Judge Robert Edward Lee Key |
Feb. 3, 1488 – Portuguese navigator Bartolomeu Dias (Diaz)
of Portugal landed in Mossel Bay on the southern extremity of Africa after
rounding the Cape of Good Hope, becoming the first known European to travel so
far south.
Feb. 3, 1690 – The colony of Massachusetts issued the first
paper money in the Americas. The currency was used to pay soldiers that were
fighting in the war against Quebec.
Feb. 3, 1781 – During the American Revolutionary War,
British forces seized the Dutch-owned Caribbean island Saint Eustatius.
Feb. 3, 1781 - American General Nathanael Greene wrote to
Baron von Steuben in which he observed that the Patriot’s "distribution of
publick stores is enough to ruin a nation."
Feb. 3, 1781 - American General Nathanael Greene and his
troops successfully crossed the Yadkin River to evade General Charles Cornwallis.
Feb. 3, 1783 - Spain recognized the independence of the
United States.
Feb. 3, 1787 – Militia led by General Benjamin Lincoln
crushed the remnants of Shays' Rebellion in Petersham, Mass.
Feb. 3, 1809 – The Territory of Illinois was created by the
10th United States Congress.
Feb. 3, 1811 – Newspaper magnate and politician Horace
Greeley was born in Amherst, New Hampshire.
Feb. 3, 1820 – Vietnamese emperor Gia Long died at the age
of 57.
Feb. 3, 1821 – Elizabeth Blackwell, the first woman to
graduate from medical school, was born in Bristol, England.
Feb. 3, 1824 – Explorer and educator Ranald MacDonald was
born at Fort Astoria, Columbia District, British North America.
Feb. 3, 1836 – William Barrett Travis, who’d lived at Sparta
and Claiborne in Alabama, arrived at the Alamo with 18 men.
Feb. 3, 1837 - Alligator, Jumper and Micanopy arrived at Fort Dade to make an agreement for a ceasefire. It was decided that the negotiations would continue on Feb. 8. It soon became obvious that not all the Seminoles agreed to a cease-fire.
Feb. 3, 1837 - A skirmish was fought between the Alabama militia and Creek warriors near Cowikee Creek in southeast Alabama.
Feb. 3, 1842 - Alabama author Sidney Lanier was born in
Macon, Ga.
Feb. 3, 1857 – Early Conecuh County teacher, lawyer and
judge Henry Franklin Stearns died at Claiborne.
Feb. 3, 1862 - Thomas Edison printed the "Weekly
Herald" and distributed it to train passengers traveling between Port
Huron and Detroit, Mich. It was the first time a newspaper had been printed on
a train.
Feb. 3, 1862 – During the Civil War, Federal reconnaissance
began of Occoquan Village, Va.
Feb. 3, 1863 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought near the Mulberry River, Ark. and in the Mingo
Swamp of Missouri. Federal forces began cutting a path through a levee on the
Yazoo River, near Yazoo Pass, for transporting troops north of Vicksburg, Miss.
The Confederate steamers Baker, Berwick Bay and the Moro were captured by the
Federal ram Queen of the West, near Vicksburg, Miss.
Feb. 3, 1863 – During the Civil
War, Confederates attacked Fort Donelson and the Cumberland Iron Works in Tennessee.
A three-day Federal operation that included Murfreesborough, Auburn, Liberty
and Alexandria in Tennessee began.
Feb. 3, 1864 – During the Civil
War, a three-day Federal expedition from Brashear City, La., up Grand Lake into
Lac Fausse Pointe and into Grant River, began. An action took place at
Liverpool Heights on the Yazoo River, Miss. Also on that day, what would be
called the Meridian (Miss.) Expedition began, and a simultaneous cavalry
operation from Memphis, Tenn. also began. This operation would last until March
6. Confederates captured the US steamer, Levi, on the Kanawha River, at Red
House Landing, in West Virginia.
