Louise Short Baptist Widows and Orphans Home historical marker. |
March 8, 1576 – Spanish explorer Diego García de Palacio
first sighted the ruins of the ancient Mayan city of Copán.
March 8, 1618 – German astronomer Johannes Kepler discovered
the third law of planetary motion, also known as the Law of Harmonies, which compares
the motion of different planets.
March 8, 1641 – Chinese geographer and explorer Xu Xiake
died in China at the age of 54.
March 8, 1655 – John Casor became the first
legally-recognized slave in England's North American colonies where a crime was
not committed.
March 8, 1746 – French botanist and explorer André Michaux
was born in Versailles.
March 8, 1775 – An anonymous writer, thought by some to be
Thomas Paine, published “African Slavery in America,” the first article in the
American colonies calling for the emancipation of slaves and the abolition of
slavery.
March 8, 1777 – Regiments from Ansbach and Bayreuth, sent to
support Great Britain in the American Revolutionary War, mutinied in the town
of Ochsenfurt.
March 8, 1782 – During what is now known as the
“Gnadenhütten Massacre,” 96 Native Americans in Gnadenhutten, Ohio, who had
converted to Christianity were killed by Pennsylvania militiamen in retaliation
for raids carried out by other Indians.
March 8, 1790 – John Green Sr., who established the first
school in Conecuh County, Ala., was born in Abbeville District, South Carolina.
A War of 1812 veteran, he passed away at the age of 92 on July 7, 1882 and is
buried in the John Green Cemetery in Conecuh County.
March 8, 1805 – State legislator J. Richard Hawthorne, who
moved to Conecuh County, Ala. in 1817, was born in Robinson County, N.C.
March 8, 1817 – The New York Stock Exchange was founded.
March 8, 1853 - The first bronze statue of Andrew Jackson
was unveiled in Washington, D.C.
March 8, 1855 - A train passed over the first railway
suspension bridge at Niagara Falls, New York.
March 8, 1859 – Novelist Kenneth Grahame was born in
Edinburgh, Scotland. He is best known for his famous children’s book, “The Wind
in the Willows.”
March 8, 1862 – During the Civil War, the iron-clad
CSS Virginia (formerly the USS Merrimack) was launched and wreaked
havoc on a Yankee squadron off Hampton Roads, Virginia. The Virginia attacked
the U.S.S. Cumberland, firing several shots into her before ramming the Federal
ship and sinking it. The other Union ships fired back, but the shots were, in
the words of one observer, “having no more effect than peas from a pop-gun.”
Ninety-eight shots hit the Virginia, but none did significant damage. The
Virginia then attacked the U.S.S. Congress, which exploded when fires caused by
the Confederate barrage reached the powder magazine. The Virginia next ran the
U.S.S. Minnesota aground before calling it a day. It had been the worst day in
U.S. naval history and signaled the end of the wooden ship era.
March 8, 1862 – During the Civil
War, a two-day operation in and around Rolla, Mo. began. Chattanooga, Tenn. was
occupied by Confederate forces, and a skirmish was fought near Nashville, Tenn.
Leesburg, Va. was occupied by Federal forces.
March 8, 1863 – The Louise Short Baptist Widows and Orphans
Home opened in Evergreen, Ala.
March 8, 1863 – During the Civil
War, Confederate operations were conducted against New Berne, N.C., which
featured skirmishes at Deep Gully and in the vicinity of Fort Anderson.
Skirmishes were fought near Carthage, Collierville, Franklin, Columbia,
Thompson’s Station, Rutherford’s Creek, La Grange, Covington and on the Harpeth
River (near Triune), all in Tennessee.
March 8, 1864 – During the Civil War, skirmishes occurred at
Courtland and Moulton in Alabama.
March 8, 1864 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought near Baton Rouge and at Cypress Creek in Louisiana.
For the first time, President Abraham Lincoln met with his new Lieutenant
General, Ulysses Simpson Grant in Washington City, D.C.
March 8, 1865 - Alabama author Mary McNeil Fenollosa was
born on her grandparents' plantation in Wilcox County, Alabama.
March 8, 1865 – During the Civil
War, the Battle of Kinston, or Wise’s Forks, took place in North Carolina.
Skirmishes were also fought at Love’s Bridge (sometimes called Blue’s Bridge),
S.C.; in Jackson County, Tenn.; with Indians at Poison Creek, in the Idaho
Territory; and in the vicinity of Duguidsville, Va.
March 8, 1874 - The thirteenth president of the United
States, Millard Fillmore, passed away at the age of 74 in Buffalo, New York.
March 8, 1887 - Mr. J.H. Moore of Claiborne was in
Monroeville on this Tuesday.
