Jan. 27, 1593 - The Vatican opened their seven-year trial
against scholar Giordano Bruno, accused among other things, of believing in the
existence of a plurality of worlds.
Jan. 27, 1596 – English captain and explorer Francis Drake
died at the age of 55 at Portobelo, Colon, Panama.
Jan. 27, 1606 – In connection with the famous “Gunpowder
Plot,” the trial of Guy Fawkes and his fellow conspirators began, ending with
their execution on Jan. 31.
Jan. 27, 1756 – World famous musician (and prominent
Freemason) Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart was born in Salzburg, Austria.
Jan. 27, 1776 – During the American Revolutionary War, Henry
Knox's "noble train of artillery" arrived in Cambridge, Mass.
Jan. 27, 1785 - The Georgia General Assembly incorporated
the University of Georgia, the first state-funded institution of higher
learning in the new republic.
Jan. 27, 1807 – Prominent Wilcox
County physician John Daniel Caldwell was born in Sumterville, S.C. and he went
on to graduate from the Medical College of South Carolina in Charleston in
March 1830. He married Mary Anderson Bowen on June 5, 1833 and moved to Linden,
Ala. in 1836. They moved to Barboursville in Wilcox County in 1838. When the
county was incorporated in 1841, Caldwell, as intendent, suggested that they
change Barboursville’s name to Camden in honor of his hometown of Camden, South
Carolina. Caldwell died in Camden at the age of 71 on Sept. 21, 1878 and he is
buried in the Camden Cemetery.
Jan. 27, 1814 – During the Creek War, Capt. Samuel “Sam” Butts,
39, was killed at the Battle of Calebee (Chalibbee) Creek in Macon County,
Ala., 50 miles west of Fort Mitchell. Butts County, Georgia and Buttsville,
Ala. (present day Greenville) was later named in his honor. Born in Nov. 24,
1774 in Southampton County, Va., he was taught for some time at a private
school by the Rev. George Guerley, in Southampton County. He was a captain in John
Floyd's militia army during the War of 1812, and was killed when the American
camp was attacked before day by the Indians. Butts was shot while he was
leading on his men. An officer who was wounded in that battle reported that Butts
was “up rousing his men, and thus became a fair mark for the Indians.”
Jan. 27, 1826 – Confederate Lt.
General Richard Taylor was born in Springfield, Ky.
Jan. 27, 1832 – English author Lewis Carroll was born in
Daresbury, Cheshire, England. His most famous writings are “Alice's Adventures
in Wonderland” and its sequel “Through the Looking-Glass.”
Jan. 27, 1834 – Russian chemist
Dmitri Mendeleev, who created the Periodic Table of Elements, was born in
Tobolsk, Siberia.
Jan. 27, 1840 - The Alabama legislature passed a joint
resolution accepting the disputed boundary line with Georgia. In recognizing
the line marked by a Georgia commission in 1826, the legislature stated that “a
fixed and known line between this State and Georgia, is of far higher
consequence to us, than the acquisition of an inconsiderable portion of
territory.”
Jan. 27, 1862 - U.S. President Abraham Lincoln issued
General War Order No. 1, which ordered all Union land and sea forces to advance
on Feb. 22, 1862. This bold move sent a message to his commanders that the
president was tired of excuses and delays in seizing the offensive against
Confederate forces.
Jan. 27, 1863 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought at Bloomfield, Mo.; Germantown, Tenn.; and in the
vicinity of Suffolk, Va. Five Federal naval vessels attacked Ft. McAllister, at
Genesis Point, on the Ogeechee River, south of Savannah, Ga. A two-day Federal
reconnaissance took place along the Neuse, Dover, and Trent Roads in North Carolina.
Jan. 27, 1864 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought on the Cumberland River at Lebanon, Ky.; at
Kelley’s Ford and McNutt’s Bridge, in the vicinity of Dandridge, Tenn. and
along the Strawberry Plains Road, near Knoxville, Tenn.; and at Thoroughfare
Mountain, Va. A 12-day Federal operation took place in Hampshire and Hardy
Counties in West Virginia.
Jan. 27, 1865 – During the Civil War, a skirmish occurred at
Elrod's Tan Yard in De Kalb County, Ala. and a skirmish was also fought at
Ennis Cross Roads, S.C. A Federal operation also took place between Fort Pinney
about the Federal gunboat, Number 28, to Kimball’s Plantation, Ark. Federals
also refloated the Confederate torpedo boat, Scorpion, on the James River below
Richmond, Va.
Jan. 27, 1865 - General Robert E.
Lee wrote a letter to Richmond. In it he pointed out that absenteeism, and
frequently outright desertion, from his Army of Northern Virginia was reaching
critical proportions. While it was hardly unknown on either side for men to go
absent with or without leave to deal with family emergencies, the problem now
was that they were neglecting to come back. Lee stated “the ration is too small
for men who have to undergo so much exposure and labor as ours,” and suggested
the Commissary Department be encouraged to provide more and better food.
