Jan. 26, 1500 - Vicente Yáñez Pinzón discovered Brazil by becoming
the first European to set foot on Brazil.
Jan. 26, 1699 - Four French ships captained by Pierre Le
Moyne d'Iberville appeared in Pensacola Bay. The Spanish governor refused to
let the Frenchmen land, so the ships continued west along the coast. On Jan.
31, d'Iberville's ships anchored off Mobile Point, sounded the channel, and
explored present-day Dauphin Island, naming it Île du Massacre (Massacre
Island) for the 60 human skeletons they found there. The ships then sailed west
and anchored in Mississippi Sound. While Iberville explored the Mississippi
River, his men began construction of Fort Maurepas on Biloxi Bay.
Jan. 26, 1779 – During the American Revolution’s “Engagement
at Burke County Jail,” a group of Patriots met at the Burke County Jail in
Savannah, Ga. to determine how they would deal with any possible defections
from the Patriot cause.
Jan. 26, 1809 - Alabama author J. H. Ingraham was born in
Portland, Maine.
Jan. 26,
1827 – Charles Lewis Scott was born in Richmond, Henrico County, Va. He went on
to graduate from the College of William and Mary in Williamsburg, Va. and
became a lawyer before traveling to California during the Gold Rush of 1849.
Scott served in the California State Assembly from 1854 to 1856 and represented
California in Congress from 1857 to 1861. When the Civil War began, he resigned
his seat in Congress and joined the Fourth Regiment, Alabama Volunteer
Infantry, of the Confederate Army, serving as major. He never returned to
California. In 1861 he suffered a serious leg wound at the First Battle of Bull
Run and resigned his commission due to injury in 1862, after the Battle of
Seven Pines. After the war, Scott farmed in Wilcox County, Alabama, then during
1869–1879 was a journalist. He was a delegate to every Democratic National
Convention from the end of the Civil War to 1896. In 1885, he was appointed by
President Cleveland as minister to Venezuela, serving until he resigned in
1889. He returned to the U.S. and farmed. Scott died on April 30, 1899 near
Mount Pleasant and is buried at a private cemetery at Eliska.
Jan. 26, 1831 – Children’s book author and editor Mary Mapes
Dodge was born Mary Mapes in New York City.
Jan. 26, 1837 - Michigan became the 26th state to join the
United States.
Jan. 26, 1839 - Alabama's first state prison was established
by legislative act. In 1842, at the Wetumpka State Penitentiary, the state's
first inmate began serving time for harboring a runaway slave. The first female
was incarcerated in 1850 for murder. Today, the Alabama Department of
Corrections oversees a multi-facility state prison system.
Jan. 26, 1852 – Italian-French explorer Pierre Savorgnan de
Brazza was born in Castel Gandolfo, near Rome.
Jan. 26, 1861 - Louisiana became
the sixth state to secede from the Union. The state convention voted 113 to 17
in favor of the measure. Also on that day, Fort Jackson and Oglethorpe Barracks
in Savannah, Ga. were seized by Georgia state troops.
Jan. 26, 1862 – During the Civil
War, Federal reconnaissance was conducted to Wilmington Narrows, or Freeborn’s
Cut, Ga.
Jan. 26, 1863 – During the Civil War, General Ambrose
Burnside was relieved of command of the Army of the Potomac after the
disastrous Fredericksburg campaign. He was replaced by Joseph Hooker.
Jan. 26, 1863 – During the Civil War, Governor of
Massachusetts John Albion Andrew received permission from Secretary of War to
raise a militia organization for men of African descent.
Jan. 26, 1863 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought at Mulberry Springs, Ark.; at Township, Fla.; and
at Grove Church (near Morrisville), in the vicinity of Fairfax Courthouse, and
at Middleburg, Va. The CSS Alabama also captured the Golden Rule off Santo
Domingo.
Jan. 26, 1864 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought at Athens, Ala.; Caddo Gap, Ark.; with Indians in
the San Andres Mountains, the New Mexico Territory; and at Flat Creek and Muddy
Creek, in the vicinity of Dandridge, near Knoxville, and at Sevierville, Tenn.