Feb. 3, 1865 - An eight-day Federal
operation against Kiowa and Commanche Indians between Fort Larned to Buckner’s
Branch in Kansas began. Skirmishes were fought in La Fayette County, Mo.; at
River's Bridge, Dillingham's Cross Roads and Duck Branch in South Carolina; and
near Harper's Ferry, West Va.
Feb. 3, 1865 - In Hampton Roads, Va., a peace conference
between U.S. President Abraham Lincoln and Confederate Vice President Alexander
Stephens took place. The conference ended in failure within just hours after
Lincoln refused to grant the delegation any concessions.
Feb. 3, 1865 – During the Civil War, the first of what would
be two days of skirmishing began at Ladd’s House, Jog Jaw Valley, in Alabama.
Feb. 3, 1870 – The Fifteenth Amendment to the United States
Constitution was ratified, guaranteeing voting rights to citizens regardless of
race.
Feb. 3, 1870 - The Clay County
community known as County Line changed its name to Lineville. The area became
known as County Line in 1856, when the federal government established a post
office there. The name reflected the town's location on the Randolph County
side of the border with Talladega County. In 1866, the Alabama state government
formed Clay County from portions of Talladega and Randolph Counties, and as a
result County Line was no longer located on a county line.
Feb. 3, 1872 – Georgiana, Ala. was
officially incorporated as a municipality, according to the Alabama League of
Municipalities.
Feb. 3, 1874 – Writer Gertrude Stein was born in Allegheny,
Pa.
Feb. 3, 1876 - Albert Spalding and his brother started a
sporting goods store. They manufactured the first official baseball, tennis
ball, basketball, golf ball and football.
Feb. 3, 1886 - Editor Robbins of The Pineapple Enterprise
was in Monroeville, Ala. on this Wednesday and visited The Monroe Journal’s
office.
Feb. 3, 1889 - Female outlaw Belle Starr, born Myra Belle Shirley, was killed when an unknown assailant fatally wounded the famous “Bandit Queen” with two shotgun blasts from behind during an ambush.
Feb. 3, 1894 – Painter and illustrator Norman Rockwell was
born in New York City.
Feb. 3, 1896 – The second term of the Monroeville Academy
began and was under the management of Prof. Powers. The building was located
“on a beautiful eminence just south of town, in full view of the public
square.”
Feb. 3, 1896 – The Hon. E.R. Morrisette of Mobile, U.S.
marshal for the Southern District of Alabama, was in Monroeville on this
Monday.
Feb. 3, 1906 – Manistee was “quite crowded” on this night as
people flocked to see the “Clarke combined show, which was acknowledged to be
about as good as has ever been through this part of the country,” according to
the Manistee correspondent’s report in the Feb. 8, 1906 Monroe Journal.
Feb. 3, 1907 – Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist James
Michener was born in Doylestown, Pa.
Feb. 3, 1910 – The Monroe Journal reported that “merchants
complain of unusual dullness in business since small pox scare struck the
county. No one comes to town unless upon urgent business and when this is
transacted does not tarry.”
Feb. 3, 1910 – The Monroe Journal reported, in news from the
Burnt Corn community, that “our Sunday schools are not attended as they should
be now on account of small pox prevailing in this community.”
Feb. 3, 1912 - Professional football set some new rules. The
field was shortened to 100 yards, touchdowns were to be worth six points
instead of five, four downs would be allowed instead of three and the kickoff
was moved from midfield to the 40-yard line.
Feb. 3, 1913 – The Sixteenth Amendment to the United States
Constitution was ratified, authorizing the Federal government to impose and
collect an income tax.
Feb. 3, 1915 – Wade Brownlow, a convict on the Conecuh
County (Ala.) road crew, attempted suicide on this morning by stabbing himself
on the left side of his chest with a table fork. “The wound was not as serious
as was at first thought and after a few days he was able to go to work again,”
according to The Evergreen Courant.
