Jan. 18, 1776 - On this evening,
the Council of Safety in Savannah, Georgia, issued an arrest warrant for the
colony’s royal governor, James Wright, and Patriots led by Major Joseph
Habersham of the Provincial Congress then took Wright into custody and placed
him under house arrest.
Jan. 18, 1778 - English navigator Captain James Cook
discovered the Hawaiian Islands, which he called the "Sandwich
Islands."
Jan. 18, 1779 – Peter Mark Roget,
who is best known for “Roget’s Thesaurus,” was born in London.
Jan. 18, 1788 – The first elements of the First Fleet
carrying 736 convicts from Great Britain to Australia arrived at Botany Bay.
Jan. 18, 1803 - Thomas Jefferson, in secret communication
with Congress, sought authorization for the first official exploration by the
U.S. government. Determined to begin the American exploration of the vast
mysterious regions of the Far West, Jefferson asked Congress for money to fund
the journey of Lewis and Clark.
Jan. 18, 1813 – Joseph Farwell Glidden, the inventor of
barbed wire, was born in Charleston, New Hampshire.
Jan. 18, 1823 – Outlaw James Copeland was born to Isham and
Rebecca Wells Copeland near the Pascagoula River in Jackson County, Miss.
Jan. 18, 1838 – Samuel White Oliver, who was around 41 years
old, passed away at his residence on Pine Barren Creek in Dallas County, Ala.
Born in Virginia around 1796, he moved to the Sparta area of Conecuh County,
Ala. in 1819. He began serving in the state legislature in 1822 and represented
Conecuh County there for 12 years and was elected speaker in 1834. He entered
the state senate in 1836, representing Conecuh and Butler counties, but
resigned the next year to move to Dallas County. He ran for governor in 1837
but was defeated by Arthur P. Bagby of Monroe County.
Jan. 18, 1843 – Steamboat pilot Charles Langdon Johnson was
born at River Ridge (now called Franklin) in Monroe County, Ala. He fought in
the Civil War as a private, and he was the nephew of Capt. “Andy” Andrew
Harrison Johnson, the captain of the “Cremona.”
Jan. 18, 1845 – Confederate soldier
James Kenard Kendall was born in Brooklyn, Ala. and on Sept. 13, 1863 at
McGowin’s Bridge he enlisted as a private in Co. I of the 15th Confederate
Cavalry, under the command of W.B. Amos. He passed away at the age of 74 in
Conecuh County and was buried in the Brooklyn Baptist Cemetery.
Jan. 18, 1861 – U.S. Army Lt. Adam Slemmer refused the third
demand for the surrender of Fort Pickens in Pensacola Harbor, Fla. Also on that
day, Fort Jefferson in the Dry Tortugas, off Key West, Fla., was garrisoned by
Federal troops and used to hold political prisoners.
Jan. 18, 1862 – During the Civil
War, the Confederate Territory of Arizona was formed.
Jan. 18, 1863 – During the Civil
War, a skirmish was fought in the Cherokee Territory, the Indian Territory.
Jan. 18, 1864 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought at Grand Gulf, Miss. and at Flint Hill, Va.
Jan. 18, 1865 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought at Clarksville, Ark. and near Lovettsville, Va. A
three-day Federal operation between Napoleonville and Grand River, La. began,
and a five-day Federal operation from Warrensburg to the Snibar Hills, Mo. also
began.
Jan. 18, 1862 - Former U.S. President and current
Confederate Congressman-elect John Tyler passed away at the age of 71 in
Richmond, Va., most likely due to a stroke. He was buried in Hollywood Cemetery
in Richmond.
Jan. 18, 1868 – John Singleton Peacock, the oldest of Lewis
Lavon and Safronia Caroline Martin’s 10 (possibly 11) children, was born at
Burnt Corn. He was named after his maternal grandfather.
Jan. 18, 1876 – Samuel G. Forbes named postmaster at Burnt
Corn, Ala.
Jan. 18, 1882 – Children’s author Alan Alexander Milne,
better known as A.A. Milne, was born in London. He is best known for his books,
“Winnie-the-Pooh” (1926) and “The House at Pooh Corner” (1928).
Jan. 18, 1886 - On this Monday morning a negro woman living
on Mr. James Andrews’ place in Monroe County, about eight miles south of Pine
Apple, left her three small children in a room in which a fire was burning. The
youngest, which was just beginning to crawl, was found with its feet and legs
in the fire, where it had evidently been for some time. The skin peeled off up
to its waist wherever touched, and its feet were burned to a crisp. Dr. J.B.
