Air Force T-28 training plane. |
Feb. 13, 1633 – Galileo Galilei was brought to Rome to face
charges of heresy after arguing with the Roman Catholic Church for some time
about astronomical matters.
Feb. 13, 1741 - "The American Magazine," the first
magazine in the U.S., was published in Philadelphia, Pa.
Feb. 13, 1743 - The Schaghticoke were
an Eastern Woodlands tribe consisting of Mahican, Potatuck, Weantinock, Tunxis,
Podunk and their descendants. Sachem Mahwee was baptized on this day by
Moravian missionaries, who had built a church and school at the Schaghticoke
village.
Feb. 13, 1776 - Patrick Henry was named the colonel of the
First Virginia battalion in defense of the state’s supply of gunpowder.
Feb. 13, 1796 - The Yazoo land
fraud was one of the most significant events in the history of Georgia.
Governor Jared Irwin signed a bill on this day rescinding the Yazoo Land Act.
It took six years and a landmark Supreme Court ruling for the State of Georgia
to settle claims resulting from this legislation.
Feb. 13, 1801 - The Federalist Congress passed the Judiciary
Act.
Feb. 13, 1818 – Conecuh County, Ala. was established, formed
out of what was Monroe County by an act of the legislature. Conecuh County
originally included all of south Alabama east of its present Western boundary
line and south of the line of Lowndes and as far east as the Chattahoochee
River.
Feb. 13, 1818 – In the Alabama territorial capital of St.
Stephens, a commission was formed to select a site for the future state
capital.
Feb. 13, 1818 - Fort Early was
built by General Blackshear during the war of 1812. General Andrew Jackson and
his army arrived at the fort on this day and used it in the campaign against
the Seminole of Florida and the Creek of Georgia.
Feb. 13, 1819 - Instead of
proceeding to take command of the troops in Georgia, Jackson sent out a call
for Tennessee volunteers. The general was acting on his own "in disregard
of positive orders" according to the Lacock report to the Senate that
month. The advance guard of Jackson's reinforcements set up camp on this day on
the bank of Big Creek, about four miles from Hartford, Georgia.
Feb. 13, 1822 - Missouri Lieutenant
Governor William Ashley placed an advertisement in the Missouri Gazette and Public Advisor, seeking 100 “enterprising
young men” to engage in fur trading on the Upper Missouri.
Feb. 13, 1831 - Union General John Rawlins was born in
Galena, Illinois. Rawlins was a close personal aide to General Ulysses S. Grant
and was reported to have kept Grant from drinking heavily during the war.
Rawlins was Grant’s principal staff officer throughout the war, and Grant said
that Rawlins was nearly indispensable.
Feb. 13, 1836 - Major General
Edmund P. Gaines arrived at Fort Brooke on Feb. 9. He left on this day with 980
soldiers, mainly volunteers from Louisiana and Florida, and a detachment of a
few men from Fort King. This was the first force to arrive at the Dade Massacre
site.
Feb. 13, 1839 - Thirty-one Seminoles
and two slaves left Florida in November 1838 and arrived on this day at Fort
Gibson.
Feb. 13, 1842 – Confederate soldier Hugh Ellis Courtney was
born in Mississippi. He enlisted at Pineville in Monroe County, Ala. on March
15, 1861 and re-enlisted on May 13, 1861. He was listed as sick at Hugunot
Springs on July 15, 1861 and was wounded at Chancellorsville on May 2, 1863. He
was admitted to the 2nd Div. Ala. General Hospital at Richmond on June 6, 1863
and was listed as a prisoner of war at the Wilderness on May 5, 1864 before being
forwarded to Point Lookout, Md. on May 18, 1864 and to Elmira Prison, N.Y. on
Aug. 15, 1864. He took the Oath of Allegiance on April 30, 1865 and stated that
he desired to “return to Bells Landing, where his relatives resides.” He was
paroled on June 14, 1865. He was almost 5-8 with a fair complexion, auburn hair
and blue eyes. Courtney died in Montgomery on Feb. 22, 1939 and was buried in
Pine Crest Cemetery in Mobile.
Feb. 13, 1854 – The Belleville Male and Female Academy in
Conecuh County, Ala. was incorporated by the Alabama legislature. The original
trustees were John L. Shaw, President; J.P. Robbins, J.R. Hawthorne, T.W.
Simpson and William Simpson.
Feb. 13, 1861 - Robert E. Lee was ordered to return to
Washington from Fort Mason to assume command of the Union Army. Instead, Lee
resigned his commission and in June of 1862 assumed command of the Confederate
Army.