March 8, 1893 - Emmet Dalton, the only survivor of the Dalton Gang’s disastrous attempt to rob two Kansas banks, began serving a life sentence in the Kansas State Penitentiary.
March 8, 1895 – The U.S. Department of Agriculture Weather
Bureau Station at Claiborne, Ala. recorded 2.1 inches of rainfall.
March 8, 1896 – Monroe County Deputy Sheriff Neville came in
on this Sunday afternoon, having in custody Yancey Stinson and Richard Edy,
charged with killing Jacob Petty in the northeastern portion of the county on
Feb. 26. The accused was arraigned before Hon. N.J. Stallworth on Mon., March
9, morning, and waiving examination, were released on bond in the sum of $300
each.
March 8, 1896 – Brother Lambert preached a “most excellent
sermon” in Manistee on this Sunday.
March 8, 1896 - Brother Feagin filled his regular
appointment in the Glendale community on this Sunday and preached “a very
impressive sermon.”
March 8, 1904 – A Chapter of Royal Arch Masons was
instituted in Evergreen, Ala. by Grand Secretary Geo. A. Beauchamp, assisted by
Grand High Priest C.R. Bricken, and a number of Masons from Monroeville.
Degrees were conferred upon 20 candidates. The following officers were elected:
Geo. W. Salter Sr., High Priest; P.M. Bruner Sr., King; R.T. Holland, Scribe;
E. Downing, C. of S.V.; W.F. Betts, P.S.; Y.M. Long, Y.M.C.; P.S. McKinley, M.
3rd V.; C. Rubach, M. 2nd V.; S.B. Lister, M. 1st V.; J.T. Williams, Treasurer;
E.E. Newton, Secretary; Wm. Ellis, Sentinel.
March 8, 1906 - Miss Lucille Bizzelle of Monroeville, Ala.
was scheduled to give a recital in the Monroe County circuit courtroom on this
evening for the benefit of the new Methodist church. Bizzelle had studied under
prominent teachers at Wheatcroft Dramatic School and Lawrence School of New
York City, Morgan School of Chicago, and had only recently returned from Boston
where she took a special course in Emerson College. She had given recitals in
New York City and in a number of towns and cities in Alabama and “had been
given the most flattering press notices of her splendid ability to entertain.”
March 8, 1906 – The Monroe Journal reported that Jennie
Faulk had returned home to Monroeville, Ala. after spending a week in St. Louis
“selecting her magnificent stock of spring hats and millinery novelties, which
are now arriving. Miss Callie Faulk is also in the store and no effort will be
spared to please the taste and gratify the desire of customers.”
March 8, 1906 – The Monroe Journal reported that Dr. R.A.
Smith had moved to Nadawah, Ala. to accept the position of physician and
druggist for the Shoal Creek Lumber Co. Smith was to “retain his interests” in
Monroeville and “his new engagements will not prevent him from responding to
the call of his friends in cases of emergency,” The Journal reported.
March 8, 1916 – During World War I, a British force
unsuccessfully attempted to relieve the siege of Kut (present-day Iraq) in the
Battle of Dujaila.
March 8, 1917 – Literary critic Leslie A. Fiedler was born
in Newark, N.J.
March 8, 1917 - In Russia, the February Revolution (known as such because of Russia’s use of the Julian calendar) began on this day, when riots and strikes over the scarcity of food erupted in Petrograd (now St. Petersburg).
March 8, 1918 - The large automobile truck of J.R. Smith was
demolished by the No. 5 passenger train on this Friday morning at the crossing
near the timber ramp in Evergreen. The car was driven by Sambo Williamson who
failed to observe the approach of the train as he attempted to cross the
tracks. The young driver suffered only slight injuries.
March 8, 1930 - The twenty-seventh president of the United
States, William Howard Taft, passed away at the age of 72 in Washington, D.C.
March 8, 1930 - The New York Yankees signed Babe Ruth to a
two-year contract worth $160,000.
March 8, 1931 – Writer John McPhee was born in Princeton,
N.J.
March 8, 1934 – Major League Baseball second baseman Marv
Breeding was born in Decatur, Ala. He would go on to play for the Baltimore
Orioles, the Washington Senators and the Los Angeles Dodgers.
March 8, 1935 – Construction of Pickwick Dam, located 52
miles below Wilson Dam in Florence, Ala., began.
March 8, 1935 – Thomas Wolfe’s novel “Of Time and the River”
was first published.
March 8, 1939 – Major League Baseball pitcher and author Jim
Bouton was born in Newark, N.J. He would go on to play for the New York
Yankees, the Seattle Pilots, the Houston Astros and the Atlanta Braves. He is
arguably most famous for his classic baseball book, “Ball Four,” which was
published in 1970.
March 8, 1948 – Evergreen (Ala.) High School, under head
coach Wendell Hart, began spring football practice.
