March 30, 1775 - Britain's King George III formally endorsed
the New England Restraining Act, which required New England colonies to trade
exclusively with Great Britain as of July 1.
March 30, 1817 – Richard Thomas Baggett, who was said to
have been the first child born to white settlers in Conecuh County, Ala., was
born on the Baggett family farm, NE 1/4 Section 4, Township 4 North, Range 10
East.
March 30, 1820 – Author Anna Sewell was born in Yarmouth,
England. She wrote “Black Beauty” in 1877.
March 30, 1822 - Florida became a U.S. territory.
March 30, 1825 - Confederate General Samuel Maxey was born
in Tompkinsville, Kentucky. During the Civil War, Maxey served in the West and
led Native Americans troops in Indian Territory.
March 30, 1853 – Painter Vincent Van Gogh was born in Zundert,
Holland.
March 30, 1855 – About 5,000 "Border Ruffians"
from western Missouri invaded the territory of Kansas and forced the election
of a pro-slavery legislature. It was the first election in Kansas.
March 30, 1858 – Hymen Lipman of Philadelphia patented the
first pencil to have an attached eraser.
March 30, 1861 – Jephtha Vining Perryman passed away at the
age of 63. He served as a legislator, judge and education superintendent in
Conecuh County, Ala. Born on Feb. 9, 1798, he is buried in the Old Evergreen
Cemetery.
March 30, 1862 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought on Wilmington Island and Whitemarsh Island, Ga.;
and in the vicinity of Clinton, Mo. The Federal occupation of Union City, Tenn.
began.
March 30, 1863 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought near Cross Hollow, Ark.; in the Indian Territory at
Tahlequah; in the vicinity of Somerset, Ky., at Dutton’s Hill; in Vernon
County, Mo., at a place knows as “The Island”; at Washington, Deep Gully and
Rodman’s Point, N.C.; at Zoar Church, Va.; and in the vicinity of Point
Pleasant, West Virginia.
March 30, 1864 – During the Civil War, a Federal
reconnaissance began from Woodville, Ala. in Jackson County.
March 30, 1864 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought at Mount Elba, Ark.; at Snyder’s Bluff, Miss.; at
Cherry Grove, N.C.; and at Greenton, Mo. A Federal reconnaissance operation
inclusive of Columbus, Clinton and Moscow, Ky. began. A three-day Federal
reconnaissance from Lookout Valley, Tenn. to McLemore’s Cove, Ga. also began.
Other reconnaissance missions were conducted around Woodville and Athens, Ala.
March 30, 1865 - General James H. Wilson detached Gen. John
T. Croxton's brigade to destroy all Confederate property at Tuscaloosa,
Alabama. Wilson's forces captured a Confederate courier, found to be carrying
dispatches from Confederate General Nathan Bedford Forrest describing the
strengths and dispositions of his scattered forces. Wilson sent a brigade to
destroy the bridge across the Cahaba River at Centreville, which cut off most
of Forrest's reinforcements from reaching the area. He began a running fight
with Forrest's forces that did not end until after the fall of Selma.
March 30, 1865 – During the Civil War, a skirmish was fought
at Montevallo, Ala.
March 30, 1865 – During the Civil
War, a four-day Federal operation starting from Baton Rouge and including
Clinton and Comite River, La. began, and a skirmish was fought at Patterson’s
Creek, West Virginia.
March 30, 1865 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought in the vicinity of Five Forks and along the line of
Hatcher’s Run and Gravelly Run, Va. Just as the final campaign was declared
underway, heavy rains began around Petersburg, Va. Phil Sheridan was working to
get the right flank offensive organized. Gen. Humphreys got his Second Corps
into a dustup at Hatcher’s Run, near Five Forks. Warren’s Fifth Corps, on the
other hand, got into a similar skirmish in an area known as Gravelly Run. The
Union men were encountering less resistance as Lee pulled men back to reinforce
the southwest side as a possible escape route.
