Jan. 10, 1775 – William Rabb Sr., who settled in Conecuh
County, Ala. in 1819, was born in Fairfield District, South Carolina. He was
one of Conecuh’s first store owners and farmers.
Jan. 10, 1776 - While in exile
aboard a warship in Cape Fear, North Carolina’s Royal Governor Josiah Martin
issued a proclamation calling on the king’s loyal subjects to raise an armed
force to combat the rebels, raise the royal standard and restore the province to
its former glorious freedom.
Jan. 10, 1780 – German physician and explorer Martin
Lichtenstein was born in Hamburg.
Jan. 10, 1791 – The Siege of Dunlap’s Station began near
Cincinnati when the “white Indian” Simon Girty and a large confederation of
natives surrounded John Dunlap’s small armed and fortified community. A 25-hour
long battle ensued. Dunlap’s Station, later referred to as Fort Colerain, was
on the east bank of the Miami River.
Jan. 10, 1832 – Lewis Cass, Secretary of War, responded on this day to the official protest of the Cherokee Nation against the state of Georgia. He claimed Andrew Jackson was "...anxious for the termination of all your difficulties."
Jan. 10, 1837 – General Jesup and his men came across a Black Seminole village and captured 52. An unknown number of blacks and Seminole, led by Osceola, fled into the swamp. Osceola was said to be ill.
Jan. 10, 1839 – Going Snake, a Cherokee tribal town Chief, was born near the present Tennessee-North Carolina boundary that met Notteley Reservoir, Ga. He was known to be a great orator and political leader. Going Snake and 1199 other Cherokee, led by John Benge, left on Sept. 28, 1838 for Indian Territory. John Benge, Chief Going Snake and 1,102 other Cherokee arrive on this day in Indian Territory. Ninety-seven Cherokee had died along the way.
Jan. 10, 1839 – A group of 32 from Blunts Tribe, 126 from Walker's town, 81 from Econ Chatta Micco's town and 37 from Dog Island town left Pensacola, Fla. on Oct. 29, 1838 for Indian Territory. They first arrived at New Orleans on Nov. 2, 1838 and then at Little Rock, Ark. on board the steam boat "Rodney.” From there, they were conveyed to Fort Gibson on board the steam boat "North St. Louis." Two hundred and 72 of these Appalachicola Seminoles arrive on this day in Indian Territory.
Jan. 10, 1842 – Thomas Hill Watts of Butler County, Ala.,
who would eventually become Alabama’s governor, married Eliza B. Allen, the
daughter of Wade Allen, Esq., then a prominent and wealthy citizen of Montgomery,
Ala.
Jan. 10, 1843 – Alexander Franklin “Frank” James was born in
Clay County, Missouri. He grew up to become a Confederate soldier, guerrilla
and outlaw. He was the older brother of outlaw Jesse James and was also part of
the James–Younger Gang.
Jan. 10, 1861 - Florida became the third state to secede
from the Union when a state convention voted 62 to 7 in favor of the measure.
U.S. troops are transferred from Barrancas Barracks to Fort Pickens, Santa Rosa
Island, Pensacola, Fla.
Jan. 10, 1861 – Lt. Adam J. Slemmer destroyed over 20,000
pounds of gunpowder at Fort McRee, spiked the guns at Fort Barrancas, and
evacuated with 51 soldiers and 30 sailors to Fort Pickens.
Jan. 10, 1861 – During the Civil War, the U.S. Arsenal at
Baton Rouge, La. was seized by Louisiana state troops who were lead by Braxton
Bragg. Fort Caswell was also seized by the citizens of Smithville and
Wilmington, N.C.
Jan. 10, 1861 - William Seward, a native of New York,
accepted President-elect Abraham Lincoln's invitation to become Secretary of
State. Seward became one of the most important members of Lincoln's
cabinet and engineered the purchase of Alaska after the Civil War. The
assassination that killed Lincoln nearly resulted in Seward's death as well.
Lewis Powell, an accomplice to John Wilkes Booth, stabbed Seward as he lay in
bed recovering from a carriage accident. Seward survived, and after a summer
convalescing, returned to the State Department.