March 8, 1949 – President of France Vincent Auriol and
ex-emperor of Annam Bảo Đại signed the Élysée Accords, giving Vietnam greater
independence from France and creating the State of Vietnam to oppose Viet
Minh-led Democratic Republic of Vietnam.
March 8, 1953 – National Baseball Hall of Fame left fielder
and designated hitter Jim Rice was born in Anderson, S.C. He would go on to
play his entire career for the Boston Red Sox (1974-1989). He was inducted into
the Hall of Fame in 2009.
March 8, 1956 – Evergreen High School’s varsity boys
basketball team, which finished second the previous week in the First District
Class AA Tournament in Mobile, was scheduled to play Kinston High School in the
opening round of the State Class AA Basketball Tournament at 3:30 p.m. in Tuscaloosa,
Ala. The Aggies were paced by Randy White, said to be the highest scorer in the
history of the school with a total of 833 points in 28 games that year, a
30-point per game average. Wayne Frazier, Eddie Kelly, Mickey Joyner and Robert
King made up the rest of the starting team for Evergreen. Substitutes were
Ronnie Edson, Harry Pugh, Wendell Tolbert, Walter Carrier and Timmie Boykin.
March 8, 1956 – The Evergreen Courant reported that the
“Repton-Burnt Corn Road” would soon be a reality as Conecuh County planned to
begin work on the road soon, according to John Tranum, Chairman of the Conecuh
County (Ala.) Board of Directors. Negotiations between the State of Alabama
Highway Department and the Board of Directors had been in progress for about 12
months, and word was received early on Mon., March 5, “flashing a green light
on the project.” The road was to be built through Bermuda, connecting both
Repton and Burnt Corn with that community, as well as providing a closer route
from Burnt Corn to Evergreen. Much of the new road was to be along the route of
the Old Federal Stage Road.
March 8, 1960 – Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist Jeffrey
Eugenides was born in Detroit, Mich.
March 8, 1964 - A television version of Alabama author
Borden Deal's story "For the Love of Willadean: A Taste of Melon" was
broadcast as part of the “Walt Disney's Wonderful World of Color” series.
March 8, 1965
– Thirty-five hundred United States Marines were the first American land combat
forces committed during the Vietnam War.
March 8, 1965 - The USS Henrico,
Union and Vancouver, carrying the 9th Marine Expeditionary Brigade under Brig.
Gen. Frederick J. Karch, took up stations 4,000 yards off Red Beach Two, north
of Da Nang.
March 8, 1970 – NFL place kicker Jason Elam was born in Fort
Walton Beach, Fla. He would go on to play for the University of Hawaii, the
Denver Broncos and the Atlanta Falcons.
March 8, 1971 - Harris Johnston Williamson, 55, died on this
Monday in a Birmingham, Ala. hospital after a long illness. He was assistant
postmaster of the Evergreen Post Office and a veteran postal employee.
Williamson began his career in the postal service on Aug. 1, 1938 and was named
assistant postmaster in June 1957. A lifelong resident of Evergreen,
Williamson’s entire career was with the Evergreen Post Office. He served with
distinction in the U.S. Navy during World War II.
March 8, 1971 – High flood waters on the Alabama River on
this Monday rose over the top of the lock at the Claiborne Dam in Monroe
County, Ala. Flooding was also visible along the river, which left its banks
and ranged as far as two and three miles inland in places. As of March 11,
1971, at last report, the river was at an elevation of 51.8 feet – nearly two
feet above the lock. Donald Bast, manager of the dam project, said the flooding
would have been worse than the 1960 flood if it were not for the river’s newly
constructed dams.
March 8, 1972 – German SS officer Erich von dem
Bach-Zelewski died at the age of 73 in Munich, Bavaria, West Germany.
March 8, 1975 - South Vietnamese
President Nguyen Van Thieu ordered the withdrawal of South Vietnamese forces
from the Central Highlands.
March 8, 1976 – NFL wide receiver
Hines Ward was born in Seoul, South Korea. He would go on to play for the
University of Georgia and the Pittsburgh Steelers.
March 8, 1976 – Major League
Baseball outfielder Juan Encarnación was born in Las Matas de Farfán, Dominican
Republic. He went on to play for the Detroit Tigers, the Cincinnati Reds, the
Florida Marlins, the Los Angeles Dodgers and the St. Louis Cardinals.
March 8, 1976 – Major League
Baseball utility player Ryan Freel was born in Jacksonville, Fla. He went on to
play for the Toronto Blue Jays, the Cincinnati Reds, the Baltimore Orioles, the
Chicago Cubs and the Kansas City Royals.
March 8, 1976 – Actor, producer and
screenwriter Freddie Prinze Jr. was born in Los Angeles, Calif.