Feb. 3, 1915 – The Evergreen Courant, under the headline
“Baby Abandoned in Hotel,” reported that “a baby found in a room at the Sewell
Hotel on Saturday morning has created more talk in Evergreen than the war
across the water. On Friday night a man and a woman went to the hotel at a late
hour and sought lodging, which they obtained. They came on train No. 3 and
asked to be called for train No. 2, which was done. They were known to have a
baby when they arrived and it was naturally supposed they took it away with
them. But they did not, for some time during the morning, Mrs. Stephens went
into the room which the couple had occupied and to her surprise and
astonishment she beheld the form of a pretty little girl baby apparently about
four weeks old. The news of the strange find spread over town and it was not
long before everybody in town knew about the little stranger and many were
curious enough to go up into the hotel to see it. It was on her hands and it
must not be neglected, so Mrs. Stephens in a motherly way prepared and gave it
nourishment and made it comfortable. On a slip of paper pinned to its clothing
was instructions to deliver the child to the Baptist Orphans Home, but the
institution could not accept it. This was no hindrance to get someone to care
for it, however, as applications came thick and fast from the best of families
for the custody of the little one. But Mr. Stephens got a clue as to the
identity of the persons who left it on his hands and went to work to locate
them. They were soon located in Butler County and Sheriff (A.A.) Williams went
up on Sunday afternoon to Greenville and out in the country where they lived
and caused the couple to return here yesterday to answer the charge of
abandonment. They gave their names as Wm. Steen and wife. The child was given
by them to the custody of Mr. and Mrs. J.D. Skinner of Belleville and the
unnatural parents left on the afternoon train for their home. Mr. and Mrs.
Skinner are very proud of their new possession.”
Feb. 3, 1916 – Clarence Moore Dannelly Jr. was born in
Evergreen, Ala., the son of Conecuh County Superintendent of Education C.M.
Dannelly. He grew up in Montgomery and on Dec. 17, 1940, Navy Ensign Dannelly
would be killed in an airplane crash during a training accident in Pensacola.
Dannelly is considered to be the first casualty of World War II from
Montgomery, and Dannelly Field (now Montgomery Regional Airport) was named in
his honor in July 1943.
Feb. 3, 1916 – The Conecuh Record reported that W.R. James
was “engaged in taking a census of the town of Evergreen. The work is being
done under a recent act of the legislature, and Mr. James was appointed by the
municipal authorities to do the work. It is an actual or general census and
serves the two-fold purpose of determining the present population and the
number of children within the school age.”
Feb. 3, 1916 – The Conecuh Record reported that J.T. Williams
had been appointed to serve as a trustee of the Second District Agricultural
School in Evergreen, Ala.
Feb. 3, 1917
– During World War I, the United States broke off diplomatic relations with
Germany a day after the latter announced a new policy of unrestricted submarine
warfare.
Feb. 3, 1919 – Alabama became the first state to enact
legislation calling for a memorial to commemorate its citizens who had served
in World War I, also known as the Great War.
Feb. 3, 1920 – Robert Long of Evergreen, Ala. left for his
semi-annual trip to New York and other eastern markets to purchase the spring
and summer stock for his firm, I. Long & Sons. He was accompanied by Althea
Burke and Miss Diaz, who were to help Long select ladies goods for his store.
Feb. 3, 1924 - The 28th president of the United States,
Woodrow Wilson, died at the age of 67 in Washington, D.C.
Feb. 3, 1926 – Novelist and short-story writer Richard Yates
was born in Yonkers, N.Y.
Feb. 3, 1927 - U.S. President Calvin Coolidge signed a bill
that created the Federal Radio Commission.
Feb. 3, 1930 – The Communist Party of Vietnam was founded at
a "Unification Conference" held in Kowloon, British Hong Kong.
Feb. 3, 1933 – Conecuh County High School’s boys and girls
basketball teams were scheduled to play Lyeffion in Lyeffion, Ala. on this
Friday.
Feb. 3, 1933
– Adolf Hitler announced that the expansion of Lebensraum into Eastern Europe,
and its ruthless Germanisation, were the ultimate geopolitical objectives of
Third Reich foreign policy.