Jan. 10, 1862 – During the Civil
War, an 11-day Federal operation into Kentucky from Cairo, Ill. began. An
engagement also occurred at Middle Creek near Prestonburg, Ky. Romeny, West Va.
was also evacuated by Federal forces and was subsequently occupied by the
Confederates.
Jan. 10, 1863 - Union Rear Admiral David D. Porter began
bombing Arkansas Post, which was also known as Fort Hindman. Other commanders
at this engagement included Union Major General John A. McClernand and
Confederate Brigadier General Thomas J. Churchill. McClernand took a 30,000-man
Corps with naval support against the Confederate garrison. Union losses were
about 1,000; the Southerners lost roughly 5,500. From Fort Hindman, at Arkansas
Post, Confederates had been disrupting Union shipping on the Mississippi River.
McClernand, therefore, undertook a combined force movement on Arkansas Post to
capture it. Union boats began landing troops near Arkansas Post in the evening
of Jan. 9, 1863. The troops started up river towards Fort Hindman. Maj. Gen.
William T. Sherman's corps overran Rebel trenches, and the enemy retreated to
the protection of the fort and adjacent rifle-pits. Porter, on Jan. 10, moved
his fleet towards Fort Hindman and bombarded it, withdrawing at dusk. Union
artillery fired on the fort from artillery positions across the river on Jan.
11, and the infantry moved into position for an attack. Union ironclads
commenced shelling the fort and Porter's fleet passed it to cut off any
retreat. As a result of this envelopment, and the attack by McClernand's
troops, the Confederate command surrendered in the afternoon. Although Union
losses were high and the victory did not contribute to the capture of
Vicksburg, it did eliminate one more impediment to Union shipping on the
Mississippi.
Jan. 10, 1863 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought at Carrolton, Ark. and at Clifton, Tenn.
Jan. 10, 1863 – During the Civil
War, Union Major General Fitz John Porter was court marshaled and cashiered out
the Federal army following the Military Court’s decision that he deliberately
failed to follow lawful orders at the Battle of Second Manassas, Va. Porter’s
guilt was questionable. An often purposefully overlooked historical fact is the
president of that particular military court was James A. Garfield, future
President of the United States.
Jan. 10, 1864 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought at King's River, Ark.; in the vicinity of Mossy
Creek, Tenn.; at Loudoun Heights, Va.; and at Petersburg, West Va. A six-day
Federal expedition also began from Vicksburg, Miss. aboard the steamers, “Era,”
“Madison” and “Northerner,” up the Mississippi River to Sunnyside Landing, Ark.
A two-day Federal operation between Dandridge to Clark’s Ferry, Tenn. also
began. Federal reconnaissance to Sperryville, Va. was also conducted.
Jan. 10, 1865 – During the Civil War,
skirmishes were fought in Texas County and at Glasgow, Mo.
Jan. 10, 1899 – The Town of Repton, Ala. was officially
incorporated as a municipality, according to the Alabama League of Municipalities.
Jan. 10, 1901 – The first oil gusher in the United States
erupted at Spindletop, just outside Beaumont, Texas, an event that is considered
the beginning of the oil age or petroleum age.
Jan. 10, 1906 – The Evergreen Courant reported that work
on the bank at Castleberry was “progressing satisfactorily and in a short while
will be complete. The contract was awarded to J.P. Baggett. The building will
be made of concrete blocks.”
Jan. 10, 1912 – The Conecuh County Jail caught fire around 8
p.m. and a large crowd went to the scene. An inmate caused the fire by setting
a blanket on fire, but little damage was done.
Jan. 10, 1912 – Austrian SS guard
Maria Mandl was born in Münzkirchen, Upper Austria, then part of
Austria-Hungary, the daughter of a shoemaker.
Jan. 10, 1913 – The steamboat “James T. Staples” was
destroyed by a boiler explosion on the Tombigbee River, about four miles from
Bladon Springs, at Powes Landing. Twenty-six people were killed and 21 were
injured. (Other sources say this occurred on Jan. 9.)
