Sunday, July 8, 2018

Today in History for July 8, 2018


July 8, 49 B.C. – The Parisii, a tribe of Celtic fishermen, first set foot in what would become the magnificent city of Paris, on the banks of the Seine, where they formed a town that became known as Lutetia, which mean “Midwater-Dwelling.”


July 8, 1497 – Vasco da Gama set sail on the first direct European voyage to India.

July 8, 1538 – Spanish general and explorer Diego de Almagro, age 62 or 63, was executed by garrote in a dungeon and then decapitated in Cuzco, New Castile, Spanish Empire. His corpse was taken to the public Plaza Mayor of Cuzco, where a herald proclaimed his crimes. Almagro, a companion and later rival of Francisco Pizarro, was a Spanish conquistador, who participated in the Spanish conquest of Peru and is credited as the first European discoverer of Chile.

July 8, 1608 - The first French settlement at Quebec was established by Samuel de Champlain.

July 8, 1663 – Charles II of England granted John Clarke a Royal charter to Rhode Island.

July 8, 1755 - Britain broke off diplomatic relations with France as their disputes in the New World intensified.

July 8, 1775 – The Olive Branch Petition was signed by the Continental Congress of the Thirteen Colonies of North America.

July 8, 1776 – From the tower of the Pennsylvania State House (now Independence Hall) in Philadelphia, the 2,000-pound copper-and-tin “Liberty Bell” range out, summoning citizens to the first public reading of the Declaration of Independence. Col. John Nixon gave the first public reading at Independence Square.

July 8, 1777 - A convention of delegates in Windsor, Vermont formally adopted the state's new constitution.

July 8, 1819 – Irish admiral and explorer Francis Leopold McClintock was born in Dundalk, County Louth. A former officer in the British Royal Navy, McClintock is best known for his discoveries in the Canadian Arctic Archipelago.

July 8, 1822 – Poet Percy Bysshe Shelley died at sea off the coast of Italy, just shy of his 30th birthday.

July 8, 1853 – The Perry Expedition arrived in Edo Bay with a treaty requesting trade.

July 8, 1857 – French psychologist Alfred Binet was born in Nice, France.

July 8, 1861 – During the Civil War, the Confederate camp at Florida, Mo. was attacked and dispersed by loyal Union State troops.

July 8, 1862 – During the Civil War, a skirmish was fought at Black Run, on the Black River, and another at Pleasant Hill in Missouri.

July 8, 1862 – HILLIARD’S LEGION: At Camp Mary in Montgomery, the men officially became known as Hilliard’s Alabama Volunteer Legion and around 7 a.m. they were formed in ranks by company. They marched to the depot, boarded freight cars and departed for Tennessee while family and Montgomery citizens cheered them on. The train went east toward West Point, Ga. and then north, reaching Atlanta late in the day, and they camped at Camp Alabama.

July 8, 1863 - Port Hudson, the Confederate stronghold on the Mississippi River in Louisiana, fell to Nathaniel Banks' Union force. Less than a week after the surrender of Vicksburg, Mississippi, the Confederate garrison’s surrender at Port Hudson cleared another obstacle for the Federals on the Mississippi River. Port Hudson was defended by General Franklin Gardner and a force of 3,500 men, but word of Vicksburg’s surrender convinced Gardner that further resistance was futile.

July 8, 1863 – During the Civil War, skirmishes were fought at Cumming’s Ferry, Kentucky River, Kentucky; at Boonsborough and Williamsport, Maryland; and at Bolton and Clinton, Mississippi.

July 8, 1863 – During the Civil War, the draft began in Massachusetts.

July 8, 1863 – During the Civil War, a Federal operation began between Germantown, Tenn. and Hernando, Miss.

July 8, 1864 – During the Civil War, a skirmish was fought at Vienna, Ala.

July 8, 1864 – During the Civil War, skirmishes were fought in the vicinity of Huntersville, Arkansas; at Antietam Bridge, Frederick, and Sandy Hook, Maryland; near Richmond, Missouri; and near Kelley’s Mill, Mississippi.

