultural School.
Sept. 7, 1914 - The Monroe County Teachers Institute
convened in the Monroe County High School auditorium with 73 teachers enrolled.
Sept. 7, 1914 – Charlie Howard shot Louisville & Nashville
Railroad bridgeman J.L. Andress four times, and Andress was rushed to Century,
Fla. for surgery. Andress, 23, passed away two days later around 9 a.m. Born on
Nov. 30, 1890 in Monroe County, Ala., he died on Sept. 9, 1914 and was buried
in the Rumbley Cemetery near Monroeville, Ala.
Sept. 7, 1914 - Sir John French, commander in chief of the
British Expeditionary Force (BEF), began his first official dispatch from the
Western Front during World War I, summarizing the events of the first several
weeks of British operations.
Sept. 7, 1915 – Former Monroe County, Ala. resident Anthony “Abram”
Shiff passed away at the age of 82 in Cincinnati, Ohio. For many years, Shiff
had been a “valued citizen of Monroe, being engaged in the mercantile business
at Claiborne.” Born on Aug. 6, 1833, he was buried in the Clifton United Jewish
Cemetery in Cincinnati. (Some sources say that he died on Sept. 10, 1915.)
Sept. 7, 1916 – The Monroe Journal reported that Mr.
Barnett, farm demonstration agent for Wilcox County, was a recent visitor to
Monroeville, the guest of his aunt, Mrs. L.J. Bugg.
Sept. 7, 1925 – The 1925-26 school year opened at the
Conecuh County High School in Castleberry, Ala. with J.B. Murphy as principal.
Sept. 7, 1927 - Inventor Philo T. Farnsworth and assistants
successfully transmitted the first all-electronic television image.
Sept. 7, 1930 – American jazz musician Sonny Rollins was
born in New York City.
Sept. 7, 1931 – Both of Evergreen, Alabama’s schools – the State
Secondary Agricultural School and the Evergreen City School - opened the 1931-32 school year with a joint
program held in the City School auditorium at 9 a.m. The program was to consist
of several musical numbers by members of the music faculty of the schools and
talks and announcements by Prof. Paul Fisher and Prof. W.P. McMillan,
principals of the two schools.
Sept. 7, 1931 – Conecuh County High School at Castleberry,
Ala. opened for the 1931-32 school year, the school’s 18th session, with a new
principal, William English of Elba. English was the school’s seventh principal
since its establishment in 1914. The principals, and years served, up to that
point, were as follows: 1914-18, Sarah E. Luther; 1918-19, Lewey Dorman;
1919-22, Sellers Stough; 1922-26, J.B. Murphy; 1926-28, L.C. Kersh; 1928-31,
Geo. M. Veazey; 1931- William English.
Sept. 7, 1931 - George Washington
Stuart, who owned and operated the Wilcox Mineral Springs at Schuster, passed
away at the age of 79 and was buried in the Ackerville Cemetery, about 15 miles
east of Camden.
Sept. 7-9, 1933 – “Under Cover Man,” starring Nancy Carroll
and Geo. Raft, and “Blue of the Night,” starring Bing Crosby, were scheduled to
be shown at the Evergreen Theatre in Evergreen, Ala.
Sept. 7, 1936 – Musician Buddy Holly was born Charles Hardin
Holley in Lubbock, Texas.
Sept. 7, 1939 – The Monroe Journal newspaper in Monroeville,
Ala. reported that Mr. and Mrs. Joe Capote and Seaborn Faulk had returned to
New York, after spending a week with Misses Nannie and Jennie Faulk. They were
accompanied home by Truman Capote, who had spent the summer in Monroeville.
Sept. 7, 1939 – In the first game of the Interstate Baseball
League championship series, Flomaton beat Evergreen, 10-5.
Sept. 7, 1940 – The Blitz began during World War II as the
first wave of German Luftwaffe bombers – 348 in all – hit London at around 4
p.m.
Sept. 7, 1945 – NFL and Auburn University offensive lineman
Forrest Blue was born in Marfa, Texas. After college, he played for the San
Francisco 49ers and the Baltimore Colts.
Sept. 7, 1946 – Political columnist and novelist Joe Klein
was born in Queens, N.Y.
Sept. 7, 1946 - The annual Conecuh County teachers institute
was scheduled to be held at the Evergreen City School on this Saturday
beginning at 9 a.m. County Superintendent of Education was Harvey G. Pate.
Sept. 7, 1961 – The Evergreen Courant reported that
Evergreen High School’s cheerleaders that football season included Sandra
Lowrey, Jackie Thornley, Sandra Brooks, Brenda Ellis, Elaine Kindig and Barbara
Stinson.
Sept. 7, 1961 – The Evergreen Courant reported that C.W.
