Feb. 1, 1676 - In the summer of
167̣5, the Massachusetts Bay Colony provided four soldiers to secure the
Framingham area. After Thomas Eames left on a trip to Boston, 11 Nipmuc led by
Chief Netus attacked his home and farm on this day. His wife Mary defended
herself using hot soap, but was quickly overpowered and killed along with five
children. The house and barn were burned and the horses and livestock stolen.
Feb. 1, 1733 - James Oglethorpe,
along with other settlers, landed on this day about 12 miles up the Savannah
River at Yamacraw Bluff. Here they meet John and Mary Musgrove who are traders
with the nearby Indians.
Feb. 1, 1768 – Charles Tait was born in Hanover, Va. He
served as a Circuit Court Judge in Georgia, as a U.S. Senator from Georgia and
as a U.S. federal judge in Alabama. He taught French, worked as an attorney and
later lived at Claiborne, where he died in 1835.
Feb. 1, 1779 - Delaware became the twelfth state to ratify
the Articles of Confederation.
Feb. 1, 1781 – In the Battle of Cowan’s Ford, American
Brigadier General William Lee Davidson died in combat while attempting to
prevent General Charles Cornwallis’ army from crossing the Catawba River in
Mecklenburg County, N.C. Davidson College was named in his honor.
Feb. 1, 1788 - Isaac Briggs and William Longstreet patented
the steamboat.
Feb. 1, 1835 – Slavery was
abolished in Mauritius.
Feb. 1, 1836 – The majority of
Cherokee, including Principal Chief John Ross, wanted to stay in the Cherokee
homelands. But a small group, led Major Ridge, John Ridge, Elias Boudinot and
others, formed what was known as the Treaty Party and advocated for relocation
west of the Mississippi River. The great majority of the Cherokee protest the
New Echota treaty, considering it to be fraudulent. Over 400 Cherokee gathered on
this day at Red Clay, Tennessee to formally dispute it.
Feb. 1, 1839 – Two hundred and 28 Cherokee,
along with Chief John Ross, arrived in Little Rock where Chief Ross’ wife
Quatie Martin Ross passed on this day. She was buried in Little Rock.
Feb. 1, 1840 - A skirmish took
place near “Fort No. 5” when an Army patrol was ambushed by Seminole warriors.
Feb. 1, 1841 - This month 270 Seminole
were held in camps waiting for relocation to Indian Territory.
Feb. 1, 1839 - The Alabama
legislature abolished imprisonment for debt, except in cases of fraud. This
action continued a modification of English common law that had begun with the
Mississippi and Alabama territorial governments. The constitutions of 1868,
1875 and 1901 would prohibit imprisonment of debtors even in cases of fraud.
Feb. 1, 1856 - Auburn University
was chartered as the East Alabama Male College.
Feb. 1, 1861 - Texas became the
seventh state to secede from the Union when the state convention voted 166-8 in
favor of the measure.
Feb. 1, 1862 - "The Battle
Hymn of the Republic," by Julia Ward Howe was first published in the
"Atlantic Monthly."
Feb. 1, 1862 - Union General James
B. McPherson was transferred to General Ulysses S. Grant's command.
Feb. 1, 1862 – During the Civil
War, a skirmish was fought at Bowling Green, Ky. and Confederate forces entered
the New Mexico Territory.
Feb. 1, 1863 – J.C. Johnson, who
was born on March 11, 1847, enlisted as a private in the Confederate army. He
served with Co. B, 3rd Alabama Cavalry and was wounded at the Battle of
Kennesaw Mountain. He died in Conecuh County on April 10, 1914.
Feb. 1, 1863 – During the Civil
War, a Federal Naval attack began on Fort McAllister, south of Savannah, Ga.,
located on Genesis Point. A nine-day Federal Naval expedition began from New
Berne to Plymouth, N.C. A two-day Federal reconnaissance began between Franklin
and Brentwood in Tennessee.
