Dr. Samuel S. Gaillard (1823-1896) |
July 24, 1534 – French explorer Jacques Cartier planted a
cross on the Gaspé Peninsula and took possession of the territory in the name
of Francis I of France.
July 24, 1701 – Antoine de la Mothe Cadillac founded the
trading post at Fort Pontchartrain, which later became the city of Detroit.
July 24, 1725 - Anglican clergyman and hymn writer John
Newton was born in London. He is best remembered for his hymn, “Amazing Grace.”
July 24, 1776 - In a letter to Major General Phillip
Schuyler on this day in 1776, Congressional President John Hancock accused the
officer of tolerating discord among soldiers from different states under his
command.
July 24, 1786 – French mathematician and explorer Joseph
Nicollet was born in Cluses, Savoy, France.
July 24, 1802 – French novelist Alexandre Dumas was born in
Villers-Cotterêts, France (1802). His novels include “The Three Musketeers”
and “The Count
of Monte Cristo.”
July 24, 1814 – During the War of 1812, General Phineas
Riall advanced toward the Niagara River to halt Jacob Brown's American
invaders.
July 24, 1823 – Slavery was abolished in Chile.
July 24, 1847 – After 17 months of travel, Brigham Young led
148 Mormon pioneers into Salt Lake Valley, resulting in the establishment of
Salt Lake City.
July 24, 1847 - Richard M. Hoe patented the rotary-type
printing press.
July 24, 1861 - At Fort Fillmore, Arizona, Lt. Col. John
Robert Baylor led 300 men of the Confederate Second Texas Mounted Rifles in an
assault on Union forces under Major Isaac Lynde.
July 24, 1861 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought at Blue Mills, Mo. and at Black River, Va.
July 24, 1862 - The Eighth President of the United States,
Martin Van Buren, died at 2 a.m. of bronchial asthma and heart failure at the
age of 79 in Kinderhook, N.Y. He is buried in the Kinderhook Reformed Dutch
Church Cemetery, as are his wife Hannah, his parents, and his son Martin Van
Buren, Jr.
July 24, 1862 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought on the Amite River in Louisiana; at White Oak
Bayou, Miss.; and near Mackville, Ky.
July 24, 1862 – During the Civil
War, Admiral David G. Farragut pointed his Union fleet toward New Orleans,
leaving five gunboats to guard the Mississippi River between Vicksburg, Miss.
and Baton Rouge, La.
July 24, 1863 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought at Sante Fe and another at Moore’s Mill, near
Fulton, Mo.; at Cook's Canyon, N.M.; and at Athens and Washington in Ohio
July 24, 1863 – During the Civil
War, a Federal operation began involving New Berne, Trenton and Pollocksville
in North Carolina. A Federal operation also began from Fredericksburg toward
Orange Court House, Va. A two-day Federal operation began in Wyoming County,
W.Va.; and a Federal operation also began between Helena and Marianna in
Arkansas.
July 24, 1864 – At the Second Battle of Kernstown, Va.,
Confederate General Jubal Early defeated Union troops under General George
Crook to keep the Shenandoah Valley clear of Yankees. Early’s victory led to
significant changes in the Union approach to the Shenandoah Valley.
July 24, 1864 – During the Civil War, skirmishes were fought
at Huntsville, Mo.; at Whitesville, Fla.; near Cartersville, Ga.; near
Collierville, Tenn.; and at Fall Water, W.Va.
July 24, 1866 – During Reconstruction, Tennessee became the
first U.S. state to be readmitted to the Union following the American Civil
War.
July 24, 1870 - The Masonic funeral services for the late
I.M. Henderson were scheduled to take place at the Puryearville Chapel on this
fourth Sunday of July. Members of the Masonic Fraternity were respectfully
invited to attend.
July 24, 1879 – The Conecuh-Escambia Star reported that
“croquet parties by lamplight is a new feature in Evergreen life. They are
enjoyed by the young ladies and gentlemen.”
July 24, 1895 – English poet and novelist Robert Graves was
born in Wimbledon.
July 24, 1896 – The Monroe Journal reported that the Bear
Creek Mill Co. had closed a deal by which they secured large bodies of timbered
lands in the vicinity of Monroeville. The company had already begun work on the
extension of a branch railroad to give access to the timber. The railroad was
to reach a point within three miles of Monroeville.
July 24, 1896 – The Monroe Journal reported that Dr. Carter
and his wife of Marengo County were spending a few weeks in Monroeville, Ala.
They were guests at the Watson House.
