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Col. Joseph Richard Hawthorne |
March 31, 1596 – Philosopher Rene Descartes, who has been
called the “Father of Modern Philosophy,” was born in La Haye en Touraine,
France.
March 31, 1621 – Poet Andrew Marvell was born in Winestead,
England.
March 31, 1774 – During the American Revolution, the Kingdom
of Great Britain ordered the port of Boston, Massachusetts closed pursuant to
the Boston Port Act.
March 31, 1776 - Abigail Adams wrote to her husband John
that women were "determined to foment a rebellion" if the new
Declaration of Independence failed to guarantee their rights.
March 31, 1790 - Thomas Bigelow died in prison, where he’d
been imprisoned for failure to pay his debts even though he had earned 23,000
acres of land for his military service.
March 31, 1809 - Ukrainian-born Russian humorist, novelist,
and dramatist Nikolai Gogol was born in the Cossack village of Sorochintsy.
March 31, 1810 – Old Bassett’s Creek Baptist Church, the
second oldest Baptist church in the state, was established near Walker Springs
in Clarke County, Ala.
March 31, 1825 – During his historic tour of the United
States, the Marquis de Lafayette arrived at the Fort Mitchell crossing of the
Chattahoochee River, where he was welcomed by, among others, General Sam Dale,
hero of the “Canoe Fight” near Claiborne. Because Lafayette entered Alabama in what was technically Creek territory,
General Thomas S. Woodward, who was himself part Creek, led an Indian escort
through the region. After staying overnight at the fort, they begin
their route west to Montgomery via military escort through Creek territory.
March 31, 1826 – The steamboat “Herald” broke the
Henderson’s record for fastest trip from Mobile to Montgomery, Ala.
March 31, 1831 – An arrest warrant was issued for the
heavily indebted William B. Travis at Claiborne, Ala.
March 31, 1836 – The first monthly installment of Charles
Dickens’ first novel, “The Pickwick Papers,” was published under the pseudonym
Boz.
March 31, 1840 – John Herbert Kelly, who would become known
as the “Boy General of the Confederacy,” was born in Carrollton, Ala. to Isham
and Elizabeth Kelly. Both of his parents died before his eighth birthday,
leaving he and his brother as orphans. At that time, they moved to Wilcox County,
Ala., where they were raised by their grandparents, Col. Joseph Richard
Hawthorne and Harriet Herbert Hawthorne. Kelly went on to study at the U.S.
Military Academy and eventually became an officer in the Confederate Army at
the outbreak of the Civil War. Due to his outstanding service, Kelly rose
through the ranks and on Nov. 16, 1863, he was promoted to the rank of
brigadier general. At the time of his promotion, at the age of 23, Kelly was
the youngest brigadier general in the entire Confederate Army, which is why we
know him today as the “Boy General of the Confederacy.”
March 31, 1861 – During the Civil
War, Federal forces abandoned Fort Bliss, Texas.
March 31, 1862 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought near Pink Hill, Mo.; in the vicinity of Deep Gully,
N.C.; and near Adamsville, Tenn., on the Purdy Road. A three-day Federal
operation also began in the vicinity of Paris, Tenn.
March 31, 1862 – During the Civil War, skirmishing between
Rebels and Union forces took place at Island 10 on the Mississippi River.
March 31, 1863 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought at Crooked Creed and Cross Hollow, Ark.; at
Richmond, La.; and in the vicinity of Franklin, Tenn.
March 31, 1863 – During the Civil
War, after burning most of it, Jacksonville, Fla. was evacuated by Federal
forces.
March 31, 1863 – During the Civil
War, a Naval engagement was fought on the Savannah River in Georgia.
March 31, 1863 – During the Civil
War, an 18-day Federal operation began between Milliken’s Bend and New
Carthage, La.; and a four-day Federal operation began between Lexington and the
mouth of the Duck River in Tennessee.
March 31, 1863 – During the Civil
War, the Federal vessels Albatross, Harford and Switzerland successfully passed
the batteries at Grand Gulf, Mississippi.
March 31, 1863 – During the Civil
war, a Confederate assault began on the Federal garrison of Washington, N.C. A
largish quantity of Confederate artillery was used to keep the offshore Union
gunboats from getting close enough to assist. Although they were not much use
militarily, the gunboats did run in supplies that enabled the garrison to
resist.
March 31, 1864 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought in the vicinity of Arkadelphia, Ark.; near Palatka,
Fla.; in eastern Kentucky at Forks of Beaver; out from Natchitoches, La.; and at
Spring Island, S.C.
March 31, 1865 – 59TH ALABAMA: The 59th
Alabama fought in the Battle of White Oak Road (or Gravelly Run).
