U.S. Navy submarine USS Guardfish |
Feb. 16, 600 A.D. – Pope Gregory the Great declared “God
bless you” to be the correct response to a sneeze.
Feb. 16, 1740 – Printer Giambattista Bodoni was born in
Saluzzo, Italy.
Feb. 16, 1741 - Benjamin Franklin published America’s second
magazine, "The General Magazine and Historical Chronicle."
Feb. 16, 1776 - The Continental Congress decided to allow
General George Washington to investigate the practicability of an expedition to
Nova Scotia.
Feb. 16, 1778 - Two future presidents of the United States,
John Adams and his son, 10-year-old John Quincy Adams, sat in Marblehead
Harbor, off the coast of Massachusetts, on board the frigate, Boston, which was to take them to
France, where John Adams would replace Silas Deane in Congress’ commission to
negotiate a treaty of alliance.
Feb. 16, 1820 – The Rev. Andrew Jay was born about three
miles from Jayvilla in Conecuh County, Ala. He went on to serve as a Baptist
minister, military officer, commissioner of roads and revenue, tax assessor and
state representative. He passed away at the age of 62 on July 18, 1883 and was
buried in the Old Beulah Cemetery in Conecuh County.
Feb. 16, 1821 – German explorer and scholar Heinrich Barth
was born in Hamburg, Germany.
Feb. 16, 1826 – Timothy Horton Ball was born in Agawam in
Hampden County, Mass. A minister, teacher, historian and author, most of his
life was spent in Clarke County, Ala. and in 1882, while living in Grove Hill,
he would publish “A Glance into the Great South-east; or, Clarke County,
Alabama, and its Surroundings, from 1540 to 1877.”
Feb. 16, 1838 – Historian and writer Henry Adams was born in
Boston, Mass. The great-grandson of John Adams and the grandson of John Quincy
Adams, he would publish his most famous book, “The Education of Henry Adams” in
1918.
Feb. 16, 1845 – Journalist and explorer George Kennan was
born in Norwalk, Ohio.
Feb. 16, 1861 - Presidents Jefferson Davis and Abraham
Lincoln were sworn in at Montgomery, Ala. and Washington City.
Feb. 16, 1861 – During the Civil
War, the U.S. Arsenal facility in San Antonio, Texas was seized by Texas
troops.
Feb. 16, 1862 – During the Civil War, General Ulysses S.
Grant captured Fort Donelson on the Cumberland River in Tennessee. About 14,000
Confederate soldiers surrendered during the incident, and this victory gave the
Union control of northern Tennessee and paved the way for the occupation of
Nashville. The battle earned Grant the nickname "Unconditional
Surrender."
Feb. 16, 1862 – During the Civil
War, a skirmish was fought at Pott's Hill, Sugar Creek, Ark.
Feb. 16, 1863 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought at Yazoo Pass, Miss., as Confederates contested the
advance of Major General Grant’s Federal forces; at Bradyville, Tenn.; and at
Romney, West Virginia.
Feb. 16, 1863 – The United States
Senate passed the final version of the first formal draft in the U.S in the
Civil War. The action had already passed the House of Representatives, and
since President Lincoln had been pressing urgently for its passage his
signature was immediately forthcoming. This action had been long anticipated.
In the first days of the war men had rushed to take the colors in a flush of
patriotism, hopes of adventure, desire to impress female associates, or just
because every other unattached male in the neighborhood seemed to be doing it.
As the early enlistments were for very short terms, sometimes as little as six
or even three months, so men had to be discharged before they were even very
well trained, much less seasoned, experienced forces. Some of these men of
course reenlisted, but as the war dragged on there was no longer any illusion
of romance involved. The South had been using a draft for more than a year now.
Feb. 16, 1864 – During the Civil War, the Federal Navy
initiated operations against the forts at the mouth of Mobile Bay, Ala.
Feb. 16, 1864 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought at Caddo Gap along the Saline River, and at Indian
Bay in Arkansas; at Fairfield, N.C.; and at Lauderdale Springs in the vicinity
of Meridian, Miss. An eight-day Federal operation against Indians from Fort
Walla Walla to the Snake River in the Washington Territory began.