March 30, 1867 – Alaska was purchased from Russia for $7.2
million, about two cents per acre, by United States Secretary of State William
H. Seward.
March 30, 1870 - The 15th amendment, guaranteeing the right
to vote regardless of race, was passed by the U.S. Congress.
March 30, 1870 – Texas was readmitted to the Union following
Reconstruction.
March 30, 1880 – Playwright Sean O’Casey was born in Dublin,
Ireland.
March 30, 1887 - Mr. W.J. Dees of Repton visited The Monroe
Journal on this Wednesday.
March 30, 1905 - U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt was
chosen to mediate in the Russo-Japanese peace talks.
March 30, 1905 – The Monroe Journal reported that the law
firm of Wiggins, Hybart & Bayles had been dissolved, and the firm of
Bayles, Hybart & Burns had taken its place. Jno. M. Burns, the new member,
was from Selma, Ala., where he had practiced law for eight years, including two
years as Selma’s City Attorney.
March 30, 1911 – An unidentified man, about 24 years old,
was killed by a freight train near the depot in Evergreen at about 9 p.m. He is
supposed to have been stealing a ride and fell from the train. The wheels
passed over his body, severing it in the middle. On his arm was tattooed the
name John Hartley South Wales.
March 30, 1911 – The Conecuh Record reported that the City
Grocery had installed a large, up-to-date refrigerator, the first of its kind
in Evergreen, Ala. It held up to 500 pounds of ice and was used for perishable
goods like butter, cheese and berries.
March 30, 1914 - Capt. R.F. Kolb delivered addresses at
Jones Mill and Monroeville on this Monday afternoon and night on behalf of his
candidacy for Alabama governor. Kolb spoke to “fair audiences at both points
and expressed strong confidence in his prospect for being in the run-off
primary. He paid his respects to all three of his competitors and declared
himself ‘the people’s candidate’ without alliance with any other interest
whatever,” The Journal reported.
March 30, 1915 – Shortly after noon, 31-year-old Lydia Belle
“Liddie” Deason Peacock, who was pregnant, was “instantly killed” by a bolt of
lightning at her home near Wilcox Station, Ala. She had been on the back porch
and when returning to the kitchen, lightning struck the house, killing her. The
bolt also shattered a column and pillar under the porch and killed a dog nearby
in the yard. Born on April 28, 1883, she was buried in the Flat Rock Cemetery
at Flat Rock.
March 30, 1915 – Around 10 p.m., the “worst rain and hail
storm that (Conecuh) County has ever known” passed through the Johnstonville
community. The storm lasted almost 10 minutes, and the hailstones were about
the size of small eggs. Nearly all the leaves were stripped from the trees,
gardens were practically ruined and all windows not protected by blinds were
broken.
March 30, 1916 – The Conecuh Record report that 4,954 bales
of cotton were ginned in Conecuh County, Ala. in 1915, which was 12,302 bales
short of the 1914 crop.
March 30, 1916 – The Monroe Journal reported that Judge
Thomas W. Davis of Thomasville, Ala., a candidate for circuit judge, was a
visitor to Monroeville during the previous week.
March 30, 1918 - British, Australian and Canadian troops mounted a successful counter-attack against the German offensive at Moreuil Wood, recapturing most of the area and forcing a turn in the tide of the battle in favor of the Allies.
March 30, 1918 - The citizens of Camden on this Saturday
evening planned to give the 120 “colored boys,” who were called to the army, a
reception at the Wilcox County Courthouse. Speeches and music were to be
features of the program which was scheduled to begin at 8 p.m. After the
patriotic exercises, refreshments were to be served. “The leaving of these boys
to fight for their country in the critical hour of its history, calls for the
deep appreciation of all at home,” according to The Wilcox Progressive Era. “Both
colored and white will join in to make the program an appropriate appreciation
of their event, and an inspiration to the soldier boys.” The “most striking”
feature of the exercise was to be a parade at 4 p.m. on this Saturday afternoon
in which the soldier boys were to march through the principal streets of Camden
headed by possibly the Snow Hill Institute band and Millers Ferry band.