March 31, 1865 – 59TH ALABAMA: The 59th
Alabama fought in skirmishes up and down Hatcher’s Run.
March 31, 1865 – During the Civil
War, a two-day Federal operation began in the vicinity of Aquia Eria in the New
Mexico Territory.
March 31, 1865 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought at Gulley and Hookerton, N.C.; at Magnolia, Tenn.;
and at Crow’s House, along Hatcher’s Run, and on the White Oak Road in
Virginia.
March 31, 1865 - Union troops under the command of General
James H. Wilson destroyed the Brierfield Ironworks, which was located between
Centreville and Montevallo, Ala. The facility was established in 1862 with the
construction of a 36-foot-high brick blast furnace. In 1863, the works were
sold, along with nine slaves, to the Confederacy for $600,000, making it the
only ironworks owned by the Confederacy. The iron produced at the site was
shipped to the Selma Ordnance and Naval Foundry, where it was fashioned into
cannon and plate armor.
March 31, 1865 – During the Civil War, Federal forces
occupied Asbyville, Ala. A skirmish was also fought at Montevallo and at Six
Mile Creek, Ala. Major General Steele’s column also reached Stockton, Ala.
March 31, 1865 - Fighting occurred at White Oak Road and the
Dinwiddie Court House.
March 31, 1865 – During the Civil War, the Battle of White
Oak Road (also known as The Battle of Hatcher’s Run, Gravelly Run, Boydton
Plank Road and White Oak Ridge) was fought at the end of the
Petersburg, Va. line near Dinwiddie Court House. During the battle, Union
General Philip Sheridan moved against the left flank of Confederate General
Robert E. Lee’s Army of Northern Virginia, near Dinwiddie Court House. The
limited action set the stage for the Battle of Five Forks, Va. on the following
day. The 59th Alabama Infantry Regiment, of which Lewis Lavon Peacock was a
member, lost a number of men in this battle.
March 31, 1887 – The Monroe Journal reported that there were
five prisoners confined in the Monroe County Jail awaiting the action of the
courts.
March 31, 1887 - Mr. W.C. Stevens, who was connected with
the live grocery house of S. Richard & Sons of Mobile, was in Monroeville
during this week.
March 31, 1887 – The Monroe Journal reported that Mrs.
DeLoach, the mother of Capt. John DeLoach, had been quite sick for several days.
March 31, 1887 – The Monroe Journal reported that several “commercial
tourists” were in Monroeville that week.
March 31, 1887 – The Monroe Journal reported that Mrs. Jno.
I. Watson, who had been ill for several days, was improving slowly.
March 31, 1889 – The Eiffel Tower was officially opened with
a dedication ceremony in Paris, France.
March 31, 1894 – Drs. J.F. Busey, W.L. Abernathy and G.L.
Lambert, all of Monroe County, Ala. were granted diplomas by the Alabama
Medical College.
March 31, 1895 - Vardis Fisher, a gifted novelist who dealt with both the
myth and reality of the American West, was born in Annis, Idaho.
March 31, 1905 - Kaiser Wilhelm of Germany arrived in Tangiers to declare
his support for the sultan of Morocco, provoking the anger of France and
Britain in what would become known as the First Moroccan Crisis, a
foreshadowing of the greater conflict between Europe’s great nations still to
come, the First World War.
March 31, 1906 – The Intercollegiate Athletic Association of the United
States (later the National Collegiate Athletic Association) was established to
set rules for college sports in the United States.
March 31, 1909
– Construction of the ill-fated RMS Titanic began.
March 31, 1914 – Alabama Congressional Representative
Richmond P. Hobson, who received the Medal of Honor for his service in the
Spanish-American War, spoke before a large crowd at the Conecuh County
Courthouse in Evergreen, Ala.
March 31, 1915 – The Evergreen Courant reported that the
basketball team in the Effie community was “progressing nicely at present.”
March 31, 1917 – The United States took possession of the
Danish West Indies after paying $25 million to Denmark, and renamed the
territory the United States Virgin Islands.
March 31, 1918 – Daylight saving time went into effect in
the United States for the first time.
March 31, 1928 – This Saturday looked to be an eventful day
in Monroeville, Ala. as it marked the opening of the first Jitney-Jungle store
for Monroeville under the ownership of Gardner & Stallworth. The big red
and green front store opened on this Saturday morning in the Fountain Fancy
Grocery stand and all Monroeville and trade territory were most cordially
invited to visit, inspect and participate in the extraordinary opening price
savings.
March 31, 1930 – The Motion Picture Production Code was
instituted, imposing strict guidelines on the treatment of sex, crime, religion
and violence in film, in the U.S. for the next 38 years.
