Noble Leslie DeVotie |
Feb. 12, 1502 – Vasco da Gama set sail from Lisbon,
Portugal, on his second voyage to India.
Feb. 12, 1630 – English explorer and author Fynes Moryson
died in England at the age of 63 or 64.
Feb. 12, 1733 – Englishman James Oglethorpe founded Georgia,
the 13th colony of the Thirteen Colonies, and its first city at Savannah.
Feb. 12, 1776 - British Major General Sir Henry Clinton
departed New York en route to Cape Fear, N.C.
Feb. 12, 1778 - Connecticut became the fifth state to ratify
the Articles of Confederation.
Feb. 12, 1789 – American Revolutionary War leader Ethan
Allen, the patriotic leader of the Green Mountain Boys, died of a stroke at the
age of 52 on his farm near the Winooski River in Vermont.
Feb. 12, 1793 - Congress passed the
first fugitive slave law, requiring all states, including those that forbid
slavery, to forcibly return slaves who have escaped from other states to their
original owners. The laws stated that “no person held to service of labor in
one state, under the laws thereof, escaping into another, shall, in consequence
of any law or regulation therein, be discharged from such labor or service or
labor, but shall be delivered up on claim of the party to whom such service or
labor may be due.”
Feb. 12, 1809 - Abraham Lincoln, the 16th President of the
United States, was born in a log cabin at Sinking Spring Farm, near
Hodgenville, Kentucky.
Feb. 12, 1809 – Charles Darwin was born in Shrewsbury,
Shropshire, England.
Feb. 12, 1823 - Founded after Spain relinquished Florida to the United States in 1821, the Town of Micanopy became the first American town in this new territory. Hernando De Soto encountered an early Timucua Village there in 1539 and Pennsylvania botanist William Bartram visited a Cuscowilla village there in 1774. Micanopy was included in a land grant made by the King of Spain in 1817 to Don Fernando del la Maza Arrendondo of Havana and St. Augustine. A select group of settlers and skilled craftsmen from New York disembarked on the banks of the St. Johns River (present-day Palatka) and with 15 slaves, they forged a 45-mile road with eight bridges, and arrived on this day in Micanopy. These first settlers made contact with the Seminole and Miccosukee, as well as the black descendants of runaway slaves who resided among them. This period was one of relative peace.
Feb. 12, 1825 - In 1823, Coweta headman William McIntosh built a hotel on his Indian Springs property. This was where he signed the second Treaty of Indian Springs on this day, which ceded 4.7 million acres of Lower Creek land in Georgia and a large tract in Alabama to the federal government, agreeing to vacate by Sept. 1 1826. “The white tide rises,” he explained, “we can’t fight or stop it and if we don’t sell, we will be cast aside, homeless and treated like animals without any place to go.” McIntosh signed the treaty in exchange for a plantation on the Chattahoochee River, $200,000, and land in present-day Oklahoma. Most Creek were overwhelmingly opposed to the land cession, and the sale of land without the approval of the Creek National Council was punishable by death under Creek law.
Feb. 12, 1825 – Creek Indians ceded the last of their lands
in Georgia to the United States government by the Treaty of Indian Springs and
migrated west.
Feb. 12, 1828 - Confederate General Robert Ransom Jr. was
born in Warren County, North Carolina. During the Civil War, he fought at
Chickamauga and the Knoxville campaign before returning to command the Richmond
defenses in 1864. He commanded a force that faced Union General Benjamin Butler
southeast of the city, and his leadership helped bottle Butler's force inside
of a bend in the James River called the Bermuda Hundred.
Feb. 12, 1836 - Santa Anna with an army of about 6,000 crossed the Rio Grande to crush the rebellion in Texas. He ordered General Jose Urrea to move from Matamoros against Texas forces stationed at San Patricio and Goliad, while he led the main army directly to San Antonio.
Feb. 12, 1840 – American Revolutionary War soldier Patrick
Norris passed away in Greene County, Ala. One of the founders of the Greensboro
Presbyterian Church in Hale County, Norris served as a private in the South
Carolina militia.
Feb. 12, 1842 - In a skirmish with Seminoles in the Wahoo Swamp, one soldier from Co. H, 8th Infantry, led by 1st Lt. P. Smirsh, was killed and another was injured.
Feb. 12, 1850 – A bill passed the Alabama legislature
incorporating the Conecuh Navigation Co., a final effort to secure steam
navigation between Brooklyn, Ala. and Pensacola, Fla. The company was headed by
J.W. Etheridge, H.L. Stearns, J.H. McCreary, C. Johns, Benjamin Hart, A.