Claybrook, principal of Evergreen High School for the previous 10 years, had
accepted the principalship of the Luverne Schools in Crenshaw County. Both the
elementary and the high school were to be under Claybrook’s supervision. Mr.
and Mrs. Claybrook were employed by the Crenshaw County Board of Education
before coming to Conecuh County. He served as principal of Dozier High for four
years.
Sept. 7, 1962 - Author Elizabeth Dewberry was born in
Birmingham, Ala.
Sept. 7, 1962 – Pulitzer Prize-winning writer Jennifer Egan
was born in Chicago.
Sept. 7, 1963 – The Pro Football Hall of Fame opened in
Canton, Ohio with 17 charter members.
Sept. 7, 1965 – The first full day of classes in Monroe
County schools for the 1965-66 school year took place, following registration
for students at all schools on Sept. 3. R.H. Vickery was county superintendent
of education.
Sept. 7, 1965 – In a run-off election in Mobile, Uriah
native Lambert Mims was named to the Mobile City Commission. Mims, the son of Mr.
and Mrs. Jeff C. Mims of Uriah, beat Henry Luscher by 1,172 votes.
Sept. 7, 1965
– During the Vietnam War, in a follow-up to August's Operation Starlight, United
States Marines and South Vietnamese forces initiated Operation Piranha on the
Batangan Peninsula, 23 miles south of the Marine base at Chu Lai.
Sept. 7, 1967 - U.S. Secretary of
Defense Robert S. McNamara announced plans to build an electronic
anti-infiltration barrier to block communist flow of arms and troops into South
Vietnam from the north at the eastern end of the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ).
Sept. 7, 1968 – Army Sgt. William Morris Cooper, 25, of
Georgiana, Ala. was killed in action in Quang Ngai, Vietnam. He was a member of
Co. D, 4th Battalion, 3rd Infantry, 11th
Infantry Brigade, Americal Division. Born on Oct. 5, 1942, he was buried in
Sunrise Memorial Park in Greenville, Ala.
Sept. 7, 1977 - The Panama Canal treaties were signed by
U.S. President Carter and General Omar Torrijos Herrera. The treaties called
for the U.S. to turn over control of the canal's waterway to Panama in the year
2000.
Sept. 7, 1978 – The Evergreen Courant reported that the
finishing touches were being made to complete the improvements of the ‘home
side’ bleachers at Sparta Academy’s Stuart-McGehee Field in Evergreen, Ala. The
splintered, wooden seats were being covered with concrete.
Sept. 7, 1979 - ESPN, the Entertainment and Sports
Programming Network, made its debut on cable TV.
Sept. 7, 1979 - The Monroe Academy Volunteers turned things
over to a rip-roaring defensive unit to claim a hard-fought, 15-7 win over the
Pickens Academy Pirates at Volunteer Stadium on this Friday night. Defensive
stars were many for the Orange with Larry Gaston, David Carpenter and Sammy
Carter getting key tackles along with most of their defensive playmates. Other
standout Monroe Academy players in that game included Davison Carter, Ron
Eddins, Troy Kendrick, Tommy Kilpatrick, Rusty Middleton, Randall Norris, Doug
Smith, Tripp Stallworth and Rick Williams. Rob Kelly was Monroe’s head coach.
Sept. 7, 1984 – National Baseball Hall of Fame short stop
and manager Joe Cronin passed away at the age of 77 in Osterville, Mass. During
his career, he played for the Pittsburgh Pirates, the Washington Senators and
the Boston Red Sox and he went on to manage the Senators and Red Sox. He was
inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1956.
Sept. 7, 1986 - Dan Marino of the Miami Dolphins threw his
100th career touchdown pass, in only his 44th NFL game, which set a NFL record.
Sept. 7, 1990 – J.U. Blacksher High School beat Fruitdale
High School, 12-0, in Fruitdale. Senior tailback Doug Brown scored on a 56-yard
run in the second quarter, and Willie Jackson scored on a two-yard run in the third
quarter.
Sept. 7, 1990 – Monroe Academy opened the 1990 season with a
14-3 win over Wilcox Academy in Camden. K.J. Lazenby was Monroe’s head coach.
Standout Monroe players in that game included John Abernathy, Chris Hare and
Tommy Weatherford.
Sept. 7, 1998 - Mark McGwire set a new Major League Baseball
record for most home runs hit in a single season. The previous record was 61
set in 1961.
Sept. 7, 2001 - Barry Bonds of the San Francisco Giants
became the only the fifth player in Major League Baseball history to hit 60
home runs in a season.
Sept. 7, 2004 – Hurricane Ivan, a Category 5 hurricane hit
Grenada, killing 39 and damaging 90 percent of its buildings.
Sept. 7, 2008 – The United States government took control of
the two largest mortgage lenders in the U.S., Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
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