Alabama Gov. William D. Jelks |
July 12, circa 100 B.C. – Gaius Julius Caesar was born in
Rome. He was the great military leader who managed to capture for the Roman
Empire most of what became France and Great Britain.
July 12, 1389 – King Richard II appointed poet Geoffrey
Chaucer to the position of Chief Clerk of the King’s Works in Westminster.
Chaucer is best remembered for his greatest work, “The Canterbury Tales.”
July 12, 1493 – Hartmann Schedel's “Nuremberg Chronicle,”
one of the best-documented early printed books, was published.
July 12, 1562 – Fray Diego de Landa, acting Bishop of
Yucatán, burned the sacred books of the Maya.
July 12, 1584 – English navigator and explorer Steven
Borough passed away at the age of 58 and was buried at Chatham.
July 12, 1776 – Captain James Cook began his third voyage.
July 12, 1780 – In what is known as the Battle of Huck’s
Defeat, Philadelphia lawyer Captain Christian Huck and 130 Loyalist cavalry,
belonging to British Lieutenant Colonel Banastre Tarleton’s legion, suffered
defeat at the hands of 500 Patriot militiamen at Williamson’s Plantation in South
Carolina.
July 12, 1804 - In Weehawken, N.J., former U.S. Secretary of
the Treasury Alexander Hamilton died from a wound he suffered in a duel with
Aaron Burr the day before. Hamilton was either 47 or 49 years old.
July 12, 1817 – Author, poet, philosopher, abolitionist, tax
resister and transcendentalist Henry David Thoreau was born in Concord, Mass.
July 12, 1838 – Confederate soldier
Charles G. Albrest (name sometimes spelled Albrest or Albreast) was born on
this day near Brewton, Ala. He enlisted at Sparta on April 7, 1862 and served
as a private in Co. E, 38th Alabama Regiment (The Miller Guards). He was
discharged due to disability on Dec. 31, 1862 in Mobile, and he returned home
to Sparta. At the time of the 1907 Confederate Census, he was living at
Castleberry. He died on Jan. 31, 1917 and was buried in the Albrest Cemetery in
Conecuh County.
July 12, 1861 - Special Confederate commissioner Albert Pike
completed treaties with the members of the Choctaw and Chickasaw tribes, giving
the new Confederate States of America several allies in Indian Territory. Some
of these tribes even sent troops to serve in the Confederate army, and one
Cherokee, Stand Watie, rose to the rank of brigadier general.
July 12, 1861 – During the Civil
War, a skirmish was fought near Newport News, Virginia.
July 12, 1861 – During the Civil
War, Beverly, West Virginia was occupied by Federal forces. Federal forces
maneuvered against Confederates in the Valley of the Great Kanawha, West
Virginia.
July 12, 1861 – James Butler “Wild
Bill” Hickok began to establish his reputation as a gunfighter after he coolly
shot three men during a shootout in Nebraska.
July 12, 1862 – The Medal of Honor was created when
President Abraham Lincoln signed into law a measure calling for the awarding of
a U.S. Army Medal of Honor, in the name of Congress, "to such
noncommissioned officers and privates as shall most distinguish themselves by
their gallantry in action, and other soldier-like qualities during the present
insurrection."
July 12, 1862 - The Confederate ironclad Arkansas was
completed and steered down the Yazoo and into the Mississippi River. The ship
lasted only 23 days before running aground and being blown up by the crew on
August 6 to avoid capture.
July 12, 1862 – During the Civil War, a five-day Federal
operation began in the vicinity of Decatur, Ala. with a skirmish near Davis
Gap.
July 12, 1862 – During the Civil
War, a skirmish was fought with Indians at Weaverville Crossing, California.
July 12, 1862 – During the Civil
War, Morgan’s raiders captured Lebanon, Kentucky, which caused excitement in
Cincinnati, Ohio, and in Frankfort, Lexington and Louisville, Kentucky.
July 12, 1862 – During the Civil
War, Union forces captured Hamilton, North Carolina.
July 12, 1862 – During the Civil
War, Federal reconnaissance was conducted to Culpeper, Orange and Madison
Courthouses in Virginia.
July 12, 1862 – HILLIARD’S LEGION: Hilliard’s Legion arrived
by train in Chattanooga from Camp Alabama in Atlanta. They formed up and
marched to the destination for arms issue.