July 24, 1896 – The Monroe Journal reported, in news from
the Pineville community, that Dr. T.B. Robbins had been quite sick for the past
week.
July 24, 1896 – The Monroe Journal reported, in news from
the Turnbull community, that Miss Mary G. Stallworth was to again honor the
Pineville school with her services.
July 24, 1897 – Amelia Earhart was born in Atchison, Kansas.
The aviatrix gained worldwide acclaim in 1932, when she became the first woman
to fly solo across the Atlantic Ocean. Of course, it was her mysterious
disappearance in 1937, during an attempted solo flight around the world, which
resulted in her having a place in esoteric lore. The ultimate resting place of
Earhart and her plane remains a hotly debated topic to this day.
July 24, 1900 – Zelda Sayre was born in Montgomery, Ala. and
she would go on to marry writer F. Scott Fitzgerald on April 3, 1920.
July 24, 1901 – The Evergreen Courant reported that the
“famous” Battle of Manassas was fought 40 years before on July 21, 1861 and
that three survivors of that battle were presently living in Evergreen - John
G. Guice, M.B. Salter and W.S. Crosby
July 24, 1901 – The Evergreen Courant reported that one of
the homing pigeons released by “Agent Sawyer of the Express Co.” had reached its
destination in Bridgeport, Conn., a distance of 1,016 miles, on July 17.
Another of the pigeons arrived the next day, July 18. of the 11 released, one
remained in Evergreen and was given to Sawyer as a present. The other eight had
not been heard from.
July 24, 1901 – The Evergreen Courant reported that Sheriff
Pridgen had placed Jim Williams in jail for shooting at R.C. Brawner at
Castleberry, Ala. Williams was captured in Brewton by Sheriff Raley.
July 24, 1908 - Amid turmoil in the Ottoman Empire, Sultan Abdul Hamid decreed restoration of the constitution, fulfilling the main demand of the Committee of Union and Progress (CUP), a rising reformist political party known as the Young Turkey Party, or the Young Turks.
July 24, 1911 - American archeologist Hiram Bingham rediscovered Machu Picchu, an ancient Inca settlement in Peru that is now one of the world's top tourist destinations.
July 24, 1914 – Evergreen beat the Nebraska Indians
traveling baseball team, 7-6, before “the largest crowd that ever witnessed a
game” in Evergreen, Ala.
July 24, 1914 - The S.S. Gaillard Chapter of the United
Daughters of the Confederacy met at the Masonic Hall at Perdue Hill, Ala. at 4
p.m.
July 24, 1915 – A large number of farmers gathered at the
Conecuh County Courthouse in Evergreen, Ala. to hear a speech given by the Hon.
Emmet A. Jones, chief of the bureau of markets of the agricultural department.
July 24, 1915 – The first open bolls of cotton from the 1915
crop were sent to The Monroe Journal by J.E. Hendrix of Mexia, Ala.
July 24, 1916 – Mystery novelist John D. MacDonald was born
in Sharon, Pa.
July 24, 1916 - Rev. C.A. Williams left Monroeville on this
Monday to assist the pastor, Rev. C.W. McConnell, in a series of meetings at
Uriah, Ala.
July 24, 1923 – The Treaty of Lausanne, settling the
boundaries of modern Turkey, was signed in Switzerland by Greece, Bulgaria and
other countries that fought in World War I.
July 24, 1937 – The State of Alabama dropped the rape
charges against the so-called "Scottsboro Boys."
July 24, 1938 – The first ascent of the Eiger’s north face
was achieved.
July 24, 1945 – Lt. Ralph E. Boggs, husband of Frances E.
Boggs of Repton, Ala., went missing in action. In July 1946, Boggs, who was
still missing, would receive the Air Medal with a gold star. He “earned the
award for meritorious service in aerial flight as leader of a fighter bomber
division in action against enemy forces in the Pacific.”
July 24, 1947 – Conecuh County Sheriff W.D. Lewis
accidentally shot himself with a .22 caliber target pistol while fishing with
Fred Oswald at the “Evergreen Club.” He was trying to shoot a grindle when the
pistol misfired, and the bullet passed through his right leg and hit his left
big toe. He was treated by Dr. Robert Stallworth.
July 24, 1947 – The Evergreen Greenies baseball team beat
Monroeville, 5-4, in Monroeville, Ala.
July 24, 1947 – The Evergreen Rotary Club’s Second Annual
Horse Show was scheduled to be held on the Evergreen High School Athletic Field
on this Thursday at 7:30 p.m. and was to be comprised of 16 classes. The show
was a feature of the Plantation Saddle Horse Association of America and was a
charitable promotion.