March 31, 1931 – TWA Flight 599 crashed near Bazaar, Kansas
killing eight, including University of Notre Dame head football coach Knute
Rockne.
March 31, 1933 – The Civilian Conservation Corps was
established with the mission of relieving rampant unemployment in the United
States.
March 31, 1933 - The "Soperton News" in Georgia
became the first newspaper to publish using a pine pulp paper.
March 31, 1936 – Poet and novelist Marge Piercy was born in
Detroit.
March 31, 1938 – The Monroe Journal reported that
Monroeville’s new post office was to be completed and ready for occupancy
within the next 10 days. Workmen were finishing the interior of the building
and placing office equipment. All patrons of the post office, who had rented
boxes in the past, were to be assigned boxes in the new building without
application. Instead of using combination locks as in the old office, the new
boxes were to have Yale locks and keys. The basement of the building was to be
occupied by the Monroe County Farm Bureau.
March 31, 1938 – The Monroe Journal reported that Mr. C.A.
Gentry, who had been connected with the Alabama Power Co. in Atmore, had been
transferred to the office in Monroeville to assume the position left vacant by
the promotion of John H. Finklea.
March 31, 1938 – The Monroe Journal reported that Margaret
Turberville of Monroe County High School in Monroeville, Ala., had been
selected as county champion in The Birmingham News-Age Herald oratorical contest
on “Jefferson and Marshall,” and would represent the county in the
congressional district competitions for this district at Grove Hill High School
on Mon., April 11, at 7:30.
March, 31, 1943 – “Oklahoma!” opened on Broadway.
March 31, 1944 - Ensign R.G. Kendall Jr. was scheduled to
leave on this Friday for Hollywood, Fla., where he was to go for training,
according to The Evergreen Courant.
March 31, 1945 - "The Glass Menagerie" by
Tennessee Williams opened on Broadway.
March 31, 1947 – Evergreen’s Fat Calf Show was scheduled to
begin at 9:30 a.m. at the Stock Yard in Evergreen, Ala. and guest speakers were
to include Alabama Gov. “Big Jim” Folsom. The event was sponsored by the
Evergreen Junior Chamber of Commerce in cooperation with the Extension Service
and Vocational Ag. Dept. and was open to 4-H Club Boys & Girls, FFA and FHA
members. The event was to include a formal dedication of the Conecuh Producer’s
Cooperative, and special music was to be provided by the Maxwell Field Band.
March 31, 1950 – NFL running back Ed Marinaro was born in
New York City. He went on to play at Cornell, the Minnesota Vikings, the New
York Jets and the Seattle Seahawks.
March 31, 1950 - A radio version of Alabama author T. S.
Stribling's story "Green Splotches" was broadcast as part of the “Escape”
series.
March 31, 1951 – The Remington Rand Corporation signed a
contract to deliver the first UNIVAC computer to the U.S. Census Bureau. UNIVAC
I (which stands for Universal Automatic Computer) took up 350 square feet of
floor space - about the size of a one-car garage - and was the first American
commercial computer. It was designed for the rapid and relatively simple
arithmetic calculation of numbers needed by businesses, rather than the complex
calculations required of the sciences.
March 31, 1954 – Evergreen High School wrapped up spring
football practice with a “Green and Red” intra-squad game at 7:30 p.m. at
Brooks Stadium in Evergreen, Ala.
March 31, 1965 - Responding to
questions from reporters about the situation in Vietnam, President Johnson
said, “I know of no far-reaching strategy that is being suggested or
promulgated.”
March 31, 1967 – The annual Miss Evergreen Pageant was held
in Evergreen, Ala. The pageant was sponsored by the Evergreen High School Band
Boosters.
March 31, 1968 - Seattle chose the nickname “Pilots” for
their new American League baseball franchise.
March 31, 1968 - In a televised
speech to the nation, President Lyndon B. Johnson announced a partial halt of
bombing missions over North Vietnam and proposes peace talks.
March 31, 1972 - The Major League Baseball Players
Association voted to go on strike on April 1.
March 31, 1972 - After firing more
than 5,000 rockets, artillery, and mortar shells on 12 South Vietnamese
positions just below the Demilitarized Zone, the North Vietnamese Army launched
ground assaults against South Vietnamese positions in Quang Tri Province, but the
attacks were thrown back, with 87 North Vietnamese killed.
March 31, 1974 - James “Pappy” Ellis officially retired from
his position as Evergreen’s police chief, and he was replaced by incoming
chief, Russell Phillips on April 1. Phillips was a retired state trooper
sergeant and former police chief in McIntosh. Ellis was honored with a “prayer
breakfast” on Fri., March 29. Phillips had been on duty with the Evergreen
Police Department since March 1 to get familiar with the city and department
personnel.