Feb. 13, 1861 - The earliest
military action to be revered with a Medal of Honor award was performed by
Colonel Bernard J.D. Irwin, an assistant army surgeon serving in the first
major U.S.-Apache conflict. Near Apache Pass, in southeastern Arizona, Irwin,
an Irish-born doctor, volunteered to go to the rescue of Second Lieutenant
George N. Bascom, who was trapped with 60 men of the U.S. Seventh Infantry by
the Chiricahua Apaches. Irwin and 14 men, initially without horses, began the
100-mile trek to Bascom’s forces riding on mules. After fighting and capturing
Apaches along the way and recovering stolen horses and cattle, they reached Bascom’s
forces on Feb. 14 and proved instrumental in breaking the siege. Although
Irwin’s bravery in this conflict was the earliest Medal of Honor action, the
award itself was not created until 1862, and it was not until Jan. 21, 1894
that Irwin received the nation’s highest military honor.
Feb. 13, 1862 - Union Brigadier General John McClernand, one
of General Ulysses S. Grant's officers, initiated the battle of Fort Donelson
when he tried to capture a Rebel battery along the outerworks of Fort Donelson.
The attack was unsuccessful. Grant captured the fort on Feb. 16.
Feb. 13, 1862 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought near Fort Heiman, Ky. and at Blooming Gap, Va.
Federal forces occupied Springfield, Mo. Confederate Brig. Gen. John Buchanan
Floyd assumed command at Fort Donelson, Tenn., while Federal troops under Brig
Gen. John Alexander McClernand and Brig Gen Charles Ferguson Smith began their
attack, along with the USS Carondelet.
Feb. 13, 1863 – During the Civil
War, a skirmish was fought in the vicinity of Washington, N.C. A two-day
Federal expedition began from La Grange, Tenn. to Mount Pleasant and Lamar,
Miss. Federal naval operations began on the Mississippi River near Vicksburg,
Miss. The USS Indianola successfully passed the Vicksburg batteries.
Feb. 13, 1864 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought at Pease Creek and at Gainesville, Fla.; at Wyatt
and between Meridian and the Chunky River, Miss.; in Frentress County, Tenn.;
and at Brentsville, Va. Gainesville, Fla. was occupied by Federal forces, and
Federal forces approached Meridian, Miss. Federal reconnaissance began in the
vicinity of Knoxville, Tenn.
Feb. 13, 1864 - A Civil War battle
took place on this day at Middle Boggy Depot in Indian Territory (present-day Atoka
County, Oklahoma). Union forces under Major Charles Willette surprised
Confederate forces under Lieutenant Colonel John Jumper. Jumper commanded
members of the Seminole Battalion Co. A, the First Choctaw, the Chickasaw
Cavalry Regiment, and a detachment of the 20th Texas Regiment. The Union forces
won the fight.
Feb. 13, 1864 – 59TH ALABAMA: General Longstreet
ordered the regiment to march into Knoxville on a full-scale foraging party.
Feb. 13, 1865 – During the Civil War, a skirmish occurred at
Station Four near Pensacola, Fla.
Feb. 13, 1865 – During the Civil
War, a skirmish was fought in Mississippi County, Mo. A five-day Federal
operation began from Winchester to Strasburg, Edenburg and Little Fort Valley
in Virginia.
Feb. 13, 1866 - On Fat Tuesday, Confederate veteran Joe Cain
paraded through the streets of federal-occupied Mobile dressed as a Chickasaw
Indian chief he dubbed "Slackabamorinico." The antics of "Chief
Slac" marked the first public celebration of Mardi Gras in Mobile since
the start of the Civil War, and led to larger, more formalized festivities the
next year. Joe Cain Day is observed annually in Mobile on the Sunday before
Mardi Gras.
Feb. 13, 1870 – True-crime writer William Roughead was born
in Edinburgh, Scotland.
Feb. 13, 1885 – Brewton, Ala. was officially incorporated as
a municipality.
Feb. 13, 1891 – Landscape painter Grant Wood, who is best
known for the iconic 1930 portrait “American Gothic,” was born near Anamosa,
Iowa.
Feb. 13, 1895 – Former University of Alabama President
Landon Garland passed away at the age of 84 on Feb. 13, 1895 in Nashville,
Tenn. and was buried in the Vanderbilt University Divinity Cemetery. A native
of Nelson County, he served as the University’s president from 1855 to 1865.
Feb. 13, 1896 – The Monroe Journal reported that the Masonic
fraternity had purchased a suitable lot in Montgomery and planned to begin the
erection of a handsome Masonic temple and state home for Masons.
