Monroe Academy's Rob Kelly. |
Sept. 19, 1676 – Jamestown was burned to the ground by the
forces of Nathaniel Bacon during Bacon's Rebellion.
Sept. 19, 1692 – Giles Corey was pressed to death, after two
days under the weight, after refusing to plead in the Salem witch trials.
Sept. 19, 1777 – During the American Revolutionary War,
British forces won a tactically expensive victory over the Continental Army in
the First Battle of Saratoga (also known as the Battle of Freeman’s Farm).
During the early morning hours of the battle, British General John Burgoyne
launched a three-column attack against General Horatio Gates and his American
forces. During the five-hour battle, the Americans lost approximately 280
troops killed, while the British suffered a more severe loss of more than 550
killed.
Sept. 19, 1778 – The Continental Congress passed the first
United States federal budget.
Sept. 19, 1796 – George Washington's Farewell Address was
printed across America as an open letter to the public.
Sept 19, 1819 – John Keats, 24, wrote the ode “To Autumn,”
which became one of the most anthologized poems in the English language.
Sept. 19, 1827 - After a duel turned
into an all-out brawl, Jim Bowie, who is said to have once lived in Monroe
County, Ala., disemboweled a banker in Alexandria, La. with an early version of
his famous Bowie knife.
Sept. 19, 1846 – Two French shepherd children, Mélanie
Calvat and Maximin Giraud, experienced a Marian apparition on a mountaintop
near La Salette, France, now known as Our Lady of La Salette.
Sept. 19, 1861 – During the Civil
War, a skirmish was fought at Barboursville, Ky.
Sept. 19, 1862 - Union troops under General William
Rosecrans defeated a Confederate force commanded by General Sterling Price at
the Battle of Iuka in northern Mississippi. The Battle of Iuka was part of a
Confederate attempt to prevent General Ulysses S. Grant from reinforcing
General Don Carlos Buell in central Tennessee. Confederate losses amounted to
1,500 while Yankee losses amounted to 790.
Sept. 19, 1862 – During the Civil War, skirmishes were
fought near Helena, Arkansas; at Horse Cave, Bear Wallow and at Southerland’s
Farm in Kentucky; at Sharpsburg, Shepherdstown (Blackford’s or Boteler’s) Ford
and near Williamsport in Maryland; at Barnett’s Corners, Peyton’s Mill and at
Prentiss in Mississippi; and at Hickory Grove and Mount Vernon in Missouri.
Sept. 19, 1862 – During the Civil
War, two days of skirmishing began in the vicinity of Brentwood, Tennessee, and
a six-day Federal operation began in the Indian Territory.
Sept. 1862 – During the Civil War,
Confederates carried out an attack on the Queen of the West, near Bolivar,
Miss.
Sept. 19, 1863 - Union troops under Union General William
Rosecrans collided with troops under Confederate General Braxton Bragg at the
Battle of Chickamauga in northwestern, Ga. It was the bloodiest two-day battle
of the Civil War and the only significant Confederate victory in the war’s
Western Theater. The following day, the Confederates routed the Yankees and
sent them in retreat to Chattanooga, Tenn.
The Conecuh Guards fought at the Battle of Chickamauga and
four of the unit’s members lost their lives, including 2nd Sgt. George Downs,
1st Cpl. Thomas Briley, James Dubose and John D. Shaver. Frank Kirk, a former
member of the Conecuh Guards, was also killed at Chickamauga while serving as a
part of the 38th Alabama Regiment.
Members of the Conecuh Guards who were wounded at
Chickamauga included 1st Sgt. Andrew J. Mosley, Gil R. Boulware (Color Sgt. of
Fort Ala. Regiment, wounded in side and arm, and left arm was amputated at
Chickamauga, survived war and returned to Conecuh County), Sgt. John Q. Dunham
(died in Madison County, Fla. in 1878), W.B. Booker (wounded at Chickamauga and
disabled for life, returned to Conecuh County) and John D. Hyde (also wounded
at Gaines’s Farm and in 1864 skirmish near Richmond, Va., returned to Conecuh
County after war).
