Saturday, January 13, 2018

Today in History for Jan. 13, 2018

USS Ticonderoga
Jan. 13, 1128 - The military order Knights Templar was granted a papal sanction, declared to be an army of God by Pope Honorius II.


Jan. 13, 1729 – Measles were spreading through "New Spain" and struck workers at the San Ignacio de Caburica mission. Padre José Agustín de Campos baptized 22 adults on this day, all of whom were sick with measles and close to death.

Jan. 13, 1756 – For the next five days, Pennsylvania authorities and local Indians held a council in Carlisle, Pa. Governor Morris and several other prominent whites represented the British, and the Indians were represented by Aroas (Silver Heels)̣̣, Belt of Wampum, Canachquasy, Isaac, Jagrea, Seneca George and several others. These discussions led to the eventual declaration of war by the British against the Delaware and Shawnee.

Jan. 13, 1776 - In the early morning hours of this day, British forces raided Prudence Island, Rhode Island, in an effort to steal a large quantity of sheep, but, upon landing on the island’s southern beaches, the British were ambushed by 15 Minutemen from Rhode Island’s Second Company led by Captain Joseph Knight, who had been tipped off to the Brits’ plans and rowed across Narragansett Bay from Warwick Neck the previous morning.

Jan. 13, 1807 - Union General Napoleon Bonaparte Buford was born in Woodford, Kentucky. During the Civil War, Buford held many commands in the West and was a hero at the Battle of Belmont in Missouri.

Jan. 13, 1815 – During the War of 1812, British troops captured Fort Peter in St. Mary’s, Georgia, the only battle of the war to take place in the state.

Jan. 13, 1830 – The Great Fire of New Orleans, Louisiana began.

Jan. 13, 1832 – Horatio Alger Jr., best known for his dime novels for boys, was born in Chelsea, Mass.

Jan. 13, 1836 – Not having enough soldiers to defend it from attack, on this day General Hernandez abandoned the Bulowville plantation. The Seminole burned the structures shortly after the soldiers left.

Jan. 13, 1838 – A small naval expedition under Lt. L.M. Powell fell under heavy attack by Seminoles on the Loxahatchee River near Jupiter Inlet.

Jan. 13, 1840 – Confederate soldier Walter Newton Duke was born. He enlisted in Co. D. of the 5th Alabama Regiment (later Co. C after April 27, 1862) on March 16, 1861. He was listed as sick at St. Frances de Sales Hospital between March 1, 1862 and Aug. 31, 1862. He was taken prisoner at South Mountain, Md. on Sept. 14, 1862, forwarded to Ft. Delaware, Del. on Oct. 2, 1862 and to Aikens Landing for exchange on Nov. 10, 1862. He was a patient at Winder General Hospital No. 4 from Nov. 3, 1862 to Dec. 16, 1862. He was taken prisoner at Gettysburg on July 4, 1863 and forwarded to Ft. Delaware on July 7, 1863 and arrived on July 12, 1863. He arrived at Point Lookout, Md. on Oct. 23, 1863 and was paroled on Feb. 18, 1865. He died on Dec. 16, 1922 and was buried in Ramah Cemetery at Teneha in Shelby County, Texas.

Jan. 13, 1846 – President James Polk dispatched General Zachary Taylor and 4,000 troops to the Texas border between the Nueces River and the Rio Grande to increase pressure on Mexico to negotiate the sale of California. Many people in Congress accused Polk of provoking war.

Jan. 13, 1852 – While drifting slowly in the Pacific doldrums, two New Bedford whaling vessels, the Monongahela and the Rebecca Sims, supposedly encountered a huge sea serpent that was over 100 feet long and about 50 feet in diameter. Its color was a brownish gray with a light stripe about three feet wide running its full length. Its neck was 10 feet around, and it supported a grotesque head that was 10 feet long and shaped like that of a gigantic alligator.

Jan. 13, 1861 – During the Civil War, President James Buchanan received envoys from both Union Major Robert Anderson (commander at Fort Sumter, S.C.) and South Carolina governor, Francis W. Pickens, regarding the status of Fort Sumter. President Buchanan, while trying not to provoke South Carolina authorities, stated that Fort Sumter would not be turned over to them.