Feb. 13, 1896 – The Monroe Journal reported that heavy rains
during the previous week washed up the railroad bridge across Murder Creek, and
trains were discontinued for 48 hours.
Feb. 13, 1903 – Belgian mystery writer Georges Simenon was
born in Liege.
Feb. 13, 1905 - President Theodore Roosevelt delivered a
stirring speech to the New York City Republican Club. Roosevelt had just won
his second reelection, and in this speech, he discussed the country’s current
state of race relations and his plan for improving them.
Feb. 13, 1915 – At Canoe, Ala., Escambia County Sheriffs
captured Andrew Simmons, a Conecuh County convict who’d escaped off a county
road crew. Also arrested for helping Simmons escape were Bestor Lewis, Tom
White and Laura Smith. Lewis and White helped steal a horse and buggy from R.M.
Rabon in Castleberry, and Smith gave Simmons clothes to replace his “striped
convict garb.”
Feb. 13, 1917 - Riley Kelly of Excel transacted business in
Monroeville on this Tuesday.
Feb. 13, 1920 - The National Negro Baseball League was
organized.
Feb. 13, 1920 - The League of
Nations, the international organization formed at the peace conference at
Versailles in the wake of World War I, recognized the perpetual neutrality of
Switzerland.
Feb. 13, 1923 – Chuck Yeager, the first
man to travel faster than the speed of sound, was born in Myra, West Virginia.
Feb. 13, 1928 - A movie version of Alabama author Octavus
Roy Cohen's book “The Prince and the Papa”
was released.
Feb. 13, 1930 – The Monroe Journal reported that the
foundation was being laid for the steel tower and water tank to be erected by
the local water company, some 20 men being employed on the project. The large
water mains were to be laid from the plant around the square and six-inch mains
were to be used on the street lines. Approximately three cars of sand and
gravel were used in the foundation piers for the tank which would be 100 feet
above the ground with a capacity of 100,000 gallons.
Feb. 13, 1930 – The Monroe Journal reported, under the
headline “MOTHER AND SON BURIED SAME DAY,” that Mr. A.B. Mason died at the
family home at Uriah on Thursday morning, Feb. 6, following an illness of only
a few days. As preparations were being made for the funeral on Friday morning,
Feb. 7, his mother, Mrs. Thomas Mason died. They were laid to rest in the
cemetery at Uriah on Saturday morning, Feb. 8.
Feb. 13, 1930 – The Monroe Journal reported that Miss Jennie
Faulk had “returned from a successful market season at Atlanta.”
Feb. 13, 1930 – The Monroe Journal reported that Lucian
Jones was a business visitor to Pensacola during the previous week.
Feb. 13, 1937 - The NFL's Boston Redskins moved to
Washington.
Feb. 13, 1943 – Religious historian
Elaine Pagels was born in Palo Alto, Calif.
Feb. 13, 1947 – A fire of unknown origin broke out in the
rear of the A&P Store on East Front Street in Evergreen, Ala. about 3 a.m.
and did considerable damage to the building and virtually destroyed the large
stock of groceries.
Feb. 13, 1949 - An Ecuadoran mob burned down a radio station
following their broadcast of “War of the Worlds.”
Feb. 13, 1953 - The Oakland Athletics changed the name of
Shibe Park to Connie Mack Stadium. The change was in honor of their longtime
owner and manager.
Feb. 13, 1961 – The missing Air Force T-28 training plane
flown by Ecuardorian pilot Carlos R. Jalil was found by a helicopter from Moody
Air Force Base in Valdosta, Ga. Jalil, a foreign pilot receiving Air Force
flight training, was killed in the crash, and Civil Air Patrol units from
Alabama (including Evergreen), Georgia and Florida took part in the search for
Jalil’s plane. This search was the Evergreen CAP unit’s first opportunity to
use its newly assigned plane, which was piloted by 2nd Lt. G.D. McKenzie.
McKenzie was accompanied by observers Capt. Lee F. Smith, 1st Lt. David E.
McKenzie and 2nd Lt. R.V. McClendon.
Feb. 13, 1961 – An allegedly 500,000-year-old rock was
discovered near Olancha, California that appeared to anachronistically encase a
spark plug.
Feb. 13, 1965 - President Lyndon B.
Johnson decided to undertake the sustained bombing of North Vietnam that he and
his advisers had been contemplating for a year.
Feb. 13, 1968 - As an emergency
measure in response to the 1968 communist Tet Offensive, Secretary of Defense
Robert McNamara approved the deployment of 10,500 troops to cope with threats
of a second offensive.
