Oct. 5, 1540 – The DeSoto Expedition departed the ancient
Indian town of Talisi in present-day Dallas County, Ala. and visited the
ancient Indian village of Casiste, which was probably located on the site of
Cahaba, Alabama’s first state capital, also in Dallas County.
Oct. 5, 1582 – Because of the implementation of the
Gregorian calendar this day does not exist in this year in Italy, Poland,
Portugal and Spain.
Oct. 5, 1713 – French philosopher and writer Denis Diderot
was born in Langres.
Oct. 5, 1774 - William Goddard laid out a plan for a
Constitutional Post before the Continental Congress.
Oct. 5, 1775 - General George Washington wrote to the
president of the Continental Congress, John Jay, to inform him that a letter
from Dr. Benjamin Church, surgeon general of the Continental Army, to
Lieutenant General Sir Thomas Gage, British commander in chief for North
America, had been intercepted.
Oct. 5, 1813 - The Battle of the Thames, also known as the
Battle of Moraviantown, took place near present-day Chatham, Ontario in Upper
Canada. It was a decisive United States victory in the War of 1812 against
Great Britain. It resulted in the death of the Shawnee chief Tecumseh and the
destruction of the Native American coalition which he led.
Oct. 5, 1829 - Chester A. Arthur, the 21st President of the
United States, was born in Fairfield, Vermont.
Oct. 5, 1852 – A county election was held in Coffee County,
Ala. in which Elba was selected as the county seat, getting 58 more votes than
Indigo Head (Clintonville).
Oct. 5, 1858 – Author Helen Churchill Candee was born in New
York City.
Oct. 5, 1861 – Joseph Ganes Sanders, the “Turncoat of Dale
County (Ala.),” had his 12-month enlistment confirmed and was assigned to the
31st Georgia Infantry.
Oct. 5, 1861 – During the Civil War, a Federal expedition
went to Oak Grove and the Temecula Ranch in California to determine the
presence of Confederate personnel.
Oct. 5, 1862 – During the Civil
War, Federal forces recaptured Jacksonville, Fla., and more fighting occurred
at Corinth, Miss.
Oct. 5, 1862 – During the Civil
War, severe skirmishing took place at Hatchie (or Davis) Bridge, Big Hatchie,
or Metamora, in Mississippi, ending the Battle of Corinth, in Mississippi. Skirmishes
were also fought at Cole Camp and near Sims' Cove in Missouri and near
Chewalla, Fort Riley (near Nashville,) Neely’s Bend (n the Cumberland River,)
and Big Hill in Tennessee.
Oct. 5 1862 – During the Civil War,
Galveston, Texas was captured by the Union Naval fleet.
Oct. 5, 1863 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought on the Greenwell Springs Road in Louisiana; at New
Albany, Miss.; at Greenfield, Stockton and Syracuse in Missouri; and at Blue
Springs, Readyville and Murfreesborough in Tennessee.
Oct. 5, 1864 – After losing the city of Atlanta, Confederate
General John Bell Hood attacked Union General William T. Sherman's supply line
at Allatoona Pass, Ga. Hood's men could not take the Union stronghold,
and they were forced to retreat into Alabama.
Oct. 5, 1864 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought near St. Charles, Ark.; at Atchafalaya, Saint
Charles and near Jackson, La.; and on the Osage River in Missouri.
Oct. 5, 1864 – During the Civil War,
a four-day Federal expedition began from Baton Rouge to Clinton, Greensburg,
Osyka (Mississippi) and Camp Moore in Louisiana. A four-day Federal expedition
from Natchez to the Homochitto River in Mississippi began. A four-day Federal
expedition from Tunica Landing to Fort Adams in Mississippi also began.
Oct. 5, 1869 - One of the single greatest weather
predictions came true on this date. Lt. SM Saxby had predicted the year before
that a hurricane would drench parts of Canada and New England. His accuracy was
only slightly off, missing the center of the storm by 100 miles and the time by
12 hours.
Oct. 5, 1877 – Chief Joseph, the leader of a band of Nez
Perce Indians in the Wallowa Valley in northeaster Oregon, surrendered to the
U.S. Cavalry.
Oct. 5, 1878 – John Wesley Hardin, who lived in Pollard,
Ala. for 18 months, was sent to prison in Huntsville, Texas. He would be
released in 1894.
Oct. 5, 1882 – Rocket scientist Robert Goddard was born in
Worcester, Mass.
Oct. 5, 1888 – Jim Burrow, the brother of outlaw train
robber Rube Burrow, died of typhoid in a prison in Little Rock, Ark. and was
buried on the prison grounds.
