Welcome to GeorgiaInfo | What's New | This Day in Georgia History | Instructional Handout Masters | Credits | CVIOG Home
TDGH - June 7

This Day in Georgia History

Compiled by

Ed Jackson and Charles Pou
Carl Vinson Institute of Government
The University of Georgia

 

June 7

1494 Spain and Portugal signed the Treaty of Tordesillas formally granting Spain rights to claim and colonize most of the New World--including all of North America.

1744 In London, a court martial trial was held to examine allegations that Lt. Col. William Cook, a dissident officer in Oglethorpe's regiment, had leveled against the general. These charges included a general complaint against Oglethorpe's system of discipline within the regiment and that Cook had "suffered great indignities and unjust Impositions and Deductions of his Pay, together with an Ill State of Health . . . ." Additionally, Cook cited 19 specific complaints against the general. The court martial threw out every charge, charging them to be "frivolous, vexations, or malicious, and without foundation" and recommended that Cook be dismissed from service. Georgia's founder was completely vindicated by the decision.

1776 Richard Henry Lee introduced a resolution calling for a declaration of independence at the Second Continental Congress meeting in Philadelphia. Georgia's delegates--Button Gwinnett, Lyman Hall, and George Walton--would support measure when the vote was taken four weeks later.

1862 James Andrews, leader of Andrews' Raiders of "The Great Locomotive Chase" fame, was hanged in Atlanta as a spy.

1864 At the Republican Party's national convention in Baltimore, Md., Abraham Lincoln won the party's nomination for a second term as president.

1899 Confederate Gen. William Stephen Walker died in Atlanta. [See April 13 entry for biographical information on Walker.]

1913 Lucille Frank renewed her charges that prosecutor Hugh Dorsey was using third degree questioning tactics to gain false evidence against her husband in the murder of Mary Phagan. Mrs. Frank said their cook, Minola McKnight, had been arrested illegally because she was not a suspect in any crime. The Atlanta Journal also reported that no indictment would be sought against Jim Conley until Frank's trial was over. If Frank was found guilty, then Conley might escape prosecution [he eventually received a one-year sentence]; if Frank were acquitted, then first degree murder charges would be filed against Conley. Investigators on the case had discovered several cases of violence in Conley's background, including shooting at his wife and threatening a former employer with a gun. Click here for a detailed accounting of the case.

1941 Over 600 delegates from 38 states attended a Ku Klux Klan convention in Atlanta. They overwhelmingly voted against a motion to restore use of hoods to hide their faces. After voting to raise $1 million in 1942 to promote "Americanism," they adjourned and reassembled at Stone Mountain to burn a cross.

1976 After much debate, the Atlanta City Council voted 11-6 to require all police officers and fire fighters to live within the city within six months of employment. This action resulted after learning that 74% of Atlanta police lived outside the city.

 

In Their Own Words on This Day. . .

1742 Tension between the Britain and Spain was building over Georgia settlements and forts on St. Simons Island and other areas of Georgia claimed by Spain. In Savannah, William Stephens wrote of this tension in his journal:

"Recd. a Letter from the General [Oglethorpe], by the hand of Noble Jones, . . . besides several other Letters and Orders from his Excellence. . . , The Chief Importance of which, was to give Advice, that there was an Embarkation of men lately arrived at Augustine, Sent from Cuba to reinforce that Garrison, . . . . His Excellence further Advised us, that he had reason to believe the Spaniards depended much upon a Revolt of the Carolina Negroes, wherefore he Ordered strict care to be taken by every Officer who has a Command, to Stop all Suspicious persons from passing the River Savannah, for as much as it is very probable the Spaniards will send private Messengers,or Spies over land, to give notice to their Correspondents. . . ."

Source: E. Merton Coulter (ed.), The Journal of William Stephens, 1741-1743 (Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1959), pp. 90-91.

1742 From Frederica, James Oglethorpe wrote the Earl of Wilmington in London:

". . . The long-promised succours [reinforcements] are now arrived at Saint Augustine from Cuba. I send you enclosed a list of all we have to oppose them. My advices from spies are that we have reason to believe that they intend to attack us immediately and also to favour a revolt of the negroes in Carolina. They can't pass by us into Carolina, so must take us in their way. But i believe they'll meet with a morsel not easily to be digested. Yet we are not in the situation we could wish, being very weak in cannon and shot, never having had any from England, nor indeed anything else since my last arrival in this country, but one store ship with power and small arms . . . . I have sent the guard schooner on the Spanish coast, as I have done boats on the passages between the islands and the main and Rangers on the continent to watch their motions."

Source: Mills Lane (ed.), General Oglethorpe's Georgia: Colonial Letters, 1733-1743 (Savannah: Beehive Press, 1990), Vol. II, p. 614.

1862 In his diary, Samuel P. Richards of Atlanta wrote of the execution of James Andrews:

"A man was hung here today; the leader of the band that stole the engine and cars on the State R Road lately. His name was Andrews and he was executed as a spy by military authority -- poor fellow he ought to have engaged in better business . . . ."

Source: Franklin M. Garrett, Atlanta and Environs: A Chronicle of Its People and Events (Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1954), Vol. I, p. 524.


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.


Go to Yahoo/The History Channel This Day in History page for June 7

Go to Georgia History page


  ©2008 Carl Vinson Institute of Government
Text-Only Web Site
UGA | CVIOG | Contact Us