Wednesday, March 21, 2018

Today in History for March 21, 2018

Marquis de Lafayette

March 21, 1685 – Baroque composer Johann Sebastian Bach was born in Eisenach, Germany.


March 21, 1692 – In connection with the Salem witchcraft trials, Magistrates Hathorne and Corwin examined Martha Corey.

On March 21, 1778 - Just three days after British Loyalists and Hessian mercenary forces assaulted the local New Jersey militia at Quinton’s Bridge, three miles from Salem, New Jersey, the same contingent surprised the colonial militia at Hancock’s Bridge, five miles from Salem, N.J. During the battle, the Loyalists not only killed several members of the Salem militia, but also two known Loyalists. At least 20 were killed in the fight inside the house of Judge William Hancock in what is now known as the Massacre at Hancock's Bridge.

March 21, 1788 - Almost the entire city of New Orleans, La. was destroyed by fire. In all, around 856 buildings were destroyed.

March 21, 1790 - Thomas Jefferson reported to U.S. President George Washington as the new secretary of state.

March 21, 1805 – Early Conecuh County, Ala. teacher, lawyer and judge Henry Franklin Stearns was born in Stanstead, Ontario, Canada.

March 21, 1810 – Future University of Alabama President Landon Garland was born in Nelson County, Va. He went on to serve as the University’s president from 1855 to 1865. He passed away at the age of 84 on Feb. 13, 1895 in Nashville, Tenn. and was buried in the Vanderbilt University Divinity Cemetery.

March 21, 1825 – Early prominent Monroe County landowner and politician James Dellet wrote a letter to French General Marquis de LaFayette, inviting him to visit Claiborne during his trip down the Alabama River to Mobile.

March 21, 1825 – During his tour of the United States, in a ceremony on Johnson Square in Savannah, Ga., the Marquis de Lafayette laid the cornerstone for a memorial dedicated to Revolutionary War hero General Nathanael Greene.

March 21, 1861 – Future University of Alabama president Josiah Gorgas, who was commanding the Frankford Arsenal in Philadelphia, resigned from the U.S. Army and would go on to head the Confederate artillery.

March 21, 1861 – During the Civil War, Confederates seized the Federal supply sloop, USS Isabella, at Mobile, Ala. The USS Isabella was headed to Pensacola, Fla.

March 21, 1862 – During the Civil war, a Naval engagement was fought at Mosquito Inlet, Fla., and the Federal occupation of Washington, N.C. began. Skirmishes were also fought between Humansville and Warsaw, Mo., at McKay’s Farm and at Cumberland Gap, Tenn.

March 21, 1863 - Union General Edwin Vose Sumner died in Syracuse, N.Y. while awaiting reassignment to the far West. His death came months after he led his corps at the Battle of Antietam in Maryland.

March 21, 1863 – During the Civil War, skirmishes were fought with Indians on Eel River, Calif.; in the vicinity of Doniphan, Mo.; between Bolivar and Grand Junction in Tennessee; and at Salem and Triune in Tennessee. A Federal operation was conducted between Bonnet Carre and the Amite River in Louisiana, and another Federal operation was conducted between New Orleans and Ponchatoula in Louisiana. A Federal operation was also conducted between La Grange and Saulsbury in Tennessee.

March 21, 1863 – During the Civil War, the joint Army-Navy expedition, intended to work through obscure waterways to get in behind Vicksburg, was progressing slowly. The waterways in question, difficult enough to navigate with a flatboat, were definitely not designed to accommodate ironclads. The troops, under Sherman’s command, followed along the banks. On this day, they reached Steele’s Bayou, and were harassed by Confederate sharpshooters.

March 21, 1864 – During the Civil War, a skirmish occurred in the vicinity of Moulton, Ala. in Lawrence County.

Marc 21, 1864 – During the Civil War, skirmishes were fought at Henderson Hill, La.; at Reynoldsburg, Tenn. and at Velasco, Texas.

Marc 21, 1864 – During the Civil War, a group with an interesting name got a fascinating talk from a man not previously known for expertise in economics. The New York Workingmen’s Democratic Republican Association received a lecture on “Property” by Abraham Lincoln. “Property is the fruit of labor,” he said. “Property is desirable--it is a positive good in the world. That some should be rich, shows that others may become rich, and hence is just encouragement to industry and enterprise. Let not him who is houseless pull down the house of another.”

March 21, 1865 - At Bentonville, North Carolina, Confederate General Joseph Johnston withdrew his army when Union troops threatened to cut off his only line of retreat.

