Monday, August 7, 2017

Today in History for Aug. 7, 2017

Claud M. McCall
Aug. 7, 1574 – English explorer and cartographer Robert Dudley was born in Richmond Palace, Surrey.


Aug. 7, 1779 – French explorer Louis de Freycinet was born in Montélimar, Drôme.

Aug. 7, 1782 – In Newburgh, N.Y., George Washington, the commander in chief of the Continental Army, ordered the creation of the Badge of Military Merit to honor soldiers wounded in battle. It was later renamed to the more poetic Purple Heart.

Aug. 7, 1789 – The United States Department of War was established by the U.S. Congress.

Aug. 7, 1813 – General Ferdinand Claiborne, who was commanding at Mount Vernon, inspected Fort Mims and recommended that at least two and possibly three additional blockhouses be built, but those orders were never accomplished.

Aug. 7, 1836 - Confederate General Evander Law was born in Darlington, S.C. and went on to open a new military school in Tuskegee, Ala. When the war broke out, Law became a lieutenant colonel in the 4th Ala. Infantry and he went on to have a distinguished career in the Confederate army, earning a reputation as a brave and effective field commander. He was the last surviving Confederate general before his death in 1920.

Aug. 7, 1861 – During the Civil War, a three-day Federal operation in the communities of Price’s Landing, Commerce, Benton and Hamburg in Missouri began.

Aug. 7, 1861 - The US War Department signed a contract with James B. Eads for the construction of seven iron clad gunboats which would become the main naval force of the Union’s western river operations, the Cairo, Carondolet, Cincinnati, Louisville, Mound City, Pittsburg and St. Louis. Unrelated to the Civil War, James Eads was responsible for conducting the multitude of surveys prior to the war that resulted in much of the present-day system of levees along the Mississippi River.

Aug. 7, 1862 – During the Civil War, a skirmish occurred near Moseley’s Plantation, in the vicinity of Decatur, Ala.

Aug. 7, 1862 – During the Civil War, a three-day Federal reconnaissance from Pensacola to Bagdad and Milton, Fla. began.

Aug. 7, 1862 – During the Civil War, skirmishes were fought near Montevallo, Ozark, Forsyth and Rocky Bluff in Missouri; near Fort Fillmore in the New Mexico Territory; at Wood’s Springs, near Dyersburg, Tenn.; and at Wolftown, Va., four miles south of Thoroughfare Mountain.

Aug. 7, 1863 – During the Civil War, skirmishes were fought near New Madrid, Mo. and at Burke’s Station, Va.

Aug. 7, 1864 – During the Civil War, in direct disobedience to his orders, the Confederate commander of Fort Gaines, on Dauphin Island, Ala., Colonel Charles D. Anderson, spent this day arranging terms and making out rolls of men to be surrendered to Admiral Farragut and General Granger. A number of the surrendered personnel spent the rest of the war a relatively short distance away on Ship Island, Miss. Others were not so fortunate.

Aug. 7, 1864 – During the Civil War, skirmishes were fought at Hickory Plains and Bull Bayou in Arkansas; along the Tallahatchie River, in Mississippi; at Enterprise, Arrow Rock, Huntsville, and another along Buffalo Creek, in Missouri; in Union County, Tenn.; and at Oldfields, near Moorefield, in West Virginia.

Aug. 7, 1864 – During the Civil War, what would prove to the be final Shenandoah Valley Campaign began in Virginia.

Aug. 7, 1876 – Dutch dancer and spy Mata Hari was born Margaretha Zelle in Leeuwarden, the Netherlands.

Aug. 7, 1882 - Isaac “Honest Ike” Vincent was elected to an unprecedented third term as Alabama State Treasurer. Thanking the Democratic Convention that had nominated him two months earlier, Vincent promised that he would “endeavor in the future, as I have in the past, to guard and advance your interests as faithfully as I would my own.” On Jan. 31, 1883, Gov. Edward A. O’Neal reported to the Legislature that Treasurer Vincent had absconded from office and that state funds totaling more than $200,000 were missing.