Feb. 1, 1864 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought at Waldron, Ark.; at Batchelder's Creek, N.C.; and
at Bristoe Station, Va. A 23-day operation against Indians began in the
Humboldt Military District, Calif., and a two-day Federal cavalry
reconnaissance began from Madisonville to Franklinton, La. Also on that day, a
monthlong operation began against Navajo Indians in the New Mexico and Arizona
Territories.
Feb. 1, 1864 – During the Civil
War, a Federal operation began between Knoxville and Flat Creek in Tennessee; a
two-day Federal reconnaissance began from Maryville to Sevierville in Tennessee;
and a seven-day Federal reconnaissance began in White and Putnam Counties in Tennessee.
Feb. 1, 1864 – During the Civil
War, using the Congressional Conscription Act, President Abraham Lincoln
ordered that 500,000 men be drafted on March 10 to serve for three years or the
duration of the war.
Feb. 1, 1865 - U.S. President
Abraham Lincoln signed a Joint Resolution submitting the proposed 13th
Amendment to the states.
Feb. 1, 1865 – During the Civil
War, Federal Naval operations were directed against the salt works at St.
Andrews Bay, Fla., and Federal operations began against Indians in the vicinity
of Fort Boise, Idaho Territory. A five-day Federal operation that encompassed
Warrensburg, Tabo Creek, Dover, Oaklin Church, and Davis Creek in Missouri
began. A five-day Federal operation that encompassed Wagon Knob, Brig Grove,
Greenton, and Texas Prairie in Missouri began.
Feb. 1, 1865 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought at Fort Zarah, Kansas; at Hickory Hill and Whippy
Swamp in South Carolina; and in McLemore's Cove, Tenn.
Feb. 1, 1884 - The first edition of
the Oxford English Dictionary was published.
Feb. 1, 1885 - John Taylor, the
president of the Mormon Church, went “underground” to avoid arrest and continued
resisting federal demands for reforms within the community of Latter-day
Saints.
Feb. 1, 1886 – Monroe County (Ala.) Court convened on this
Monday.
Feb. 1, 1886 - The Monroe County Medical Society met in
Monroeville, Ala. on this Monday. There were only three physicians present at
the meeting: Drs. McMillan, Packer and Russell.
Feb. 1, 1886 – Former Monroe County Sheriff Burns and
Richard Nettles of Buena Vista were in Monroeville, Ala. on this Monday.
Feb. 1, 1893 - Thomas A. Edison
completed work on the world's first motion picture studio, the Black Maria in
West Orange, N.J.
Feb. 1, 1895 – On this Friday
morning, I.D. Roberts shot Sam Thames in Roberts’ oat field at Perdue Hill,
Ala. Roberts had discovered an unattended mule in his oat field and when Thames
arrived and attempted to bridle the mule, Roberts fired and accidentally
wounded Thames in the neck and shoulder. Thames was treated for his wounds and
was expected to fully recover.
Feb. 1, 1900 - Eastman Kodak Co.
introduced the $1 Brownie box camera.
Feb. 1, 1901 - Clark Gable was born
in Cadiz, Ohio. He would go on to star in the role of Rhett Butler in the epic
1939 movie, “Gone with the Wind.”
Feb. 1, 1902 – Poet Langston Hughes
was born in Joplin, Mo.
Feb. 1, 1904 – Humorist S.J.
Perelman was born in Brooklyn.
Feb. 1, 1905 – The Evergreen
Courant reported that George L. Madison of Oshkosh, Wisc., who came south every
winter to hunt, was the guest of the family of J.E. Ellis.
Feb. 1, 1906 – The Monroe Journal
reported that a Mr. Gunter, a former resident of Pine Apple, had purchased the
turpentine business belonging to Mr. Baker of Drewry.
Feb. 1, 1906 – The Monroe Journal reported that Miss May
Belle Davis of Manistee, Ala. had been a guest of Monroeville friends for a few
days during the previous week.