Jan. 27, 1886 - W.G. McCorvey brought to The Monroe Journal’s
office on this Wednesday morning, a bullet taken from the center of the trunk
of a hickory tree measuring five feet in diameter. “It had, doubtless, been
there a hundred years or more, probably fired at a blood-thirsty Indian by some
bold adventurer who had trespassed upon the hunting grounds of the Red Men of
the Forest, who laid claim to this, then, wild and uninhabited region,” The
Journal reported.
Jan. 27, 1888 - The National Geographic Society was founded
in Washington, D.C. for "the increase and diffusion of geographical
knowledge." Nine months after its inception, the Society published its
first issue of National Geographic magazine.
Jan. 27, 1901 – Pro Football Hall of Famer Art Rooney was
born in Coulterville, Pa.
Jan. 27, 1905 – O.L. Peckham, a truck farmer who had moved
to Evergreen, Ala. from Missouri, was found dead shortly after noon near where
he was building a home in front of D.G. Rutland’s house in Evergreen. Rutland
discovered Peckham’s body leaning against a tree and moved the body to his
house. The ensuing investigation revealed that Peckham had apparently committed
suicide by drinking carbolic acid, which he’d purchased from an Evergreen drug
store on Jan. 21. Investigators found the empty bottle and a dipper by
Peckham’s side. He was buried in the Evergreen Cemetery on Jan. 28 at 10 a.m.
Jan. 27, 1907 – The Rev. C.H. Motley was to fill his regular
appointment at the Methodist church on this Sunday, according to The Monroe
Journal.
Jan. 27, 1915 – The Evergreen Courant reported that Prof.
C.C. Smith of Healing Springs had been elected superintendent of the Orphans
Home in Evergreen, Ala., succeeding M.C. Reynolds, who had resigned to move to
Birmingham. Smith was expected to reach Evergreen the following week with his
family.
Jan. 27, 1915 – The Evergreen Courant reported that Charles
Savage Jr. was “painfully injured several days ago by being caught in some part
of the machinery at the oil mill.”
Jan. 27, 1916 – According to The Conecuh Record, a partial
eclipse of the sun occurred on this Thursday at 9:30 a.m.
Jan. 27, 1916 – The Conecuh Record reported that the tax
assessor’s books showed a “multiplicity of dogs” in Conecuh County, Ala.
Jan. 27, 1916 – The Conecuh Record reported that Emmitt Lee
Stallworth, the son of Dr. Stallworth, had been chosen to represent the
Evergreen Baptist Church at the Sunday School Convention in Selma, Ala. The Evergreen
Methodist Church was to be represented at the convention by Bryan Northcutt,
the son of W.B. Northcutt.
Jan. 27, 1916 – The Monroe Journal reported that Walter S.
Harper, a “gifted member of the staff of” The Montgomery Advertiser, had spent
several days in Monroe County, Ala. that week, “visiting various towns and
communities in the collection of data for the adequate representation of Monroe
County’s resources in the forthcoming ‘All-Alabama’ edition of The Advertiser.”
Jan. 27, 1916 – The Monroe Journal reported that railroad
contractor J.T. McCarthy was in Monroeville, Ala. for a few days that week.
McCarthy “will probably keep his construction outfit in the county until the
work of putting the Deep Water road bed in apple pie shape for regular train
service is completed.”
Jan. 27, 1918 - Plagued by
hunger and increasingly frustrated with the continuing Great War, hundreds of
thousands of long-suffering German workers prepared for a massive strike in
Berlin.
Jan. 27, 1920 – Rennie R. Elder, a well known resident of
the Flat Rock, Ala. community, passed away in Conecuh County at the age of 24.
Born on Aug. 27, 1895 at Old Town, he was buried in the Flat Rock Cemetery at
Flat Rock in Conecuh County. (Some sources indicate that he died on June 21,
1920.)
Jan. 27, 1927 - United Independent Broadcasters Inc. started
a radio network with contracts with 16 stations. The company later became
Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS).
Jan. 27, 1933 – Conecuh County High School’s boys basketball
team won their second game of the season on this Friday night by beating
Evergreen, 17-13. Archie Barfield led CCHS, and was followed by Gaston King.
Coach Thomasson was CCHS’s head coach.
Jan. 27, 1944 – The Evergreen Courant reported that Staff
Sgt. Meldon R. Holland, 26, of Castleberry, Ala. had been awarded the Purple
Heart. Holland, a mechanic, was injured by shrapnel in the spring of 1943
during a Japanese bombing raid in New Guinea.
Jan. 27, 1945 – During World War II, the Red Army liberated
the remaining inmates of the Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp built by the
Nazi Germans on the territory of Poland.
Jan. 27, 1949 – Evergreen, Ala. Postmaster Mary Cunningham
announced that the Evergreen Post Office would be painted inside and out in the
“very near future.” The Evergreen Post Office was one of the few in the state
to be approved for this type of work.
Jan. 27, 1950 – Evergreen High School’s boys basketball beat
Pleasant Home, 53-22. John Greel Ralls led Evergreen with 19 points.