Oct. 5, 1889 – The Monroe Journal reported that J.B. Downs
killed an alligator that was over seven feet long.
Oct. 5, 1895 – Every member of the Monroe County Militia
Corps was ordered to appear in uniform at Monroeville, Ala. at 10 a.m. Any
member failing to appear without a satisfactory excuse was subject to
dishonorably discharged. T.B. Nettles was the unit’s captain.
Oct. 5, 1914 – During World War I, the first aerial combat
occurred resulting in an intentional fatality.
Oct. 5, 1915 – Bulgaria entered World War I as one of the Central
Powers.
Oct. 5, 1915 - At the request of the Greek prime minister,
Eleutherios Venizelos, Britain and France agreed to land troops at the city of
Salonika (now Thessaloniki), in northern Greece, during World War I.
Oct. 5, 1918 – East Brewton was officially incorporated as a
municipality.
Oct. 5, 1921 - The World Series was broadcast on the radio
for the first time. The game was between the New York Giants and the New York
Yankees.
Oct. 5, 1921 – Pro Football Hall of Fame defensive tackle
Bill Willis was born in Columbus, Ohio. He went on to play for Ohio State and
the Cleveland Browns. He was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1977.
Oct. 5, 1923 – The Troy State Normal School (present-day
Troy University) beat Greenville High School, 13-6, in a football game played
in Greenville, Ala.
Oct. 5, 1925 – Conecuh County, Ala. public schools
officially opened for the 1925-26 school year.
Oct. 5, 1936 - A new administration took charge of
municipal affairs in Evergreen, Ala. on this Monday night with the inauguration
of the newly elected mayor and council. Dr. J.R. Brooks was formally inducted
into office as mayor and J.T. Gaillard, C.B. Wilson, Cecil Hagood, J.H. Robison
and J.W. Shannon took their seats as members of the council. All incumbent city
employees were renamed by the council and a new position, that of street
foreman, was created and H.Z. Gunter named to take this place. Those re-named
were: Clerk and Treasurer, J.R. Simmons; Light and Water Supt., F.M. Wright;
Ass’t Supt. Foster Brooks; Chief of Police, Harry L. Riley; Night Marshal, G.W.
Moorer; Attorney, J.L. Kelly.
Oct. 5, 1938 – In Nazi Germany, Jews' passports were
invalidated; those who needed a passport for emigration purposes were given one
marked with the letter "J" (for "Jude", or Jew).
Oct. 5, 1939 - Author J. Whitfield Gibbons was born in
Montgomery, Ala.
Oct. 5, 1947 – The first televised White House address was
given by U.S. President Harry S. Truman and his subject was food conservation.
Oct. 5, 1949 - American baseball writer and historian George
William “Bill” James was born in Holton, Kansas, in 1949.
Oct. 5, 1950 – The entire edition of The Evergreen Courant
published on this day was printed in green ink to “stress the slogan of the
program of green grazing and cover crops on county fields, ‘Let’s Make Conecuh
County Fields Green This Winter.’”
Oct. 5, 1951 – Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist Edward P.
Jones was born in Washington, D.C.
Oct. 5, 1951 – In one of the “roughest”
games of the season, Excel and McKenzie battled to a 6-6 tie in Monroeville,
Ala. “The game ended with a McKenzie player being carried unconscious from the
field, shortly before which Curtis Bowen, Excel fullback, had received a
severely broken arm. Tension mounted after the final whistle when fans poured
out on the field to mill around players of both teams after a final unfavored
penalty against McKenzie. A potential post-game fracas was quieted however.”
Oct. 5, 1951 - The Evergreen High Aggies scored two
touchdowns in the second quarter, another in the third and then threw back a
rugged Monroeville running attack to win their second victory of the season
20-7 in Evergreen on this Friday night. A crowd of some 2,000 enjoyed the game.
Players on Evergreen’s team in that game included Ward Alexander Jr., Pace
Bozeman, Lurton Chambers, Same Cope, Gwyn Daniels, Wayne “Dog” Douglas, Donahue
Edson, Eddie Evers, Jimmy Frazier, Shirley Frazier, Paul Hanks, Gillis “Red”
Morgan, Bill Robinson and Joe Stowers. Wendell Hart was Evergreen’s head coach,
and Spencer Davis was assistant coach.