Feb. 1, 1906 – The Monroe Journal reported that Miss Lucile
Bizzelle had returned home from Boston where she had completed a course in a
school of oratory and expression.
Feb. 1, 1906 – The Monroe Journal reported that Dr. J.T.
Russell’s office was now located in the room formerly occupied by the late Dr.
Wiggins.
Feb. 1, 1906 – In this day’s
edition of The Monroe Journal, the correspondent from the Robinsonville
community reported that residents there were expecting to get rural free
delivery soon and a telephone line, which would connect with the long distance
at Atmore.
Feb. 1, 1910 – The Marengo Democrat
and The Linden Reporter, which were established in 1889, consolidated to form
The Democrat-Reporter in Linden, Ala.
Feb. 1, 1911 – Caleb Johnston
Snowden, 65, passed away at his home near Brooklyn, Ala. Born on Oct. 14, 1845,
he enlisted in Co. H of the 15th Confederate Cavalry and served until the
Confederacy surrender in 1865. He was buried in the Brooklyn Baptist Church Cemetery
in Conecuh County, Ala.
Feb. 1, 1913 - Jim Thorpe signed a
contract to play baseball with the New York Giants.
Feb. 1, 1917 - The lethal threat of
the German U-boat submarine raised its head again, as Germany returned to the
policy of unrestricted submarine warfare it had previously suspended in
response to pressure from the United States and other neutral countries.
Feb. 1, 1917 – The Monroe Journal reported that the Monroe
County Board of Education had held a stated meeting in Monroeville during the
previous week with all members present. Among other business transacted at the
meeting was the election of Prof. Geo. A. Harris as County Superintendent of
Education to succeed Prof. J. Barnes, whose term was set to expire on Sept. 30.
Feb. 1, 1917 – The Monroe Journal reported that Judge W.G.
McCorvey was a business visitor to Montgomery earlier that week.
Feb. 1, 1917 – The Monroe Journal reported that Dr. D.D.
Cole of Eliska was a business visitor to Monroeville during the previous week.
He was accompanied by Mrs. Cole and two children and Mrs. Stiggins who were
guests of the editor Q. Salter’s family.
Feb. 1, 1918 – Scottish writer
Muriel Spark was born in Edinburgh.
Feb. 1, 1919 – During World War I,
Army Pvt. Raymond L. Seale of Repton, Ala. “died from disease.” He was a member
of the 165th Infantry, 42nd Division. He was buried in
the New Home Primitive Baptist Church Cemetery in Excel.
Feb. 1, 1920 – A disastrous fire
that started around 3 a.m. occurred at the large Vredenburgh Saw Mill Co. saw
mill in Vredenburgh, Ala. At the time
of the fire another mill in Vredenburgh was already under construction, so
construction was rushed on this second mill to get it started. In 1922, both
mills were operating on double shifts. The cause of the fire was unknown.
Feb. 1, 1924 - A movie version of Alabama author T. S.
Stribling's book “Birthright”
was released.
Feb. 1, 1927 – Poet Galway Kinnell
was born in Providence, R.I.
Feb. 1, 1928 – National Baseball
Hall of Fame infielder and manager Hughie Jennings died at the age of 58 in
Scranton, Pa. During his career, he played for the Louisville Colonels, the
Baltimore Orioles, the Brooklyn Superbas, the Philadelphia Phillies and the
Detroit Tigers and he went on to manage the Tigers and the New York Giants. He
was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1945.