Feb. 3, 1935 - Miss Jennie Faulk left Monroeville on this
Sunday for Atlanta, Ga. to “do her Spring marketing,” according to The Monroe
Journal.
Feb. 3, 1939 – Greenville High School’s varsity boys
basketball team beat Evergreen, 34-17, in Greenville on this Friday night.
Feb. 3, 1940 – Pro Football Hall of Fame quarterback Fran
Tarkenton was born in Richmond, Va. He would go on to play for the University
of Georgia, the Minnesota Vikings and the New York Giants. He was inducted into
the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1986.
Feb. 3, 1942 – Monroe County High School’s boys and girls
basketball teams traveled to Excel, Ala. to take on Excel High School. MCHS’s
boys won, 26-20, but Excel’s girls beat MCHS’s girls by one point.
Feb. 3, 1945 – Pro Football Hall of Fame quarterback Bob
Griese was born in Evansville, Ind. He would go on to play for Perdue and the
Miami Dolphins. He was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1990.
Feb. 3, 1947 – The lowest temperature in North America,
−63.9 °C (−83.0 °F), was recorded in Snag, Yukon.
Feb. 3, 1947 – Author Paul Auster was born in Newark, N.J.
Feb. 3, 1948 - Two men were killed and one injured in a
head-on collision between a car and log truck nine miles north of Brewton, Ala.
on this Tuesday. The dead were W.A. Griggers, 60, of Brooklyn, who was driving
the car, and truck driver Anderson Smith, 41, of East Brewton. Reuben E.
Blackwell of Brewton was riding in the cab of the truck but was thrown clear
and escaped with injuries. According to information received from Highway Patrol
Sgt. T.P. Melton, both vehicles were completely demolished and burned. Smith
was pinned beneath the truck. It was believed that Griggers had suffered a
heart attack and was unconscious at the time of the accident.
Feb. 3, 1951 - The Tennessee Williams play, "The Rose
Tattoo," opened on Broadway in New York.
Feb. 3, 1955 – Around noon, Fred Edward Mills, 65, a “well
known and highly esteemed merchant and business leader of Evergreen,” Ala.,
died unexpectedly from a heart attack. Mills died at his store, Mills Ready to
Wear, as he was preparing to go to the weekly meeting of the Evergreen Rotary
Club. Born on Oct. 3, 1889, he was buried in the Evergreen Cemetery in Conecuh
County, Ala.
Feb. 3, 1955 - After months of
prodding by U.S. advisors, South Vietnamese President Ngo Dinh Diem introduced
the first in a series of agrarian reform measures.
Feb. 3, 1957 - A television version of Alabama author Borden
Deal's story "A Bottle of Wine" was broadcast as part of the “Alfred Hitchcock Presents” series.
Feb. 3, 1957 - Joe F. Nettles, Monroeville, Ala. student at
University Military School in Mobile, was promoted to the rank of sergeant in
the University Military Band on this Sunday. He was the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Albert Nettles.
Feb. 3, 1966 - The unmanned Soviet Luna spacecraft made the
first controlled landing on the moon.
Feb. 3, 1967 - Sujane King of Georgiana, a freshman at
Patrick Henry Junior College, was named the top beauty at PJHC in the first
annual Beauty Pageant on this Friday night. Runners-up were Christine Payne of
Jackson, second runner-up; and Patricia Justice of Melbourne Beach, Fla., first
runner-up. The pageant was sponsored by the Student Government Association of
the college.
Feb. 3, 1970 - The Senate Foreign Relations Committee opened
hearings on the conduct of the war by the Nixon administration.
Feb. 3, 1971 – New York Police Officer Frank Serpico was
shot during a drug bust in Brooklyn and survived to later testify against
police corruption. Many believe the incident proved that NYPD officers tried to
kill him.
Feb. 3, 1972 – The Monroe Journal reported that Gene T.
Mixon of Old Texas had killed a 247-pound buck with an “unbelievable 39-point
rack.” Mixon shot the deer in north Monroe County on Jan. 11, 1972.