Feb. 16, 1864 – During the Civil
War, Sherman’s troops continued the destruction of anything remotely connected
to the Confederacy in Meridian, Miss. After taking the town without a fight,
the Federal troops were turned loose to destroy the place. The troops were
specifically told to destroy any public places such as train depots, stations
and tracks, communications equipment such as telegraphs and wires, warehouses
and arsenals, much of which could be considered legitimate military targets.
However, they were also given license to rip up hotels, shops of all sorts and
other mercantile establishments where the justification was not military, but
simply to infuriate people and (hopefully) get them to pressure the government
to surrender and end the war. Sherman’s men were told not to molest private
residences, but enforcement was not strict.
Feb. 16, 1865 – During the Civil War, a skirmish occurred
near Gurley's Tank, Ala.
Feb. 16, 1865 – During the Civil
War, a two-day Federal operation began in the vicinity of Bennet’s Bayou and
Tolbert’s Mill in Arkansas and a six-day Federal operation originating from
Fort Larned, Kansas against Indians began. A four-day Federal reconnaissance
from in Ozark Country, Mo. and Marion County, Ark. began and two days of
skirmishing about Columbia, S.C. began. Skirmishes were fought near Cedar Keys,
Fla. and at Athens and Sweet Water in Tennessee.
Feb. 16, 1866 – National Baseball Hall of Fame outfielder
Billy Hamilton was born in Newark, N.J. He went on to play for the Kansas City
Cowboys, the Philadelphia Phillies and the Boston Beaneaters. He was inducted
into the Hall of Fame in 1961.
Feb. 16, 1878 - Strongly supported by western mining interests and farmers, the Bland-Allison Act—which provided for a return to the minting of silver coins—became the law of the land.
Feb. 16, 1878 - Pamela Colman Smith, the artist who drew the
images on the Rider-Waite Tarot card deck, was born in Pimlico, Middlesex.
Feb. 16, 1894 - Infamous gunslinger John Wesley Hardin, who
lived in Pollard, Ala. for about 18 months, was pardoned after spending 15
years in a Texas prison for murder. Hardin, who was reputed to have shot and
killed a man just for snoring, was 41 years old at the time of his release.
Feb. 16, 1895 - Alabama formally
adopted a state flag for the first time. The legislature dictated "a
crimson cross of St. Andrew upon a field of white," which was the design
submitted by John W. A. Sanford Jr., who also sponsored the bill. This flag
remains Alabama's flag today.
Feb. 16, 1895 - Alabama author Florence Glass Palmer was
born in Uniontown, in Perry County, Ala.
Feb. 16, 1900 – Passenger service was established on the
Louisville & Nashville railroad through Monroeville, Ala.
Feb. 16, 1903 - W.D. Garrett died at his home on this Monday
morning, aged 77 years. His remains were laid to rest Wednesday at Mt.
Pleasant, according to The Monroe Journal.
Feb. 16, 1904 – German SS officer Karl-Heinz Bürger was born
in Güstrow, in
Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania, Germany.
Feb. 16, 1916 - After five days of
intense fighting, the Russian army defeated the Third Turkish Army to capture
Erzerum, a largely Armenian city in the Ottoman province of Anatolia.
Feb. 16, 1917 - Rev. C.W. McConnell of Roy, Ala. was in
Monroeville on this Friday to “provide himself with a car so that he may the
more conveniently meet his appointments at widely separated points.”
Feb. 16, 1921 – The first ripe strawberries of the season
were exhibited in Evergreen, Ala. on this day by E.C. Lee, taken from his
Castleberry farm. This was the earliest exhibition of strawberries on record
for Evergreen.
Feb. 16, 1921 - The annual meeting of the stockholders of
the Country Club in Evergreen was held on this Wednesday afternoon, and
officers were elected for ensuing year. They included J.S. Stearns, President;
C.R. Taliaferro, Secretary-Treasurer; Board of Directors, W.H. Wild, L.T.
Rutland, E.L. Stallworth, J.C. Cheney and E.J. McCreary. Resolutions were
passed restricting fishing in the club pond and streams on property owned by
it.
Feb. 16, 1922 – In the fictional video game, “Call of
Cthulhu: Dark Corners of the Earth,” confined in Arkham Asylum once again,
private investigator Jack Walters hung himself, unable to handle the reality of
himself and what he witnessed in Innsmouth.