Also at Chickamauga, Isadore Goldstein of the Conecuh Guards
was taken prisoner and remained in prison until the end of the war. He moved to
Pennsylvania after the war.
Also at Chickamauga was Lt. Newton E. Johnston, who was born
at Brooklyn, Ala. He served with Co. E, 38th Alabama Infantry, Clayton’s
Brigade, and died as a result of wounds sustained at Chickamauga on Sept. 19,
1863. He returned to Brooklyn and died shortly thereafter.
Lewis Lavon Peacock and his older brother, Noah Dallas
Peacock, both fought at the Battle of Chickamauga. Lewis Lavon Peacock served
with Hilliard’s Legion, which lost more than half its number in that battle.
(The flag of the Second Battalion, for example, had 81 bullet holes.) Noah
Dallas Peacock fought with Co. F, 15th Ala. Inf., which had been transferred
from the Army of Northern Va. to the Army of Tennessee earlier that fall.
Sept. 19, 1863 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought on the Greenwell Springs Road, near Baton Rouge,
Louisiana; at Bristol and Como, Tennessee; and at Raccoon Ford, Virginia. A
six-day Federal expedition from Fort Pillow to Jackson, Tennessee began.
Sept. 19, 1864 - Union General Philip Sheridan defeated
Confederate troops under General Jubal Early at the Third Battle of Winchester
(Opequon Creek), Va. With over 50,000 troops engaged it was the largest battle
fought in the Shenandoah Valley and was not only militarily decisive in that
region of Virginia but also played a role in securing Abraham Lincoln's
election in 1864.
Sept. 19, 1864 – During the Civil
War, a five-day Federal operation began from Natchez to Buck’s Ferry and
Farrar’s Plantation, Mississippi.
Sept. 19 1864 – During the Civil
War, Confederate Major General Sterling Price’s Confederate Cavalry column of
12,000 entered Missouri from Arkansas. This would be the last major Confederate
thrust to take control of Missouri.
Sept. 19, 1864 – During the Civil
War, skirmishes were fought at Doniphan, Missouri and at Culpepper, Virginia.
Sept. 19, 1881 – U.S. President James A. Garfield died of
wounds suffered in a July 2 shooting. Vice President Chester A. Arthur became
President upon Garfield's death.
Sept. 19, 1892 - Author Jack Bethea was born in Birmingham,
Ala.
Sept. 19, 1895 – The Monroe Journal reported that the
“Academy building” in Monroeville, Ala. was nearing completion and was to be
ready for occupancy by the first of October. “The house will present a very
handsome appearance when the finishing touches are put on.”
Sept. 19, 1900 – Butch Cassidy (Robert LeRoy Parker) and the
Sundance Kid (Robert Longabaugh) committed their first robbery together, taking
$32,640 from the First National Bank of Winnemucca, Nevada.
Sept. 19, 1901 - All Major League Baseball games were
canceled for the funeral of U.S. President William McKinley.
Sept. 19, 1911 – Author William Golding was born in St.
Columb Minor, Cornwall, England. He is best known for his novel, “The Lord of
the Flies.”
Sept. 19, 1915 - Canadian-born American pathologist
Elizabeth Stern Shankman was born in Cobalt, Canada.
Sept. 19, 1916 - During the East African Campaign of World
War I, colonial armed forces of the Belgian Congo (Force Publique) under the
command of General Charles Tombeur, captured the town of Tabora after heavy
fighting.
Sept. 19, 1917 – During World War I, Army Pvt. Hillery H.
Jernigan of Brewton, Ala. “died from disease.”
Sept. 19, 1920 – Writer and editor Roger Angell was born in New
York.
