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April 19 1775 The American Revolution began with the "shot heard round the world" as a British force of 700 Redcoats fired on 77 Minutemen at the village of Lexington, Mass. Eight of the patriots were killed and 10 wounded. The British force then moved on to seize patriot military supplies at Concord, but along the way American patriots began firing on the advancing force of Redcoats. Unsuccessful in a battle at Concord, the British force retreated to Boston after losing 250 killed and wounded soldiers during the course of the day. [Click here to read more about the battles of Lexington and Concord.] 1861 President Lincoln issued an executive proclamation directing U.S. naval forces to blockade Southern ports. 1865 About 30 miles west of Macon, a skirmish known as the Battle of Culloden was fought as a part of Wilson's Union force, moving toward Macon, encountered the Worrill Grays near Culloden. The Grays -- a company of Georgia Reserve Militia consisting of 200 teens, old men, and wounded veterans -- was forced to withdraw after a two-hour battle with a much larger Union force. [There is some uncertainty about the actual date of the battle, with it possibly having occurred on April 20 -- and even as late as April 25.] 1865 The day following Gen. Joseph E. Johnston and Gen. William Sherman signed an armistice agreement, Confederate soldiers began large-scale desertion. Between April 19 and 24, some 8,000 Confederates left ranks and departed for home. 1940 President Franklin D. Roosevelt arrived in Warm Springs, Ga. for his thirty-seventh visit to his "second home." 1963 Milwaukee Brave Hank Aaron hit career homer No. 300 against the New York Mets. 1979 Gov. George Busbee signed a joint resolution of the General Assembly [see text] designating the azalea as the official state wild flower. 1989 Georgia Governor Joe Frank Harris signed a bill into law officially establishing the Georgia Aviation Hall of Fame to be located at the Museum of Aviation at Robbins Air Force Base in Houston County.. 1991 World Boxing Association champion Evander Holyfield out-pointed 42-year-old George Foreman in a 15-round bout. 1995 According to a resolution adopted by the Georgia House of Representatives on Feb. 27, 1995, April 19 was declared "Johnny Mercer Day" 1995 Gov. Zell Miller signed legislation [see text] designating the peanut as Georgia's official state crop. 1998 The University of Georgia
men's golf team won the 1998 S.E.C. championship by one shot over South Carolina.
The team win was the 22nd S.E.C. championship for the Bulldog, but the first
since 1988. 2006 Marietta, GA native Larry
Nelson was selected to the World Golf Hall of Fame. In Their Own Words on This Day. . . 1744 The following entry from William Stephens' journal for this day shows the diligent efforts some made at cultivating silk worms, but also hints that the efforts would not be successful:
Source: E. Merton Coulter (ed.), The Journal of William Stephens, 1743-1745 (Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1959). 1865 For 67-year-old planter and businessman John Banks in Columbus, Ga., the Civil War was now over, as he recorded in his diary:
Source: John Banks, Autobiography of John Banks, 1797 - 1870 (Austell, Ga.: privately printed by Elberta Leonard, 1936), p. 36. 1865 Returning to her home in Washington, Ga., 24-year-old Eliza Andrews wrote in her journal from Milledgeville of the previous day's events, including a brief meeting with one of Georgia's most famous poets:
Source: Eliza Frances Andrews, The War-Time Journal of a Georgia Girl: 1864-1865 (New York: D. Appleton and Co., 1908), pp. 155-159. 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.
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