Feb. 1, 1931 – Longtime railroad
employee William Dorsey Goodson of Evergreen, Ala. retired after 62 years of
work on the railroads. Born on Oct. 4, 1852, Goodson began his railroad career
on May 17, 1869 in Ft. Deposit as a laborer and apprentice foreman. In early
1879, he was promoted to section foreman on the Western of Alabama Railroad at
Lowndesboro Station. A few months later, he moved to Eufaula, where he served
as a section foreman with the Central of Georgia Railroad. In 1888, he was
promoted to supervisor of his division with headquarters at Union Springs. He
moved to Evergreen on March 15, 1890, where he worked for the next 41 years as
section foreman. (Asa Heaton, formerly of Searcy, replaced Goodson as section
foreman.) Goodson passed away on May 8, 1934 at the age of 81 and he’s buried
in the Old Evergreen Cemetery.
Feb. 1, 1935 - The football game played on the field in
Monroeville on this Friday afternoon between former high school and college
stars of Monroeville and those from Excel and Uriah resulted in a scoreless
tie. “A good crowd turned out to see this game which boasted a number of
players who were former outstanding athletes,” according to The Monroe Journal.
Feb. 1, 1944 –
Major League centerfielder Paul Blair was born in Cushing,
Okla. He would go on to play for the Baltimore Orioles, the New York Yankees
and the Cincinnati Reds.
Feb. 1, 1949 – NFL offensive lineman Dave Thompson was born
in Langdale, Ala. He went on to play for Valley High School in Fairfax, Ala.;
Clemson University, the Detroit Lions, the New Orleans Saints and the Tampa Bay
Bucs.
Feb. 1, 1952 – Conecuh County, Ala. voters had until this
day to pay their poll tax if they wanted to vote in that year’s elections. H.C.
Wiggins was Conecuh County Tax Collector at this time.
Feb. 1, 1956 - Autherine Lucy of
Birmingham, Ala. became the first African American to enroll at the University
of Alabama. Her stay at the school ended abruptly, however, as she was
suspended and then expelled amid campus unrest. Permanent integration of the
university would be delayed until 1963, when two black students enrolled the
day of Gov. George Wallace's "stand in the schoolhouse door."
Feb. 1, 1959 – Members of the Dyatlov Expedition started to move
through Dyatlov Pass. It seems they planned to get over the pass and make camp
for the next night on the opposite side, but because of worsening weather
conditions, snowstorms and decreasing visibility, they lost their direction and
deviated west, up towards the top of Kholat Syakhyl. When they realized their
mistake, the group decided to stop and set up camp there on the slope of the
mountain.
Feb. 1, 1962 - The National League released its first
162-game schedule.
Feb. 1, 1963 - Evergreen High School’s varsity boys
basketball team gained revenge for an earlier season defeat on this Friday
night when they whipped the W.S. Neal Blue Eagles, 62-47, in Evergreen, Ala.
Sid Lambert set the Aggies individual single game high point peak for the
season as he ripped the cords for 31 markers, half the Aggie scoring total.
Ronnie Jackson contributed 10 points to the winning cause. Ray Davis led Neal
with 24 points.
Feb. 1, 1964 - Flxible Southern Company of Loudonville,
Ohio began operations in Evergreen, Ala. after purchasing the assets of
Southern Coach & Body Co.
Feb. 1, 1964 – The Beatles had
their first number one hit in the United States with "I Want to Hold Your
Hand."
Feb. 1, 1964 - U.S. and South Vietnamese naval forces
initiated Operation Plan (Oplan) 34A, which called for raids by South
Vietnamese commandos, operating under American orders, against North Vietnamese
coastal and island installations.
Feb. 1, 1965 – B.E. Lee, who’d served seven years as principal at
Monroe County High School, was named the first president of the Monroeville
Junior College, which became Patrick Henry Junior College a short time later.
Feb. 1, 1968 - Vince Lombardi resigned as the coach of
the Green Bay Packers.
Feb. 1, 1968 – During the Vietnam War, the execution of
Viet Cong officer Nguyễn Văn Lém by South Vietnamese National Police Chief
Nguyễn Ngọc Loan was videotaped and photographed by Eddie Adams. This image
helped build opposition to the Vietnam War.
