Oct. 29, 1390 – The first trial for witchcraft in Paris was
held, leading to the death of three people.
Oct. 29, 1618 – English adventurer, writer, and courtier Sir
Walter Raleigh was beheaded for allegedly conspiring against James I of
England. He was around 65 years old.
Oct. 29, 1682 – French historian, explorer and author Pierre
François Xavier de Charlevoix was born in Saint-Quentin, Picardy, Kingdom of
France.
Oct. 29, 1692 – In connection with the Salem witchcraft
trials, Massachusetts Bay Governor William Phips prohibited further arrests,
released many accused witches and dissolved the Court of Oyer and Terminer.
Oct. 29, 1740 – Biographer James Boswell was born in Edinburgh,
Scotland. He is best known for his 1791 book, “The Life of Samuel Johnson.”
Oct. 29, 1777 - John Hancock
resigned his position as president of the Continental Congress, due to a
prolonged illness.
Oct. 29, 1778 - Future New Jersey Governor Joseph Bloomfield
resigned his military post. He had accepted the elected position of clerk for
the New Jersey Assembly. The city of Bloomfield, New Jersey, was incorporated
in his name in 1812.
Oct. 29, 1792 – Mount Hood in Oregon was named after Samuel
Hood, 1st Viscount Hood by Lt. William E. Broughton who sighted the mountain
near the mouth of the Willamette River.
Oct. 29, 1837 – Folk artist and quilt maker Harriet Powers
was born into slavery outside Athens, Ga.
Oct. 29, 1844 – Ingraham Spense of the Conecuh Guards was
born at Bermuda, Ala. He first entered Confederate service on April 9, 1863 in
Evergreen with Co. E, 4th Ala. Infantry, and served with that unit until
paroled at the close of the war in 1865. He was a Second Sergeant at the close
of the war.
Oct. 29, 1861 – During the Civil War, skirmishes were fought
in the vicinity of Woodbury and Morgantown, Ky.
Oct. 29, 1862 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought at Williamsport, Md.; at Indian Mound, Mo.; at
Sabine Pass, Texas; near Upperville and on the Blackwater River in Virginia;
and at Petersbug, W.Va.
Oct. 29, 1863 – During the Civil War, a skirmish occurred at
Cherokee Station, Alabama
Oct. 29, 1863 - In Hamilton County, Tenn., the Battle of
Wauhatchie (Brown's Ferry) came to an end after forces under Union General
Ulysses S. Grant opened a supply line in Chattanooga after driving away a
Confederate attack led by General James Longstreet. Although the Confederates
still held the high ground above Chattanooga, the new supply line allowed the
Union to hold the city and prepare for a major new offensive the next month.
The Union suffered 78 killed, 327 wounded, and 15 missing, while the
Confederates suffered 34 killed, 305 wounded, and 69 missing.
Oct. 29, 1863 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought at Ozark, Ark.; at Fourteen Mile Creek in the
Indian Territory; at Saylorsville, Ky.; near Opelousas, La.; near Warsaw, Mo.;
at Ford’s Mill, near New Berne, N.C.; at Leiper’s Ferry, on the Holston River, in
Tennessee; near Catlett’s Station, Va.; and at Beverly, W.Va.
Oct. 29, 1864 – Confederate heroine Emma Sansom of Gadsden
married Christopher B. Johnson and moved to Texas in late 1876 or early 1877.
Oct. 29, 1864 – During the Civil War, a skirmish occurred at
Muscle Shoals (or Raccoon Ford) near Florence, Ala.
Oct. 29, 1864 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought near Fort Heiman, Ky.; at Upshaw's Farm and near
Warrenton in Missouri; at Bainbridge, Tenn.; and at Johnson's Farm and
Uppervile in Virginia.
Oct. 29, 1877 – Confederate general
Nathan Bedford Forrest died.
Oct. 29, 1885 - Union General George B. McClellan died from
a heart attack at the age of 85 in Orange, New Jersey.
Oct. 29, 1895 – Monroe County (Ala.) Deputy Sheriff Ben
McMillan returned from Jefferson Parish, La. with Sam Rogers, who broke out of
the Monroe County Jail four years prior and had been at large until captured by
Jefferson Parish officers. McMillan returned him to the Monroe County Jail,
where he was set to be tried on a murder indictment.
Oct. 29, 1901 – Leon Czolgosz, the assassin of U.S.
President William McKinley, was executed by electrocution at the age of 28 at
Auburn State Prison in Auburn, N.Y.
Oct. 29, 1905 – British novelist Henry Green was born Henry
Yorke in Tewkesbury, England.
Oct. 29, 1911 - American newspaperman Joseph Pulitzer passed
away at the age of 64 in Charleston, S.C.
Oct. 29, 1914 – The Conecuh Record reported that a “shooting
affray occurred at Castleberry, Ala. a few days ago” between John Parker and
John Ellis. Ellis was shot and seriously wounded by Parker, who was arrested
and placed in the Conecuh County Jail.
Oct. 29, 1914 – The Conecuh Record reported that Minnie L.
Hart had been appointed postmaster at Range, Ala.
Oct. 29, 1915 - Jane Addams, a leading American social activist, wrote to United States President Woodrow Wilson, warning him of the potential dangers of readying the country to enter the First World War.
Oct. 29, 1921 – In one of the biggest upsets in college
football history, Harvard lost to Centre College, ending a 25-game winning streak.
Oct. 29, 1922 - The second movie version of Alabama author
Mary Johnston's book “To Have and To Hold” was released.