Jan. 26, 1865 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought at Paint Rock, Ala. and in the vicinity of
Pocotaligo, S.C. A six-day Federal reconnaissance also began from Pine Bluff
toward Camden and Monticello, Ark. A 10-day Federal expedition began from
Plaquemine to The Park, La. A 17-day Federal expedition began from Memphis,
Tenn. into Southeastern Arkansas and Northwestern Louisiana.
Jan. 26, 1870 - The state of Virginia rejoined the Union.
Jan. 26, 1870 – County Court convened in Monroeville, Ala.
with the Hon. J.W. Leslie presiding. Solicitor Duke represented the state.
Jan. 26, 1875 - Mistakenly believing Frank and Jesse James were hiding out at their family home, a gang of men–likely led by Pinkerton detectives–mounted a raid that left the outlaws’ mother permanently maimed and their nine-year-old half-brother dead.
Jan. 26, 1879 – Dr. William R. Strode, 48, died at Perdue
Hill, Ala. and was buried at McConnico Cemetery. Born in Culpepper County, Va. on
March 5, 1833, he graduated from the Medical College of Philadelphia in 1853.
He served as a surgeon in the Confederate Army and married Mary Gorin of Monroe
County in October 1870.
Jan. 26, 1879 – Noah Dallas Peacock (Lewis Lavon Peacock’s
older brother) and daughter, Susan, joined the Mossy Grove Universalist Church
at Ariton, Ala.
Jan. 26, 1885 – The Monroe Journal reported that “a
gentleman from Canada, who has been prospecting in the northern part of our
county, with a view to a home in our delightful climate, expresses himself as
being very much pleased.”
Jan. 26, 1904 - Irish statesman, co-founder of Amnesty
International, and winner of the 1974 Nobel Peace Prize, Sean MacBride,
was born in Paris.
Jan. 26, 1905 – The Monroe Journal reported that the
Monroeville Library would be ready to open its doors to the public in a few
days. “Nice rooms have been neatly fitted up in the old court house and a choice
collection of standard works covering a wide range of literature gathered for
the entertainment and instruction of patrons.” Miss Mann was the librarian.
Jan. 26, 1907 – Hungarian endocrinologist Hans Selve was
born in Vienna, Austria-Hungary.
Jan. 26, 1915 – The Rocky Mountain National Park was
established by an act of the U.S. Congress.
Jan. 26, 1915 – Liston A. Hixon passed away at his home in
Monroeville, Ala. on this Tuesday night. A former farmer and merchant, he was
about 63 years old. He was buried in Hamilton Hill Cemetery.
Jan. 26, 1916 - Alabama author Amelie Rives's play “The Fear Market”
opened on Broadway.
Jan. 26, 1917 - The first match games of basketball of the
season were played on the high school grounds on this Friday afternoon between
the Monroeville and Brewton teams. The games were “swift and exciting and the
visitors worsted in both,” according to The Monroe Journal. The score stood 27
to 5 and 20 to 4 respectively in favor of Monroeville.
Jan. 26, 1918 – During World War I, Army Pvt. Adrien (Adren)
F. Hardy of Brewton, Ala. was killed in action while serving with the 42nd
Division, 167th Infantry. Born in Baldwin County in July 1901, he is
listed on the “Tablets of the Missing” at the Aisne-Marne American Cemetery in
Picardie, France. (Some sources say he died on July 26, 1918.)
Jan. 26, 1918 - Soon after
the Bolsheviks seized control in immense, troubled Russia in November 1917 and
moved towards negotiating peace with the Central Powers, the former Russian
state of Ukraine declared its total independence.
Jan. 26, 1919 – William E. Molett was born in Orrville, Ala.
He would go on to graduate from Evergreen High School and then joined the
military, became a master navigator, recorded 6,000 hours as an aircraft navigator,
including 91 flights over the North Pole. He also taught polar aviation for
three years and returned as a Lt. Col. in the Air Force. In 1996, he wrote a
book called “Robert Peary and Matthew Henson at the North Pole.”
Jan. 26, 1918 - Spright Dowell, Alabama’s state
superintendent of education, made a forceful address to the teachers of Conecuh
County on this Saturday at their regular bi-monthly meeting held at the Conecuh
County High School in Castleberry. Prof. Bennett, county superintendent, was
also present.
Jan. 26, 1922 – The Rev. Eugene Clarke, the rector of St.
James Episcopal Church at Perdue Hill, Ala., was scheduled to hold services in
the Monroe County Courthouse at 7 p.m. on this Thursday.
