John Frye Gaillard |
July 18, 64 A.D. – The Great Fire of Rome caused widespread
devastation and raged on for six days, destroying half of the city.
July 18, 1743 - "The New York Weekly Journal"
published the first half-page newspaper ad.
July 18, 1779 - American Brigadier General Anthony Wayne
destroyed British fortifications at Stony Point, N.Y. In the action two days
before, he earned the moniker "Mad" Anthony Wayne for his successful
mission to take the garrison.
July 18, 1792 - Revolutionary War hero John Paul Jones died
in his Paris apartment, where he was still awaiting a commission as the United
States consul to Algiers. One of the greatest naval commanders in history,
Jones is remembered as a Father of the American Navy, along with fellow
Revolutionary War hero Commodore John Barry. John Paul Jones is buried in a
crypt at the U.S. Naval Academy Chapel in Annapolis, Maryland, where a Marine
honor guard stands at attention in his honor whenever the crypt is open to the
public.
July 18, 1811 – William Makepeace Thackeray was born in
Calcutta, India. He is best remembered for his book, “Vanity Fair: A Novel
without a Hero.”
July
18, 1825 – John Quincy Adams Warren, the son of Hinchey W. Warren, was born in
Conecuh County.
July 18, 1826 - Colonel Isaac Shelby died from a stroke at
his estate in Lincoln County, Kentucky at the age of 75. He was a soldier in
Lord Dunmore's War, the Revolutionary War, and the War of 1812. Later, he
served as the first and fifth Governor of Kentucky and served in the state
legislatures of Virginia and North Carolina.
July 18, 1861 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought near Harrisonville, Martinsburg and Parkersville,
Mo.
July 18, 1861 – During the Civil
War, fighting occurred at Blackburn’s Ford and Mitchell’s Ford in Virginia. The
main body of Confederate forces in the Shenandoah Valley were withdrawn to
reinforce the troops manning the Bull Run line, near Manassas. This was the
first time such a large body of troops were moved by train.
July 18, 1862 – The first ascent of Dent Blanche, one of the
highest summits in the Alps, took place.
July 18, 1862 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought at Henderson, Ky. and near Memphis, Mo.
July 18, 1863 – During the Civil War, in what is known as
the Second Battle of Fort Wagner, Union Colonel Robert Gould Shaw and 272 of
his troops were killed in an unsuccessful assault on Fort Wagner on Morris
Island near Charleston, S.C. After the battle Union General Quincy Gillmore
settled in for a long siege. The battle involved one of the first formal (and
perhaps the most famous) African American military units, the 54th
Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry, supported by several white regiments.
July 18, 1863 - The Union advance was halted at Blackburn's
Ford on Bull Run.
July 18, 1863 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought at Des Allemands, La.; at Brookhaven, Miss.; with
Indians on the Rio Hondo in the New Mexico Territory; at Pomeroy, Ohio, as the
Federals began closing in on the exhausted men under the command of John Hunt
Morgan; and at Memphis and Germantown, Tenn. The first of two days of
skirmishing also began near Hedgesville and Martinsburg, W.Va.
July 18, 1863 – During the Civil
War, Federal reconnaissance began from Cassville, Missouri to Huntsville, Ark.
A seven-day Federal operation that included New Bern, Tarborough and Rocky
Mount, N.C. began.
July 18, 1864 – During the Civil War, a skirmish occurred
near Auburn, Ala.
July 18, 1864 – Confederate General John Bell Hood replaced
Joseph Johnston as commander of the Army of Tennessee because Johnston had
failed to keep General William T. Sherman away from Atlanta.
July 18, 1864 – During the Civil
War, President Lincoln issued a call for 500,000 additional volunteers.
July 18, 1864 – During the Civil
War, a 19-day Federal operation began against Apache Indians in the Arizona
Territory. An 18-day Federal operation began in Southern Missouri and
Northeastern Arkansas. A four-day Federal operation began in southwestern
Missouri.
July 18, 1864 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought at Falls Church, Va.; at Kabletown, W.Va.; and near
Checaw Station, Campbellton, Buck Head and along the Chattahoochee River in
Georgia.
July 18, 1864 – During the Civil
War, Horace Greeley was sent to Canada to negotiate an end to the Civil War.
Lincoln gave him broad powers to come to a settlement, only requiring that it
include the restoration of the Union and a renunciation of slavery. The
Confederates would not accept these conditions.
July 18, 1870 – The First Vatican
Council declared the doctrine of Papal Infallibility.