Oct. 29, 1929
– The New York Stock Exchange crashed in what would be called the Crash of '29
or "Black Tuesday," ending the Great Bull Market of the 1920s and
beginning the Great Depression.
Oct. 29, 1940 - The first peacetime military draft began in
the United States.
Oct. 29, 1942 – In the United Kingdom, leading clergymen and
political figures held a public meeting to register outrage over Nazi Germany's
persecution of Jews.
Oct. 29, 1947 - A forest fire in Concord, N.H. was soaked
with rain produced by seeding cumulus clouds with dry ice-- the first such
attempt in the U.S.
Oct. 29, 1948 - Actress and
Birmingham native Kate Jackson was born. Jackson played Sabrina Duncan, the
leader of the group of women detectives, in the television series Charlie's
Angels, which ran from 1976 to 1981. Her first television series was the
gothic-horror soap opera Dark Shadows, on which she played the ghost of a
Victorian governess.
Oct. 29, 1953 – Beatrice High School, under head coach James
Pace, beat Repton High School, 7-0, on this homecoming Thursday night in
Repton, Ala. E.H. Penny was Repton’s principal that year, and Albert Arnold was
Repton’s head football coach.
Oct. 29, 1958 – Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and editor
of The New Yorker magazine David Remnick was born in Hackensack, N.J.
Oct. 29, 1960 – An airplane carrying the Cal Poly football
team crashed on takeoff in Toledo, Ohio.
Oct. 29, 1965 – Evergreen High School lost its seventh
straight game, a 19-6 loss to Red Level in Red Level, Ala. Evergreen’s only
touchdown came on a pass from Bubba Faulkner to Jack White.
Oct. 29, 1965 – On homecoming night in Coffeeville, Ala.,
Lyeffion High School beat Coffeeville High School, 39-0. Lyeffion quarterback
Homer Chaver scored on four touchdown runs. Other outstanding Lyeffion players
in that game included Laymon Booker, Ronnie Booker, Harold Brown, Don Jones, Bo
O’Gwyn, Don Salter, Jerry New and Stanley Wilson.
Oct. 29, 1965 – On homecoming night in Repton, Ala., Repton
High School beat Dozier High School, 21-0. Players scoring for Repton included
Terry Andrews, Ralph Baggett and Nickey Thompson. Players scoring on PAT plays
included Larry Baggett, Frank Watson and Barry Blackwell.
Oct. 29, 1966 – In an incident often attributed to the
Bermuda Triangle, “Southern Cities,” a 67-foot tugboat left Freeport, Texas
with a 210-foot barge in tow. The tugboat and its crew disappeared, but the barge,
complete with its cargo and intact towline would be found by searchers.
Oct. 29, 1967 - A power outage to do necessary work was
scheduled for this Sunday morning in Evergreen, Ala., beginning at the City
Café and extending to the Highway 31 South area. The current was to be turned
off at 7 a.m. and was scheduled to be turned back on at approximately 9:30 a.m.
J.W. Weaver was the City of Evergreen’s Electrical Superintendent.
Oct. 29, 1969 – During the Vietnam
War, Judge Julius Hoffman ordered “Chicago Eight” defendant Bobby Seale gagged
and chained to his chair during his trial.
Oct. 29, 1971 - The total number of
U.S. troops remaining in Vietnam dropped to 196,700 – the lowest level since
January 1966.
Oct. 29, 1973 - O.J. Simpson of the Buffalo Bills set two
National Football League records. He carried the ball 39 times and he ran 157
yards putting him over 1,000 yards at the seventh game of the season.
Oct. 29, 1979 - Willie Mays severed all ties with Major
League Baseball when he accepted a public relations job with an Atlantic City
casino.
Oct. 29, 1981 – Mike Qualls was named sports editor of The
Monroe Journal in Monroeville, Ala.
Oct. 29, 1983 - An early morning fire, thought to have been
caused by an electrical short-circuit, gutted the main building of The Garden
Center at Ollie, Ala. on this Saturday and caused heavy damage to a greenhouse,
according to Monroeville Fire Chief Wilbert Pickens.
Oct. 29, 1989 – Lee Roy Jordan of Excel, Ala. was inducted
into the Dallas Cowboys Ring of Honor.
Oct. 29, 1989 - Ozzie Newsome ended his National Football
League streak of 150 consecutive game receptions.
Oct. 29, 1990 - The United Nations Security Council voted to
hold Saddam Hussein's regime liable for human rights abuses and war damages
during its occupation of Kuwait.
Oct. 29, 1991 – The asteroid “Gaspra” was photographed for
the first time by the space probe Galileo.
Oct. 29, 1993 – Episode No. 7 of “The X-Files” – entitled
“Ghost in the Machine” – aired for the first time.
Oct. 29, 1993 - The movie “The Nightmare Before Christmas,” story
adapted by Alabama author Robert McDowell, was released.
Oct. 29, 1995 - Jerry Rice of the San Francisco 49ers became
the National Football League's career leader in receiving yards with 14,040
yards.
Oct. 29, 1995 – “Degree of Guilt,” a television version
of Alabama author Richard North Patterson's books “Degree of Guilt” and “Eyes of a Child,”
was broadcast.
Oct. 29, 2001 – The Opp Commercial Historic District in
Covington County, Ala. was added to the National Register of Historic Places.
Oct. 29, 2004 – The Arabic-language news network Al Jazeera
broadcasted an excerpt from a 2004 Osama bin Laden video in which the terrorist
leader first admits direct responsibility for the September 11, 2001 attacks and
referenced the 2004 U.S. presidential election.
Oct. 29, 2014
– The San Francisco Giants won the 2014 World Series.
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