Adams, who happened to be in the neighborhood at the time of the accident, was
called in, but found the little sufferer beyond human aid, as it had fallen
into a stupor from which a reaction was hardly possible, according to the Pine
Apple Enterprise.
Jan. 18, 1892 – Oliver Hardy of the comedy team Laurel &
Hardy was born Norvell Hardy in Harlem, Ga.
Jan. 18, 1903 – United States President Theodore Roosevelt
sent a radio message to King Edward VII, the first transatlantic radio
transmission originating in the United States. The message was sent from a
transmitter in Wellfleet, Mass.
Jan. 18, 1907 – At the Monroeville, Ala. school house on this
Friday, public exercises were planned to commemorate the birthday of General
Robert E. Lee. The Hon. John M. Burns was to deliver the principal address on
the subject of “Lee’s Place in History.”
Q. Salter was to talk on “Lee as a Model Citizen.” “The school will
render several concert songs applicable to the occasion,” The Monroe Journal
reported.
Jan. 18, 1915 – Charles Henderson of Troy was inaugurated as
Alabama’s governor at noon at the state capitol in Montgomery, succeeding Emmet
O’Neil of Florence. The oath was administered by Chief Justice John C. Anderson
of the State Supreme Court.
Jan. 18, 1915 – On this Monday, the Conecuh County (Ala.)
Circuit Court convened. A number of cases on the civil docket were heard with
the criminal docket to be taken up the following week.
Jan. 18, 1915 - L.M. Sawyer assumed the duties of Monroe
County, Ala. Sheriff on this Monday. Claude Kilpatrick and J.W. Urquhart were
members of his official staff.
Jan. 18, 1915 – A.A. Williams began his term as Conecuh County,
Ala. Sheriff, succeeding E.C. Hines. Williams named Conrad Davis as his chief
deputy, replacing former Chief Deputy R.G. Kendall.
Jan. 18, 1916 – A 611-gram chondrite type meteorite struck a
house near the village of Baxter in Stone County, Missouri.
Jan. 18, 1919 – During World War I, the Paris Peace
Conference opened in Versailles, France, and some of the most powerful people
in the world met to begin the long, complicated negotiations that would
officially mark the end of the First World War.
Jan. 18, 1929 – Evergreen High School’s boys basketball team
beat Georgiana, 39-13.
Jan. 18, 1934 – Author and illustrator Raymond Briggs was
born in London.
Jan. 18, 1936 - Mr. and Mrs. A.C. Lee and daughter, Nelle
Harper, spent this Saturday in Mobile, Ala., according to The Monroe Journal.
Jan. 18, 1943 - The U.S. banned sales of pre-sliced bread
for the duration of World War II.
Jan. 18, 1949 – In an incident attributed to the Bermuda
Triangle, British and American plane crews searching for the missing Star Ariel
reported seeing “a strange light” on the sea, but search-and-rescue units
dispatched to the vicinity found nothing.
Jan. 18, 1950 – The People’s Republic of China formally
recognized the communist Democratic Republic of Vietnam and agreed to furnish
it military assistance; the Soviet Union extended diplomatic recognition to
Hanoi on Jan. 30.
Jan. 18, 1951 – Beatrice, Ala. native Butch Avinger was
drafted in the first round of the NFL draft by the Pittsburgh Steelers.
Jan. 18, 1951 – Fred Cone of Pine Apple became the 27th
overall pick in the 1951 NFL Draft when he was selected in the third round by
the Green Bay Packers. Cone played fullback and placekicker for the Packers,
and on Sept. 29, 1957 he actually played in the first ever game at Green Bay’s
Lambeau Field, a 21-17 win over their rivals, the Chicago Bears. Cone was one
of Green Bay’s best players during his seven seasons with the team, and he was
inducted into the Packers Hall of Fame in 1973.
Jan. 18, 1951 - The NFL passed a rule that said that a
tackle, guard or center was not eligible to catch a forward pass.
Jan. 18, 1951 – Frisco City High School’s boys basketball
team beat Uriah, 55-43, on this Friday night in Frisco City, Ala. Standout
Frisco City players that season included B.B. Barnes, Jerry Gulsby, Keith King,
Charles Pugh and LaRue Rumbley. Evins McGhee led Blacksher with 14 points
against FCHS.
Jan. 18, 1967 - Albert DeSalvo, who claimed to be the
"Boston Strangler," was convicted in Cambridge, Mass. of armed
robbery, assault and sex offenses. He was sentenced to life in prison. Desalvo
was killed in 1973 by a fellow inmate.