Jan. 13, 1862 – During the Civil War, the Burnside Expedition arrived off of Hatteras Inlet, N.C., and proceeded into Pamlico Sound. President Abraham Lincoln appointed Edwin Stanton as the new Federal Secretary of War.

Jan. 13, 1863 – During the Civil War, a Federal expedition began from Helena, Ark. up the White River. The USS Columbia also ran aground off the coast of North Carolina and was burned by Confederates a few days later. A skirmish was also fought near Hamburg, Tenn.

Jan. 13, 1863 - During the Civil War, a three-day Federal reconnaissance began between Murfreesborough to Versailles, Tenn. A seven-day Federal reconnaissance began from Nashville to Cumberland River Shoals in Tennessee. A Federal operation began between Yorktown and West Point in Virginia.

Jan. 13, 1864 - A two-day Federal reconnaissance began from Pine Bluff to Monticello in Arkansas. President Abraham Lincoln ordered Major Generals Quincy A. Gillmore in Florida and Nathaniel P. Banks in New Orleans to proceed in constructing free governments in the states of Florida and Louisiana. Skirmishes were also fought at Ragland Mills, Ky.; at Collierville, Sevierville and at Schultz’s Mill, on Cosby Creek in Tennessee; near Ely's Ford, Va.

Jan. 13, 1865 – Federal operations began against Fort Fisher, N.C. Shelling continued and Federal infantry was put ashore. At Tupelo, Miss., Confederate Lieutenant General John Bell Hood resigned as commander of the Confederate Army of Tennessee.

Jan. 13, 1865 - Lt. Commander Stephen B. Luce, whose ship, the USS Pontiac, came and supported Gen. William Tecumseh Sherman‘s troops’ movement across the Savannah River at Sister’s Ferry, Ga., as they continued to move toward Charleston wrote: “After hearing General Sherman’s clear exposition of the military situation, the scales seemed to fall from my eyes.....it dawned on me that there were certain fundamental principles....of general application whether the operations were on land or sea.” Luce in later years was the primary force in founding what a later generation would call the Naval War College.

Jan. 13, 1865 - In North Carolina, Union forces began a massive three-day bombardment at Fort Fisher.

Jan. 13, 1870 – The stockholders of the Monroeville Academy met at the Monroe County Courthouse at 4 p.m.

Jan. 13, 1880 - Internationally known folklorist Ruby Pickens Tartt was born in Livingston, Ala. Tartt chronicled the folk music and slave narratives of Sumter County, helping preserve the culture by recording folk performances and writing stories and articles on the subject. Her work with experts John A. Lomax and Harold Courlander brought African American folklore to international prominence. The culture she helped preserve continues to affect the world of folk music and folk culture as her notes, the songs, the singers, the stories and the storytellers are rediscovered by a new generation of scholars and musicians.

Jan. 13, 1906 – A head-on collision between two trains took place on the Southern Alabama division of the Louisville & Nashville railroad about two miles north of Monroe Station at about 5 a.m. One of the trains was a northbound logging train of 11 empty cars belonging to the Bear Creek Mill Co. The other train was a southbound “special” train carrying the “Little Johnny Jones” theatrical company from Selma to Pensacola. That train consisted of two baggage cars, a day coach and two Pullman luxury cars. The engine of the special was turned completely over 30 feet down an embankment. The engine of the logging train was entirely disabled, and four of the cars behind it were overturned with it. Dr. R.A. Smith hurried to the scene as soon as he learned of the accident “to render such medical assistance as might be required, but fortunately very little was needed.” Three chorus girls of the theatrical company, “Misses Maddock, Thomas and Bailey, suffered injuries about their heads and necks, and also suffered from shock, and most of the members of the theatrical company, all of whom were asleep in their berths at the time of the collision, were slightly injured. A special train carrying physicians was sent from Pensacola and returned there at five o’clock in the evening. The three young women were taken to a local hospital and remain there. Both engineers and firemen jumped in time to save themselves. The engineer of the special was Mark Boghich, and the conductor was W.L. Hahn.”