Perryman “and their associates.” The company was charged with the
responsibility of providing the operation of steamboats between Montezuma on
the Conecuh River and Brooklyn on the Sepulga.
Feb. 12, 1850 – Winston County was created by the Alabama
legislature from lands formerly held by Walker County.
Feb. 12, 1861 – During the Civil
War, at Napoleon, Ark., the U.S. Ordnance Depot was seized by Arkansas state
troops.
Feb. 12, 1861 – Noble Leslie
DeVotie, the first Alabama soldier to die in the Civil War, drowned while on
duty as chaplain of Alabama troops at Fort Morgan. Before enlisting, he was
pastor of Selma Baptist Church. He was 23 years old at the time of his death.
DeVotie graduated in 1856 from the University of Alabama; Presbyterian
Theological Seminary at Princeton in 1859. In 1856, at the University of Alabama,
he was chief founder of Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity, the only national
social fraternity founded in the Deep South.
Feb. 12, 1861 – The Wilcox True
Blues, about 100 men strong, left Wilcox County with I.G.W. Steadman as captain
and traveled to Pensacola, Fla. Formed in early February 1861 by men from
eastern Wilcox County, this company of volunteers before the end of February
was mustered into the First Alabama Infantry Regiment as Co. B. At the time of
their organization, Steadman was elected colonel of the 1st Alabama,
and David Wardlow Ramsey became captain of the True Blues. (Men of Wilcox)
Feb. 12, 1862 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought at Springfield, Mo.; at Edenton, N.C.; and in the
vicinity of Moorefield, West Va.
Feb. 12, 1862 – During the Civil
War, the siege that would eventually lead to the capture of Fort Donelson,
Tenn. began. U. S. Grant’s Federal army, under the command of General
McClernand, was on this day arrayed on the hills around the west side of Ft.
Donelson. The delay was caused by the fact that the gunboats, which had left
Ft. Henry at the same time as the army, had to travel about eight times further
to arrive. Although the Confederate defenders could still enter and exit the
fort to the east, it was in fact under siege.
Feb. 12, 1863 – During the Civil
War, a 16-day Federal operation on Bayou Plaquemine and the Atchafalaya River
in Louisiana began.
Feb. 12, 1863 – During the Civil
War, the USS Queen of the West, although unsuccessful as a ram ship during the
previous week in front of Vicksburg, Miss., was still an implacable hunter on
the waters and tributaries of the Mississippi. On this day, she took a jaunt up
the Red River. Her commander, Col. C.R. Ellet, took a landing party as far as
the Atchafalaya, where he came upon a Confederate wagon train. The 12 wagons
were destroyed, along with 70 barrels of beef, ammunition and stores from
another train.
Feb. 12, 1863 – During the Civil
War, a two-day Federal reconnaissance from Batchelder’s Creek began. Skirmishes
were also fought at Sandy Ridge, N.C.; at Bolivar, Tenn. and near Smithfield
and Charlestown in West Virginia.
Feb. 12, 1863 – During the Civil
War, a three-day Federal operation began from Belle Plain, aboard the steamer,
Edwin Lewis, to Mattox Creek, Currioman, and Momini Bays in Virginia. A Federal
expedition began from Pratt’s Landing, aboard the steamer, Alice Price, down
the Potomac to the Coan River and Heatherville in Virginia.
Feb. 12, 1864 – During the Civil
War, an eight-day Federal operation began in the vicinity of Batesville, Ark.
Skirmishes were fought at Caddo Gap, Ark.; at Holly Springs and Wall Hill in
Mississippi; near Marion Station, north of Meridian, Miss.; near California
House and Macon in Missouri; in Overton County, Tenn.; at Rock House, West Va.
Feb. 12, 1864 – John McGee Parkman, a local banker,
purchased Sturdivant Hall in Selma, Ala. from Edward Watts.
Feb. 12, 1865 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought 20 miles north of Lewisburg, Ark.; near Columbia
and at Macon in Missouri; and along the North Edisto River in South Carolina.
An eight-day Federal operation began between Fort Riley and Fort Larned in
Kansas.
Feb. 12, 1865 – During the Civil War, a skirmish occurred at
Waterloo in Lauderdale County, Ala.