Jan. 18, 1969 – Baseball Hall of Famer Ted Williams was
appointed manager of the Washington Senators.
Jan. 18, 1971 – George C. Wallace began serving his
second term as Alabama’s governor. He would later be re-elected and would
remain for a third term that would eventually end on Jan. 15, 1979.
Jan. 18, 1971 - In a televised
speech, Senator George S. McGovern (D-South Dakota) began his antiwar campaign
for the 1972 Democratic presidential nomination by vowing to bring home all
U.S. soldiers from Vietnam if he was elected.
Jan. 18, 1973 – Sturdivant Hall in Selma, Ala. was added to
the National Register of Historic Places.
Jan. 18, 1973 - Pink Floyd began recording "Dark Side
Of The Moon."
Jan. 18, 1976 - The Pittsburgh Steelers beat the Dallas
Cowboys, 21-17, in Super Bowl X. The CBS telecast was viewed by an estimated 80
million people. Excel, Ala. native Lee Roy Jordan started for Dallas at middle
linebacker. Jordan, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Jordan of Excel, was a
13-year NFL veteran at the time.
Jan. 18, 1979 – The Wilcox County Courthouse Historic
District in Camden, Ala. was added to the National Register of Historic Places.
Jan. 18, 1979 – The Oak Island “Money Pit” mystery was the
subject of an episode of the television series “In Search of...,” which first
aired on this date, bringing the legend of Oak Island to a wider audience.
Jan. 18, 1980 - The Conecuh County Cattlemen and CowBelles
were scheduled to hold their annual banquet this on this Friday night at 7 p.m.
at the Holiday Inn in Evergreen, Ala. Gerald and Kathy Salter were presidents
of the organizations. The featured speaker was to be Robert Vaughn of Ozark, a
highly sought after humorous speaker.
Jan. 18, 1991 – On this Friday night, Sparta Academy’s
varsity boys basketball team defeated Jackson Academy, 88-66. Leading scorers
were Tim Salter, 31 points; Wayne Cook, 18; Steven Gall, 17; Scott Brown, 12;
and Mark Watts had 11 points.
Jan. 18, 1994 – The Cando event, a possible bolide impact,
occurred in Cando, Spain. Witnesses claim to have seen a fireball in the sky
lasting for almost one minute.
Jan. 18, 1994 – Conecuh County Probate Judge Rogene Booker
administered the oath of office to newly appointed Evergreen Police Chief
Thomas Booker at Evergreen City Hall in Evergreen, Ala.
Jan. 18-19, 1994 – On both of these days, weather reporter
Harry Ellis reported low temperatures of 16 degrees in Evergreen, Ala.
Jan. 18, 1995 - A network of caves were discovered near the
town of Vallon-Pont-d'Arc in southern France. The caves contained paintings and
engravings that were 17,000 to 20,000 years old.
Jan. 18, 1996 - Baseball owners unanimously approved interleague
play for 1997.
Jan. 18, 1996 - J.F. Shields High School’s varsity boys
basketball team earned a share of first place in the 2A, Area 2 race on this
Thursday in Beatrice when the team upended Excel High School, 64-58. Alfred
Hale scored 15 points to lead Shields’ offense. Stephen Pharr scored 16 points
to lead Excel. Other standout Shields players in that game included Derek
Booker and Damien Payne. Standout Excel players included Shane Moore, Mark
Moore, Stacey McPhaul and Chris Lint.
Jan. 18, 2001 - The Cartoon Network exclusively aired the
last episode of "Batman Beyond."
Jan. 18, 2001 - Special Education Coordinator for Conecuh
County Schools, Harriet Hubbard, was awarded the Margaret Vann Award for
Outstanding Special Education Coordinator in the State of Alabama in Birmingham
during the Alabama Federation Council for Exceptional Children Super Conference
2001. Since Hubbard’s employment with Conecuh County Schools in 1997,
tremendous strides had been taken in the field of special education. Hubbard
had written grants totaling over $70,000, which enabled the county to purchase
a new and much needed school bus for transporting multi-handicapped students.
Jan. 18, 2010 – Anne Crook Hines Farish passed away in
Monroeville, Ala. at the age of 83. She was Monroeville’s first female council
member and served as Monroeville’s mayor for 16 years.
Jan. 18, 2015 – Around 6 p.m. in Alabaster in Shelby County,
Ala., a UFO witness was on his back patio when he saw two star-like objects.
The witness watched these objects for about five minutes before they flew off
to the north and faded from sight. The witness said “it was obvious it was not
an aircraft, star, satellite, etc.”
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