Friday, December 22, 2017

Today in History for Dec. 22, 2017

Dec. 22, 1769 - Daniel Boone (Sheltowee - Big Turtle) and John Stewart, while on a long hunt, were surprised and captured by a large party of Shawnee (Shawanoe), led by Captain Will. Boone and Stewart were forced to lead the Shawnee to their main camp, where they took their horses, deer skins and most of their supplies. The Shawnee then gave them a warning: "Now, brothers, go home and stay there. Don't come here anymore, for this is the Indians' hunting-ground, and all the animals, skins, and furs are ours. If you are so foolish as to venture here again, you may be sure the wasps and yellow jackets will sting you severely."

Dec. 22, 1775 - The Continental Congress created a Continental Navy, naming Esek Hopkins, Esq., as commander in chief of the fleet. Congress also named four captains to the new service: Dudley Saltonstall, Abraham Whipple, Nicholas Biddle and John Burrows Hopkins. Their respective vessels, the Alfred, Columbus, Andrew Doria and Cabot, became the first ships of the Navy’s fleet.

Dec. 22, 1813 – The Army departed Fort Deposit and took up the line of march through the pathless forest and late in the afternoon made their camp within 10 miles of the Holy Ground.

Dec. 22, 1814 – Early Monroe and Conecuh County, Ala. teacher and physician Dr. John L. Shaw was born in Robinson County, N.C.

Dec. 22, 1818 – The merchants of Blakeley in Baldwin County, Ala. petitioned the U.S. Congress for the privilege of becoming a “Port of Entry and Delivery.”

Dec. 22, 1830 - The State of Georgia made it unlawful for the Cherokee to meet in council, unless it was for the purpose of giving land to whites, and prohibited whites from being on Cherokee land without a permit.

Dec. 22, 1835 - The “New Echota” treaty negotiations were attended by close to 400 “Treaty Party” Cherokee. They wanted the entire Cherokee Nation to agree and move west to Indian Territory.

Dec. 22, 1836 - The Congress of the Republic of Texas invalidated all managerial grants under the Mexican Republic and declared all vacant lands under them the property of the Republic. They also required those granted the right to settle by the Mexican Republic, and all public officers, to deliver the titles for such property to the Commissioner of the General Land Office.

Dec. 22, 1858 – Composer Giacomo Puccini was born in Lucca, Tuscany, Italy.

Dec. 22, 1861 – During the Civil War, a skirmish was fought at New Market Bridge, near Newport News, Va.

Dec. 22, 1862 – National Baseball Hall of Fame catcher, manager and owner Connie Mack was born Cornelius Alexander McGillicuddy in East Brookfield, Massachusetts. He would go on to play for the Washington Nationals, the Buffalo Bisons and the Pittsburgh Pirates. He also managed the Pirates and the Philadelphia Athletics. He was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1937.

Dec. 22, 1862 – During the Civil War, an 11-day Confederate raid into Kentucky began. Skirmishes were also fought near Windsor and at Joyner’s Ferry, on the Blackwater River in Virginia; and at Wardensville, West Virginia.

Dec. 22, 1863 – During the Civil War, skirmishes were fought at Fayette, Miss.; and at Cleveland and Danridge in Tennessee.

Dec. 22, 1864 - Union General William T. Sherman presented the city of Savannah, Ga. to President Abraham Lincoln. Sherman captured the city after his famous “March to the Sea” from Atlanta. Savannah had been one of the last major ports that remained open to the Confederates. Sherman wired Lincoln with the message, “I beg to present you, as a Christmas gift, the city of Savannah, with 150 heavy guns and plenty of ammunition, and also about 25,000 bales of cotton.”

Dec. 22, 1864 – During the Civil War, a second day of skirmishing continued in the Franklin Creek area of Jackson County, Miss. between Pascagoula and the Alabama state line.

Dec. 22, 1864 – During the Civil War, a skirmish was fought along the Duck River in Tennessee.

Dec. 22, 1869 – Poet Edwin Arlington Robinson was born in Head Tide, Lincoln County, Maine.

Dec. 22, 1882 - An Edison employee, Edward Johnson, first used electric bulbs to decorate a Christmas tree.

Dec. 22, 1894 - A “riot occurred at a negro fair” near Pine Apple, Ala. on this Saturday. Five people were reportedly killed and 13 more were “mortally wounded.” The Monroe Jouranl reported that “those killed were the three Vanmetten brothers and Alex and Ed Kayer. Whiskey was the cause.”

Dec. 22, 1894 – Alfred Dreyfus, a Jewish officer in the French army, was convicted of treason n a trial that became one of the most divisive events in European history.

Dec. 22, 1895 - William Rontgen, a German professor of physics, took the first X-ray image. It was of his wife's left hand and showed the ring she was wearing.

Dec. 22, 1905 – Poet, essayist and translator Kenneth Rexroth was born in South Bend, Indiana

Dec. 22, 1910 – The Conecuh Record in Evergreen, Ala. reported that Lum Dean found a boll weevil on his farm and experts in Montgomery verified that it was in fact a genuine boll weevil.

Dec. 22, 1916 - Charles Boswell, professional blind golfer, was born in Birmingham, Ala. After losing his vision fighting during World War II, Boswell learned to play golf, going on to win 17 national and 11 international blind golf tournaments. He received numerous honors along the way, including the Philadelphia Sports Writers Association award in 1957 and election to the Alabama Sports Hall of Fame in 1972.