July 24, 1947 – The Monroe Journal reported that
preparations for about 1-1/2 miles of street for paving in Frisco City probably
would get underway that week or the next, according to Mayor G.E. Hendrix. The
construction was expected to cost about $7,500 and the majority of the paving
was to take place in the area leading out to Snyder and on the extension to
Central Avenue.
July 24, 1948 – Capt. Clarence Chiles and copilot John
Whitted were flying an Eastern Airlines DC-3 from Houston to Atlanta. Over
Montgomery, Ala. they saw a “dull red glowing object” appear out of nowhere.
The object was headed right for the plane, but before the pilots could react,
the object zipped by their starboard side, nearly colliding with the plane. The
object then climbed quickly and disappeared from sight. Chiles and Whitted said
that the object was about the size of a B-29 bomber and noted that it didn’t
have wings or a tail. When it passed the plane, the pilots saw that a row of
windows ran down the side of the object. Adding credibility to their story,
witnesses at Robbins Air Force Base near Macon, Ga. also claimed that they saw
an unusual object that matched the description of the object seen by Chiles and
Whitted. Investigators later determined that there weren’t any other planes in
the area when the sighting took place.
July 24, 1955 – In the Conecuh County Amateur Baseball
League, Chapman beat Old Texas, 25-1. Burkett pitched for Chapman while Old
Texas used four different pitchers.
July 24, 1955 – In the Conecuh County Amateur Baseball
League, Paul beat Garland, 15-3, at Paul, Ala. Harold Godwin pitched for Paul,
allowing just two hits and no runs, and he also recorded three hits on offense.
Other Paul players included Terrell McClendon, Robert King, Homer Riley and
Mason, the catcher.
July 24, 1955 – In the Conecuh County Amateur Baseball
League, Lyeffion beat McKenzie, 11-6, in McKenzie, Ala. Robert Dees and Donald
Evers pitched for Lyeffion.
July 24, 1955 - Alabama author Brad Watson was born in
Meridian, Miss.
July 24, 1961 – In the Evergreen Senior Baseball League, the
Tigers beat the Pirates, 9-2. Standout players for the Tigers included winning
pitcher Sid Lambert, and standout players for the Pirates included pitchers
Scott Cook and Steve Baggett
July 24, 1961 – In the Evergreen Senior Baseball League, the
Braves beat the Indians, 3-2. Standout players for the Braves included winning
pitcher Ronnie Jackson, and standout players for the Indians included pitcher
Jimmy Weaver.
July 24, 1965 - In the air war,
four F-4C Phantom jets escorting a formation of U.S. bombers on a raid over
munitions manufacturing facilities at Kang Chi, 55 miles northwest of Hanoi,
are fired at from an unknown launching site. It was the first time the enemy
had launched antiaircraft missiles at U.S. aircraft.
July 24, 1966 – Michael Pelkey made the first BASE jump from
El Capitan along with Brian Schubert. Both came out with broken bones. BASE
jumping has now been banned from El Cap.
July 24, 1969 - U.S. President Nixon met with the crew of
Apollo 11 aboard the U.S.S. Hornet.
July 24, 1974 – During the “Watergate Scandal,” the United
States Supreme Court unanimously ruled that President Richard Nixon did not
have the authority to withhold subpoenaed White House tapes and they ordered
him to surrender the tapes to the Watergate special prosecutor.
July 24, 1977 - Members of the Foshee-Tranum Post No. 3581
of the Veterans of Foreign Wars of Conecuh County were requested to attend a
meeting on this Sunday afternoon in the County Courthouse at 2:30 p.m. This was
the first called meeting of the year, and some important business was to be taken
care of before the new year begins, according to Commander J.B. Harper.
July 24, 1978 - Billy Martin was fired for the first of
three times as the manager of the New York Yankees baseball team.
July 24, 1987 - Hulda Crooks, at 91 years of age, climbed Mt.
Fuji. Hulda became the oldest person to climb Japan’s highest peak.
July 24, 1983 – George Brett batting for the Kansas City
Royals against the New York Yankees, had a game-winning home run nullified in
the "Pine Tar Incident."
July 24, 1984 - Terry Bradshaw retired from the National
Football League.
July 24, 1990 – Iraqi forces started massing on the
Kuwait–Iraq border.
July 24, 1998 - Director Steven Spielberg’s World War II
epic, “Saving Private Ryan,” was released in theaters across the United States.
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