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TDGH - March 13

This Day in Georgia History

Compiled by

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

 

March 13

1736 Don Francisco de Moral Sanchez, governor of Spanish Florida, wrote James Oglethorpe complaining about English settlements and forts in lands long claimed by Spain.

1865 Pres. Jefferson Davis signed legislation approved by the Confederate Congress authorizing the recruitment of black soldiers into the Confederate army.

1933 Four major Atlanta banks reopened after a three-day "holiday" decreed by Gov. Eugene Talmadge on Mar. 6, subsequently extended by Pres. Franklin Roosevelt. All banks were directed to prevent large withdrawals without specific statements on how the money would be spent.

1957 After citizens of Calhoun and Gordon County purchased and deeded to the state 220 acres of land encompassing the original site of New Echota, the official capital of the Cherokee Nation before removal, the Georgia Assembly authorized the governor to provide $250,000 over two years to be used in the reconstruction of New Echota as a state historic site. [Click here and here for more information on New Echota State Historic Site.]

1957 Gov. Marvin Griffin signed a joint resolution in which the General Assembly "impeached" U.S. Supreme Court chief justice Earl Warren and associate justices Hugo Black, William O. Douglas, Thomas Clark, Felix Frankfurter, and Stanley Reed. The resolution further called on Georgia's congressional delegation to institute formal impeachment charges against the justices in the U.S. House of Representatives.

1957 Gov. Marvin Griffin signed Georgia's first water pollution control act. The legislation created a Water Quality Council to regulate wastewater treatment facilities.

1996 The International Wildlife Coalition and the U.S. Humane Society charged the U.S. Navy with causing the death of five or six right whales during war games off the coast of Georgia and Florida. According to the groups, some of the whales died from concussions from gunnery practice and bomb explosions, while others died from being scrapped by naval vessels. The Navy denied responsibility for the deaths. With only 300 still living, the right whale is the most endangered species of large whale. Its calving grounds are off the coast of Georgia and northern Florida.

1999 Before a soldout crowd in New York's Madison Square Garden, Atlanta's Evander Holyfield battled Britain's Lennox Lewis to a controversial 12-round draw. At age 36, Holyfield went into the match with a record of 36 wins (25 by knockout) and 3 losses. Lewis, 33, had a record of 34 wins (27 by knockout) and 1 loss. Holyfield was world heavyweight champion of the International Boxing Federation and the World Boxing Association titles, while Lewis held the World Boxing Council title. Everyone expected one fighter to emerge holding all three titles as the first unified world boxing champion since 1992. But that was not to be. Lewis threw many more punches than Holyfield and never appeared in danger of being knocked down, but in a decision booed by the crowd, one judge gave the match to Lewis, one to Holyfield, and one had it a draw. For the fight, Holyfield won $20 million, compared to Lewis's $10 million.

 

In Their Own Words on This Day. . .

1764 Savannah merchant James Habersham wrote to Georgia's colonial agent William Knox concerning the terms of the 1763 Treaty of Paris, which ended the French and Indian War. Under this treaty, Spain ceded East and West Florida to England, while France ceded all lands east of the Mississippi River (except New Orleans) to England. In this letter, Habersham expressed concern that Georgia's southern boundary was not being moved to include parts of Florida, and he expressed satisfaction that the French would no longer be Georgia's neighbors [contrast this with the letter a mere eight years later (see March 12 "In Their Own Words" entry) in which revolutionary fervor is building -- which would lead to an alliance with France against England]:

". . . It is with concern we find that the Boundary of this Province is confined to St. Mary's [River], the method by which it was effected, considering the behaviour of those concerned, is no ways surprising to us. The Cession of New Orleans and the Lands West of the River Mississippi to Spain yields us great satisfaction, as we the hopefull indeed pretty well assured the Spaniards will prove more advantageous and less turbulent Neighbors, than we should have found the French to be. . . ."

Source: Collections of the Georgia Historical Society, Vol. VI, The Letters of the Hon. James Habersham, 1756-1775 (Savannah: Georgia Historical Society, 1904), p. 18.

1861 After Georgia's secession, many Georgia militia units left for newly established training camps to be organized into regiments and prepare for active duty. From one such camp in Augusta, Maurice O'Callaghan wrote to his friend Johnny Perkins:

"I received your kind letter this morning and you may rest assured that it give[s] me no less joy than if it had been from my Brother, for I cherish a true friend. As [for] myself, Johnny, I will give you a small history of my new home. For our subsistence we have what the boys call wasp-nest bread -- it is a baker's bread -- and one piece of fat meat three times a day and coffee three twixt twice a day. Second, we drill three times a day with muskets that weights 17 [pounds] each. We have a jolly time here. There is 200 soldiers here now. You just ought to see us with our red shirts on and caps on. We look more like British than Southern soldiers. We are going to pitch our tents in a few days on the parade ground, where every man will cook for himself. This will suit me very well, for I do not think our cook is the cleanest in the world now how.

"Johnny, as I have to rise in the morn at daybreak and ought to have went to bed at 9 o'clock but have stole time on the office of [the] day to the amount of about an hour, I must close. I want you to tell all the boy[s] to write me, such as Alf and Job. Give them my best wishes. Oh, I had liked to have forgot Miss Coffer, my little sweetheart. Tell [her] howdy for me and keep her for me, for she is the only one I can claim in that part, for Miss Ollie has forgot me or at least I think so from the way she has treated me. I wrote her a letter, and she did not answer and as after I have her ample time to do so. Then I studied a while and said farewell. . . ."

Source: Mills Lane (ed.), "Dear Mother: Don't grieve about me. If I get killed, I'll only be dead.": Letters from Georgia Soldiers in the Civil War (Savannah: Beehive Press, 1990), pp. 2-4.


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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 Charly Pou.


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