Feb. 16, 1923 - Howard Carter unsealed the burial chamber of
Egyptian Pharaoh Tutankhamen. The next day he entered the chamber with several
invited guests. He had originally found the tomb on November 4, 1922.
Feb. 16, 1928 – The Evergreen Courant reported that J.L.
Kelly, Mayor of Evergreen and prominent attorney, had entered the race for
nomination for County Solicitor for Conecuh County in the coming Democratic
primary. He was opposing J.E. Jones, the incumbent. Kelly was a native of
Conecuh County, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Kelly of Repton. He finished his
law course at the University of Alabama, and had since that time engaged in the
practice of law in Evergreen.
Feb. 16, 1928 - The formal announcement of Mr. B.E. Jones,
prominent attorney of Evergreen, for the office of Circuit Judge of the 21st
Judicial Circuit of Alabama, appeared in this day’s edition of The Evergreen
Courant. It had been pretty generally known for several months that Jones was a
candidate for the office. He was opposed by F.W. Hare of Monroeville, whose
announcement was made in the Monroe Journal the previous week. They were
seeking the office held by Judge John D. Leigh of Brewton. The 21st
Judicial Circuit was composed of Baldwin, Conecuh, Escambia and Monroe
counties.
Feb. 16, 1928 – The Monroe Journal reported that Mr. J.H.
Stove of Ceygnet, Ohio, Funeral Director and Embalmer, had arrived in
Monroeville during the previous week and had opened for business in the
building next door to the post office. Stove was a graduate of the Cincinnati
College of Embalming and held a license for the State of Ohio. He planned to
carry a line of coffins, caskets and funeral supplies. Hearse and ambulance
service were also to be available at all times at reasonable prices.
Feb. 16, 1928 – The Monroe Journal reported that a joint
reunion of Confederates and Union soldiers was being proposed. A joint reunion
of the Union and Confederate veterans was expected to illustrate that the
bitterness of the War Between the States had ended. Representative Howard (D)
of Nebraska had told a House judiciary committee during the previous week, in
advocating his bill proposing such a gathering that year in Washington. Chairman
Hersey of Maine asked Howard to obtain the endorsement of the commanders of
both the Grand Army of the Republic and the United Confederate Veterans for the
proposed meeting before the committee considered the plan. Under the bill, the
government would pay all expenses of the reunion.
Feb. 16, 1928 – The Monroe Journal reported that doctors
A.B. Coxwell and R.A. Smith had moved to new suites of offices in the Simmons
building. Doctors Harper and Yarbrough also had apartments in the building. Dr.
J.M. Johnson had established his dental office in the apartments vacated by
Coxwell and Smith.
Feb. 16, 1938 – The first ever meeting of the Evergreen
Rotary Club was held on this day in the Evergreen Hotel in Evergreen, Ala.
Feb. 16, 1939 – The Monroe Journal reported that work on the
Monroe County School building program was progressing rapidly and was one of
the largest PWA Projects in the state, consisting of a brick combination
auditorium and gymnasium at Monroeville and Uriah; a brick gymnasium at Frisco
City; five-room addition and toilet sanitation at Excel, and four-room addition
at Beatrice. Total of these improvements amounted to approximately $105,000 for
which the County Board of Education is receiving a 45 percent grant or gift
from the United States Government. The completion of these projects was
expected to leave Monroe County with what was “generally recognized as the most
modern school plant of any rural county in the state.”
Feb. 16, 1944 – Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist Richard Ford
was born in Jackson, Miss.
Feb. 16, 1951 – Army SFC Howard W. Hall, 31, of Clarke
County, Ala. died of wounds in South Korea. Born on Feb. 13, 1920 in Randolph
County, Ala., Hall was a member of the 73rd Heavy Tank Battalion, 7th Infantry
Division. He was seriously wounded by the enemy in South Korea on February 16,
1951 and died of those wounds the following day. His family lived in several
places but they were living in Lamar in Randolph County, Ala. when he was born.
The son of Martha and John W. Hall, he enlisted in Randolph County and was
awarded the Bronze Star. He was buried in Park Hill Cemetery in Columbus, Ga.