Jan. 10, 1916 – The birthday of that “celebrated soldier and
model Christian gentleman” Robert E. Lee was observed as a holiday in Alabama
on this Wednesday, according to The Conecuh Record.
Jan. 10, 1916 – During World War I, in the Erzurum Offensive,
Russia defeated the Ottoman Empire.
Jan. 10, 1918 – The Wilcox Progressive Era reported that
W.A. Dale had moved into the new building erected by Dr. E. Bonner and Hon.
J.M. Bonner at the old post office site. Dale planned to carry a full, fresh
line of groceries and general merchandise. He also had a delivery wagon and
would deliver orders promptly. His phone was No. 102.
Jan. 10, 1918 – The Wilcox Progressive Era reported that Mrs.
Jennie Foster, principal of the grammar school in Camden, had had a pig pen
built for two months but no pig had been sent in.
Jan. 10, 1918 – In this day’s edition of The Wilcox Progressive
Era, notice was given that application was being made to the Governor and Board
of Pardons of Alabama for the parole of Joe Howard Riley, who was convicted in
the Circuit Court of Wilcox County on May 7, 1914 of murder in the second degree
and was sentenced to 30 years in prison.
Jan. 10, 1918 – The correspondent from Lower Peach Tree reported
in this day’s edition of the Wilcox Progressive Era that they were experiencing
the “coldest weather in years” and that the “big Bear creek was frozen nearly over.”
Jan. 10, 1918 – The Wilcox Progressive Era, in news from the
Bellview community, reported that Mr. J.B. Sessions had just completed his
store and that his family had just recovered from the measles.
Jan. 10, 1920 – The Treaty of Versailles took effect,
officially ending World War I.
Jan. 10, 1923 - Four years after the end of World War I,
President Warren G. Harding ordered U.S. occupation troops stationed in Germany
to return home.
Jan. 10, 1925 – Harold R. Betts became postmaster at Burnt
Corn.
Jan. 10, 1928 – The old Monroe County Courthouse building,
believed to have been built in 1854, burned. It was located between the two
present-day courthouses on the square in Monroeville, Ala.
Jan. 10, 1928 – Philip Levine, who became known as “the
Whitman of the industrial heartland,” was born in Detroit, Mich. He would go on
to win the National Book Award and the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry and was named
Poet Laureate of the United States.
Jan. 10, 1929 – “The
Adventures of Tintin,” one of the most popular European comic books, was
first published in Belgium.
Jan. 10, 1936 – Best-selling historian Stephen Ambrose was
born in Lovington, Ill.
Jan. 10, 1938 – National Baseball Hall of Fame first baseman
Willie McCovey was born in Mobile, Ala. He went on to play for the San
Francisco Giants, the San Diego Padres and the Oakland Athletics. He was
inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1986.
Jan. 10, 1944 - A radio version of Alabama author Lillian
Hellman's play “Watch on the Rhine”
was broadcast as part of “The Lady Esther Screen Guild Theatre” series.
Jan. 10, 1946 – The Monroe Journal reported that two Veterans
of Foreign Wars (VFW) Posts were to be organized in Monroe County. The first in
the county was to be instituted at Uriah at the Methodist Church at 7:15 p.m.
on Jan. 15. A post was also to be organized at Monroeville on Jan. 26, at 7:15
p.m. at the Legion Club House.
Jan. 10, 1946 – The Monroe Journal reported that James E.
Kearley of Beatrice had been discharged from the Army after serving a total of
53 months, 22 of which were spent overseas. He was awarded the Good Conduct
Medal, European, Pre-Pearl Harbor and American theater ribbons.
Jan. 10, 1952 – The members and guests of the Frisco City
Masonic Lodge No. 702 were entertained at an annual oyster supper on this
Thursday evening. The event was held at the local school gymnasium.
Jan. 10, 1957 - Six pre-dawn bombings in Montgomery, Ala.
damaged four black churches and two ministers' homes, including that of
Montgomery Bus Boycott leader Ralph Abernathy. The violence came on the heels
of several shooting incidents in which recently desegregated city buses were
fired upon.