July 8, 1864 – During the Civil War, part of Sherman’s Army crossed the Chattahoochee, outflanking the Confederates. Confederate General Joseph E. Johnston retreated into Atlanta, Ga. to prevent being flanked by Union General William T. Sherman. A skirmish was also fought at Cove Springs and Isham’s Ford, Georgia.

July 8, 1865 - C.E. Barnes patented the machine gun.

July 8, 1876 – White supremacists killed five Black Republicans in Hamburg, South Carolina.

July 8, 1877 – John Sampey Sr., one of Conecuh County’s original settlers, cattle farmers and Methodists, died at the age of 76 in Belleville, Ala. Sampey was born in Belfast, County Antrim, Northern Ireland on April 20, 1801 and sailed for America on Sept. 12, 1824. He is buried in the Belleville United Methodist Church Cemetery.

July 8, 1879 – The sailing ship USS Jeannette departed San Francisco carrying an ill-fated expedition to the North Pole.

July 8, 1889 – The first issue of The Wall Street Journal was published.

July 8, 1890 – Jewish teenager Haiman Long arrived in Evergreen, Ala. and went on to open a business known as the “Red Front Store,” which later became known as “I. Long & Sons.” He would go on to become one of Evergreen’s most prominent merchants and citizens before passing away in Evergreen on Dec. 1, 1937 at the age of 63.

July 8, 1891 - Future President Warren G. Harding married a spunky divorcee named Florence Mabel Kling DeWolfe in Marion, Ohio. Harding, the 29th President of the United States, was the great-grandson of Conecuh County’s Henchie Warren, who is said to have hidden a chest of gold in Shipps Pond.

July 8, 1892 – Novelist and poet Richard Aldington was born in Edward Godfree Aldington in Portsmouth, England.

July 8, 1895 - The Monroe County Commissioners court was scheduled to convene in Monroeville on this Monday for the purpose of examining the books of tax assessments for the year 1895 and to levy the county tax.

July 8, 1898 – Frank Reid, a disgruntled city engineer in Skagway, Alaska murdered Jefferson Randolph “Soapy” Smith, one of the most notorious con men in the history of the West.

July 8, 1908 - Miners of the District 20 United Mine Workers union in Birmingham, Ala. declared a strike against the coal companies. The bitter and often violent two-month strike pitted one of the South's few viable interracial labor unions against northern Alabama's "Big Mules," the Birmingham district's politically influential, wealthy industrial employers. To break the strike, mine owners deputized hundreds of armed men to confront the workers and, at their request, Governor Braxton Bragg Comer declared martial law and dispatched state troops into the coalfields.

July 8, 1912 – Castleberry, Ala. town marshal M.C. Johnson arrested Roland Baggett and a “young man named Crockett” on charges of attempted murder and placed them in the Conecuh County Jail in Evergreen. Allegedly, Baggett and Crockett attempted to kill Bob Knight of Castleberry on July 6. Knight had been shot in the back with a .32-caliber bullet that passed through his body and his chances of recovery didn’t look good.

July 8, 1914 – The Evergreen Courant reported that William Ellis “exhibited a piece of broken earthenware here recently which he says he found 30 feet under the surface of the earth while boring a well on his premises. How it came there is unexplainable.”

July 8, 1915 – Three mules belonging to J.T. McCarthy & Co. were drowned, a fourth was “rescued with difficulty” and painful injuries were sustained by a wagon driver as a result of the collapse of Graham Bridge on Flat Creek. The wagon was loaded with 700 to 800 feet of green lumber being hauled across the bridge when the accident occurred. The creek was swollen from recent rains and the mules, entangled by the harness, were swept down the creek by the swift current.

July 8, 1917 – National Book Award-winning novelist and short-story writer J.F. Powers was born James Earl Powers in Jacksonville, Ill.

