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April 3 1735 While in England, James Oglethorpe on this day helped secure the passage of a Trustee act entitled "An Act to prevent the Importation and Use of Rum and Brandies in the Province of Georgia." The act provided that after June 24, 1735, "no Rum, Brandies, Spirits or Strong Waters" shall be imported into Georgia." Additionally, the selling of wine, beer, or ale without permission was prohibited. 1818 Alabama governor John Gill Shorter was born in Monticello, Georgia, though his family moved to Eufaula, Ala. in 1833. Shorter graduated from the University of Georgia in 1837 and was admitted to the Alabama bar the following year. A supporter of secession, Shorter represented Alabama in the Confederate Congress until his election as Alabama governor. He served one term (1861-63). Shorter died on May 29, 1872. 1865 Union forces occupied Richmond, Va. -- the national capital of the Confederacy. Confederate officials had departed the previous day. Their immediate destination was Georgia, and ultimately perhaps Texas. 1898 President McKinley called for 3000 soldiers from Georgia to fight in the Spanish-American War. 1930 The U.S. government designated the Wolf Island National Wildlife Refuge. 1942 Singer and songwriter Billy Joe Royal was born in Valdosta, Ga. He is best remembered for this hit, "Down in the Boondocks." 1968 Martin Luther King, Jr. gave his prophetic "I Have Been to the Mountain Top" speech in Memphis, in which he said:
King was assassinated the following day. 1992 The U.S. Postal Service
released a 29-cent Olympic Baseball stamp in first day of issue ceremonies
in Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium. [Click here
to see photo and story.] Commemorating the entry of baseball as an Olympic
sport, the stamp was released from the stadium where Olympic baseball would
be played at the 1996 Summer Olympics. 2004 - Dominique Wilkins, George Rogers,
Claude Humphrey, Pat Swilling, Tim Simpson, John “Blue Moon” Odom, Pepper
Rodgers, Wade Mitchell and James K. Harper, Jr. were inducted into the Georgia Sports Hall of Fame. In Their Own Words on This
Day. . . 1734 Almost most of Georgia's colonists had been members of the Church of England before coming, other religions were represented. The first group to settle were 42 Jews, who came in July 1733. Next were persecuted Lutheran Protestants from Salzburg, who arrived on March 12, 1734. Three weeks after their arrival, Lutheran minister John Martin Boltzius recorded in his diary of the great help one of the Jews had provided the Salzburgers while they were in Savannah:
Source: George Fenwick Jones (ed.), Detailed Reports on the Salzburger Emigrants Who Settled in America... Edited by Samuel Urlsperger, Volume One, 1733-34 (Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1968), p. 70. 1888 In one of her final journal entries, Gertrude Thomas expressed despair at her financial condition [because of years of bad decisions by her husband,they were almost completely bankrupt] -- yet she retained pride in her children and grandchildren. She would not write in her journal after August 1889, but instead went on to become a very active member of the Women's Christian Temperance Union and Georgia Women's Suffrage Association:
Source: Virginia Ingraham Burr (ed.), The Secret Eye: The Journal of Ella Gertrude Clanton Thomas, 1848-1889 (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1990), p. 443. January
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© Carl Vinson Institute of Government, University of Georgia If you have a date related to Georgia history or people that ought to be included, or if know of entries that should be corrected, send a note to Ed Jackson or Charles Pou. Go to Yahoo/The History Channel This Day in History page for Apr. 3 Go to GeorgiaInfo table of contents |
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