Alabama Governor Braxton Bragg Comer |
Jan. 14, 1331 – Italian explorer
Odoric of Pordenone, who was around 45 years old, died at Udine, Patriarchate
of Aquileia, Holy Roman Empire.
Jan. 14, 1639 – The
"Fundamental Orders," the first written constitution that created a
government, was adopted in Connecticut.
Jan. 14, 1676 – Joshua Tifft was
born in Massachusetts or Rhode Island around 1640. Little is known about his
life but that he owned a farm at Wickford, near where the Great Swamp Fight
occurred. He was wounded and captured on this day by Captain Fenner’s soldiers.
Roger Williams questioned him, but because he served as translator, he tried to
justify helping the Narragansett during the Great Swamp Fight.
Jan. 14, 1699 - The colony of Massachusetts held a day of
fasts in protest of wrongly persecuted witches.
Jan. 14, 1705 – French sailor and explorer Jean-Baptiste
Charles Bouvet de Lozier was born.
Jan. 14, 1741 - Benedict Arnold, the American general during
the Revolutionary War who betrayed his country and became synonymous with the
word “traitor,” was born in Norwich, Colony of Connecticut, British America.
Jan. 14, 1772 – During the British occupation of Alabama,
explorer Bernard Romans visited St. Stephens in present-day Washington County
and recorded – “Stout sloops and schooners may come up to this rapid; therefore
I judge some considerable settlement will take place.”
Jan. 14, 1784 – At the Maryland State House in Annapolis,
the Continental Congress ratified the Second Treaty of Paris with Great Britain
ending the Revolutionary War.
Jan. 14, 1806 - Matthew Fountaine Maury was born at Spotsylvania County, Va. Maury was a Commander in the
CSA Navy, a diplomat for the CSA Government in Europe, one of the era's most
distinguished scientists, and father of oceanography and meteorology.
Jan. 14, 1819 – A “train of emigrants,” consisting of 52
horses and 12 wagons from South Carolina, stopped for the night on the present
site of Greenville, Ala. to “rest themselves from the fatigue of the day.” The
next day, after further investigation, they decided to settle the location
which was wilderness at the time. The group included James Dunklin, Joseph
Dunklin, John Dunklin, Dr. Hilary Herbert, Webster Gilbert, John Bolling,
William Graydon, John Graydon, William Payne, Thomas Coleman and Dr. George
Herbert.
Jan. 14, 1833 – The state of Georgia ordered all whites
living with Indians to swear allegiance to the State of Georgia. Rev. Samuel
Worcester, a missionary to the Cherokee Nation in Georgia, refused to do so. On
Sept. 16, 1831, Worcester was sentenced to four years at hard labor. The
Supreme Court ruled that it was unconstitutional for Georgia to jail Worcester,
but he would not be released until this day by the Governor of Georgia.
Jan. 14, 1860 - The House Committee of Thirty Three, which
was chaired by Thomas Corwin of Ohio, submitted a proposed constitutional
amendment that would protect slavery in all areas where it already existed. The
plan also called for the enforcement of fugitive slave laws and repealed state
personal liberty laws. The committee was made up of one representative from
each state, but the proposed measure was not enough to stem the tide of
seceding states.
Jan. 14, 1861 – During the Civil
War, Fort Taylor in Key West, Fla. was occupied from Federal forces. This
location would prove to be valuable for Federal blockaders as a coaling
station. Fort Pike, near present day Slidell, La. was also seized by Louisiana
State troops.
Jan. 14, 1862 – During the Civil
War, U.S. gunboat reconnaissance was conducted to Columbus, Ky., and
Confederate positions were shelled along the way.
Jan. 14, 1862 – On this day during
the Civil War, General Ambrose Burnside was supposed to be leading an invasion
force of nearly 100 ships to Hatteras Inlet, N.C. Instead he was spending his
time on continuous rescue missions as the ships of his fleet were torn by
fierce winds and storm. Many were being driven onto shoals and sandbars as
their anchor lines were dragged or broke entirely. All of this chaos was going
on within the relative shelter of the inlet; many of the ships of the mission
had not made it even that far, could not attempt the entrance as long as the
wind blew, and were at the mercy of the storm on the open ocean. As this was
taking place in the dead of winter the storm was probably not a hurricane in
the technical sense. However, few of those feeling its force cared to debate
the finer points of weather related terminology.
Jan. 14, 1863 – During the Civil
War, a two-day Federal expedition to South Bend, Ark. began. A skirmish was
also fought along Bayou Tech, in the vicinity of New Iberia, La.
Jan. 14, 1864 – During the Civil War, the Confederate
commerce raider, CSS Alabama, captured and burned the Emma Jane off the coast
of Malabar, Indian, now having destroyed over 60 such Federal vessels.