Dec. 22, 1917 - A week after the armistice was signed between Russia and Germany and nearly three weeks after a ceasefire was declared on the Eastern Front, representatives of the two countries began peace negotiations at Brest-Litovsk, near the Polish border in what is now the city of Brest, in Belarus.

Dec. 22, 1921 - James Mooney, an ethnographer of American Indians, especially those of the southeastern United States, died in Washington, D.C. at the age of 60. His investigations of the history, heraldry, and culture of the Cherokee and Kiowa included the deciphering of the Kiowa calendar and the discovery of an ancient ritual of the North Carolina Cherokee recorded in the native script. His most acclaimed work was “The Siouan Tribes of the East” (1894).

Dec. 22, 1922 - American poet, translator, and critic Kenneth Rexroth was born in South Bend, Ind.

Dec. 22, 1933 - A falling tree brought almost instant death on this Friday to Hosie Oliver Lynch, 28-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. J.D. Lynch, who lived three miles east of Castleberry, Ala. In company with his father, a brother and other workers, young Lynch was getting out black gum cross-ties in the woods three miles west of Castleberry when a pine tree, which had been lodged but was released by the cutting of another tree, struck him on the head. He died within 20 minutes. Born on July 4, 1905, he was buried in Brush Creek Methodist Church Cemetery in Conecuh County, Ala.

Dec. 22, 1937 – The Lincoln Tunnel opened to traffic in New York City.

Dec. 22, 1942 – During World War II, Adolf Hitler signed the order to develop the V-2 rocket as a weapon.

Dec. 22, 1943 - Sporting goods manufacturers received permission to use synthetic rubber for the core of baseballs.

Dec. 22, 1944 – National Baseball Hall of Fame pitcher Steve Carlton was born in Miami, Fla. He would go on to play for the St. Louis Cardinals, the Philadelphia Phillies, the San Francisco Giants, the Chicago White Sox, the Cleveland Indians and the Minnesota Twins. He was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1994.

Dec. 22, 1944 – During World War II, the Vietnam People's Army was formed to resist Japanese occupation of Indochina, now Vietnam.

Dec. 22, 1948 – Major League Baseball first baseman Steve Garvey was born in Tampa, Fla. He would go on to play for the Los Angeles Dodgers and the San Diego Padres.

Dec. 22, 1949 – Pro Football Hall of Fame punter Ray Guy was born in Swainsboro, Ga. He went on to play for Southern Miss and the Oakland/Los Angeles Raiders. He was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 2014.

Dec. 22, 1956 – Colo, the first gorilla to be bred in captivity, was born at the Columbus Zoo and Aquarium in Ohio.

Dec. 22, 1961 - James Davis became the first U.S. soldier to die in Vietnam, while U.S. involvement was still limited to the provision of military advisers.

Dec. 22, 1962 - Vince Lombardi, coach of the Green Bay Packers, was on the cover of TIME magazine.

Dec. 22, 1966 – The Monroe Journal newspaper in Monroeville, Ala. published its Centennial Edition.

Dec. 22, 1971 - The Soviet Union accused China of backing U.S. policies in Vietnam, an accusation that illustrated the growing rift between the two communist superpowers.

Dec. 22, 1972 - Washington announced that the bombing of North Vietnam would continue until Hanoi agreed to negotiate “in a spirit of good will and in a constructive attitude.”

Dec. 22, 1973 - The Menominee Restoration Act was signed by President Richard Nixon. The act returned federally recognized sovereignty to the Menominee Indian Tribe of Wisconsin. It also restored tribal supervision over property and members, as well as federal services granted to American Indian tribes.

Dec. 22, 1975 – Weather observer Earl Windham reported a low of 23 degrees in Evergreen, Ala.

Dec. 22, 1976 – Major League Baseball outfielder and pitcher Jason Lane was born in Santa Rosa, Calif. He would go on to play for the Houston Astros and the San Diego Padres.

Dec. 22, 1986 - Joe Paterno was named Sportsman of the Year by "Sports Illustrated" magazine. It was only the second time a coach had won the award.

Dec. 22, 1988 – The Monroe Journal newspaper printed an article detailing the contents of the time capsule at Jones Park in downtown Frisco City. Published under the headline, “Frisco saves history in time capsule,” the article was written by Anna Thibodeaux.

Dec. 22, 1996 - Kordell Stewart of the Pittsburgh Steelers ran 80 yards for a touchdown against Carolina. It was the longest scoring run by a quarterback in NFL history.

Dec. 22, 1996 - Vinny Testaverde of the Baltimore Ravens became the eighth quarterback in NFL history to pass for 4,000 yards and throw at least 30 touchdown passes in a single season.

Dec. 22, 2003 – Connie Gibson of Repton, Ala. told The Monroe Journal on this Monday that U.S. Rep. Jo Bonner (R-Mobile) and U.S. Rep. Terry Everette (R-Dothan) had agreed to personally deliver a petition to Washington, D.C., asking Congress to bestow the Medal of Honor on her son, Army Sgt. Troy Jenkins, who was killed in Iraq earlier that year.

Dec. 22, 2007 – Hillcrest High School’s varsity boys basketball team upset Wilcox-Central, ranked No. 4 in 5A, 51-47, in Evergreen, Ala.


Dec. 22, 2010 – Tuscaloosa, Ala. native Andy Phillips was introduced as the Alabama Crimson Tide baseball team's hitting coach beginning in 2011. 

No comments:

Post a Comment