Jan. 13, 1906 - Hugh Gernsback of the Electro Importing Company advertised radio receivers for sale for the price of just $7.50 in "Scientific American" magazine.

Jan. 13, 1908 – Evergreen’s Company K was scheduled to meet at the Evergreen armory on this Monday night at 7:30 p.m. Business of importance was to be transacted, and company members were encouraged to bring new members. P.M. Bruner was the company’s captain, and J.A. Rumbley was first sergeant.

Jan. 13, 1910 – The first public radio broadcast took place as a live performance of the opera “Cavalleria rusticana” was sent out over the airwaves from the Metropolitan Opera House in New York, New York.

Jan. 13, 1915 – The Evergreen Courant reported that Brooklyn, Ala. merchant E.N. Amos had entered bankruptcy.

Jan. 13, 1916 – The Conecuh Record reported that a Butler County, Ala. grand jury did not indict W.J. Travis for killing Dr. Nall “a short time ago” in McKenzie.

Jan. 13, 1916 – The Conecuh Record reported that the First National Bank of Evergreen (Ala.) had elected its board of directors and officers for the ensuing year during a recent meeting. Those directors and officers included Robt. F. Croom, president; Lewis Crook, active vice-president; C.R. Taliaferro, vice-president; J.D. Wright, cashier. The Record also reported that, during recent board meeting, the Peoples Bank of Evergreen had also elected directors and officers for the coming year. They included President, C.P. Deming; vice-president and cashier, A. Cunningham; assistant cashier, C.P. Deming Jr. and Byron Tisdale. W.B. Ivey was added to the board of directors.

Jan. 13, 1916 – The Conecuh Record reported that Conecuh County Sheriff Williams killed a “mad dog” a few days before.

Jan. 13, 1916 – The Conecuh Record reported that the Equalization Board was in session that week.

Jan. 13, 1916 – The Conecuh Record reported that a “white man” killed Wade Longmire a few days before, and the killing reportedly grew out of a dispute over a debt.

Jan. 13, 1916 – The Conecuh Record reported that the Martin Drug. Co. had sold out to Betts & Newton.

Jan. 13, 1916 – The Monroe Journal reported that Monroe County (Ala.) Education Superintendent J.A. Barnes had “invested in a brand new car and will now better than ever be enabled to make close and efficient supervision of rural schools.”

Jan. 13, 1916 – The Monroe Journal reported that A.C. Lee, Esq., had “been admitted to partnership with Messrs. Barnett and Bugg in the practice of law. Although admitted to the practice only a few months ago, Mr. Lee is already taking high rank at the local bar. Messrs. Barnett, Bugg and Lee constitute one of the strongest law firms in this section.”

Jan. 13, 1916 - In an attempt to relieve their compatriots under heavy siege by Turkish forces at Kut-al Amara in Mesopotamia, British forces under the command of Lieutenant General Fenton Aylmer launched an attack against Turkish defensive positions on the banks of the Wadi River.

Jan. 13, 1929 - Nearly 50 years after the famous gunfight at the O.K. Corral, Wyatt Earp died quietly in Los Angeles at the age of 80. He was cremated in Los Angeles and his ashes were taken to Colma and interred in the Jewish section of the Hills of Eternity Cemetery. His gravesite is located in the Hills of Eternity Memorial Park in Colma, San Mateo County, Calif.

Jan. 13, 1931 - Two cars of hogs, 274 head weighing a total of 45,240 pounds, were sold in the cooperative sale held in Evergreen on this Tuesday by the Conecuh Livestock Association for the sum of $2,756.95, according to information furnished by County Agent P.R. Pettis.

Jan. 13, 1935 – A plebiscite in Saarland showed that 90.3 percent of those voting wished to join Nazi Germany.

Jan. 13, 1937 – The “Allen Treasure,” $2,700 in pre-Civil War gold coins were discovered beneath a smoke house in the Clarke County community of Rockville, Ala.

Jan. 13, 1950 – Georgiana High School’s varsity boys basketball team beat Evergreen High School, 50-31, in Evergreen on this Friday night. Harville led Georgiana with 15 points; Don Simmons scored 14; and Shell scored 12. Guerry Moorer led Evergreen with 15 points, and Jack Cunningham followed with five points.