July 18, 1896 - There was to be a basket picnic at the
bridge on Escambia Creek near Jones Mill, Ala. on this third Saturday in July.
July 18, 1902 – The Conecuh Guards were scheduled to hold
their annual encampment at Sans Souci beach, near Mobile, Ala. The encampment
was scheduled to last one week, beginning on July 18. Prior to this, members of
the Conecuh Guards were expected to attend drill at their armory on each Monday
and Friday leading up to July 18.
July 18, 1902 – Short story writer and novelist Jessamyn
West was born in Jennings County, Ind.
July 18, 1903 - There was to be an ice cream supper at the
residence of J.W. Wilkerson, 1-1/2 miles south of Manistee on this Saturday night
for the benefit of the Pleasant Hill Baptist Church.
July 18-20, 1905 – The Clarke County Masonic Conference was
scheduled to be held at Coffeeville Lodge, No. 122.
July 18, 1906 – Playwright Clifford Odets was born in
Philadelphia, Pa.
July 18, 1907 – The Monroe Journal reported that Sheriff
M.M. Fountain spent a few days at the state capital that week.
July 18, 1907 – The Monroe Journal reported that two new
Pythian lodges were soon to be organized in the area, one at McWilliams and
another at Repton. There were some 16 or 18 applicants for dispensation at each
place and the necessary paraphernalia had already been ordered. Prof. L.K.
Benson had been reappointed Deputy Grand Chancellor for this district and was
to institute both lodges.
July 18, 1907 – The Monroe Journal reported that the
following officers of Alabama Lodge No. 3, Perdue Hill, were elected for the
ensuing year: R. Perry, worshipful master; J.F. Gaillard, senior warden; H.J.
Coxwell, junior warden; L.N. Lambert, treasurer; W.E. Broughton, secretary;
J.A. Marshall, senior deacon; S.F. Busey, junior deacon; and L.J. Frye, tyler.
Regular meetings were to be held on the Saturday night before the full moon in
each month.
July 18, 1907 – The Monroe Journal
reported that the following officers of Cokerville Lodge, No. 75, McWilliams,
Ala., were elected for the ensuing year: G.E. Kyser, worshipful master; T.D.
Forte, senior warden; C.L. Grimes, junior warden; D.C. Sadler, treasurer; W.P.
Roberts, secretary; H.B. Hardy, senior deacon; J.D. Brantley, junior deacon;
J.W. Smith, tyler. Regular meetings were to be held on the Saturday before the
second Sunday at 9 a.m. and the Wednesday before the fourth Sunday at 8 p.m.
July 18, 1914 - Convicted of murder on meager evidence, the singing Wobbly Joe Hill was sentenced to be executed in Utah. He was executed by firing squad the following year.
July 18, 1917 - The U.S. War
Department established Camp McClellan in Calhoun County, Ala., three months
after the U.S. entered World War I. The facility was used as a
rapid-mobilization base and permanent National Guard facility. Military use of
the property dates to the close of the Spanish-American War, when the site was
used as temporary quarters for a large reserve force starting in August 1898.
In the years before its closing in 1999, Fort McClellan hosted an average
population of approximately 10,000 military
personnel and employed 1,500 civilian workers.
July 18, 1918 - Three days after a German offensive near the
Marne River in the Champagne region of France met with failure, Allied forces
launched a major counterattack, ending the Second Battle of the Marne and
decisively turning the tide of the war toward an Allied victory.
July 18, 1918 – Rolihlahla “Nelson” Mandela was born in
Mvezo, South Africa.
July 18, 1923 – Lillie Irene Gibbons passed away and was
buried in the Old Evergreen Cemetery in Evergreen, Ala. Years later, starting
in 2008, a local mystery involving multiple tombstones for her in Conecuh and
Butler counties would baffle police and historians alike.
July 18, 1924 - Alabama author Felicity Allen was born in
Louisville, Ky.
July 18, 1925 – Nazi leader Adolf Hitler published the first
volume of his personal manifesto “Mein Kampf,” seven months after he was
released from Landsberg jail. The autobiographical work soon became the bible
of Germany’s Nazi Party.
July 18, 1927 - Ty Cobb set a Major League Baseball record
by getting his 4,000th career hit. He hit 4,191 before he retired in 1928.
July 18, 1933 - Mr. and Mrs. Clarence M. White moved to
Frisco City on this Tuesday to make their home. White was employed at Lee Motor
Co.