July 8, 1918 - Ernest Hemingway, 18, was severely wounded while carrying a companion to safety on the Austro-Italian front, along the Piave Delta, during World War I. Hemingway, working as a Red Cross ambulance driver, was decorated for his heroism and sent home. He received the Pulitzer Prize in 1953 for his novel, “The Old Man and the Sea.”

July 8, 1926 – Psychiatrist and writer Elisabeth Kubler-Ross was born in Zurich, Switzerland.

July 8, 1927 - A delegation of Monroe and Clarke County citizens went to Montgomery on this Friday to appear before the State Highway Commission in an effort to interest the commissioners in an east and west highway by way of Monroeville, Claiborne, Whatley, Grove Hill and Coffeeville. The delegation was very well pleased at the reception they received at the hands of the Highway Department. The most serious obstacle in the way at this time, they stated, was due to there being a division of sentiment as to what project that county wished taken up next.

July 8, 1929 – Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist Shirley Ann Grau was born in New Orleans. She won the Pulitzer Prize for fiction in 1965 for “The Keepers of the House.”

July 8, 1930 - Col. Woolsey Finnel, Chairman of the State Highway Commission and candidate for governor in the primary election to be held on Aug. 12, 1930, spoke at the Conecuh County Courthouse on this Tuesday night. He was introduced by Robt. H. Jones, attorney and Chairman of the Conecuh County Democratic Committee.

July 8, 1932 – The Dow Jones Industrial Average reached its lowest level of the Great Depression, closing at 41.22.

July 8, 1937 – Turkey, Iran, Iraq and Afghanistan signed the Treaty of Saadabad.

July 8, 1941 - With his team trailing 5-4 with two outs in the ninth inning, Ted Williams hits a three-run home run to lead the American League to a 7-5 victory in the All-Star Game at Briggs Stadium in Detroit.

July 8, 1945 - Following a long period of ill health, H.L. Dees Sr., widely known and successful citizen of Repton, passed away at his home on this Sunday morning. Dees was born in Monroe County on Dec. 4, 1869.

July 8, 1947 – In what became known as the “Roswell UFO Incident,” the U.S. Army announced it had recovered a crashed flying disc near Roswell, New Mexico. Quickly afterward they retracted the story and said it was actually a "weather balloon."

July 8, 1950 – Melvin Salter, the son of Hilliard Salter of Evergreen, Ala. was reported missing in action in Korea. He served with the paratroopers in World War II and reenlisted about two years before he went missing.

July 8, 1951 - The city of Paris celebrated her 2,000th birthday.

July 8, 1952 – Pro Football Hall of Fame middle linebacker Jack Lambert was born in Mantua, Ohio. He went on to play for Kent State and the Pittsburgh Steelers. He was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1990.

July 8, 1952 - The Evergreen City Council met on this Tuesday night at city hall with nothing but routine business coming before them. Two building permits were granted for the construction of residences. George T. Robbins received a permit for the construction of a frame residence in his Pine Woods subdivision. Earl Windham was granted a permit for the construction of a residence on Salter Street, between the Barlow and Shell residences.

July 8, 1953 - Notre Dame announced that the next five years of its football games would be shown in theatres over closed circuit TV.

July 8, 1953 – Columnist, novelist and essayist Anna Quindlen was born in Philadelphia.

July 8, 1959 - Major Dale R. Ruis and Master Sgt. Chester M. Ovnand became the first Americans killed in the American phase of the Vietnam War when guerrillas struck a Military Assistance Advisory Group (MAAG) compound in Bien Hoa, 20 miles northeast of Saigon.

July 8, 1963 - Eddie Rankin, age six, of Evergreen, Ala., was killed on this afternoon when he dashed into the path of a 1962 Ford, driven by Velma Worlds of Castleberry. “Trooper Cargile said that it was impossible for Mrs. World’s to avoid hitting the child.”

July 8, 1963 - Non-jury equity cases on the Conecuh County Circuit Court docket were to be heard on this Monday starting at 9 a.m. Circuit Judge A.H. Elliott of Brewton was to preside. According to Circuit Clerk Ralph Crysell, a total of 140 cases were on the docket, 52 non-jury cases and 68 equity cases.