Jan. 26, 1926 - Alabama author Elise Sanguinetti was born in
Anniston, Ala.
Jan. 26, 1929 – Cartoonist, novelist and playwright Jules
Feiffer was born in the Bronx.
Jan. 26, 1944 - Alabama author Angela Davis was born in
Birmingham, Ala.
Jan. 26, 1946 – British playwright Christopher Hampton was born
in Faial in the Azores archipelago.
Jan. 26, 1956 – Evergreen High School’s varsity basketball
team was scheduled to make its first official appearance in South Alabama
Conference competition when they were to play Luverne at Elba, Ala. in the
first game of the SAC Tournament at 6 p.m. The only other game on tap in the
first round of play was Enterprise vs. Greenville, at 7:15 p.m. Georgiana and
Florala, who drew first round byes, were to meet in the first game of the
quarterfinals at about 8:30 p.m.
Jan. 26, 1956 – The Evergreen Courant reported that the U.S.
Naval Air Station in Pensacola would soon begin using the Evergreen Airport,
Middleton Field, for an auxiliary field in training students. Presumably,
pilots and ground crews would be flown up each day, in an operation similar to
that of Camp Rucker, when a large number of students and instructors flew to
Evergreen for touch and go landings.
Jan. 26, 1956 – The Evergreen Courant reported that Peace
Pilgrim, who had walked over 7,600 miles on her pilgrimage for peace, passed
through Evergreen over the weekend on her way to Montgomery. Peace Pilgrim
began her 100-mile walk in Alabama at Castleberry, walking into Evergreen after
dark. She spent the night at the bus station, The Rebel, and began her long
trek about 7 a.m. the next morning. On Sun., Jan. 22, about 3:30 p.m., she was
seen a few miles above Georgiana, and several people reported having seen her
Mon., Jan. 23, the last in the afternoon, about two miles above the junction of
the Ft. Deposit road and the new highway, at Priester’s.
Jan. 26, 1958 – Comedian Ellen DeGeneres was born in
Metairie, La.
Jan. 26, 1960 – On this Tuesday evening, the Conecuh County
Training School Eagles beat Camden Academy, 70-60. “The Eagles used a combination
of shooting and rebounding by Marvin Jones and Douglas Evans and the playmaking
of Eley Randerson and Martin were particularly effective with their passing and
general ball handling skills. Marvin Jones gained the scoring honors with 22
points. Evans was second with 19 valuable points, but an even more important
contribution of Evans and Jones was their rebounding on the offensive and
defensive backboards.”
Jan. 26, 1966 - The most notorious unsolved crime in
Australian history took place, when three children went missing while on a trip
to Glenelg Beach near Adelaide, South Australia. The case saw numerous twists
and turns, including failed input from psychics and a series of hoaxed letters
alleged to have come from the missing Beaumont children.
Jan. 26, 1966 - The Pine Belt Conference basketball
tournament, hosted by the J.U. Blacksher High Bulldogs, got under way on this
Wednesday night with three games being played at the coliseum in Monroeville,
Ala. The tournament was to continue through that Saturday night when the
championship game was to be played. Teams in the tourney included Blacksher,
Chatom, Coffeeville, Excel, Frisco City, Grove Hill, Jackson, Leroy, Millry,
Monroeville, Repton, Silas and Thomasville.
Jan. 26, 1967 – Dr. R. Dale LeCount, a retired Presbyterian
minister who was then assistant to the president of Blue Cross-Blue Shield of
Alabama, was to be the guest speaker at the annual Ladies Night Banquet of the
Monroeville Chamber of Commerce on this Thursday night at the Community House.
The banquet was scheduled to begin at 7:30 p.m. LeCount, a native of Syracuse,
Ind., had been retired from the ministry since 1962.
Jan. 26, 1970 - U.S. Navy Lt.
Everett Alvarez Jr. spent his 2,000th day in captivity in Southeast Asia.
Jan. 26, 1972 - Radio Hanoi
announced North Vietnam’s rejection of the latest U.S. peace proposal.
Jan. 26, 1978 - Rhonda Griffin was
chosen ‘Miss Rubicon” for 1978 at the annual pageant at Evergreen High School
on this Thursday. The Rubicon was the school’s annual and was to feature Rhonda
and Katrinka Rankins, first alternate, and Melissa Johnson, second alternate,
in the annual’s beauty section.