March 21, 1865 – During the Civil War, a Federal operation began between Pine Bluff and Monticello in Arkansas, and Federal forces occupied Goldsborough, Tenn.

March 21, 1871 – Journalist Henry Morton Stanley began his famous search to find the missionary and explorer David Livingstone in Africa. A former unknown infantry private from Arkansas who was among the first to see action at Shiloh, the search for Livingston culminated when Sir Henry Stanley, formerly Private Henry Stanley, asked the now famous question, “Dr. Livingston, I presume?”

March 21, 1882 - Gilbert M. Anderson, the first western movie star, was born in Little Rock, Arkansas.

March 21, 1887 - Col. Nick Stallworth, one of the most prominent and successful lawyers of Evergreen, was in Monroeville on this Monday on business.

March 21, 1900 – The Evergreen Courant reported, under the headline “Masonic Lodge Growing,” that for more than a year past, the Masonic order of Evergreen had enjoyed “unusual” growth and prosperity and continued to grow. The membership was at 42 with two applications for affiliation and five candidates on the way. The new candidates were Dr. Carl Rubach, D.W. Powell, Chas. L. Sims and Max Long who had taken the Entered Apprentice degree and G.T. Bowden, who was to take the E.A. degree at the next meeting. The Fellowcraft degree was to be conferred on the first four named at a special meeting the following Saturday night. The lodge was instituted in 1841, since which time several hundred Masons had been made, many of whom had died and others moved away. The meetings were “always interesting and fairly well attended,” the newspaper reported. “The lodge is taking on new life and will continue to grow.”

March 21, 1905 – Writer Phyllis McGinley was born in Ontario, Oregon.

March 21, 1906 - Mr. W.H. Tucker, merchant and postmaster at Snider, visited Monroeville, Ala. on this Wednesday.

March 21, 1910 - The U.S. Senate granted ex-President Theodore Roosevelt a yearly pension of $10,000.

March 21, 1911 – The Bowles Post Office in Conecuh County, Ala. permanently closed after 24 years of operation. The post office originally opened on Feb. 17, 1887 12-1/2 miles north of Evergreen at the residence of John Kelly, where it remained until Jan. 7, 1909. On that day, the post office moved one mile south to the W.E. “Bill” Cook Store, where the post office remained until it permanently closed.

March 21, 1913 – An F4 tornado passed through Lower Peach Tree, Ala., and a total of 27 were killed, 60 others injured, 30 reported missing.

March 21, 1915 – The railroad depot at Beatrice, Ala. was broken into by burglars, who gained entrance through a rear door by means of a crowbar.

March 21, 1915 – On this Sunday morning, the Hickory Grove Methodist Church was destroyed by fire.

March 21, 1918 – During World War I, the first phase of the German Spring Offensive, Operation Michael, began near the Somme River in France, the first major offensive on the Western Front in two years.

March 21, 1921 - Commencing on this Monday, Milt Tolbert’s Tent Theater was to appear in Monroeville, Ala. for a week’s engagement, presenting a complete new repertoire of plays and vaudeville features. The opening play was to be the four-act comedy drama, “Woman Against Woman,” which was a dramatization of the novel of the same name. The feature play of the week, however, was “Within the Law,” the well known New York success, which was to be presented on Friday night, March 25. The price of admission was 25 cents and 35 cents, including war tax.

March 21, 1923 – Poet Nizar Qabbani was born in Damascus, Syria.

March 21, 1923 – Confederate veteran Washington B. Jones died at his home in Monroeville, Ala. on this Wednesday evening, aged 79 years. According to The Monroe Journal, Jones “volunteered at the age of 16 and served gallantly in an infantry company in the 38th Alabama. For many years, he had resided in Monroeville and enjoyed a wide acquaintance throughout the county.” Born on March 4, 1844, he was buried in the Old Methodist Cemetery in Monroeville.

March 21, 1925 - Alabama author Madison Jones was born in Nashville, Tenn.

March 21, 1927 - The spring term of the circuit court for Monroe County was scheduled to convene on this Monday.

March 21, 1932 - Alabama, Mississippi, Georgia and Tennessee were hit by a series of 33 tornadoes that killed 334 people. Of those, 268 of the deaths occurred in Alabama.

March 21, 1932 - Over 250 Alabamians died in tornadoes that sweep the state. More than 1,500 others were injured and damage was estimated at $5 million. The western and north-central parts of the state, especially the towns of Northport, Cullman and Columbiana, were hardest hit.