Feb. 13, 1969 – The Evergreen Courant reported that
Marine Corps Pfc. Joseph S. Ward was in Okinawa en route to Vietnam. He entered
the Marine Corps on July 2, 1968 and left for California in January 1969. Ward
was the son of Richard Ward of Evergreen, Ala. and Mrs. James V. Hawsey of
McKenzie. He attended Lyeffion High School.
Feb. 13, 1970 – Lyeffion High School held its annual
football banquet at the school, and Coach Baccum of Mississippi State was the
guest speaker.
Feb. 13, 1975 - James E. Nettles Sr., 78, died on this
Thursday in a Monroeville, Ala. nursing home after a long illness. Nettles was
a longtime resident of Repton and represented Conecuh County in the State House
of Representatives in the 1940s. Born on Jan. 18, 1897, he was buried in Excel
Cemetery.
Feb. 13, 1976 – In their regular season finale, Sparta
Academy’s varsity boys basketball team “pulled the upset of the year” by
beating previously unbeaten Wilcox Academy, 46-45, in overtime in Camden.
Ronnie Pugh led Sparta with 18 points, and Sparta finished the regular season
with an 18-6 overall record.
Feb. 13, 1977 – NFL wide receiver Randy Moss was born in
Charleston, West Virginia. He would go on to play for Marshall, the Minnesota
Vikings, the Oakland Raiders, the New England Patriots, the Tennessee Titans
and the San Francisco 49ers.
Feb. 13, 1978 - Gladys Mae Jones, 68, well-known resident
of the Fairview community, was killed in a two-car collision in Evergreen on
this Monday afternoon. Jones, who worked with the Conecuh County Pensions &
Security Dept., was driving alone in her car when it was involved in a
collision with a car driven by Huly Davis, also alone, a teacher at Nichburg
School. The accident occurred on Rural Street at the intersection of the then
new bypass from Highway 31 South to Highway 83 North. Jones was killed
instantly. Jones was a native of Belleville and a member of a prominent,
pioneer county family. She was well known and enjoyed the love and esteem of
her family and a wide circle of friends, according to The Evergreen Courant.
Feb. 13, 1984 - Monroe Academy’s boys varsity basketball
team rallied from an 11-point deficit to upend Jackson Academy, 72-69, on this
Monday in the first round of the Alabama Private School Athletic Association
state basketball tournament. Individual efforts of juniors Michael McCrory and
Hudson Hines keyed the District 3 runners-up’s upset win over the 19-3 District
2 champs in Jackson. McCrory scored 25 points and pulled down six rebounds.
Hines came through with a clutch performance, scoring 23 points.
Feb. 13, 1989 - Alabama author Everette Maddox died in New
Orleans, La.
Feb. 13, 1991 – During the Gulf War, two laser-guided
"smart bombs" destroyed the Amiriyah shelter in Baghdad. Allied
forces said the bunker was being used as a military communications outpost, but
over 400 Iraqi civilians inside were killed.
Feb. 13, 2001 – The Sarasota County, Fla. Sheriff’s office
released two remarkable photos of a mysterious creature that had been taken by
an elderly woman who sighted an apelike entity in her back yard. For two
nights, the large hairy monster had made strange noises, emitted a strong odor
and snitched apples from her back porch. On the third night, she managed to
take two photographs of the creature that her husband thought looked something
like an orangutan.
Feb. 13, 2002 - In Alexandria, Va., John Walker Lindh pled
innocent to a 10-count federal indictment. He was charged with conspiring to
kill Americans and aiding Osama bin Laden's terrorist network.
Feb. 13-14, 2003 - Sparta Academy’s boys and girls
basketball teams won the West Region 1 Area 1 Tournament held on this Thursday
and Friday at Sparta. Named to the all-tournament team were Ashton Garner,
Perry Castleberry, Callie Ezell and Chris Garner. Katie Etheridge and Wiley Cobb
were named Tournament MVP.
Feb. 13, 2003 - Bill O’Conner told those present for the
annual Chamber Banquet on this Thursday night that Evergreen and Conecuh County
had everything they needed to bring industry and growth to the area. He said he
would not be surprised to see Evergreen explode with growth in the next few
years.
Feb. 13, 2004 - Astronomers announced the discovery of a
huge diamond-like object in the galaxy, a pulsating white dwarf star, nicknamed
Lucy, after the Beatles' song “Lucy in the Sky with Diamonds.”
Feb. 13, 2008 - Roger Clemens
denied having taken performance-enhancing drugs in testimony before Congress.
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