March 12, 1977 - Weather observer Earl Windham reported a
low temperature of 28 degrees in Evergreen, Ala.
March 8, 1978 – The first radio episode
of “The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy” by Douglas Adams was transmitted on
BBC Radio 4.
March 8, 1986 - Monroe County High School’s girls basketball
team came up on the short end of a 56-53 score in the state title match on this
Saturday against Wenonah High, after playing “giant killers” on Fri., March 7,
in the state semifinals of the Class 5A state tournament at Decatur, Ala. The
Lady Tigers, who finished as the state’s Class 5A runners-up for the second
straight season, lost to state champion Wenonah, 56-53, on Sat., March 8, after
handing previously unbeaten and top-ranked Hartselle a 42-40 defeat at John C.
Calhoun Community College on Fri., March 7. Players on MCHS’s team that season
included Bridgett Brown, Barbara Lang, Samantha Malone, Stephanie Richardson
and Jennifer Stallworth. Ronald Jackson was MCHS’s head coach.
March 8, 1993 – Hillcrest High School’s
baseball team opened the 1993 season by beating Wilcox Central, 19-0, in
Evergreen, Ala. Hillcrest senior pitched the complete game shutout, allowing
just three hits and striking out 10 opposing batters. Hillcrest’s Mario
McDaniel also hit a three-run home run in the first inning. Senior Rhett Wilson
pitched the complete game shutout. Wilson allowed three hits and walked five
while recording 10 strikeouts. Isaac McMillan and Sederick Fluker led the
offensive attack for the Jaguars, each collecting two hits and combining for
seven runs. Reggie Boykin paced the Jaguars on the base pads. Boykin collected
five stolen bases. McMillan added four, Fluker had three and Earnest Grace and
Gary Remundo each had two as the Jags raised plenty of dust with 18 stolen bases.
March 8, 1994 – The William Carter Home (Pine Flat
Plantation) near Forest Home was added to the Alabama Register of Landmarks and
Heritage.
March 8, 1998 – Pro Football Hall of Fame middle linebacker
Ray Nitschke died at the age of 61 in Venice, Fla. During his career, he played
at the University of Illinois and the Green Bay Packers. He was inducted into
the Hall of Fame in 1978.
March 8, 1999 - The U.S. Supreme Court upheld the conviction
of Timothy McVeigh for the bombing of a federal building in Oklahoma City in
1995.
March 8, 1999 – National Baseball Hall of Fame center
fielder Joe DiMaggio died in Hollywood, Fla. He played his entire career for
the New York Yankees. He was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1955.
March 8, 2001 – The Evergreen Courant reported that Sally
Hartley, daughter of Tommy Hartley and Gloria Hartley, had been elected to
serve as a member of the Auburn Tigerettes/Tiger Hosts for the 2001-2002
football recruiting season. The Tigerettes and Tigers Hosts were the official
hostesses and hosts of the Auburn University Athletic Department. In addition
to providing moral support to the Auburn Tigers, they were active in football
recruiting and act as tour guides to people visiting Auburn. Sally was a
freshman from Evergreen, majoring in Public Relations.
March 8, 2001 – The Evergreen Courant reported that the
extremely heavy rains that fell on Fri., March 2, and Sat., March 3, throughout
Conecuh County, Ala. did extensive damage to several roads. This bridge on
County Road 30 going to Fairnelson washed out so badly that residents had to
travel the Seven Bridges Road to get to Evergreen. County workers were trying
to have the bridge repaired and open for traffic again by March 8.
March 8, 2001 - The Monroeville Area Chamber of Commerce was
scheduled to hold its annual membership dinner on this Thursday at 6:30 p.m. in
the fellowship hall of Monroeville First Baptist Church on Pineville Road in
Monroeville, Ala. Special guest speakers for the event were to be Ralph Stacey,
president and chief executive officer of the Chamber of Commerce Association of
Alabama, and Milton Brown, Mobile real estate entrepreneur and songwriter and
force behind the soon to be completed film, “Mi Amigo.” At the chamber dinner
meeting, Brown was to show clips from Monroe County scenes in the movie and
discuss making the film.
March 8, 2004 – A new constitution was signed by Iraq's
Governing Council.
March 8, 2006 - NFL owners and the players' union agreed on
a union proposal which extended the collective bargaining agreement for six
years.
March 8, 2008 – Weather reporter Harry Ellis reported a low
of 29 degrees in Evergreen, Ala.
March 8, 2009 – Country music singer-songwriter Hank Locklin
passed away in Brewton, Ala. at the age of 91. At the time of his death, he was
the oldest living member of the Grand Ole Opry.
March 8, 2014 – Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 disappeared en
route from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing. The aircraft is believed to have crashed
into the Indian Ocean off the coast of Australia with the loss of all 239
people aboard.
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