July 8, 1965 – John Sale of Brewton, Ala., the reigning state high school champion, defeated Forrest Watkins of Monroeville in an 18-hole playoff for the championship of the Evergreen Golf Club’s July 4th Invitational Tournament.

July 8, 1965 – Pulitzer Prize-winning author Thomas Sigismund “T. S.” Stribling died at the age of 84 in Florence, Ala. He won the Pulitzer Prize in 1933 for his novel “The Store.”

July 8, 1965 - Ambassador Maxwell Taylor resigned from his post in Vietnam and was replaced by former ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge.

July 8, 1965 - President Lyndon Johnson decreed that a Vietnam Service Medal be awarded to Americans serving in the conflict, even though there had been no official declaration of war.

July 8, 1970 - The San Francisco Giant’s Jim Ray Hart became the first National League player in 59 seasons to collect six runs batted (RBI) during a single inning.

July 8, 1977 - The City of Evergreen served lunch to Marines of the 4th Force Reconnaissance Co., U.S. Marine Corps Reserve, when they took a break in Evergreen on this Friday. The Mobile-based reserve unit was taking part in running the 4th Marine Amphibious Force Battle Standard from Tun Tavern, Philadelphia, the birthplace of the Marines to New Orleans, running the flag from Greenville to Mobile. The flag was scheduled to officially arrive in New Orleans on Aug. 1, where it was to be joined with the flag of the 4th Marine Division (reserve division) being run from Camp Pendleton, Calif. to join with the 4th Marine Aircraft Wing (reserve) to form the 4th Marine Amphibious Force (reserve) in permanent station at New Orleans.

July 8, 1977 - Evergreen Mayor O.B. “Bert” Tuggle took a look at the 4th Marine Amphibious Force Battle Standard held by 1st Lt. Charles Jackson of Brewton, executive officer of the 4th Force Reconnaissance Co., U.S. Marine Corp Reserve, Mobile. Standing by the mayor and holding a folded U.S. flag was First Sgt. Leroy Thrasher of Mobile, who headed the group of Mobile Marine Reserves who ran the flag from Greenville to Mobile, arriving in Evergreen at noon on this Friday and in Mobile on the next day.

July 8, 1977 - Weather observer Earl Windham reported a high of 101 degrees on this day in Evergreen, Ala.

July 8, 1982 – An assassination attempt against Iraqi president Saddam Hussein in Dujail occurred.

July 8, 1994 – Swedish-American businessman and explorer Lars-Eric Lindblad died of a sudden heart attack while on vacation in Stockholm.

July 8, 1999 – The Evergreen Courant reported that the Maxwell-Johnson House, located at 120 South Main St. in Evergreen, had recently been added to the Alabama Register of Landmarks and Heritage.

July 8, 2000 - J.K. Rowling's fourth Harry Potter book, "Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire," was released in the U.S.

July 8, 2002 - U.S. President George W. Bush promised to "use all the tools at our disposal" to bring down Iraqi President Saddam Hussein.

July 8, 2008 - Luther Upton, then age 61, of Evergreen announced that he had qualified to run for the District 3 seat on the Evergreen City Council during municipal elections on Aug. 26, 2008.

July 8, 2011 – Space Shuttle Atlantis was launched in the final mission of the U.S. Space Shuttle program.

July 8, 2013 – “Get Out Alive with Bear Grylls,” a reality competition series filmed in New Zealand, premiered on NBC.

July 8, 2014 – “Hunting the Legend,” a Bigfoot movie set almost entirely in Wilcox County, Ala., was released.

July 8, 2015 – Former Alabama and NFL quarterback Kenny Stabler, a native of Foley, Ala., passed away in Gulfport, Miss. at the age of 69. During his pro career, he played for the Oakland Raiders, the Houston Oilers and the New Orleans Saints. He was inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2016.

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