July 12, 1863 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought near Vernon, Indiana; near Donaldsonville,
Louisiana, on the La Fourche Plantation; near Canton, Mississippi; near
Switzler’s Mill, in Chariton County, Missouri; and at Ashby’s Gap, Virginia.
July 12, 1863 – During the Civil
War, a nine-day Federal expedition began from Vicksburg to Yazoo City,
Mississippi, aboard the USS Baron De Kalb, Kenwood, New National, and Signal.
The Baron De Kalb struck a torpedo and sank.
July 12, 1864 – During the Civil
War, a four-day Federal operation began in Lincoln County, Tennessee.
July 12, 1864 – During the Civil
War, the governor of New Jersey called out volunteers for the defense of
Washington, D.C.
July 12, 1864 – During the Civil
War, fighting occurred near Fort Stevens and along the northern defenses of
Washington, D.C. U.S. President Abraham Lincoln was present to witness a
portion of the battle where Union forces repelled Jubal Early's army on the
outskirts of Washington, D.C.
July 12, 1864 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought on Turkey Creek at Lee’s Mills, near Ream’s
Station, in Virginia; and at Warwick Swamp, Virginia.
July 12, 1879 – All surviving Confederate soldiers living in
Conecuh County were asked to meet at the Conecuh County Courthouse in Evergreen
on this Saturday, for the purpose of organizing a Historical and Memorial Association
of the Confederate soldiers of Conecuh County. The association, to have for one
of its laudable objects, to obtain and preserve the records, to show what
Alabama achieved and suffered during the war between the states. – John S.
Stearns, John G. Guice, J.B. Bonnett, F.M. Walker, P.D. Bowles and many others.
July 12-13, 1886 – Monroe County Court was held in
Monroeville, beginning on the morning of July 12 and remained in session until
the evening of Tues., July 13.
July 12, 1886 - Capt. T.A. Nettles was in Monroeville on
this Monday.
July 12, 1892 – Alexander Joy Cartwright Jr., the inventor
of the modern game of baseball, passed away in Honolulu,
O'ahu, Kingdom of Hawai'I at the age of 72.
July 12, 1901 - Cy Young of the Boston Red Sox got his 300th
career victory. He ended his career with 511 wins.
July 12, 1904 – Poet Pablo Neruda was born Neftali Ricardo
Reyes Basoalto in Parral, Chile.
July 12, 1906 – The Monroe Journal reported that three new
passenger stations were to be built on the Mobile & Montgomery division of
the Louisville & Nashville Railroad, costing in the aggregate $36,500.
Those buildings were to be erected at Brewton, Flomaton and Tyson. The new
station at Flomaton was expected to cost $28,000 and was to be modern in every
respect.
July 12, 1906 – The Monroe Journal reported, in news from
the Harp community, that merchant, J.L. Tatum, accompanied by his sister, Miss
Lucy, had just returned home from the picnic at Poplar Springs. Both reported a
nice time.
July 12, 1906 – The Monroe Journal reported, in news from
Flomaton, that William P. Powell had bought the G.A. Ivey property opposite the
L&N depot and planned to lay it off into building lots. Powell had already
opened a new hotel, the Flocambia. Powell was a former resident of Monroe
County.
July 12, 1906 – The Monroe Journal reported that Tax
Collector J.L. Marshall had returned from a visit to his daughter, Mrs. J.L.
Sowell, in Marion County.
July 12, 1906 – The Monroe Journal reported that Alabama
Gov. William D. Jelks, acting under the recommendations of the State Pardon
Board, had commuted the death sentence of Sonnie Coker, a young negro of Monroe
County, to imprisonment for 99 years. Had clemency been denied, Coker would
have been hanged on July 13. Coker was tried and convicted in Monroe County
Circuit Court in July 1905 for criminal assault on a negro girl.
July 12, 1906 – The Monroe Journal reported, in news from
the Pineville community, that “two hideous snakes were killed at our front door
a few days” before. Little Jim Allen Sanders was sitting in the piazza and saw
a snake “winding its sinuous length up a tree in front of the door. He secured
a hoe, brought it down and killed it. The next day the children were playing
under the house and came upon another just like the first. Jim Allen killed
that one too.”
July 12, 1912 – Evergreen’s baseball team beat Pollard, 1-0,
in Evergreen, Ala.