Feb. 16, 1954 – Monroe County High School’s varsity boys basketball team picked up their 15th win of the season, and their tenth win in a row, by beating Excel, 68-44, at the coliseum in Monroeville, Ala. Bobby White led MCHS with 21 points; Joe Stevens scored 14; and Paul Fowler scored 12. Matchett led Excel with 16 points, and Stacey scored 12.
Feb. 16, 1954 – Monroe County High School’s varsity boys basketball team picked up their 15th win of the season, and their tenth win in a row, by beating Excel, 68-44, at the coliseum in Monroeville, Ala. Bobby White led MCHS with 21 points; Joe Stevens scored 14; and Paul Fowler scored 12. Matchett led Excel with 16 points, and Stacey scored 12.
Feb. 16, 1960 – The U.S. Navy submarine USS Triton
began Operation Sandblast, setting sail from New London, Connecticut, to begin
the first submerged circumnavigation of the globe. The trip ended on May 10.
Feb. 16, 1960 – W.S. Neal High School’s varsity boys
basketball team beat Evergreen, 66-44, on this Tuesday night.
Feb. 16, 1961 – National Baseball Hall of Fame pitcher Dazzy
Vance died at the age of 69 in Homosassa Springs, Florida. During his career,
he played for the Pittsburgh Pirates, the New York Yankees, the Brooklyn
Robins/Dodgers, the St. Louis Cardinals and the Cincinnati Reds. He was
inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1955.
Feb. 16, 1966 – For his actions on this day in Vietnam,
Capt. Clinton O. “Neal” Hyde Jr. of Evergreen, Ala. was awarded the Army
Commendation Medal for Heroism. Hyde was a senior advisor with a paramilitary
strike force unit that was conducting a search and destroy operation in the
Tion Phuoc District in Vietnam. On two occasions after his force made contact
with the Viet Cong, Hyde organized a fire and maneuver tactic that forced the
insurgents to withdraw from their positions. While pursuing the enemy, Hyde and
his counterpart, along with the lead element of the friendly force, became
pinned down by intense hostile automatic weapons fire. With complete disregard
for his safety, Hyde exposed himself to deadly fire to move to the rear to
radio for an air evacuation of friendly casualties. After the medical
evacuation, Hyde further exposed himself to enemy fire while moving to the
front of the force to adjust mortar fire on hostile emplacements. His accurate
adjustment of supporting fire drove the Viet Cong from their positions and
allowed the friendly patrol to continue their mission. Hyde, the son of Mr. and
Mrs. C.O. Hyde of Evergreen, was a graduate of Evergreen High School and West
Point Military Academy.
Feb. 16, 1968 - The first-ever 911
call was placed in Haleyville, Ala. State Representative Rankin Fite made the
call fom the mayor's office and it was answered at the police station by
Congressman Tom Bevill. The system was put into operation within weeks of
AT&T's announcement that it planned to establish 911 as a nationwide
emergency number. The Alabama Telephone Company, in a successful attempt to
implement the number before AT&T, determined that Haleyville's equipment
could be quickly converted to accommodate an emergency system.
Feb. 16, 1968 - U.S. officials
reported that, in addition to the 800,000 people listed as refugees prior to
January 30, the fighting during the Tet Offensive had created 350,000 new refugees.
Feb. 16, 1969 – Army Sgt. Ralph Gerald Dunn, 21, of
Andalusia, Ala. was killed in action in Kon Tum, Vietnam. Born on Oct. 27,
1947, he was buried in Andalusia Memorial Cemetery.
Feb. 16-20, 1970 – Evergreen High School hosted the 10-team
District 1, Region 2, Class 3A Basketball Tournament at Memorial Gymnasium in
Evergreen. On Feb. 16, Atmore High School played W.S. Neal High School at 6:30
p.m., and Marshall High School of Evergreen played Jackson High School at 8
p.m. On Feb. 17, Marengo County-Dixon Mills played Escambia County Training
School at 6:30 p.m. and Evergreen High School played Camden Academy at 8 p.m.
On Feb. 18, Union High School of Monroeville played the winner of the
Atmore-Neal game at 6:30 p.m., and Monroeville High School played the winner of
the Marshall-Jackson game at 8 p.m. Semifinal round games were played at 6:30
p.m. and 8 p.m. on Feb. 19, and the championship game was played on Feb. 19.