Aug. 7, 1895 – An armed posse was raised in Monroeville, Ala. to hunt for “Railroad Bill” after two children of Chas. Busey reported saw the famous desperado a mile or two south of Monroeville. The children were returning home from an errand when they came upon “Bill” who was lying in the shade beneath a tree near a path leading through a dense wood with his rifle beside him. When the children appeared, he jumped to his feet and fled, leaving a piece of his clothing on the group. The children hurried home, told their father, who came to Monroeville and “gave the alarm.” The posse searched the woods without finding “Bill” and eventually returned to Monroeville.

Aug. 7, 1896 – The Monroe Journal reported that the temperature “hovered in the neighborhood of 100 degrees in the shade” for several days during the previous week.

Aug. 7, 1896 – The Monroe Journal reported, under the headline “Public Speaking,” that E.R. Morrisette, candidate for Congress from the first district, would address citizens at the following times and places: River Ridge, Wed., Aug. 12, 10 o’clock a.m.; Bell’s Landing, Wed., Aug. 12, eight o’clock, p.m.; Buena Vista, Thurs., Aug. 13, 10 a.m.; Pineville, Thurs., Aug. 13, four o’clock p.m.; Kempville, Fri., Aug. 14, 10 o’clock a.m.; and Burnt Corn, Fri., Aug. 14, four p.m.

Aug. 7, 1896 – The Monroe Journal reported, in news from the Carlisle community, that Robert Smith killed a rattlesnake a few days before measuring six feet, five inches in length.

Aug. 7, 1903 – Anthropologist and archeologist Louis Leakey was born in Kabete, Kenya.

Aug. 7-9, 1906 - The annual session of the Monroe County Masonic Conference was held at Tunnel City Lodge in Tunnel Springs, Ala. All lodges in the county were urged to send full delegations. R.E. Barnes of Monroeville was Secretary. J.R. Montgomery of Eliska, Dr. T.M. McMillan, O.O. Bayley, T.S. Wiggins, I.B. Slaughter, J.M. Sowell and Q. Salter were among those who attended.

Aug. 7, 1907 - Senator pitcher Walter Johnson won his first Major League Baseball game by defeating the Indians, 7-2.

Aug. 7, 1912 - Theodore Roosevelt, the former U.S. president, was nominated for the presidency by the Progressive Party, a group of Republicans dissatisfied with the renomination of President William Howard Taft. Also known as the Bull Moose Party, the Progressive platform called for the direct election of U.S. senators, woman suffrage, reduction of the tariff, and many social reforms. In November, Roosevelt was defeated by Democratic candidate Woodrow Wilson, who benefited from the divided Republican Party.

Aug. 7, 1914 – In the first of a three-game series, Brewton’s baseball team beat Monroeville, 9-3, in Monroeville, Ala.

Aug. 7, 1914 - At five o’clock in the morning, French troops launched their first attack of World War I, advancing towards the city of Mulhouse, located near the Swiss border in Alsace, a former French province lost to Germany in the settlement ending the Franco-Prussian War in 1871.

Aug. 7, 1915 – Monroe County Sheriff’s Deputy Ralph Clark was shot through the right lung while attempting to arrest a man who was wanted for a minor offense at the Alger-Sullivan headquarters camp on this Saturday night. Clark returned fire and mortally wounded the shooter, who was then strung up by a mob and riddled with bullets. Clark was taken to Century for medical attention.

Aug. 7-8, 1915 – A series of baseball games was scheduled to be played at Herbert, Ala. between teams from Herbert and Mason. A public picnic was scheduled for Aug. 8 with two games to follow that afternoon.

Aug. 7, 1916 – County Court was in session in Evergreen on this Monday.