March 21, 1933 – Construction of Dachau, the first Nazi concentration camp, was completed.

March 21, 1934 – Blind author Ved Mehta was born in Lahore, India (now Pakistan).

March 21, 1943 – Wehrmacht officer Rudolf von Gersdorff plotted to assassinate Adolf Hitler by using a suicide bomb, but the plan fell through. Von Gersdorff was able to defuse the bomb in time and avoid suspicion.

March 21, 1945 – German SS officer Arthur Nebe, age 50, was executed in Berlin after the failed attempt to kill Adolf Hitler in July 1944.

March 21, 1946 - The Los Angeles Rams signed Kenny Washington, making him the first African American player in since 1933.

March 21, 1946 - The first Mexican League baseball game was played.

March 21, 1952 – A pilot from Texas lost his life when his plane crashed at Goodway Junction, Ala. in a field behind the store of S.B. Newman.

March 21, 1953 - The Rev. and Mrs. A.C. Lee, Mrs. Lucille Ingram and daughter, Cecelia, spent this Saturday in Mobile.

March 21, 1962 - Mr. and Mrs. John McKinley and son, Maiben, of Dothan were guests of A.C. Lee, Miss Alice Lee and Mrs. Alice McKinley on this Wednesday afternoon.

March 21, 1963 - Alabama author Lillian Hellman's play “My Mother, My Father and Me” opened on Broadway.

March 21, 1964 – Margaret Hagood of Evergreen, who was Conecuh County and the state of Alabama’s 1964 Junior Miss, competed in the America Junior Miss Pageant in Mobile. Hagood was the daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Joseph H. Hagood of Evergreen.

March 21, 1965 - Rev. Martin Luther King led 3,200 marchers from Selma, Ala. toward Montgomery in support of civil rights for black Americans, after two earlier marches had ended at the Edmund Pettus Bridge - the first in violence and the second in prayer. Four days later, outside the Alabama state capitol, King told 25,000 demonstrators that "we are on the move now . . . and no wave of racism can stop us." On August 6, 1965, President Lyndon Johnson signed the Voting Rights Act into law.

March 21, 1967 - The North Vietnamese press agency reported that an exchange of notes took place in February between President Lyndon B. Johnson and Ho Chi Minh, and that Ho rejected a proposal made by Johnson for direct talks between the United States and North Vietnam on ending the war.

March 21, 1967 - In South Vietnam, Operation Junction City produced what General Westmoreland described as “one of the most successful single actions of the year.”

March 21, 1968 - The new American League franchise in Kansas City, Mo. took the nickname, Royals.

March 21, 1972 - In Cambodia, more than 100 civilians were killed and 280 wounded as communist artillery and rockets struck Phnom Penh and outlying areas in the heaviest attack since the beginning of the war in 1970.

March 21, 1975 – National Baseball Hall of Fame left fielder Joe Medwick passed away at the age of 63 in St. Petersburg, Fla. During his career, he played for the St. Louis Cardinals, the Brooklyn Dodgers, the New York Giants and the Boston Braves. He was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1968.

March 21, 1985 – NFL running back Adrian Peterson was born in Palestine, Texas.

March 21, 1989 – Sports Illustrated reported allegations tying baseball player Pete Rose to baseball gambling.

March 21, 1993 – Pollard, Ala. was officially incorporated as a municipality, according to the Alabama League of Municipalities.

March 21, 1994 - Michael Jordan was cut from the White Sox roster and was sent to their minor league club.
  
March 21, 1996 – Hillcrest High School’s track and field team participated in a track and field meet at T.R. Miller High School in Brewton, Ala. Hillcrest’s boys finished third behind Miller and Jay. Hillcrest’s girls finished second behind Jay.

March 21, 1998 – Hillcrest High School in Evergreen, Ala. competed in the State High School Powerlifting Championship in Daleville and finished No. 5 in the state. State Champions from Hillcrest included Jerry House, who totaled 985 pounds in the 148-pound weight class, and Tim Bush, who totaled 1,135 pounds in the 165-pound weight class.

March 21, 2004 - Veterans Stadium in Philadelphia was demolished.

March 21, 2006 – The social media site Twitter was founded.

March 21, 2008 – The Bell Witch Cave in Adams, Tenn. was added to the National Register of Historic Places.

March 21, 2013 – NFL wide receiver Harlon Hill died at the age of 80 in Florence, Ala. A native of Killen, Ala., Hill played at the University of North Alabama and for the Chicago Bears, the Pittsburgh Steelers and the Detroit Lions.

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