Sept. 19, 1926 – National Baseball Hall of Fame center
fielder Duke Snider was born in Los Angeles, Calif. He went on to play for the
Brooklyn/Los Angeles Dodgers, the New York Mets and the San Francisco Giants.
He was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1980.
Sept. 19, 1927 – Conecuh County, Ala. schools were scheduled
to open for the 1927-28 school year on this Monday morning. M.A. Hanks was
Conecuh County’s Superintendent of Education.
Sept. 19, 1928 - Adam West, who is best known for the title
role in the 1960s ABC series “Batman” and its theatrical feature film, was born
in Walla Walla, Wash.
Sept. 19, 1930 – Evergreen High School, under head coach
E.L. McInnis, beat Conecuh County High School, 28-0, in Evergreen, Ala.
Sept. 19, 1939 – Dr. G.C. Watson of Monroeville, Ala. passed
away at his home around 6 a.m. after a heart attack. A former dentist and
prominent businessman, Watson was a native of Wilcox County, but had lived in
Monroe County for 40 years. A 34-year resident of Monroeville, he practiced
dentistry up until about 15 years prior to his death, but he had to give it up
due to poor health. He’d been engaged in the mercantile business since that
time.
Sept. 19, 1939 – The officers elected to serve Alabama Lodge
No. 3 in Monroeville, Ala. were installed during an installation ceremony
conducted by Joe Southall and George U. Potter of Mobile.
Sept. 19, 1940 – The public was invited to attend Monroe
County High School’s football practice “under the lights” on this Thursday
night in Monroeville, Ala.
Sept. 19, 1941 - Author James Haskins was born in Demopolis,
Ala.
Sept. 19, 1943 – National Baseball Hall of Fame second
baseman Joe Morgan was born in Bonham, Texas. He went on to play for the
Houston Colt .45s/Astros, the Cincinnati Reds, the San Francisco Giants, the
Philadelphia Phillies and the Oakland Athletics. He was inducted into the Hall
of Fame in 1990.
Sept. 19, 1944 – The Battle of Hürtgen Forest, between the
United States and Nazi Germany, began.
Sept. 19, 1947 – Evergreen High School, under head coach
Wendell Hart, beat Repton High School, 30-0, in Evergreen, Ala.
Sept. 19, 1947 - Author Thomas H. Cook was born in Fort
Payne, Ala.
Sept. 19, 1949 - Ralph Kiner of the Pittsburgh Pirates
became the first National League player to hit 50 home runs in two different
seasons.
Sept. 19, 1950 – During the Korean War, Army 2LT Stewart M.
Baker Jr. of Covington County, Ala. was killed in action.
Sept. 19, 1952 – Evergreen High School, under head coach
Wendell Hart, beat Escambia County High School, 10-6, in Evergreen, Ala. Ralph
Law was an assistant coach at Evergreen that season. Players on Evergreen’s
team that season included Paul Hanks, Wayne “Dog” Douglas, Ward Alexander,
Capt. Pace “Hot” Bozeman and Shirley Frazier.
Sept. 19, 1952 – Excel High School beat Lyeffion High
School, 28-0, in Excel. Julian Moore was Lyeffion’s head coach.
Sept. 19, 1952 – Frisco City High School beat Beatrice High
School, 38-0, in Frisco City. James Pace was Beatrice’s head coach.
Sept. 19, 1958 – Wilcox County High School beat Beatrice
High School, 33-7, in Camden. Charles McNeil was Beatrice’s head coach.
Sept. 19, 1958 - The Evergreen Aggies were scheduled to hit
the road on this Friday night for their first game away from home in the 1958
season. They were scheduled to meet the powerful Andalusia Bulldogs at eight
o’clock at the Andalusia Municipal Stadium.
Sept. 19, 1959 - In a surreal moment of the Cold War, Nikita
Khruschev, the Soviet leader, exploded with anger after being told for security
reasons he would not be allowed to visit Disneyland.