Oct. 5, 1951 - Death claimed John Dickerson Diamond, one of
Conecuh County’s oldest citizens, on this Friday afternoon at his home some two
miles from the Wilcox community. He would have been 100 years old in April
1952. Diamond was born in Conecuh County on April 30, 1852 and had lived there
all of his life. For the previous 76 years, he had lived in the home he moved
into after his marriage and it was in this home that his death came. He was
until his retirement a few years ago, a farmer, a calling he followed all of
his life. He was buried in the Olive Branch Baptist Church Cemetery in Conecuh
County.
Oct. 5, 1952 - Clive Barker was
born in Liverpool, Lancashire, England.
Oct. 5, 1953 - The New York Yankees won their fifth straight
World Series by defeating the Brooklyn Dodgers.
Oct. 5, 1956 - The movie “The Ten Commandments,” partly based on
the book “The
Pillar of Fire” by Alabama author J. H. Ingraham, was released.
Oct. 5, 1956 – W.S. Neal High School beat Evergreen High
School, 14-0, in Brewton, Ala. Neal halfback Maury Weaver scored both of Neal’s
touchdowns while future NFL and Auburn standout Wayne Frazier led Evergreen’s
defense and offense. Other standout Evergreen players in that game included
Robbie Boykin and Robert Ellington.
Oct. 5, 1958 – American astrophysicist and author Neil
deGrasse Tyson was born in Manhattan, N.Y.
Oct. 5, 1959 – Sculptor and architect Maya Ying Lin was born
in Athens, Ohio.
Oct. 5, 1961 – The motion picture version of “Breakfast at
Tiffany’s" first opened in theaters. The movie, which starred Audrey Hepburn and George Peppard, was based on a Truman Capote novella.
Oct. 5, 1962 – “Dr. No,” the first in the James Bond film
series, was released in theaters.
Oct. 5, 1963 - Ambassador Henry
Cabot Lodge reported to President John F. Kennedy from Saigon that South
Vietnamese generals were planning a coup against President Ngo Dinh Diem.
Oct. 5, 1964 – The remnants of Hurricane Hilda knocked
Monroeville, Alabama’s radio station, WMFC, off the air for the entire day. The
station resumed operations at 5:30 a.m. the next day.
Oct. 5, 1964 - Senator Gaylord
Nelson (D-Wisconsin), disturbed by growing reports that the Johnson
administration was preparing to escalate U.S. operations in Vietnam, stated
that Congress did not intend the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution to endorse
escalation.
Oct. 5, 1972 – The Evergreen Courant reported that Navy
Petty Officer Third Class Larry L. Andrews of Evergreen, Ala., had left his
homeport in Alameda, Calif. for a Western Pacific deployment aboard the
nuclear-powered aircraft carrier, USS Enterprise.
Oct. 5, 1974 - American David Kunst completed the first
journey around the world on foot. It took four years and 21 pairs of shoes. He
crossed four continents and walked 14,450 miles.
Oct. 5, 1982 – During what’s now known as the Chicago
Tylenol murders, Johnson & Johnson initiated a nationwide product recall in
the United States for all products in its Tylenol brand after several bottles
in Chicago are found to have been laced with cyanide, resulting in seven
deaths.
Oct. 5, 1985 – Clyde Mavin Williams, 48, of Pensacola, a
native of Monroe County, Ala., drowned around 11 a.m. when the boat he was
fishing from overturned on the Alabama River between Mount Pleasant Landing and
Dixie Landing. Monroe County Rescue Squad members recovered his body around 9
a.m. on Oct. 7.
Oct. 5, 1985 – Former Frisco City, Ala. mayor Thomas
Jefferson “Jeffie” Jones passed away at the age of 85 at Mobile Infirmary. He
served four terms as a Frisco City town councilman between 1944 and 1972 and
was Frisco’s mayor from 1972 to 1976. He was re-elected mayor in 1980, but
resigned in 1981 due to poor health. A graduate of Jones Mill High School, he
worked for the Frisco Railroad for 45 years and retired as a freight agent. He
was a member of the Frisco City Masonic Lodge. Born on July 30, 1990, he was
buried in the Shiloh Primitive Baptist Church Cemetery in Frisco City.
Oct. 5, 2001 - Barry Bonds of the San Francisco Giants
surpassed Mark McGwire’s single-season home run record when he hit his 71st and
72nd home runs in a single season.
Oct. 5, 2003 - The Chicago Cubs won their first postseason
series since the 1908 World Series.
Oct. 5, 2003 - Dante Hall of the Kansas City Chiefs scored
on a return in an NFL-record fourth straight game. He scored his fourth
touchdown on a return in only 5 games.
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