Jan. 13, 1955 – Astronomer Morris K. Jessup, the author of “The Case for the UFO,” received a letter from a man who identified himself as “Carlos Allende.” In the letter, Allende informed Jessup of the “Philadelphia Experiment.”

Jan. 13, 1955 – Novelist Jay McInerney was born in Hartford, Conn.

Jan. 13, 1956 - Evergreen High School’s boys basketball team beat Greenville, 59-48, handing them their first loss of the season on this Friday night. Randy White, big Evergreen center, couldn’t miss, as he hit almost every shot, scoring 28 points in the first half. White scored more than two-thirds of Evergreen’s points, with an amazing total of 40 for the night. Eddie Kelly got eight, Robert King got seven, and Carrier and Joyner, two each.

Jan. 13, 1957 – Short-story writer Lorrie Moore was born in Glen Falls, N.Y.

Jan. 13, 1962 - In the first Farm Gate combat missions, T-28 fighter-bombers were flown in support of a South Vietnamese outpost under Viet Cong attack.

Jan. 13, 1966 – The Evergreen Courant reported that David L. Burt Jr. of Evergreen, Ala. had sold an Aberdeen-Angus bull to Nathaniel McMillan of Repton.

Jan. 13, 1966 – The Evergreen Courant reported that the Evergreen (Ala.) Kiwanis Club had recently installed its new slate of officers. They were Otis Bell, president; Lamar Rogers, vice president; Delma Bowers, treasurer; and Horace Deer, secretary.

Jan. 13, 1966 – The Evergreen Courant reported that Fireman Apprentice Frederick W. Salter, U.S. Navy, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Brooks Salter of Rt. 2, Evergreen, Ala., was back on station off the coast of Vietnam aboard the attack aircraft carrier USS Ticonderoga, after a nine-day visit to Yokosuka, Japan. The visit gave Ticonderoga’s crew and air squadrons a rest after two months of operations with the Seventh Fleet in the South China Sea.

Jan. 13, 1967 - Members of the Monroeville Kiwanis Club and their guests received first hand information on the situation in Vietnam on this Friday when George Clay Nettles, a native of Monroeville, spoke to the club. Nettles had just returned from Vietnam after an 18-month tour with the state department. His speech revealed first hand information about the South Vietnamese people and their relationship with U.S. military forces and with each other.

Jan. 13, 1968 – Johnny Cash gave his legendary live performance at Folsom Prison in Folsom, Calif.

Jan. 13, 1972 – George C. Wallace of Alabama declared himself a Democratic candidate for U.S. President, entering the field with George McGovern, 1968 nominee Hubert Humphrey, and nine other Democratic opponents.

Jan. 13, 1972 – President Richard Nixon announced that 70,000 U.S. troops would leave South Vietnam over the next three months, reducing U.S. troop strength there by May 1 to 69,000 troops.

Jan. 13, 1976 – Actor Michael Peña was born in Chicago.

Jan. 13, 1977 – The Evergreen Courant reported that five persons had been arrested and charged with the burglary of the County Line Discount Package Store on U.S. Highway 84, outside Repton, Ala., on the Conecuh-Monroe county line. The burglary took place around midnight on Jan. 4, 1977.

Jan. 13, 1977 – The Evergreen Courant reported that Evergreen High School’s boys basketball team improved to 6-2 on the season with a 72-58 win over T.R. Miller. Senior center Marion Stanton led Evergreen with a double double, scoring 15 points and grabbing 16 rebounds.

Jan. 13, 1978 – National Baseball Hall of Fame manager Joe McCarthy died at the age of 90 in Buffalo, N.Y. During his career, he managed the Chicago Cubs, the New York Yankees and the Boston Red Sox. He was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1957.

Jan. 13, 1981 – On this Tuesday, Monroe Academy’s boys basketball team beat South Butler Academy of Georgiana, 97-47, in Ollie. The Vols, who topped the 20-point mark in each quarter of the contest, were paced by the 18-point shooting of Keith Jones, who also had nine assists. Other standout MA players in that game included Tracey McPherson, Kim Stacey, Blake Masingill, Joey Langham, Jeff Gandy, Mark Nettles, Tim Chunn, Craig Cave, Rickey Sanchez and Patrick Munday.