Feb. 12, 1865 - The Rev. Dr. Henry
Highland Garnet, the first African American to address the U.S. House of
Representatives, delivered a sermon to a crowded House chamber. His sermon
commemorated the victories of the Union army and the deliverance of the country
from slavery. Garnet, a former slave himself, was a pastor of the 15th Street
Presbyterian Church in Washington, D.C. President Abraham Lincoln, with the
unanimous consent of his Cabinet and the two congressional chaplains, had
arranged for the special Sunday service to be held on February 12, the
president’s 56th birthday.
Feb. 12, 1869 – Vietnamese emperor Kiến Phúc was born.
Feb. 12, 1870 – Prominent Conecuh County, Ala. farmer, state
senator, state representative, William Adam Ashley, age 47, died at his home at
Hampden Ridge. Born on Feb. 1, 1823, he was buried in the Ashley-Anderson
Family Cemetery in Evergreen.
Feb. 12, 1876 – Future Evergreen Courant editor and
publisher Lamar W. Matkin was born in Red River County, Texas. An 1894 graduate
of the Marengo Military Academy in Demopolis, he bought The Marengo Democrat
and The Linden Reporter and combined those two papers. He later worked for The
Montgomery Reporter and bought The Evergreen Courant on June 9, 1924. He was
also a member of Greening Lodge No. 53 in Evergreen.
Feb. 12, 1878 - Frederick W. Thayer patented the baseball
catcher’s mask.
Feb. 12, 1885 – Six inches of snow fell in Monroeville, Ala.
Feb. 12, 1886 – The Monroe Journal reported that Mr. M.M.
Graham had been appointed Superintendent of Education of Monroe County and that
his bond had been filed.
Feb. 12, 1886 – The Monroe Journal reported that the Monroe
County Jail contained only three prisoners.
Feb. 12, 1892 - President Abraham Lincoln's birthday was
declared to be a national holiday.
Feb. 12, 1903 – National Baseball Hall of Fame outfielder
Chick Hafey was born in Berkeley, Calif. During his career, he played for the
St. Louis Cardinals and the Cincinnati Reds. He was inducted into the Hall of
Fame in 1971.
Feb. 12, 1906 – Colin Falkenberry, who was believed to have
been in his 90s, burned to death in a house fire on this Monday night at Tunnel
Springs, Ala. Falkenberry lived in a small house in the yard behind his son’s
house, and he was known to get up at all hours of the night, light a fire and
sit by it until he became drowsy. His family woke up in the middle of the night
on this night to find the house “in flames and the roof falling in.” The house
was so far gone that it was impossible to get inside to rescue Falkenberry.
Also, it was “only by the most heroic efforts of neighbors” that the son’s
dwelling was saved from the fire.
Feb. 12, 1906 - The first regular term of the Monroe County
Commissioners Court for 1906 convened on this Monday with all members of the
board in attendance.
Feb. 12, 1908 - The Great Car Race from New York to Paris
began.
Feb. 12, 1909 – The National Association for the Advancement
of Colored People (NAACP) was founded.
Feb. 12, 1911 – The Elba United Methodist Church in Coffee
County, Ala. officially opened.
Feb. 12, 1915 - The cornerstone of the Lincoln Memorial was
laid in Washington, D.C.
Feb. 12, 1915 - One of the biggest
air raids of World War I occurred on this day when 34 planes from the British
Naval Wing attacked the German-occupied coastal towns of Blankenberghe, Ostend
and Zeebrugge in Belgium.
Feb. 12, 1915 - Lorne Greene, the actor who played Ben Cartwright on the immensely popular television Western “Bonanza,” was born in Ontario, Canada.
Feb. 12, 1917 – Major League Baseball centerfielder Dom
DiMaggio was born in San Francisco, Calif. The brother of baseball legend Joe
DiMaggio, Dom played his entire 11-year career for the Boston Red Sox.
Feb. 12, 1917 - On this day, the
Austrian submarine U-35
bombed and sank the American schooner Lyman M. Law in the Mediterranean Sea
off the coast of Cagliari, Sardinia.
Feb. 12, 1924 - U.S. President Calvin Coolidge made the
first presidential political speech on radio.
Feb. 12, 1924 – George Gershwin's “Rhapsody in Blue” received its premiere in a concert titled
"An Experiment in Modern Music," in Aeolian Hall, New York, by Paul
Whiteman and his band, with Gershwin playing the piano.
Feb. 12, 1926 – Major League Baseball catcher Joe Garagiola
was born in St. Louis, Mo. He went on to play for the St. Louis Cardinals, the
Pittsburgh Pirates, the Chicago Cubs and the New York Giants.