Feb. 16, 1972 – Pro Football Hall of Fame running back
Jerome Bettis was born in Detroit, Mich. He would go on to play for Notre Dame,
the Los Angeles/St. Louis Rams and the Pittsburgh Steelers. He was inducted
into the Hall of Fame in 2015.
Feb. 16, 1975 – Weather observer Earl Windham reported 3.0
inches of rain in Evergreen, Ala.
Feb. 16, 1976 – Major League Baseball outfielder Eric Byrnes
was born in Redwood City, Calif. He went on to play for the Oakland Athletics,
the Colorado Rockies, the Baltimore Orioles, the Arizona Diamondbacks and the
Seattle Mariners.
Feb. 16, 1977 – NFL running back Ahman Green was born in
Omaha, Neb. He would go on to play for Nebraska, the Seattle Seahawks, the
Green Bay Packers and the Houston Texans.
Feb. 16, 1978 – Social networking got its start when the
first public, dial-up Computerized Bulletin Board System (CBBS) went online in
Chicago, Ill.
Feb. 16, 1978 – The Evergreen Courant reported that Lyeffion
High School’s varsity boys basketball team had upped their record to 15-5
during the past week by beating Georgiana, 51-47, in Lyeffion. Adrian Woods led
scoring with 19 points. Harold Kyser and Ricky Hall both reached double figures
with 15 and 11 respectively.
Feb. 16, 1978 – The Evergreen Courant reported that Tim
Robinson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Robinson, had been named to the Dean’s
List at the U.S. Army Military Academy, West Point, New York, for the first
semester, officials at the Academy announced. Robinson was a 1977 graduate of
Lyeffion High School where he was an outstanding and popular student. Because
of his superior high school record, Tim received an appointment to the Academy.
Feb. 16, 1978 – The Monroe Journal reported that Navy Lt.
(junior grade) Wilson E. Frye, the son of George D. Frye of Uriah, was
participating in exercise “Readiex 2-78” off the Southern California coast. He
was serving as the weapons officer of the submarine USS Guardfish, homeported
in San Diego. A 1975 graduate of the University of New Mexico, Albuquerque,
with a bachelor’s degree in electrical engineering, Frye joined the Navy in
September 1968.
Feb. 16, 1978 – The Monroe Journal reported that Concord
Baptist Church in Buena Vista had been added to the Alabama Register of
Landmarks and Heritage by the Alabama Historical Commission. The
privately-owned church, located on County Road 56, was the former Church of
Christ Concord. It was owned by deacon J. Lindsey of Beatrice.
Feb. 16, 1980 - One of the world's worst traffic jams took
place on a stretch of road in France from Lyon to Paris. Cars were backed up
for 109 miles.
Feb. 16, 1982 – In the quarterfinal round of the Class 1A,
Area II tournament in Castleberry, Ala., Lyeffion beat Conecuh County High
School, 89-65.
Feb. 16, 1984 – The Monroe Journal reported that Chief
Warrant Officer George Singleton was given a valuable service award by local
Girls Scouts during the previous week. The award was presented by Susan
Sanderson, area Girl Scout cookie chairman, for his assistance in Girl Scout
cookie sales and for allowing the cookies to be stored at the National Guard
Armory in Monroeville before distribution. The annual cookie sale was underway,
and cookies were to be available for several weeks.
Feb. 16, 1987 – The trial of John Demjanjuk, accused of
being a Nazi guard dubbed "Ivan the Terrible" in Treblinka
extermination camp, started in Jerusalem.
Feb. 16, 1989 - Roger Clemens of the Boston Red Sox signed a
three-year contract worth $7,500,000.
Feb. 16, 1991 – Hillcrest High School’s Dameion Fantroy, who
competed in the 175-pound weight class, set a state record by bench-pressing
360 pounds at the state powerlifting meet in Eufaula, Ala. The previous state
record of 340 pounds was set in 1988.
Feb. 16, 1991 – Weather reporter Harry Ellis reported a low
temperature of 17 degrees in Evergreen, Ala.