Jan. 13, 1983 - Weather observer Earl Windham reported a low of 23 degrees in Evergreen, Ala.

Jan. 13, 1983 – The Evergreen Courant reported that the United States flag of Tommy Harper was being flown over the Evergreen-Conecuh County Public Library in honor of him and all other deceased veterans of Conecuh County. The Pilot Club of Evergreen collected the flags of honored veterans and stored them in the county courthouse for many years, but in early 1983, the flags are being kept at the library. The late Tommy Harper served as a private with Co. F, 8th Battalion, Replacement Center. He entered service on Sept. 6, 1918 at Evergreen, and was honorably discharged Dec. 30, 1918 at Camp Pike, Ark. His flag was being flown during the month of January over the Evergreen-Conecuh County Public Library.

Jan. 13, 1983 – The Monroe Journal reported that Monroe Academy head football coach Rob Kelly had resigned after a successful four years at the helm of the “Big Orange.” Kelly notified headmaster John Ross of his decision during the previous week, and his formal resignation was presented to the academy’s board of directors on Mon., Jan. 10. The resignation, which was to become effective in May when the school let out for the summer holidays, was accepted by the board. Kelly came to the school in 1979 and took the Volunteers through a tough season to finish with a 12-1 record and the Alabama Private School Athletic Association 3A championship. Since that year, Kelly had kept the Volunteers in the thick of the APSAA 3A race with records of 9-2 in 1980, 8-3 in 1981 and 10-3 in 1982.

Jan. 13, 1986 - "The Wall Street Journal" printed a real picture on its front page. The Journal had not done this in nearly 10 years. The story was about artist, O. Winston Link and featured one of his works.

Jan. 13, 1995 – Greenville Academy’s varsity boys basketball team beat Sparta Academy, 53-52, in Evergreen. Adrian Mitchell led Sparta with 13 points, and Larry Wright followed with 11 points. Other standout Sparta players in that game included Brent Worrell, Michael Pate, Jason Miller, Nicholas Jones and James Johnson.

Jan. 13, 1995 – Greenville Academy’s varsity girls basketball team beat Sparta Academy, 64-27, in Evergreen. Nikki Jones led Sparta with 14 points. Other outstanding Sparta players in that game included Carrie Lambert, Janet Kendrick, Aundria Griffin and Missy Westwood.

Jan. 13, 2005 - Major League Baseball adopted a steroid-testing program that suspended first-time offenders for 10 days and randomly tested players year-round.

Jan. 13, 2005 - Concert and operatic star Nell Rankin died in New York at age 81. The Montgomery, Ala. native made her stage debut in Wagner's Lohengrin in Zurich, Switzerland in 1949.

Jan. 13, 2005 - The NFL fined Randy Moss of the Minnesota Vikings $10,000 for pretending to pull down his pants and moon the Green Bay Packer crowd during a playoff win the previous weekend.

Jan. 13, 2006 – The Conecuh County community of Belleville, just west of Interstate Highway  65, was devastated on this Friday morning when a tornado ripped through the area leaving Betty Jo Williams dead. The tornado was spawned out of a severe weather front that ripped through the region early on this Friday. The tornado touched down for only minutes, but left a path of destruction that was over one-half mile square. It left three homes destroyed and over 15 structures damaged, including the Belleville Volunteer Fire Department, and many vehicles damaged. Williams was killed when the chimney in her home collapsed.

Jan. 13, 2006 - Evergreen weather observer Harry Ellis reported 1.03 inches of rain on this day.


Jan. 13, 2010 – Evergreen’s Chris Hines, a 6-8, 220-pound forward at the University of Alabama, played 17 minutes in a 65-64 loss to Vanderbilt in Tuscaloosa. Hines played 17 minutes and finished the game with six points, three rebounds and an assist. After the loss, UA head coach Anthony Grant praised Hines, saying in the post-game press conference that “Chris Hines came in and gave us some good energy, as did (Alabama forward) Tony Mitchell and the other guys that came in.”

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