Sept. 19-20, 1961 – The Hill Abduction Incident, which was
the first widely publicized modern report of alien abduction, was said to have
occurred on this date in rural New Hampshire.
Sept. 19, 1965 – Burglars broke into and robbed the post
office and Sam Lowrey’s Store at Burnt Corn on this Sunday night. The burglars
broke a lock on the front of the store, which contained the post office, to
gain entrance and removed about $75 in cash from the post office safe and an
undisclosed amount of money from Lowrey’s Store. The crime was investigated by
Mobile postal inspector B.R. Wilson and state investigator J.F. Gardner of
Evergreen.
Sept. 19, 1965 - The post office and Sam Lowery’s Store at
Burnt Corn was burglarized on this Sunday night, according to state and postal
inspectors. B.R. Wilson, postal inspector out of the Mobile office, and J.F.
Gardner, state investigator of Evergreen, said about $75 was missing from the
post office safe and an undetermined amount of money was missing from Sam
Lowery’s Store. Wilson said the safe-cracking appeared to be the work of
professionals.
Sept. 19, 1966 - The Johnson
administration and its handling of the war in Vietnam came under attack from
several quarters. A group of 22 eminent U.S. scientists, including seven Nobel
laureates, urged the President to halt the use of antipersonnel and anti-crop
chemical weapons in Vietnam. In Congress, House Republicans issued a “White
Paper” that warned that the United States was becoming “a full-fledged
combatant” in a war that was becoming “bigger than the Korean War.” The paper
urged the President to end the war “more speedily and at a smaller cost, while
safeguarding the independence and freedom of South Vietnam.”
Sept. 19, 1967 – Major League Baseball pitcher Jim Abbott
was born in Flint, Mich. Despite having been born without a right hand, he
played 10 seasons in Major League Baseball (MLB) for the California Angels, New
York Yankees, Chicago White Sox and Milwaukee Brewers, from 1989 to 1999.
Sept. 19, 1969 – McKenzie High School beat Lyeffion High
School, 26-8, in McKenzie. Bobby Joe Hall was Lyeffion’s head coach.
Sept. 19, 1969 - President Nixon
announced the cancellation of the draft calls for November and December.
Sept. 19, 197 – Montagnard troops of South Vietnam revolted
against the rule of Nguyễn Khánh, killing 70 ethnic Vietnamese soldiers.
Sept. 19, 1975 – Evergreen High School, under head coach
Buddy Davis, beat Monroe County High School, 14-13, in Evergreen, Ala.
Sept. 19, 1975 – Sparta Academy, under head coach Richard
Brown, beat Crenshaw Christian, 6-0, in Luverne. Sparta went on to finish the
season with a 7-3-1 overall record.
Sept. 19, 1976 – Two Imperial Iranian Air Force F-4 Phantom
II jets flew out to investigate an unidentified flying object when both
independently lost instrumentation and communications as they approached, only
to have them restored upon withdrawal.
Sept. 19, 1976 – NBA shooting guard Raja Bell was born in
Saint Croix, U.S. Virgin Islands. He went on to play for Boston University,
FUI, the Philadelphia 76ers, the Dallas Mavericks, the Utah Jazz, the Phoenix
Suns, the Charlotte Bobcats and the Golden State Warriors.
Sept. 19, 1980 – Monroe County High School beat Evergreen
High School, 6-0, in Monroeville, Ala.
Sept. 19, 1980 – J.U. Blacksher High School, under head
coach Keith Cardwell, beat Coffeeville, 20-0, at Uriah.
Sept. 19, 1980 - The second-ranked Monroe Academy Volunteers
defeated the Marengo Academy Longhorns 23-8 at Volunteer Stadium in Ollie on
this Friday night, avenging the previous year’s defeat at the hands of the
visitors from Linden. Volunteer quarterback David Carpenter scored all three
Monroe Academy touchdowns, all on short runs. Other standout Monroe players in
that game included Boyd Bradley, Tim Chunn, Byron Dunn, Joey Langham, Will
Thames, Randy Watson and John Wilman. Rob Kelly was Monroe’s head coach.