March 31, 1978 - The Monroe Academy Volunteers’ spring
football drills were scheduled to end on this Friday night as they were
scheduled to play Escambia Academy in a jamboree at Canoe. Coach Vance McCrory
of MA planned to dress 37 players for the jamboree with 15 of those returning
from the 1977 team. Players on Monroe’s team for that spring game included
Keith Adair, David Carpenter, Davison Carter, Jim Carter, Sammy Carter, Tim
Chunn, Keith Cox, Allen Deer, Bryan Dunn, Byron Dunn, Ron Eddins, Buddy
Elliott, Larry Gaston, Brian Harris, Jeff Helton, Ty Ivey, Mitch Jones, O’Neal
Jordan, Troy Kendricks, Mike Kennedy, Tommy Kilpatrick, Lawrence Knight, Jim
Masingill, Dave McCrory, John McKenzie, Tracy McPherson, Tim Mixon, Mark
Nettles, Randall Norris, Stanley Owens, Tommy Owens, Robin Reynolds, Ricky
Sager, Doug Smith, Tripp Stallworth, Eddie Stanley, Greg Tatum, Jeff Tatum,
Randy Watson, Bryce Whetstone and Rick Williams.
March 31, 1981 – The organizational meeting Conecuh County’s
“New Courthouse Committee,” which was formed by the Conecuh County Commission
to study and make recommendations regarding the construction of a new county
courthouse, was held. Circuit Judge Robert E.L. Key was the committee’s
chairman and other members of the committee included William D. Melton, David
L. Burt Jr., Larry Fluker, Richard Rabb, Robert Floyd, Lee F. Smith, W.J.
Barlow, Billy Mims, Alton Johnson, Oliver Pugh, Aubrey D. Padgett, Judge Frank
T. Salter, Anne T. Cook, Elizabeth W. Salter, Prather N. Smith and Willene
Whatley.
March 31, 1983 – The Monroe Journal reported that Monroe
County State Trooper Marion Craft had received an award from the state
Department of Public Safety in appreciation of “the extra effort in attempting
to save the life of an infant and for control of onlookers at the scene of an
accident Oct. 4, 1981.”
March 31, 1988 - The staff of the Alabama Journal
were awarded the Pulitzer Prize for General News Reporting for their
investigation into infant mortality in Alabama.
March 31, 1994
– The journal “Nature” reported
the finding in Ethiopia of the first complete Australopithecus afarensis
skull.
March 31, 1995 – The longest strike in Major League Baseball
history ended as players were sent back to work. Because of the strike, the
1994 World Series was cancelled. It was the first time baseball did not crown a
champion in 89 years.
March 31, 1998 - The Tampa Bay Devil Rays and the Arizona
Diamondbacks debuted in the major leagues.
March 31, 1998 - Pokey Reese of the Cincinnati Reds tied a
Major League record when he had four errors on opening day.
March 31, 1998 - Mallory Salter, daughter of Eddie and Julie
Salter of Evergreen, killed her first turkey on this Tuesday. The gobbler
weighed 18 pounds, had an 11-inch beard and 1-1/4-inch spurs. Mallory’s father,
who is a World Champion Turkey Caller, used a H.S. Strut mouth call to call the
turkey for Mallory. Mallory had also recently won her first turkey calling
contest.
March 31, 1999 - The sci-fi film “The Matrix,” with its
influential mix of cyberpunk, anime, postmodernism, and metaphysics opened on
this day.
March 31, 2003 - Former U.S. President George H.W. Bush
threw out the ceremonial first pitch at the season opener between the
Cincinnati Reds and the Pittsburgh Pirates.
March 31, 2003 - U.S. military officials accused Geraldo
Rivera of disclosing unauthorized military movements. Rivera had outlined
military movements in the dirt while embedded with the 101st Airborne Division
in Iraq.
March 31, 2003 - NBC fired Peter Arnett after he gave an
unauthorized interview with state-run Iraqi TV. During the interview Arnett
said that the American-led war effort had initially failed because of Iraqi
resistance.
March 31, 2004 – In Fallujah, Iraq, four American private
military contractors working for Blackwater USA were killed after being
ambushed.
March 31, 2004 - NFL owners adopted a 15-yard penalty for
excessive celebrations. The penalty was added to the fines previously in place
for choreographed and multiplayer celebrations. Also, if the infraction was
flagrant the player would be ejected. The previous day the owners had
instituted a modified instant replay system for five years.