Feb. 1, 1968 – During the Vietnam War, Richard M. Nixon
announced his candidacy for the presidency.
Feb. 1, 1968 – Marine Cpl. John Wesley Winter, 20, of Brewton, Ala. was
killed in action in Vietnam. Born on Nov. 20, 1947, he was a member of Co.
G 5th Marine Battalion, 1st Marine Division. He was buried in Union Cemetery in
Brewton.
Feb. 1, 1972 - Monroeville’s Charlie Company of the 156th
Military Police Battalion (Army) retired its colors due to a massive
reorganization of the Alabama Army National Guard. Replacing C Co. at Fort
Short Millsap was Det. 2, 778th Maintenance Co. (Rear-DS). The
headquarters part of the company was to be located at Jackson, with the towns
of Evergreen, Fairhope and Monroeville making up the remaining parts of the
company. Sgt. George B. Singleton was to remain in charge of the Monroeville
detachment.
Feb. 1, 1984 - Weather observer Earl Windham reported a low
of 24 degrees in Evergreen, Ala.
Feb. 1, 1984 - Alvin Howard Dees, 75, of Evergreen, Ala.
died on this Wednesday in a local hospital. A native of Escambia County, the
son of the late Stephen and Lucy Robinson Dees, he was manager of Jay Villa
Plantation for 41 years. He was born Aug. 14, 1908. He was buried in Magnolia
Cemetery in Evergreen.
Feb. 1, 1985 - Weather observer Earl Windham reported 1.92
inches of rain in Evergreen on this day.
Feb. 1, 1985 - The Evergreen Chamber of Commerce held a
“highly successful” promotion banquet on this Friday night at the Holiday Inn.
A total of 127 business and professional people heard a dynamic talk by Don
Collins, president of Collins Industries of Hutchinson, Kansas, owner of
Transi-Corp. of Evergreen. Collins was introduced by Keith Holcombe, manager of
Transi-Corp., who also gave a report on the local plant. Commission Chairman
David Burt spoke for the county, and Mayor Pat Poole for the City of Evergreen.
Mrs. Willene Whatley, president, reported on a most successful year for the
Chamber of Commerce. Highlight of the year was Evergreen’s being named a
Prepared City by the Alabama Development Office. Whatley was re-elected
president. Also re-elected were Jimmy Bell, vice-president, and Mrs. Mamie Jo
Lambert, treasurer. Mrs. Dorothy Sargeant was re-appointed secretary.
Feb. 1, 1992 - Barry Bonds signed the highest single
season contract, which amounted to $4.7 million.
Feb. 1, 2003 - The space shuttle
Columbia broke up while reentering Earth's atmosphere. All seven crew members
were killed.
Feb. 1, 2004 – Janet Jackson's
breast was exposed during the half-time show of Super Bowl XXXVIII, resulting
in U.S. broadcasters adopting a stronger adherence to Federal Communications
Commission censorship guidelines.
Feb. 1, 2007 - Alabama author W. L.
Heath died in Guntersville, Ala.
Feb. 1, 2008 - The Aruban prosecutor's office reopened
the case into the disappearance of Natalee Holloway, 18, of Mountain Brook,
Ala. after receiving video footage of Joran van der Sloot, under the influence
of marijuana, saying that Holloway died on the morning of May 30, 2005, and
that he disposed of her body.
Feb. 1, 2010 - At their meeting on this Monday night, the
Excel Planning Commission accepted an application to rezone a piece of property
for the proposed site of a Dollar General store, and a public hearing was set
for Feb. 18. Linda Albritton requested her two parcels of property – an open
lot and a lot with a residence on it on the southwest corner of Alabama Highway
136 and Third Street – be changed from residential (R-1) to business (B-1).
Planning Commission Chairman Gary Cole said all the documentation for the
application, including a letter of intent naming the purpose of the rezoning,
was in order, and the group agreed unanimously to take the application.
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