Jan. 10, 1959 – Joseph Ross Glass, a 79-year-old member of
Greening Lodge. No. 53 in Evergreen, Ala., passed away. Born on Sept. 21, 1880,
he was buried in Magnolia Cemetery in Evergreen.
Jan. 10, 1961 - Dashiell Hammett,
the author of “The Maltese Falcon,” passed away from lung cancer at the age of
66 in New York City’s Lenox Hill Hospital. A veteran of two World Wars, he was
buried in Arlington National Cemetery.
Jan. 10, 1962 - The NFL entered
into a single-network agreement with CBS for telecasting all regular-season
games for $4.65 million annually.
Jan. 10, 1962 – On this Wednesday
morning, temperatures dipped to 12 degrees in Evergreen, Ala. and two inches of
snow were reported in northern Conecuh County. All county schools were
dismissed on Jan. 10 and were to remain closed until the morning of Fri., Jan.
12.
Jan. 10, 1963 - The Chicago Cubs
became the first baseball club to hire an athletic director when they hired
Robert Whitlow to fill the position.
Jan. 10, 1964 – A UFO was reported
to have zipped into the tracking range during the firing of a Polaris missile
and for 14 minutes the radar followed the erratic course of the UFO before
getting back on the target missile.
Jan. 10, 1967 – During the Vietnam
War, President Lyndon Johnson, in his annual State of the Union message to
Congress, asked for enactment of a six-percent surcharge on personal and
corporate income taxes to help support the Vietnam War for two years, or “for
as long as the unusual expenditures associated with our efforts continue.”
Jan. 10, 1972 - Former Vice
President Hubert Humphrey criticized President Richard Nixon, saying that it
was taking longer for President Nixon to withdraw U.S. troops from Vietnam than
it did to defeat Hitler.
Jan. 10, 1975 – Evergreen High School’s basketball team was
scheduled to play Escambia County High School of Atmore on this Friday night in
Evergreen, Ala.
Jan. 10, 1976 – Major League
Baseball second baseman Adam Kennedy was born in Riverside, Calif. He went on
to play for the St. Louis Cardinals, the Anaheim Angles/Los Angeles Angels of
Anaheim, the Oakland Athletics, the Washington Nationals, the Seattle Mariners
and the Los Angeles Dodgers.
Jan. 10, 1979 - Alabama author Sara
Mayfield died in Tuscaloosa, Ala.
Jan. 10, 1982 - San Francisco 49ers
wide receiver Dwight Clark made a leaping catch in the end zone on a pass from
quarterback Joe Montana with 51 seconds left in the National Football
Conference (NFC) championship game against the Dallas Cowboys. "The
Catch" set up a successful extra point kick by Ray Wersching that lifted
the 49ers to a 28-27 victory and a trip to Super Bowl XVI.
Jan. 10, 1986 - Ralph Garrett was honored on this day
when he retired from South Central Bell after 38 years and nine months of
service. He was a toll technician at the time of his retirement.
Jan. 10, 1990 - The NCAA approved a
random drug testing program among college football players and harsh penalties
for drug use.
Jan. 10, 1999 - The animated series
"Batman Beyond" debuted on the WB network.
Jan. 10, 2007 – Explorer,
photographer and cartographer Bradford Washburn died of heart failure at the
age of 96 in a retirement home in Lexington, Mass.
Jan. 10, 2008 – The Kyser Cemetery
in Conecuh County was added to the Alabama Historic Cemetery Register.
Jan. 10, 2011 - SEC champion Auburn
University, led by Coach Gene Chizik and Heisman Trophy winner Cam Newton,
defeated the PAC-10 champions, the University of Oregon, in the BCS National
Championship game in Glendale, Arizona, with a final score of 22-19.
Jan. 10, 2012 – Football player and
coach Vince Gibson, a native of Birmingham, Ala., died at the age of 78 in
Kenner, La. After playing guard at Florida State in the 1950s, he went on to
serve as the head coach at Kansas State, Louisville and Tulane.
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