Sept. 19, 1984 - Pete Rose reached the 100-hit plateau for
the 22nd consecutive year. He also tied the National League record for doubles
with 725.
Sept. 19, 1986 – Monroe County High School beat Evergreen
High School, 40-7, in Monroeville, Ala. Willie Farish was Evergreen’s head
coach.
Sept. 19, 1986 – Coffeeville High School beat J.U. Blacksher
High School, 14-7, at Uriah. Keith Cardwell was Blacksher’s head coach.
Sept. 19, 1990 - Iraq began confiscating foreign assets of
countries that were imposing sanctions against the Iraqi government.
Sept. 19, 1991 - The "Iceman" also known as Otsi,
the mummy of an ancient human stone age wanderer, was found in a glacier in the
Alps.
Sept. 19, 1995 - The Unabomber's 35,000-word manifesto was
published by The Washington Post and the New York Times.
Sept. 19, 1997 - Mark McGwire became the first Major League
player to hit 20 or more home runs for two teams in the same season. It was his
54th home run of the year.
Sept. 19, 1997 – No. 5-ranked Frisco City High School, under
head coach Rodney Dollar, beat Sweet Water, 42-33, in Sweet Water. The
following week, the Whippets climbed to No. 3 in the Class 1A poll on their way
to an 8-3 overall finish.
Sept. 19, 1997 – Flomaton High School beat J.U. Blacksher
High School, 37-20, in Flomaton. John Williamson was Blacksher’s head coach.
Sept. 19, 1998 – Cal Ripken Jr. of the Baltimore Orioles
ended his streak of consecutive games played at 2,632 games in a row by
voluntarily removing himself from a game against the New York Yankees on this
day. He had played in every game since May 30, 1982.
Sept. 19, 1999 - Sammy Sosa was became the first Major
League player to hit 60 home runs twice.
Sept. 19, 2003 – Hillcrest High School, under head coach
Arlton Hudson, beat Monroe County High School, 14-13, at Brooks Memorial
Stadium in Evergreen.
Sept. 19, 2003 – Frisco City High School, under head coach
Troy Quinn, beat Fruitdale, 20-6, in Frisco City.
Sept. 19, 2003 – J.U Blacksher High School, under head coach
Mark Chaney, beat Marengo, 21-6, at Uriah. Blacksher finished the season with a
3-7 overall record.
Sept. 19, 2008 – Excel High School, under head coach Andy
Lambert, beat Southern Choctaw, 41-15, in Silas.
Sept. 19, 2008 – Georgiana High School beat Frisco City High
School, 48-13, in Georgiana. Troy Quinn was Frisco’s head coach.
Sept. 19, 2008 – B.C. Rain High School beat Hillcrest High
School, 13-8, at B.C. Rain. Maurice Belser was Hillcrest’s head coach.
Sept. 19, 2008 – J.U Blacksher High School, under head coach
Mark Heaton, beat McIntosh High School, 13-6, at Uriah. Blacksher would finish
the season with an 8-4 overall record.
Sept. 19, 2011 – Mariano Rivera of the New York Yankees
surpassed Trevor Hoffman to become Major League Baseball's all time saves
leader with 602.
Sept. 19, 2014 – Excel High School, under head coach Richard
Anderson, beat Cottage Hill Christian, 38-34, in Mobile.
Sept. 19, 2014 – T.R. Miller High School beat Hillcrest High
School, 42-20, in Evergreen.
Sept. 19, 2014 – J.U. Blacksher High School, under head
coach Wesley Sims, beat Chickasaw High School, 26-24, in Chickasaw. Blacksher
would finish the season with a 6-5 overall record.
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