Feb. 3, 1972 - Funeral rites for the Rev. Enoch Johnson, 88,
were to be conducted on this Thursday afternoon at 3 p.m. at the Excel Nazarene
Church. Johnson, a resident of Monroe County for 57 years, had been a minister
in Monroe County churches during all those years. He was active in establishing
the Beulah Camp, a religious retreat in Monroe County, near Excel, and other
religious and civic projects.
Feb. 3, 1978 - Fire from an apparent explosion leveled two
buildings at American Forest Products in Vredenburgh on this Friday, claiming
the jobs of nearly 30 workers and threatening to close the plant. The blaze was
beyond control when Vredenburgh firemen arrived at the plant five minutes after
receiving a call from a night watchman at 9 p.m., Vredenburgh volunteer fireman
J.Y. McIntosh Jr. said. The cause of the fire and the cost of damages were
undisclosed as of Feb. 9, although firemen speculated that an electrical
short-circuit may have triggered the fire.
Feb. 3, 1978 - Monroe Academy’s varsity boys basketball team
thoroughly thrashed Greenville Academy on this Friday night, winning 64-30 in
Monroeville, Ala. O’Neal Jordan led Monroe with 14 points. Other standout
Monroe players in that game included Tommy Bowden, Frank Carter, Sammy Carter,
Mitch Jones, Kevin Norris, Doug Smith, Mike Stanton, Hines Steele and Jeff
Tatum.
Feb. 3, 1979 - The Minnesota Twins traded Rod Carew to
California for four players.
Feb. 3, 1982 - John Sharples of England finished a 371-hour
marathon of disco dancing.
Feb. 3, 1984 – The Old Federal Road Chapter of the National
Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution was formed in Monroe
County, Ala.
Feb. 3, 1984 – Sparta Academy’s varsity boys and girls
basketball teams wrapped up their regular season schedules with wins over
Greenville Academy on this Friday night in Evergreen. Sparta’s boys won, 91-46,
and Sparta’s girls won, 43-35. Russ Brown led Sparta’s boys with 21 points, and
other top players in that game included Connery Salter, Vince Watts, Britt
McNeill, Al Etheridge, Jim Wagstaff, Danny Reed, Thad Ellis, Jim Marino and
Mark Rigsby. Jan Coker led Sparta’s girls with 13 points, and other top players
in that game included Tammy Booker, Carol Kendrick, Tina Bybee and Raye Ann
Gall. Both teams finished the regular season with 18-5 records. Over the previous
two years, the girls had won 35 games and lost 11 for a winning percentage of
76.1 percent. The boys had a two-year record of 36 wins and 13 losses, a
winning percentage of 73.7 percent.
Feb. 3, 1984 - Over 100 people attended the Evergreen
Chamber of Commerce’s annual promotion banquet on this Friday night at the
Holiday Inn in Evergreen, Ala. Representatives from 35 businesses and
industries, 10 professionals and nearly all county and city elected officials
were among those present. Mrs. Ouida Salter introduced the speaker, Dr. Joe M.
Elrod of Montgomery, who was associated with New York Like Insurance Co. He
entertained with a chain of “Cajun” jokes drawn from his experiences while
serving as an educator in Southern Louisiana before finishing up with a few
serious remarks and challenges. Willene Whatley assumed the presidency and made
concluding remarks.
Feb. 3, 1990 - Darryl Strawberry of the New York Mets
voluntarily entered an alcohol rehab center.
Feb. 3, 1993 – A “landmark in Gosport,” the Gosport Cash
Store, on U.S. Highway 84, just inside Clarke County, Ala., was destroyed by
fire early on this Wednesday morning. According to co-owner Pauline Matthews,
she and her husband, Bill, learned of the fire about 4:15 a.m. Firefighters
arrived about 4:30 a.m. to find the store fully engulfed in flames. Mrs.
Matthews said the store belonged to her husband’s grandfather and was about 100
years old. In past years, it was known as the old Bush Store, but it had been
closed for around 50 years before the Matthewses reopened it in 1985.