Everyone who felt the sentiment of the hour was asked to contribute to the
success of the entertainment. The following program was to be rendered at the
evening exercises: PROGRAM: Song – “America,” Prayer by Rev. B.H. Grier; Speech
by Prof. J.N. Cotton, Music; Speech by W.G. Wilson, Music; Speech by S.C.
Godbold, Esq., Music; Speech by John Miller, Esq., Music; Speech by Rev. I.H.
Bonner, Music; Closing by Prof. E.W. Berry; Closing Prayer, E.H. Rhone,
Refreshments.
March 30, 1923 – The baseball team at the State Secondary
Agricultural School was scheduled to play Brewton at 3:15 p.m. at Gantt’s Field
in Evergreen, Ala.
March 30, 1928 – The Monroe Journal reported that Mr. W.L.
Skinner of Edenburg, Texas was spending a few days with his brother, Mr. M.E.
Skinner and among his numerous friends in Monroeville. Skinner reported that
the little colony of Monroe County people who emigrated to the Rio Grande
Valley were prosperous and happy.
March 30, 1928 – The Monroe Journal reported that another
new dwelling was in the course of erection in the Slaughter Heights Addition.
It was being built by Mr. John Fleming and was to be occupied by Mr. L.P.
Dunnam and family.
March 30, 1928 – The Monroe Journal reported that the
tabulation of the card reports showed there were 19,022 bales of cotton,
counting round as half bales, ginned and to be ginned in Monroe County from the
crop of 1927, as compared with 23,918 bales for the crop of 1926.
March 30, 1939 – “Detective Comics” No. 27 was released,
introducing Batman.
March 30, 1944 – The Evergreen Courant reported that
Aviation Cadet Harry L. Johnston, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Martin L. Johnston of
Owassa, Ala., had completed approximately one-third of his pilot training and
would soon report to an Air Corps Basic Flying School in Newport, Ark. for the
intermediate phase of his flying training. Before entering the Air Corps,
Johnston attended Evergreen High School; Alabama Polytechnic Institute in
Auburn; and the 55th College Training Detachment in Gettysburg, Pa.
Johnston was accepted as aviation cadet at Montgomery, Ala. in March 1943.
March 30, 1945 – During World War II, Staff Sgt. James E. Freeman,
a 29-year-old graduate of Evergreen (Ala.) High School, was killed in action in
Germany. Freeman, who’d been in the Army for about 10 years, was a paratrooper
and had only been overseas for about a month when he was killed. He was a
member of the 513th Parachute Division, 17th Airborne
Division. Born on Jan. 26, 1916, he was buried in the Old Town Cemetery in
Conecuh County, Ala.
March 30, 1946 – About 400 people attended Conecuh County,
Alabama’s first fat calf show at the Conecuh Cooperative Stockyard in
Evergreen. Dan Brown was Grand Champion, and Johnnie Nielson was the Reserve
Grand Champion.
March 30, 1946 – “St. Louis Woman,” a musical
version of Alabama author Arna Bontemps's book “God Sends Sunday,”
opened on Broadway.
March 30, 1959 - Baseball practice at Monroe County High
School got underway on this Monday afternoon when around 25 candidates reported
for action. Lettermen included in the group were Jim Lazenby and Jimmy Andress,
pitchers; Branchard Tucker, outfielder; Mickey Ryland, catcher; Charles
Pridgeon, first base; Preston Griffin, infielder; Kenneth Gall, second base.
MCHS, which was led by head coach James Allen, was scheduled to begin its
season on April 10.
March 30, 1965 - A bomb exploded in
a car parked in front of the U.S. Embassy in Saigon, virtually destroying the
building and killing 19 Vietnamese, two Americans, and one Filipino; 183 others
were injured.
March 30, 1966 – Army Sgt. Elmer Jack Taylor, 26, of Atmore,
Ala. was killed in action in the Quang Tri province of South Vietnam. Born on
Feb. 11, 1940, he was an infantryman in the 1st Infantry Division, 1st
Battalion, 28th Infantry, C Co. He was awarded the National Defense
Service Medal, the Combat Infantryman Badge, the Purple Heart, the Vietnam
Campaign Medal and the Vietnam Service Medal. He was buried in Mount Pleasant
Methodist Church Cemetery at Eliska.