Jan. 27, 1951 - Forcefully marking the continued importance of the West in the development of nuclear weaponry, the government detonated the first of a series of nuclear bombs at its new Nevada test site, the flash from which was seen as far away as San Francisco.
Jan. 27, 1958 - Little Richard entered Oakwood College in Huntsville,
Ala. This was after he announced that he was giving up Rock & Roll so he
could serve God.
Jan. 27, 1959 – Members of the Dyatlov expedition departed
Vizhai, the last inhabited settlement so far north, on their way to Otorten, a
mountain 6.2 miles north of the site of the Dyatlov incident.
Jan. 27, 1959 – NFL wide receiver Cris Collinsworth was born
in Dayton, Ohio. He played college ball at Florida and his entire NFL career
with the Cincinnati Bengals.
Jan. 27, 1964 – Evergreen High School’s varsity boys
basketball team beat Frisco City, 63-62, at Memorial Gym in Evergreen, Ala. Sid
Lambert led Evergreen with 18 points, and Joe Sasser scored 15.
Jan. 27, 1966 The Monroe Journal reported that Mrs. T.M.
McMillan had resigned as the librarian at the Monroe County Library, it was
announced by the Monroe County Library Board. McMillan’s resignation was to be
effective March 15, 1966. Members of the library board also announced that Mrs.
M.L. Bergman had been appointed librarian in McMillan’s place.
Jan. 27, 1967 - Paige Cothren became the first player to
sign with the New Orleans Saints.
Jan. 27, 1967 - Specialist Four
Donald W. Evans, a 23-year-old medic from Covina, California, was awarded a
posthumous Medal of Honor for action on this day in the Kontum Province.
Jan. 27, 1968 – The Minerve, a French submarine, disappeared
in the Mediterranean, never to be found.
Jan. 27, 1973 - The United States, South Vietnam, Viet Cong
and North Vietnam formally signed “An Agreement Ending the War and Restoring
Peace in Vietnam” in Paris.
Jan. 27, 1973 - The last U.S.
serviceman to die in combat in Vietnam, Lt. Col. William B. Nolde, was killed
by an artillery shell at An Loc, 60 miles northwest of Saigon, only 11 hours
before the truce went into effect.
Jan. 27, 1976 – Actor and writer Clint Ford was born in Fort
Worth, Texas.
Jan. 27, 1978 – Weather observer Earl Windham reported a low
of 20 degrees on this day in Evergreen, Ala.
Jan. 27, 1985 - Weather observer Earl Windham reported a low
of 21 degrees on this day in Evergreen, Ala.
Jan. 27, 1990 – Roy Lee Moorer, 99, of Evergreen, Ala.
passed away. He pitched for the University of Alabama in 1911-1912 and played
professional baseball in Evansville and for the Birmingham Barons. He was
buried at Magnolia Cemetery in Evergreen.
Jan. 27, 1991 - Whitney Houston sang the "Star Spangled
Banner" at Super Bowl XXV.
Jan. 27, 1994 – The Evergreen Courant reported that the
Conecuh County (Ala.) Commission had approved the recommendation of the Conecuh
County Emergency Medical Services, Inc., and had chosen City Ambulance, Inc. as
the contract holder for Conecuh County.
Jan. 27-28, 1994 – Hillcrest High School hosted the annual
Hillcrest Invitational Basketball Tournament in Evergreen, Ala. The tournament
featured Hillcrest, Excel and T.R. Miller.
Jan. 27, 2001 – According to this day’s edition of the
Agence France Presse, an airport in southern Siberia was closed down for 90
minutes when a UFO hovered above its runway, preventing conventional aircraft
from flying. The crew of an I1-76 cargo aircraft refused too take off when they
sighted a large glowing object hovering above the runway of Siberia’s Barnaul
airport, and the crew of another cargo plane refused to land when they spotted
the same luminescent UFO above the runway, choosing to take their jet to
another airport. After the mysterious object had performed whatever unknown
mission constituted its unknown agenda, it left the airport and disappeared.
Jan. 27, 2002 - Stephen King's three-part, six-hour miniseries
"Rose Red" began airing on ABC-TV.
Jan. 27, 2003 – The first selections for the National
Recording Registry were announced by the Library of Congress.
Jan. 27, 2010 – Author J.D. Salinger passed away at his home
in New Hampshire at the age of 91.
Jan. 27, 2010 - Evergreen’s Chris Hines started for the
Alabama Crimson Tide men’s basketball team in a 57-38 win over LSU at Coleman
Coliseum in Tuscaloosa. In the win over LSU, Hines played 21 minutes, scored
three points and grabbed four rebounds, including three boards on defense and
one on offense. He also had an assist and two steals.
Jan. 27, 2015 – Around 6 p.m. in Birmingham in Jefferson
County, Ala., a UFO witness was driving home from the grocery store when he saw
an “object hovering in the distance, blinking and changing colors.” He pulled
over and attempted to film the object without success.
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