July 18, 1934 – Around 1 p.m., Conecuh County, Ala. soldier
Jessie L. Dickerson was killed instantly by a bolt of lightning at Camp Jackson
in Columbia, S.C., while attending camp there with the local National Guard
unit. Dickerson was the youngest son of Mr. and Mrs. J.H. Dickerson, who lived
several miles north of Evergreen in the Holly Grove community. Born in Conecuh
County in 1912, he was buried in the Chappelle Methodist Church Cemetery in
Evergreen.
July 18, 1934 – Shell Petroleum Co. district agent William A.
Gowan, 20, of Brewton, Ala. was killed almost instantly in Castleberry when he
fell from a height of 20 feet at the Blue Bell camp. Gowan, the son of Dr.
Gowan of Brewton, had climbed a ladder to stretch a wire from one pole to
another across the highway to hang advertising signs, when he lost his balance
and grabbed a live power line before falling to the pavement, landing on his
chin. He never regained conciousness, died about 40 minutes later on the way to
the Brewton hospital and physicians didn’t know if the shock or fall killed him
because none of his bones were broken. He was buried in the Union Cemetery in
Brewton.
July 18, 1937 - Pioneer of "gonzo" journalism,
Hunter S. Thompson was born in Louisville, Ky.
July 18, 1938 - Douglas "Wrong Way" Corrigan
arrived in Ireland, after having left New York bound for California.
July 18, 1940 - Franklin Delano Roosevelt was nominated for
an unprecedented third term as President of the United States.
July 18, 1940 – National Baseball Hall of Fame catcher,
first baseman, third baseman and manager Joe Torre was born in Brooklyn, N.Y.
During his career, he played for the Milwaukee/Atlanta Braves, the St. Louis
Cardinals and the New York Mets and went on to manage the Mets, the Braves, the
Cardinals, the New York Yankees and the Los Angeles Dodgers. He was inducted
into the Hall of Fame in 2014.
July 18, 1946 – In Amateur Baseball League action, Evergreen
picked up its first win of the season by beating Flomaton, 4-3 in Flomaton, Ala.
Evergreen’s Edsel Johnson got the pitching win, and his brother, Ottis Johnson,
led Evergreen at the plate with two hits. Edsel also hit an inside-the-park
home run.
July 18, 1948 - Monroeville’s baseball team was scheduled to
play Atmore in Monroeville on this Sunday afternoon at Legion Field at 3 p.m.
LeVaughn Hanks was Monroeville’s coach.
July 18, 1949 - Evergreen’s Junior American Legion Baseball
Team was eliminated from the district playoffs by Andalusia in a game on this
Monday afternoon in Andalusia, Ala. Evergreen, which was managed by Jack
Finklea, finished third in the regular season standings in the district with a
6-4 record behind first-place Andalusia and second-place Brewton. Evergreen
pitcher Bobby (Pistol Pete) Wells finished the season with a 6-2 pitching
record.
July 18, 1951 – Empire, Ala. native Daniel Robert “Dan”
Bankhead, the first black pitcher in Major League Baseball, played in his final
major league baseball game.
July 18, 1955 - Following a visit
from Ho Chi Minh and his ministers, the Soviet Union announced that it would
grant Hanoi 400 million rubles (about $100 million) in economic aid.
July 18, 1963 – The Monroe Journal reported that
construction on the new swimming pool at Vanity Fair Park in Monroeville had
begun and members of the younger set were anxiously awaiting its completion.
The pool was to be 82-1/2 by 42 feet with an offset area for diving, measuring
28 by 40 feet. A children’s wading pool, 30 by 40 feet, was to be constructed
adjacent to the main swimming pool.
July 18, 1963 – The Monroe Journal reported that a check
with the Federal Bureau of Investigation in Mobile on Wed., July 17, revealed
that no arrests had been made as yet in connection with the robbery of the
Union Bank in Repton the week before. A lone bandit entered the bank at noon on
Tues., July 9, and forced Carl Ryals, cashier, to fill his brief case from the
cash drawers and safe. He then locked Ryals in the vault and fled. All
personnel of the bank were at lunch except A.E. Kelly, who had stepped next
door for a few minutes. The town was practically deserted during the noon hour
and no one saw the bandit before or after the hold up. FBI, state and local
officials converged on the town immediately, but the bandit had evidently made
good his escape.
July 18, 1963 – The Monroe Journal reported that the
Interstate Commerce Commission had authorized the Louisville & Nashville
Railroad to purchase the four and one-half mile Manistee & Repton Railroad.
The M&R ran between Monroeton Junction and Monroeville twice weekly. The
ICC at the same time dismissed the M&R’s application for permission to
abandon the entire line.