March 30, 1967 - The cover of the Beatles' "Sgt.
Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band" was staged and photographed.
March 30, 1967 – The Evergreen Courant reported that
Wolfe Ambulance Service planned to begin offering ambulance service to all of
Conecuh County on Sat., April 1. Cope Funeral Home planned to end offering this
service on Fri., March 31. Frank Wolfe of Monroeville, owner of the new
service, was already operating an ambulance service in Monroe County at that
time.
March 30, 1967 – The Evergreen Courant reported that
Warrant Officer One R.B. Griffin had started a 12-month tour of duty with the
U.S. Army in Vietnam. He was the son of Mrs. Bertha Griffin of Rt. 1,
Evergreen.
March 30, 1967 – In this day’s edition of The Evergreen
Courant, service station operators were warned by Evergreen Police Chief John
Andrews not to sell gasoline or other combustible fluids in glass containers.
He pointed out that to do so was a violation of a city ordinance. Andrews said
that each year about this time when lawn-mowing resumed there were violations
of the ordinance reported. He said that it was very dangerous for gasoline to
be carried in glass containers and enforcement of the law was necessary for
public safety.
March 30, 1967 – The Evergreen Courant reported that
Marine Private First Class James C. Salter Jr., grandson of Mrs. Emmie Tatum of
Rt. 1, Evergreen, was in Da Nang, Vietnam serving as a member of ‘A’ Battery,
First Battalion, 13th Marine Regiment.
March 30, 1971 – An organizational meeting for a proposed
Civitan Club in Evergreen, Ala. was held at 6:30 a.m. at Jimmie’s Restaurant.
The Andalusia Civitan Club was sponsoring the proposed club in Evergreen.
March 30, 1972 – A major
coordinated communist offensive opened with the heaviest military action since
the sieges of Allied bases at Con Thien and Khe Sanh in 1968.
March 30, 1976 – Actress Jessica Cauffiel was born in
Detroit, Mich.
March 30, 1978 – The Monroe Journal reported, under the
headline “Cornerstone set,” that Eastwood Baptist Church, in a brief ceremony
the week before, set the cornerstone marker in its new building under
construction on Drewry Road. Sealed behind the marker was some historical data,
including a list of charter church members, first officers and newspaper
clippings. Construction was expected to be completed in May or June, said the
Rev. Ralph Gwin, acting pastor.
March 30, 1978 – The Evergreen Courant reported that Albert
Daryl Harper of Evergreen had been named to the Dean’s List at Emmanuel
College, Franklin Springs, Ga., for the winter quarter.
March 30, 1981
– U.S. President Ronald Reagan was shot in the chest outside a Washington, D.C.,
hotel by John Hinckley Jr.
March 30, 1984 – County music’s Hank Locklin was scheduled
to perform at the Eighth Annual Sparta Academy Talent Show and Contest in
Evergreen, Ala.
March 30, 1988 - The movie “Beetlejuice,” story by
and screenplay cowritten by Alabama author Robert McDowell, was released.
March 30, 1989 – The Gee’s Bend Farms Community School in
Gee’s Bend in Wilcox County, Ala. was added to the Alabama Register of
Landmarks and Heritage.
March 30, 1989 – The Rawls House in Enterprise, Ala. was
added to the Alabama Register of Landmarks and Heritage.
March 30, 1993 - In the Peanuts comic strip, Charlie Brown
hit his first home run.
March 30, 2004 - NFL owners approved a modified version of
the instant replay system for five years. They added a third coaches' challenge
if the first two were successful.
March 30, 2008 - U.S. President George W. Bush threw out the
first pitch at the Washington National's new stadium, Nationals Park.
March 30, 2010 – German SS officer Martin Sandberger died at
the age of 98 in Stuttgart, Germany.
March 30, 2013 – Former University of Alabama quarterback,
assistant coach and athletics director Mal Moore, a native of Dozier, Ala.,
died at the age of 73 in Durham, N.C.
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