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December 2 1737 After having been in Georgia since February 1736, a disillusioned John Wesley sailed from Georgia to Charleston, and subsequently on to England. Although he had hoped to serve as a missionary to Georgia's Indians, Oglethorpe had primarily wanted Wesley to minister to the needs of Savannah's population. However, at the time, Wesley was perceived as too formal in his Anglican practices. Toward the end of his stay, he also became romantically involved with a young woman and proposed marriage. Her refusal and subsequent marriage to another man apparently led Wesley to refuse to offer her communion--an action prompting her new husband to sue him. Facing trial, Wesley departed for England. 1859 Gov. Joseph E. Brown signed legislation incorporating the Lucy Cobb Institute "for the education of young ladies, in the town of Athens." Thomas R.R. Cobb, Henry Hull Jr., Henry R.J. Long, John H. Newton, and Stephen Thomas were designated as initial trustees of the school that over 130 years later would become the home of the University of Georgia's Carl Vinson Institute of Government. 1860 Convicted of treason by a Virginia state court for his raid on the U.S. arsenal at Harpers Ferry, Va., abolitionist John Brown was hanged. Though his raid had been widely condemned in both the North and South, his death generated much sympathy in the North. This reaction led to increased tension between the North and South and convinced many white southerners that the new Republican Party was committed to ending slavery in the South. 1863 Following the Battle of Chickamauga, Gen. Braxton Bragg turned over command of the Army of Tennessee to General William Hardee at Dalton, Ga. 1953 Atlanta University president Dr. Rufus Clement won a decisive election to the Atlanta Board of Education, defeating white incumbent T.H.Landers, who had served on the board since 1927. Clement, who had the support of many white leaders in Atlanta, described his victory as proof that "the white population is ready to work constructively with the Negro population." After the 1954 Brown v. Board of Education decision, Clement became a proponent of a "go slow, go easy" path to integration that helped Atlanta avoid the confrontations over desegregation that developed in many other southern cities. 1955 The U.S. Air Force acquired
title to 211 acres of land in Houston County for construction of additional
runways for Robins Air Force Base. 1994 "Cobb," a movie based on the
life of native Georgian Ty Cobb and
filmed largely in Royston, GA and Athens, GA, was released.
In Their Own Words on This Day. . . 1737 After an unhappy experience in Georgia, John Wesley sailed for Charleston headed for England. In today's entry in his diary, he recorded:
Source: William Stephens, A Journal of the Proceeding in Georgia ([no city cited]: Readex Microprint Corporation, 1966), Vol. I, p. 45. 1737 In his journal the Trustees' secretary William Stephens recorded some of the unpleasantness surrounding John Wesley's departure from Georgia:
Source: William Stephens, A Journal of the Proceeding in Georgia ([no city cited]: Readex Microprint Corporation, 1966), Vol. I, p. 45. 1864 In his memoirs, General Sherman wrote that Union cavalry Gen. Kilpatrick:
Source: Mills Lane (ed.), Marching Through Georgia: William T. Sherman's Personal Narrative of His March Through Georgia (New York: Arno Press, 1978), p. 157. 1864 Confederate scout Enoch John, who was pursuing Sherman's army, wrote in his diary:
Source: Diary of Cpl Enoch John January / February / March / April / May / June / July / August / September / October / November / December
© 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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