July 18, 1964 – The Evergreen Jaycees’ Second Annual
Evergreen Horse Show was scheduled to begin at 6:30 p.m. on this Saturday at
Brooks Stadium in Evergreen, Ala. George Wallace Jr., the son of Alabama’s
governor, was scheduled to be the featured speaker.
July 18, 1964 - Pete Rose of the Cincinnati Reds hit the
only grand slam home run of his career.
July 18, 1968 – Intel (short for Integrated Electronics) was
founded, chiefly by Gordon E. Moore and Robert Noyce.
July 18, 1968 - President Lyndon B.
Johnson met South Vietnamese President Nguyen Van Thieu in Honolulu to discuss
relations between Washington and Saigon.
July 18, 1969 – Vietnam War Medal of Honor recipient Army
Sgt. Rodney John Evans, 21, of Florala, Ala. was killed in action in Tay Ninh, Vietnam
with serving in Co. D, 1st Bn., 12th Cavalry, 1st
Cavalry Division. His citation reads in part "The force had started to
move forward when a nearby squad was hit by the blast of a concealed mine.
Looking to his right Sgt. Evans saw a second enemy device. With complete
disregard for his safety he shouted a warning to his men, dived to the ground,
and crawled toward the mine. Just as he reached it, an enemy soldier detonated
the explosive and Sgt. Evans absorbed the full impact with his body." Born
on July 17, 1948 in Chelsea, Suffolk County, Mass., he was buried at Liberty
Hill Church Cemetery in Florala.
July 18, 1969 – Writer Elizabeth Gilbert was born in
Waterbury, Conn. She is best known for her 2006 memoir, “Eat Pray Love.”
July 18, 1970 - Ron Hunt of the San Francisco Giants was hit
by a pitch for the 119th time in his career.
July 18, 1972 – Reports of the “Missouri Monster”
proliferated in the Louisiana, Mo. area. One man claimed that he saw the
monster cross a highway carrying a sheep or dog in its mouth while numerous
other people claimed to have seen giants with red eyes staring at them from out
of the darkness. Another man swore that the monster picked up the back end of
his small foreign car.
July 18, 1972 - The Monroe Dixie Youth All-Stars were
scheduled to travel to Sweet Water, Ala. to play Grove Hill at 7:30 p.m. in the
Sub-District playoffs. Members of the Monroe all-star team included Mitch
Jones, Chris Hornady, Jim Carter, Chris Smith, Hudson Lazenby, Kevin Norris,
Johnny Till, Hines Steele, Tommy Bowden, Whetzel Trussell, Frank Carter, Allen
Jaye, O’Neal Jordan, Mike Stanton and W.T. Stanton. Coaches were David
Middleton and Perry Nye.
July 18, 1976 – Actress Valerie Cruz was born in
Elizabethtown, N.J.
July 18, 1977 - Members of the Evergreen High School
marching band were scheduled to meet Monday at 8 a.m. at the band room. The new
band director, Carroll Cumbee, was to be present and hoped to get acquainted
with band members.
July 18, 1992 - Evergreen High School’s Class of 1970 was
scheduled to sponsor a men’s softball tournament on this Saturday at Evergreen
Municipal Park. Registration fee for the tournament was $60 per team.
July 18, 1995 – City of Evergreen workers were up all night
after severe weather knocked the power out to a large portion of Evergreen,
Ala. when the lines from the substation located in the Industrial Park were
torn down when a large tree fell across the lines. It left much of the
northwest part of the city without lights for almost 11 hours.
July 18, 1995 - The oldest known musical instrument in the
world was found in the Indrijca River Valley in Slovenia. The 45,000-year-old
relic was a bear bone with four artificial holes along its length.
July 18, 1995 - “Dreams from My Father: A Story of Race and
Inheritance,” a memoir by a little-known law professor named Barack Obama, was
published. Obama wrote the book before entering politics; 13 years after it was
published, he was elected America’s 44th president.
July 18, 1999 - New York Yankee David Cone pitched the 16th
perfect game in Major League Baseball history and 14th in the modern era with a
no-hit, no-walk victory over the Montreal Expos.
July 18, 2007 – The Evergreen Courant reported that Mr. and
Mrs. Thomas Robinson had grown a giant pink squash and mushmelon. The squash
weighed 44 pounds and was 40-1/2 inches long. The mushmelon weighed 17 pounds.
July 18, 2008 – “The Dark Knight,” the fifth film in the
big-screen “Batman” series, opened in theaters around the United States, six
months after the death of one of its stars, Heath Ledger, who played the Joker.
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