Jan. 14, 1864 – During the Civil War, a skirmish occurred at
Shoal Creek in Shelby County, Ala. Skirmishes were also fought in Bollinger
County, Mo. and at Dandridge and Middleton in Tennessee.
Jan. 14, 1864 – During the Civil
War, a Federal operation began around Baldwin’s Ferry, on the Big Black River
in Mississippi, intent upon the destruction of all john boats, pirogues,
flatboats, ferries or any other means of crossing the Big Black River. A
Federal operation also took place between Collierville and Quinn’s Mill, Tenn.
Jan. 14, 1865 – Fifteen days of
sustained Federal operations against Indians along the Overland Stage Coach
Road between Julesburg and Denver in the Colorado Territory began. Federal
forces also advanced from Beaufort to Pocotaligo, S.C.
Jan. 14, 1865 – During the Civil
War, the combined arms land and sea attack on Ft. Fisher, near Wilmington,
N.C., entered its second day. Navy gunboats were firing at a rate of 100 shells
per minute. Confederate defenders suffered 300 dead and were unable to bury
them due to the severity of the shrapnel. The Federal fire was so intense that
only one gun on the landward side of the fort was still operational, all the
others having been dismounted by shellfire. This was ample proof of the overall
improvement in gunnery since the war began. While the Navy handled their part
of the operation, the Army prepared for a possible attack by Braxton Bragg‘s
Confederates and continued preparation in its move against the fort.
Jan. 14, 1875 – Noble Prize-winner Albert Schweitzer was
born in Kaysersberg, in the province of Alsace-Lorraine.
Jan. 14, 1879 – Chief Joseph of the Nez Perce Tribe addressed Congress about tribal lands stolen through treaties. He gave the analogy that it is “like having horses that he doesn't want to sell being sold by his neighbor, with the neighbor then letting the buyer take the horses.”
Jan. 14, 1891 – James K. Kyser became postmaster at Burnt
Corn, Ala.
Jan. 14, 1891 – General Nelson Miles, commander of the U.S. Army troops in South Dakota, reported that the rebellious Sioux were finally returning to their reservation following the bloody massacre at Wounded Knee.
Jan. 14, 1896 – Novelist John Dox Passos was born in
Chicago.
Jan. 14, 1899 – The act entered into on this day between the U.S. and the Cherokee Commission provided in Sec. 78 that immediately upon ratification of the agreement, the Principal Chief of the Cherokee Nation had the authority and was directed to grant absolute and unconditional pardon to all persons who had been convicted in the courts of the Cherokee Nation of a violation of Cherokee laws. The agreement was ratified by a vast majority of citizen voters of the Cherokee Nation.
Jan. 14, 1905 – Writer Emily “Mickey” Hahn was born in St.
Louis, Mo.
Jan. 14, 1907 - Jefferson D. Helton and T.E. Dennis Jr. of
Tunnel Springs had a preliminary hearing before Judge Slaughter on this Monday,
charged with the murder of Dixie Bradley on or about Jan. 4. “The defendants
established to the satisfaction of His Honor, that having in their possession a
warrant for the arrest of Bradley, and in the discharge of their duty as
officer they were forced to shoot him in self-defense, Bradley, it is alleged,
having offered violent resistance by opening fire on the officers,” The Monroe
Journal reported. “Messrs. Helton and Dennis were discharged.”
Jan. 14, 1907 - L.W. Locklin of Perdue Hill and his son,
A.J., passed through Monroeville on this Monday en route to Montgomery to
attend the inauguration of Governor B.B. Comer. The Monroe Journal also
reported that J.M. Burns, Esq., also attended the inauguration.
Jan. 14, 1908 – While unloading a shotgun, the 10-year-old
son of Bob Mosley accidentally shot and killed his sister, age 12, at their
home on this date, according to the Jan. 16 edition of The Conecuh Record. “The
full charge of the gun struck the girl between the shoulders, completely
severing the spinal column. Death was almost instantaneous.”
Jan. 14, 1909 - Company K was scheduled to meet at the
Evergreen armory on this Monday at 7:30 p.m. for its regular monthly muster.
P.M. Bruner was Captain.
Jan. 14, 1911 – Roald Amundsen's South Pole expedition made
landfall on the eastern edge of the Ross Ice Shelf.
Jan. 14, 1912 – The “bird man,” R.G. Fowler of San Francisco
reached Evergreen on this Sunday afternoon and attracted a large crowd. He
circled Evergreen at least 1,000 feet above the ground, and the crowd below
could hear his aircraft’s little motor. He circled the city several times and
landed about two miles east of Evergreen and north of the L&N Railroad
tracks. He remained until Tuesday, waiting for favorable weather, and took off
for other points around 3 p.m. Fowler’s landing in Evergreen is believed to
have been the first plane landing ever in Conecuh County.