Feb. 3, 1993 - LaDerrick Odom, a senior at J.F. Shields High
School in Beatrice, Ala. was added to Auburn University’s list of football
recruits on this Wednesday when he signed a grant-in-aid with the Tigers. Odom
was 6-foot-2 and weighed 220 pounds. Odom led the Panthers in tackles in the
fall of 1992, collecting a total of 121 stops from his outside linebacker
position. He was projected to play either linebacker or defensive end at
Auburn. Odom’s grant-in-aid with Auburn marked the first time that any Shields
graduate had signed a football scholarship with a major college.
Feb. 3, 1994 - Nearly two decades
after the fall of Saigon, U.S. President Bill Clinton announced the lifting of
the 19-year-old trade embargo against Vietnam, citing the cooperation of
Vietnam’s communist government in helping the United States locate the 2,238
Americans still listed as missing in the Vietnam War.
Feb. 3, 2000 – Sparta Academy’s varsity boys basketball team
saw their season come to an end with a 73-47 loss to Calvary School in the
opening round of the AISA Class AA, East Area II Regional Tournament in
Evergreen, Ala. Lee Booker, who was named to the all-tournament team, led
Sparta in that game with 23 points. Sparta’s varsity girls beat Calvary School,
64-41, to advance to the tourney finals.
Feb. 3, 2000 – Paul Deason, 52, of Evergreen, Ala. allegedly
murdered his son, Scott Deason. Conecuh County Sheriff’s deputies found Scott
Deason with a shotgun wound to his “stomach area” at Paul Deason’s residence.
Scott Deason was transported to Evergreen Medical Center and then to D.W.
McMillan Hospital in Brewton, where he died during emergency surgery.
Feb. 3, 2001 - The XFL debuted. The Las Vegas Outlaws beat
the New York-New Jersey Hitmen, 19-0, and the Orlando Rage beat the Chicago
Enforcers, 33-29.
Feb. 3, 2002 - The New England Patriots won Super Bowl
XXXVI, 20-17, over the heavily favored Los Angeles Rams. It was the first Super
Bowl win for the Patriots. The game ended with a last second, 48-yard field
goal by Patriots’ kicker Adam Vinatieri. Britney Spears performed the national
anthem.
Feb. 3, 2005 – Sparta Academy’s varsity girls basketball
team beat Clarke Prep in the opening round of the AISA Class AA East Area 1
tournament at Escambia Academy. Sparta’s players included Erin Brock, Preethi
Covin, Ashton Garner, Cody Godwin, Ava Pate and Samantha Seaman.
Feb. 3, 2005 – Sparta Academy’s varsity boys basketball team
beat Jackson Academy in the opening round of the AISA Class AA East Area 1
tournament at Escambia Academy. Players on Sparta’s boys team included Chase
Brown, Michael Campbell, Will Ivey, Chad Morris, Tony Raines and Eric Talbot.
Feb. 3, 2005 - Judge Robert Edward Lee Key, age 88, of
Evergreen passed away on this Thursday at Westminster Village in Spanish Fort. Key
was born Feb. 2, 1917 in Conecuh County. He served as a Lieutenant Colonel in
the JAG Corps during World War II and served as a judge in the 35th
Judicial Circuit Court District for a number of years. Graveside services were
held Sat., Feb. 5, 2005 at 9 a.m. at Magnolia Cemetery with Dr. Thomas Butts
officiating and Cope Funeral Home directing. A memorial service was held at 10
a.m. at the Evergreen Baptist Church. Survivors included his wife, Marjorie
Virginia Key, Spanish Fort; a daughter, Elizabeth Ann Scott, Mobile; two
grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.
Feb. 3, 2007
– A Baghdad market bombing killed at least 135 people and injures a further
339.
Feb. 3, 2008 - The New York Giants stunned the 18-0 New
England Patriots in Super Bowl XLII, pulling off one of the biggest upsets in
Super Bowl history, by beating them 17-14 at the University of Phoenix Stadium
in Glendale, Az.
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