July 12, 1915 – Wiley House returned home to Burn Corn on
this Monday after spending several days with his sister Mrs. C.A. Sinquefield.
He was fully recovered from the pistol and knife wounds he received from John
Salter and Robert Watkins on June 23, 1915.
July 12, 1915 – Freemason Simeon F. Daniel passed away at
his home in Century, Fla. at the age of 84, and he was buried with Masonic
honors in Monroeville, Ala. on July 13. Daniel was a Monroe County native and
had lived there most of his life before moving to Atmore and Century prior to
his death.
July 12, 1915 - Allied forces make a sixth and final attempt to capture Achi Baba, a prominent hill position featuring a commanding view of Cape Helles, on the Gallipoli Peninsula, from its Turkish defenders.
July 12, 1916 - Chancery court was in session in Evergreen,
Ala. on this Wednesday.
July 12, 1917 - The Wilcox County School Improvement
Association was scheduled to meet on this second Thursday of the month at 5
p.m.
July 12, 1918 – Croatian explorer Dragutin Lerman died at
the age of 54 in Kreševo, Bosnia and Herzegovina, where his gravestone is still
visible.
July 12, 1930 – The thermometer at the Evergreen, Ala.
weather observation station registered a high mark of 107.5 degrees on this day
and the day before.
July 12, 1931 - A Major League Baseball record for doubles
was set as the St. Louis Cardinals and the Chicago Cubs combined for a total of
23.
July 12, 1945 – The Evergreen Courant reported that the
finishing touches were being administered to the Laula Middleton Airport by
Nolan & Dickerson, general contractors, and it was expected that within a
few days it would be ready to turn over to the Navy. Warren Brothers Road Co.,
who had sub-contracted to lay the bituminous surface on the tremendous runways
and auxiliary runways, completed their work the week before and were this week
moving all equipment to Savannah, Ga., where they were beginning work on
another contract. The contractor was completing final grading and sodding on
the grounds adjacent to the runways.
July 12, 1946 - "The Adventures of Sam Spade" was
heard on ABC radio for the first time.
July 12, 1951 - The Monroe County Masonic Conference was
scheduled to be held in Monroeville, Ala. on this Thursday with the local
Alabama Lodge No. 3 as host. The program, beginning at 9:30 a.m., was to be as
follows: Address of welcome, Rev. A.C. Lee; response, Rev. J.F. Bilbro;
introduction grand officers and visitors; conference business.
July 12, 1954 - The Major League Baseball Players
Association was organized in Cleveland, Ohio.
July 12, 1956 – Retired farmer and merchant Leon Ogborne
Norris died at the age of 88 at Uriah and was buried in the Norris Family
Cemetery near Uriah. He was born on Oct. 7, 1867 in Brazil. Leon Norris was the
son of Samuel Leonidas Norris, a former Confederate soldier, (and Emma Ogborne)
who was part of group who fled Monroe County after the surrender at Appomattox
and settled in Brazil. The Monroe County group headed by William H. Norris
became known collectively with other immigrants from southern states as Los
Confederados.
July 12, 1960 – Evergreen Mayor Zell Murphy was swept back
into office by a majority vote in an election on this Tuesday that was full of
surprises (for some) and one oddity. Carrying every box, Murphy romped to
victory in his bid for a second term, piling up 52 votes more than the combined
total of his opponents, former Mayor J.H. (Hub) Robison and former Councilman
Guy Mason. The voters returned two members of the City Council to office,
turned down the bid of the other and put in three new men. Henry Sessions was
the leader in the council voting as he piled up heavy totals in all four boxes
for 522 votes. Right behind him was Jack Wild with 503. Both were making their
first bids for office. Incumbent Councilman Aubrey Griffin was next with 440
votes. Newcomer Walter Poole took fourth place with a 398 total. Dr. Joseph Hagood,
present mayor pro-tem, won the final spot with a 387 vote total. Bob Bozeman
received 378 votes, Cumbie Snowden, an incumbent, 310, and John Raines, 289.
The oddity occurred in the council race with six of the eight candidates
receiving a clear majority of the votes cast. The fifth and sixth men, Dr.
Hagood and Bob Bozeman, were separated by only nine votes.