Feb. 16, 1991 – Yellow ribbons were placed on the fence
along the railroad tracks in downtown Evergreen, Ala. by the loved ones of
military personnel who were serving in the Persian Gulf War.
Feb. 16, 1996 – The Avant House on Sanford Road in
Andalusia, Ala. was added to the National Register of Historic Places.
Feb. 16, 1998 – Ethan Eugene Dorsey, 28, of Andalusia, Ala.
was scheduled to stand trial in front of Judge Sam Welch on three counts of
capital murder in conection with the alleged killings of Richard Cary, 52,
Scott Williams, 39, and Timothy Bryan Cane, 13, on Nov. 20 at Cary’s Store in
the Brooklyn community. All three victims were found gunned down at the store
sometime around 8 p.m., and Calvin Middleton of Andalusia was also charged in
the shooting.
Feb. 16, 1999 - O.J. Simpson's 1968 Heisman Trophy was sold
for $230,000. A court judgment ordered the trophy to be sold to help settle a
$33.5 million civil judgment against Simpson for the deaths of his ex-wife and
her friend.
Feb. 16, 2004 - Baseball commissioner Bud Selig approved the
swap of Alex Rodriguez of the Texas Rangers and Alfonso Soriano of the New York
Yankees. The Rangers would also get a minor league player in the deal.
Feb. 16, 2006 – Pro Football Hall of Fame defensive tackle
Ernie Stautner died at the age of 80 in Carbondale, Colo. He played his entire
career for the Pittsburgh Steelers. He was inducted into the Hall of Fame in
1969.
Feb. 16, 2012 – National Baseball Hall of Fame catcher Gary
Carter died at the age of 57 in Palm Beach Gardens, Fla. During his career, he
played for the Montreal Expos, the New York Mets, the San Francisco Giants and
the Los Angeles Dodgers. He was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 2003.
Feb. 16, 2013 – Evergreen, Ala. native and NFL running back
Ken Clark died of a heart attack at the age of 46 in Minneapolis, Minn. Born
Kenneth R. Clark, he attended Bryan High School in Omaha, Nebraska and played
collegiate football at the University of Nebraska. While with the Huskers under
Hall of Fame coach Tom Osborne, Clark became one of the school's all-time
greats. He topped the 1,000 rushing yardage mark twice and earned All-Big Eight
honor two-times. In 1989, Clark set a single-season rushing yardage record for
a junior with 256 in a game against Oklahoma State University. Selected by the
Indianapolis Colts during the 8th round of the 1990 NFL Draft, he appeared in
34 regular season games. While attending Nebraska, he was a Human Development
major. He was buried in Graceland Park Cemetery in South Omaha, Nebraska.
Feb. 16, 2013 – Bones belonging to a Prichard man who’d been
missing since 2009 were discovered beneath the General W.K. Wilson Bridge
(Dolly Parton Bridge) near Mobile, Ala.
Feb. 16, 2016 – Witnesses reported a UFO sighting that
occurred around 4:30 p.m. on this Tuesday in Florence, which is in Lauderdale
County, in the extreme northwest corner of Alabama. The witness in this case
said he was traveling across the Singing River Bridge in Florence around 4:30
p.m. when he spotted a gray, football-shaped object in the sky. The witness
said he could see the other side of the river from his position on the bridge
and that the object was hovering in the sky just over the tree line. The
witness estimated that the object was about the size of a small plane. He also
noted that it appeared to swing side-to-side for a few moments before it dipped
into the trees for about four seconds. The object then reappeared over the tree
line and was visible for a few more seconds before it darted away to the
southeast towards Wilson Dam. The witness said he couldn’t see the object once
it disappeared around the hills by the dam.
Feb. 16, 2016 – Witnesses reported a UFO sighting that
occurred on this Tuesday around 9:45 p.m., in Eufaula, which is in Barbour
County in Southeast Alabama, near the Alabama-Georgia state line. The witness
in this case spotted in the sky what he thought was at first a pulsar or two
flashing stars, so he grabbed his video camera and filmed the unusual object
for an hour. He eventually stopped filming the object and went inside “once the
object focused well enough to be observed,” he said. However, when he reviewed
the footage he found something unexpected. What he thought was a pulsar or two
flashing stars turned out to be a “vision of a materon cube caught on tape,”
the witness reported.
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