Jan. 14, 1915 – Kady Brownell, the “only woman Civil War
veteran,” passed away in New York City, age 72 or 73. She went with her husband
when he joined a Rhode Island regiment. Kady trained with the soldiers. She
fought in battle and helped the injured. At the First Battle of Bull Run, she
held the flag high even as Confederate bullets were flying.
Jan. 14, 1915 - As part of
an attempt to display its loyalty to the British empire and, perhaps more
importantly, enlarge its own sphere of influence on the African continent,
South Africa sent troops to occupy Swakopmund, a seaside town in
German-occupied Southwest Africa (modern-day Namibia).
Jan. 14, 1922 - W.F. Higdon and “Mr. Loveless” of Atmore
visited Monroeville on business on this Saturday. “Both these gentlemen were
formerly connected with The Atmore Record, and contemplate the establishment of
a job printing plant in Escambia’s agricultural metropolis,” The Monroe Journal
reported.
Jan. 14, 1923 – On this Sunday, three prisoners escaped from
the Escambia County Jail in Brewton, Ala. around noon. Two of the three
escapees were in jail on murder charges.
Jan. 14, 1926 – In Lovecraftian fiction, a total solar
eclipse occurred, and Nyarlathotep was only stopped by the nearest of margins.
Jan. 14, 1931 - The L.M. Sawyer home caught fire on this Wednesday
morning about 11 o’clock. Only a small patch on the roof was burned before the
fire was extinguished, according to The Monroe Journal.
Jan. 14, 1938 – Jay (Fla.) High School beat Evergreen High
School’s boys basketball team, 11-6.
Jan. 14, 1938 – Lyeffion High School’s boys basketball team
beat Conecuh County High School, 20-18, in Castleberry, Ala. Brooklyn’s girls
basketball team beat CCHS, 20-15, that same night in Castleberry.
Jan. 14, 1943 – U.S. President Franklin Roosevelt, age 60,
completed the first airplane journey by a sitting president when he flew to the
Casablanca Conference in Morocco to discuss strategy with British Prime
Minister Winston Churchill. Roosevelt left Florida in a Boeing 314 Flying Boat,
nicknamed the Dixie Clipper, and the journey took four days due to frequent
refueling stops.
Jan. 14, 1948 - Plastic helmets were prohibited in the
National Football League.
Jan. 14, 1951 - The first National Football League Pro Bowl
All-Star Game was played in Los Angeles, Calif.
Jan. 14, 1952 – Bruce Dale Jones was born. On March 9, 1972,
at the age of 20, he was killed at Tan Son Nhut Airbase in Gia Dinh, South
Vietnam, where he was serving as a sergeant in the Air Force’s 377th Security
Police Squadron.
Jan. 14, 1953 – Army 1LT Charles Smith, 28, of Covington
County, Ala. was killed in action in Korea. A veteran of World War II, he was
born on Sept. 11, 1924. He was buried in the Hardin Street Cemetery in Opp,
Ala.
Jan. 14, 1954 – Actress Marilyn Monroe and baseball legend
Joe DiMaggio were married, but the marriage only lasted nine months.
Jan. 14-15, 1960 – The Conecuh County Basketball Tournament,
featuring varsity and B-teams, was scheduled to be held at Lyeffion High
School. In the varsity division on the opening night, Conecuh County High School
was scheduled to play Repton High School at 7 p.m., and Evergreen High School
was scheduled to play Lyeffion at 8:15 p.m. The next night, the B-team title
game was set for 7 p.m., and the varsity title game was set for 8:15 p.m.
Jan. 14, 1963 - George Wallace began serving his first term
as Alabama governor, and during his inauguration he promised his followers,
"Segregation now, segregation tomorrow, segregation forever!" His
first term would end on Jan. 16, 1967, but he would later serve three other
terms as Alabama’s governor.
Jan. 14, 1964 – During the Vietnam
War, Lt. Gen. William Westmoreland was appointed deputy to Gen. Paul Harkins,
chief of U.S. Military Assistance Command Vietnam (MACV).
Jan. 14, 1968 – During the Vietnam
War, U.S. joint-service Operation Niagara was launched to support the U.S.
Marine base at Khe Sanh. The Khe Sanh base was the westernmost anchor of a
series of combat bases and strongholds that stretched from the Cua Viet River
on the coast of the South China Sea westward along Route 9 to the Laotian
border. Intelligence sources revealed that the North Vietnamese Army was
beginning to build up its forces in the area surrounding Khe Sanh. Operation
Niagara was a joint U.S. Air Force, Navy and Marine Corps air campaign launched
in support of the marines manning the base. Using sensors installed along the
nearby DMZ and reconnaissance flights to pinpoint targets, 24,000 tactical
fighter-bomber sorties and 2,700 B-52 strategic bomber sorties were flown
between the start of the operation and March 31, 1968, when it was terminated.