Aug. 7, 1918 – During World War I, U.S. Army 2nd Lt. Claud Mortimer McCall, 25, of Brewton, Ala. was killed in action while serving in Co. C of the 38th Infantry Regiment, 3rd Infantry Division at the Second Battle of the Marne Vesle River in France. He was buried in the Oise-Aisne American Cemetery and Memorial, Fere-en-Tardenois, Departement de l'Aisne, in Picardie, France. Born in 1893, he also has a grave marker at Fort Crawford Cemetery in East Brewton.

Aug. 7, 1919 – Caroline Saphronia “Fronie/Lizzie” Martin Peacock, 74, of Owassa died of typhoid fever. Born on Aug. 26, 1844 in Alabama, she was buried in Flat Rock Cemetery in Conecuh County, Ala. She was the wife of Confederate veteran Lewis Lavon Peacock, who passed away the following year.

Aug. 7, 1930 – The last confirmed lynching of blacks in the Northern United States occurred in Marion, Indiana. Two men, Thomas Shipp and Abram Smith, were killed.

Aug. 7, 1933 – In what is now known as the “Simele Massacre,” the Iraqi government slaughtered over 3,000 Assyrians in the village of Simele. The day became known as Assyrian Martyrs Day.

Aug. 7, 1938 – American journalist Jane Kramer was born in Providence, Rhode Island.

Aug. 7, 1940 – During World War II, Alsace-Lorraine was annexed by the Third Reich.

Aug. 7, 1942 - The U.S. 1st Marine Division began Operation Watchtower, the first U.S. offensive of the war, by landing on Guadalcanal, one of the Solomon Islands.

Aug. 7, 1942 - Alabama author Judith Richards was born in McLeansboro, Ill.

Aug. 7, 1945 – The USS Eldridge arrived at Okinawa for local escort and patrol, and with the end of hostilities a week later, continued to serve as escort on the Saipan–Ulithi–Okinawa routes until November.

Aug. 7, 1946 - Lt. Gen. Holland "Howlin' Mad" Smith retired from the Marines after a 40-year career. A veteran of World Wars I and II, the Russell County, Ala. native became known as "the father of amphibious warfare," and was honored for his years of service by being retired as a full general.

Aug. 7, 1947 - Kon-Tiki, a balsa wood raft captained by Norwegian anthropologist Thor Heyerdahl, completes a 4,300-mile, 101-day journey from Peru to Raroia in the Tuamotu Archipelago, near Tahiti. On this day, the raft smashed into the reef at Raroia in the Tuamotu Islands after its journey across the Pacific Ocean in an attempt to prove that pre-historic peoples could have traveled from South America.

Aug. 7, 1953 – City Furniture Co. in Evergreen, Ala. held its grand opening in the location formerly occupied by the Olen Department Store in the Binion Building on West Front Street.

Aug. 7, 1953 – Essayist and journalist Anne Fadiman was born in New York City.

Aug. 7, 1954 – The Evergreen Chamber of Commerce planned to auction off the first bale of cotton of the 1954 season in Evergreen’s “No Man’s Land” around 1 p.m. on this Saturday. The first bale was ginned at the Evergreen Gin by Castleberry farmer J.W. Reeves.

Aug. 7, 1958 - Emilia Newcomb, age 22, spontaneously combusted while dancing at a party. She was reduced to a small pile of ash after a brief, intense flare, with only her shoes, slightly scorched, remaining.

Aug. 7, 1959 – The Lincoln Memorial design on the U.S. penny went into circulation. It replaced the "sheaves of wheat" design, and was minted until 2008.

Aug. 7, 1959 – As part of the Explorer program, Explorer 6 launched from the Atlantic Missile Range in Cape Canaveral, Florida.

Aug. 7, 1960 - David Duchovny, who played FBI Agent on “The X-Files,” was born in New York City.

