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January 14 1733 After visiting with South Carolina officials, James Oglethorpe returned to the ship Anne in the early morning hours of the 14th. Later that day, the Anne departed Charles Town harbor with crew and passengers to sail southward to Port Royal. [Note: Letters, diaries, and records of this time show dates based on the Julian calendar (referred to as "Old Style") then in effect in Britain and the American colonies. The Gregorian calendar ("New Style") was adopted in 1752. Thus, Jan. 14, 1732/33 (Old Style) represents Jan. 25, 1733 under the calendar now in effect. For a fuller explanation, click here.] 1783 Future Georgia congressman and governor Wilson Lumpkin was born in Pittsylvania County, Va. [See Dec. 28 entry for biographical information.] 1784 The Continental Congress assembled in Annapolis, Maryland, and ratified the Treaty of Paris, signed the preceding Sept. 3 by representatives of the United States and Great Britain. The ratification formally ended the American Revolution and established the United States as a sovereign nation. 1799 Cotton gin inventor Eli Whitney received an important U.S. government contract. But, it had nothing to do with cotton gins. Rather, the pioneer in making interchangeable parts was being asked to produce 10,000 muskets. 1833 Mercer Institute began
operations in Penfield. It would grow and develop into Mercer University. [submitted
by Michael Cass, Mercer University] 1835 Savannahian James M. Wayne was sworn in as an associate justice of the U.S. Supreme Court. Appointed by Pres. Andrew Jackson, Wayne participated in the controversial Dred Scott decision. Despite the secession of his home state, Wayne remained on the Supreme Court--prompting the Confederacy to label him a traitor and confiscate his property. He continued serving on the Supreme Court until his death in 1867. 1856 Businessman and philanthropist
Thomas Egleston was born in Charleston, South Carolina. His family moved to
Georgia in 1870, where young Thomas soon was employed by an insurance firm.
Quickly becoming adept at the business, he was co-owner of the firm, now
called Perdue and Egleston, within a decade. An astute businessman, Egleston
underwrote major construction projects in Atlanta invested his profits well,
becoming one of the South's first millionaires. He also lobbied to have uniform
legislation regarding insurance throughout the South and, as president of
the Southeastern Tariff Association, worked to provide uniform rates, forms,
and services. The formative influence in Egleston's life was his mother, a
woman of strong character who brought her children through the disasters
of the Civil War and became beloved by all who knew her for her acts of
kindness and friendship. When she died in 1912, Egleston bequeathed the money
to construct a hospital for sick and needy children to be named in her honor.
Today the Henrietta Egleston Hospital for Children stands as a monument to
this family who gave so much to Atlanta and the rest of Georgia. 1990 Jim Williams, the central fugure in the case
later dramatized by the book and movie Midnight in the Garden of Good
and Evil, was found dead in his house.
In Their Own Words on This Day. . . 1865 From her older sister's plantation near Albany, Eliza Frances Andrews wrote about a problem Georgia would later become nationally known for -- dirt roads that were impassable when it rained, as noted in this journal entry:
Source: Eliza Frances Andrews, The War-Time Journal of a Georgia Girl, 1864-1865 (New York: D. Appleton and Co., 1908), p. 68.
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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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