This airpower played a major role in the successful defense of Khe Sanh when it
came under attack on January 21 and was subsequently besieged for 66 days until
finally broken on April 7.
Jan. 14, 1969 – Nirvana drummer Dave Grohl was born in
Warren, Ohio.
Jan. 14, 1971 – Army Spc. Donald Wayne Smith, 21, of
Brewton, Ala. was killed in action at Pleiku, South Vietnam. Some sources say
he was an “accidental ground casualty,” and his body was recovered. He was born
in Brewton on Aug. 17, 1949, and his name is listed on panel 05W, line 044 of
the Vietnam Memorial Wall in Washington D.C. He was buried in the Baptist Hill
Cemetery in Brewton. Smith served as a Power-Generation Equipment Repairman
with the 506th Light Maintenance Co., 62nd Maintenance Battalion, 45th Ground
Support Group, Army Support Command Qui NOHN, 1st Logistical Command, USARV. He
was awarded the National Defense Service Medal, the Vietnam Service Medal, the
Vietnam Campaign Medal and the Vietnamese Gallantry Cross Unit Citation.
Jan. 14, 1972 – The President’s Mansion at the University of
Alabama was added to the National Register of Historic Places due to its
architectural and historical significance.
Jan. 14, 1973 - The Miami Dolphins became the first NFL team
to go undefeated in a regular season when they beat the Washington Redskins in
Super Bowl VII.
Jan. 14, 1974 - The World Football League was founded.
Jan. 14, 1976 – In connection with the “Amityville Horror”
case, George and Kathy Lutz, with their three children and their dog, Harry,
left their home at 112 Ocean Ave., leaving all of their possessions behind.
Jan. 14, 1976 - Ted Turner completed the purchase of the
Atlanta Braves.
Jan. 14, 1980 – Evergreen High School’s varsity boys
basketball team improved to 12-1 on the season by beating Escambia County High
School, 61-50. Top Evergreen players in those games included Johnny Allen,
Russell Bozeman, Joe Mitchell, Sanford Moye, Perona Rankins, Philander Rodgers
and Arturo Scott.
Jan. 14, 1980 - The Conecuh County Cattlemen and CowBelles
were scheduled to hold their annual banquet on this Friday at 7 p.m. at the
Holiday Inn. The State Association was to be represented by President Milton
“Buzz” Wendland of Autaugaville. The featured speaker was to be Robert Vaughn
of Ozark. Vaughn was a highly sought humorous speaker who was guaranteed to
give audiences lots of laughs along with some important matters upon which to
think.
Jan. 14, 1986 - Weather observer Earl Windham reported a
low of 24 degrees in Evergreen, Ala.
Jan. 14, 1990 - "The Simpsons" began airing
regularly on television.
Jan. 14, 1990 - Joe Montana of the San Francisco 49ers set
an NFL record when he threw his 30th and 31st post-season touchdown passes.
Terry Bradshaw held the previous record of 30.
Jan. 14, 1993 - NFL Commissioner Paul Tagliabue announced
the establishment of the "NFL World Partnership Program."
Jan. 14, 1996 - Fox aired the San Francisco 49ers-Dallas
Cowboy NFC championship game, and the game pulled a 34.2/57 Nielsen rating.
Jan. 14, 2002 - Barry Bonds signed a contract with the San
Francisco Giants worth $90 million for five years.
Jan. 14, 2004 - In St. Louis, a Lewis and Clark Exhibition
opened at the Missouri History Museum. The exhibit featured 500 rare and
priceless objects used by the Corps of Discovery.
Jan. 14-15, 2006 - Evergreen weather observer Harry Ellis
reported low temperatures of 30 on both of these days.
Jan. 14, 2010 - Sparta Academy’s varsity boys basketball
team picked up their eighth win of the season on this Thursday night with a
51-21 win over South Choctaw Academy in Evergreen.
Jan. 14, 2010 - The Conecuh County Board of Education
returned to a long-standing tradition on this Thursday when it held its first
meeting in recent memory at one of the county’s local schools. For a number of
years, the board had held its regular meetings at the Conecuh County Resource
Center in Evergreen, but on this Thursday, the board met in the cafeteria at
Lyeffion Junior High School and planned to rotate the location of their
meetings among the county’s local schools. Board Chairman David Cook explained
to the sizeable group of parents, faculty and students at the meeting that over
the years the board somehow “got away from” the practice of meeting at local
schools.
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