Aug. 7, 1964 – Monroe County’s first reported cotton bale was ginned at the Kelly Mill at Dottelle, Ala. Steve Dailey at Mexia owned the bale, which weighed 568 pounds.

Aug. 7, 1964 – During the Vietnam War, the U.S. Congress passed the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution, giving U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson broad war powers to deal with North Vietnamese attacks on American forces.

Aug. 7, 1965 - Miss Dorothy Robinson was congratulated by Conecuh County Farm Bureau President William Ward after being named Conecuh’s 1965 Maid of Cotton. Results of the contest, in which former National Maid of Cotton Katy Sue Meredith of Andalusia was a judge, was announced at the annual meeting of the Farm Bureau at the Courthouse on this Saturday morning.

Aug. 7, 1966 - Alabama author Richmond P. Hobson Jr. died at his ranch near Vanderhoof, British Columbia.

Aug. 7, 1967 - The North Vietnamese newspaper Nhan Dan reported that the People’s Republic of China (PRC) had signed a new agreement to give Hanoi an undisclosed amount of aid in the form of an outright grant.

Aug. 7, 1968 - In his Major League Baseball debut, Joe Keough of the A's hit a home run in his first at-bat.

Aug. 7, 1969 – Alabama Gov. Albert Brewer named Evergreen Mayor Wm. H. Sessions to the Region Six Planning Board for Law Enforcement. The board was one of seven established throughout the state by Brewer to assist in implementing the Crime Control and Safe Streets Act in Alabama.

Aug. 7, 1969 - Johnny Middleton, a native of Evergreen, announced the opening of his accountant and tax consultant office in the office space in the Jr. Food Store building in Evergreen, Ala.

Aug. 7, 1969 – The Evergreen Quarterback Club was scheduled to meet at 7:30 p.m. at Evergreen City Hall.

Aug. 7, 1974 – The Seaboard Coastline Depot in Enterprise, in Coffee County, Ala, was added to the National Register of Historic Places.

Aug. 7, 1974 – French stuntman Philippe Petit performed a high wire act between the twin towers of the World Trade Center - 1,368 feet in the air.

Aug. 7, 1976 – NFL punter Shane Lechler was born in East Bernard, Texas. He went on to play for Texas A&M, the Oakland Raiders and the Houston Texans.

Aug. 7, 1976 – During the Viking program, Viking 2 entered orbit around Mars.

Aug. 7, 1981 – The Washington Star ceased all operations after 128 years of publication.

Aug. 7, 1985 - A five-year agreement between the Major League Baseball players union and team owners ended a two-day mid-season players’ strike. The season resumed the next day.

Aug. 7, 1987 - Bill Mazeroski's No. 9 uniform jersey was officially retired from active service by the Pittsburgh Pirates.

Aug. 7, 1988 – Liz Cochran, who was later named Miss Alabama 2009, was born in Helena, Ala.

Aug. 7, 1988 - Baron Keith Stabler, 22, of Franklin was killed when his 1987 Chevrolet Cavalier wrecked early on this Sunday, according to State Trooper Willie Cameron. Stabler was driving north on Alabama Highway 41 at Fountain when he apparently fell asleep around 1 a.m., Cameron said. The car drifted off the road, hit a culvert and overturned several times.

Aug. 7, 1990 - President George Herbert Walker Bush ordered the organization of Operation Desert Shield in response to Iraq's invasion of Kuwait on August 2. The order prepared American troops to become part of an international coalition in the war against Iraq that would be launched as Operation Desert Storm in January 1991. To support Operation Desert Shield, Bush authorized a dramatic increase in U.S. troops and resources in the Persian Gulf.

Aug. 7, 1990 – Monroe Academy began preseason football practice under second-year head coach K.J. Lazenby.

Aug. 7, 1999 - Tony Gwynn of the San Diego Padres got his 3,000th hit of his Major League Baseball career.


Aug. 7, 2003 - In California, Arnold Schwarzenegger announced that he would run for the office of governor.

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