Feb. 12, 1938 – Children’s author Judy Blume was born in
Elizabeth, N.J.
Feb. 12, 1940 - Mutual Radio presented the first broadcast
of the radio play "The Adventures of Superman."
Feb. 12, 1941 – Japanese mountaineer and explorer Naomi
Uemura was born in Hidaka, now part of Toyooka, Hyōgo, Japan.
Feb. 12, 1942 – Monroe County High School and Excel were
scheduled to play each other in basketball on this Thursday night at 7:30 p.m.
at the Monroe County High School auditorium.
Feb. 12, 1947 – The largest observed iron meteorite until
that time created an impact crater in Sikhote-Alin in the Soviet Union.
Feb. 12, 1948 – The Monroe Journal reported that Coach E.H.
Penny had resigned from the faculty of Monroe County High School to accept the
head coaching position at Atmore High School. Head athletic coach at MCHS for
the previous 2-1/2 years, he came to Monroeville in November 1945, following
service in the Navy, and subsequently produced winning teams in both basketball
and football. In two seasons of football coaching, he established a record of
14 games won against five defeats, while his basketball teams of 1946 and 1947
lost a total of only three games.
Feb. 12, 1960 – Georgiana High School’s varsity boys
basketball team beat Evergreen, 50-39. Bateman led Evergreen with 16 points,
and Mixon led Georgiana with 22 points.
Feb. 12, 1963 – Construction began on the Gateway Arch in
St. Louis, Mo.
Feb. 12, 1963 - The City of Monroeville placed the order for
a new fire truck at a regular meeting of the City Council on this Tuesday
night. The contract for the fire equipment was awarded to L.P. Harless Co. of
Birmingham at a price of $7,281, the low bid. The new tank was to hold 500
gallons, with a pump capable of pumping 500 gallons per minute.
Feb. 12, 1968 – Adventurer and hiker Christopher McCandless
was born in El
Segundo, California.
Feb. 12, 1970 – The Evergreen Courant reported that
Evergreen High School basketball player John Earl Skipper was ranked fifth in
the South Alabama Conference’s scoring standings. In 15 games, he had scored
308 total points, an average of 20.5 points per game.
Feb. 12, 1972 - About 6,000
Cambodian troops launched a major operation to wrestle the religious center of
Angkor Wat from 4,000 North Vietnamese troops entrenched around the famous
Buddhist temple complex, which had been seized in June 1970.
Feb. 12, 1973 - The release of U.S.
POWs began in Hanoi as part of the Paris peace settlement.
Feb. 12, 1978 - Groundbreaking ceremonies for the expansion
of Old Salem Baptist Church in Mexia were held on this Sunday. Those present at
the ceremonies were the Rev. Ed Womack and his wife, Mr. and Mrs. Leroy
Coleman, Mrs. Bartow Lloyd, Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Brown, Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur
Sawyer, Mrs. Wallace Nettles, Mrs. Laura Sheffield, Dania Womack, Tammy Womack,
James Sheffield, Calvin Lovitt and Roland Sheffield.
Feb. 12, 1979 – Future college and NFL wide receiver and
punt returner Antonio Chatman was born in Jackson, Ala. He attended Susan
Miller Dorsey High School in Los Angeles, El Camino College and the University
of Cincinnati. He later went on to play for the Green Bay Packers and the
Cincinnati Bengals.
Feb. 12, 1993 - U.S. Rep. Sonny Callahan, R-Mobile, was
scheduled to speak during the Monroeville Kiwanis Club’s weekly luncheon meeting
at noon on this Friday at the Vanity Fair Golf & Tennis Club in
Monroeville, Ala.
Feb. 12, 1994 - Art thieves stole the iconic painting “The
Scream” from an Oslo museum.
Feb. 12, 1999 – The Thomasville (Ala.) Historic District
added to the National Register of Historic Places. The historic district is
centered on the old business district and is roughly bounded by U.S. Highway
43, West Front Street, Wilson Street, and West Third Street.
Fe. 12, 2000 – Pro Football Hall of Fame coach Tom Landry
died at the age of 75 in Dallas, Texas. He coached the Dallas Cowboys from 1960
to 1988. He was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1990.
Feb. 12, 2001 - NEAR Shoemaker became the first spacecraft
to land on an asteroid.
Feb. 12, 2002 - Baseball owners approved the sale of the
Florida Marlins and Montreal Expos.
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