July 12, 1962 – In Evergreen Senior League action, the
Pirates whipped the Indians, 6-5, on this Thursday night as the Bucs kept
themselves out of last place. George Fontaine started but Steve Baggett bagged
the win as he took over in the third on the mound for the victors. Paul Deason
took the loss for the Tribe although he pitched a no-hitter. A triple by Deason
highlighted the three-run Indian third as the Indians tied the game at 4-4, but
the Pirates scored two more in their half of the third. The Indians scored in
the fifth when Jimmy Weaver got on on an error, worked his way to third and
then stole home.
July 12, 1962 – On this Thursday night, a 1959 Chevrolet
driven by Floyd Wilson of Castleberry struck and killed Henry Faircloth of near
Castleberry. Faircloth, 76, and Wilson both were on their way to attend church
services when the accident occurred.
July 12, 1965 - Viet Cong ambushed
Company A of the 3rd Reconnaissance Battalion, led by U.S.M.C. Lt. Frank
Reasoner of Kellogg, Idaho. The Marines had been on a sweep of a suspected Viet
Cong area to deter any enemy activity aimed at the nearby airbase at Da Nang.
Reasoner and the five-man point team he was accompanying were cut off from the
main body of the company. He ordered his men to lay down a base of fire and
then, repeatedly exposing himself to enemy fire, killed two Viet Cong,
single-handedly wiped out an enemy machine gun emplacement, and raced through
enemy fire to rescue his injured radio operator. Trying to rally his men,
Reasoner was hit by enemy machine gun fire and was killed instantly. For this
action, Reasoner was nominated for America’s highest award for valor. When Navy
Secretary Paul H. Nitze presented the Medal of Honor to Reasoner’s widow and
son in ceremonies at the Pentagon on Jan. 31, 1967, he spoke of Reasoner’s
willingness to die for his men: “Lieutenant Reasoner’s complete disregard for
his own welfare will long serve as an inspiring example to others.” Lieutenant
Reasoner was the first Marine to receive the Medal of Honor for action in
Vietnam.
July 12, 1966 - The National
Committee for a Sane Nuclear Policy (SANE) and American socialist Norman Thomas
appealed to North Vietnamese President Ho Chi Minh on behalf of captured
American pilots.
July 12, 1973
– A fire destroyed the entire sixth floor of the National Personnel Records
Center of the United States.
July 12, 1978 – The Wilson-Finlay House (also known as Mist Lady,
the Joshua Wilson House and the Finlay House) in Gainestown in Clarke County,
Ala. was added to the National Register of Historic Places.
July 12, 1979 – The infamous “Disco Demolition” night was
held at Comiskey Park in Chicago, which led to at least nine injuries, 39
arrests and the cancellation and forfeiture of the second game of a
doubleheader between the White Sox and the Detroit Tigers.
July 12, 1980 – Local weather reporter Earl Windham reported
a high temperature of 101 degrees in Evergreen, Ala.
July 12, 1980 – Brenda Joy Yancey, 34, drowned in the
Sepulga River at Cobb’s Landing at about 8:30 p.m.
July 12, 1982 - "E.T.: The Extra-Terrestrial"
broke all box-office records by surpassing the $100-million mark of ticket
sales in the first 31 days of its opening.
July 12, 1984 – The Evergreen Courant reported that the
members of the Evergreen Little League All Star team were Richard Melton, Keith
Richardson, Broderick Gross, Bryan Garrett, Ryan Burt, Mickey Jones, Michael
Floyd, Kevin Townson, Jamie Deason, Greg Stanton, Jamie Shipp, Scott Jones,
Richard Byrd and Kenny Meeks. The coaches were Willie Byrd and Earnest Boykin.
July 12, 1984 - Steve Carlton of the Philadelphia Phillies
recorded his 100th strikeout for the 18th consecutive season.
July 12, 2000 - The movie "X-Men" premiered in New
York.
July 12, 2007
– U.S. Army Apache helicopters performed airstrikes in Baghdad, Iraq. Footage
from the cockpit was later leaked to the Internet.
July 12, 2010 – The Wiggins Cemetery at Mexia, Ala. was
added to the Alabama Historic Cemetery Register.
July 12, 2010 – Alabama native Bo Jackson threw the
ceremonial first pitch before the 2010 Home Run Derby at Angel Stadium in
Anaheim California and participated in the celebrity softball game.
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