Jan. 26, 1978 - The Evergreen Chamber of Commerce held
its first Executive Board meeting of the year on this Thursday at Evergreen
City Hall. The new board members were installed by the past-president, Ed
Smith. New officers were elected as follows: President, Gary Robinson; Vice
President, Coston Bowers; Treasurer, Claude Jernigan. Mrs. Doris Sexton will
continue to serve as Executive Secretary for the Chamber.
Jan. 26, 1979 - The first episode of "The Dukes of
Hazzard" aired on CBS.
Jan. 26, 1983 - Alabamians were shocked and saddened when
retired University of Alabama football coach Paul “Bear” Bryant died suddenly
from a heart attack. Bryant began coaching at Alabama in 1958 and went on to
win six national championships with the team. In 1981 he became football's
"winningest" coach with 315 victories.
Jan. 26, 1986 - In New Orleans, Louisiana, the Chicago Bears
scored a Super Bowl record number of points to defeat the New England Patriots,
46-10, and win their first championship since 1963.
Jan. 26, 1988 – Frisco City High School’s varsity boys
basketball team beat Excel, 54-48. Top Frisco City players in that game included
Cleveland Banks, Robert Byrd, Lorenzo Lawson, Terry Tucker and Clifton Tucker.
Jan. 26, 1989 – The Andalusia Commercial Historic District
was added to the National Register of Historic Places.
Jan. 26, 1997 - ZZ Top, James Brown and the Blues Brothers
performed at the Super Bowl XXXI halftime show. The Green Bay Packers won,
35-21, over the New England Patriots. It was the third Super Bowl win for the
Packers.
Jan. 26, 2003 - The Tampa Bay Buccaneers defeated the
Oakland Raiders, 48-21, in Super Bowl XXXVII. Tampa Bay coach Jon Gruden became
the youngest coach to ever win a Super Bowl. It was the first Super Bowl
appearance for the Buccaneers.
Jan. 26, 2004 – A whale exploded in the town of Tainan,
Taiwan. A build-up of gas in the decomposing sperm whale was suspected of
causing the explosion.
Jan. 26, 2006 – The Evergreen Courant reported that
Hillcrest’s varsity boys basketball team was just two games away from posting a
perfect record in area play that season, after adding wins over Opp and Geneva to
its record during the previous week. Four Jaguars scored in double figures
against Opp with Cleveland Knight getting 15 points on five three-pointers to
lead the crew. Other players on Hillcrest’s team that year included Chris
Hines, Nick Lovelace, Justin Holder, P.K. Riley, Nick Ackron, Richard Johnson,
Derrell Simpson, Blake Bryant and Robert Thomas.
Jan. 26, 2006 – The Evergreen Courant reported that, with a
perfect 4-0 standing in the area race, all the Sparta Academy Warriors needed
was one more victory to clinch the regular season championship. That victory
came in the form of a 68-46 blowout of the visiting Jackson Academy Eagles that
was keyed by Eric Talbot’s 21-point performance. Other players on Sparta’s team
that season included Tony Raines, Michael Campbell, Will Ivey, Chris Cinereski,
J.R. Williams, Jacob Patillo, D.J. Buckhault and Chase Brown. Russ Brown was
head coach.
Jan. 26, 2006 – The Evergreen Courant reported Ashton Garner
led Sparta Academy’s girls in a 57-43 win over Clarke Prep in Evergreen. Other
players on Sparta’s girls team that season included Erin Brock, Erica Palmer,
Mallory Kendrick, Susan Ann Cook, Morgan Harden, Kara Layton, Deanna Covin and
Camarena Godwin. Russ Brown was head coach.
Jan. 26, 2010 - The AISA District Spelling Bee was held on
this Tuesday at Reid State Technical College in Evergreen. Winners were, eighth
grade, Rachel Riley, Sparta Academy; fifth grade, Grace Terry, Escambia
Academy; seventh grade, Taylor Chavers, Sparta Academy; fourth grade, Austin Phillips,
Fort Dale Academy; and sixth grade, Rachel Jackson Fort Dale Academy. District
organizer was Heather West. Spelling Bee pronouncer was Zebbie Nix, and judges
were Ann Sage and Susan Cook.
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