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TDGH - September 29

This Day in Georgia History

Compiled by

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

 

September 29

1526 Lucas Vásquez de Ayllón and 600 Spanish colonists (including African slaves and perhaps freemen) landed on the Georgia mainland opposite Sapelo Sound and founded the settlement of San Miguel de Gualdape. This was the first European settlement in North America since the Vikings' exploration around year 1000 A.D. The colonists had sailed from the Caribbean island of Hispaniola in July aboard six ships. In August, they had landed at Winyah Bay on the Carolina coast, but failing to find an Indian settlement (which would be necessary for food until crops could be planted and harvested) they sailed southward. On the Georgia coast, Ayllón found Guale Indians. Although physical remains of their settlement have not been found, historians and geographers have utilized surviving navigation logs and other records to reconstruct the 1526 voyage. (See Jeannine Cook, ed., Columbus and the Land of Ayllón, 1992.) Based on the latest research, the San Miguel de Gualdape settlement probably was situated on the mainland of what today is McIntosh County opposite Sapelo Sound. (Click here to view map.) One source feels the most likely location was within the present-day Harris Neck National Wildlife Refuge, which is located near the mouth of the Newport River facing St. Catherines Island. (To view a timeline of Spanish explortion and colonization in the New World, click here.)

1746 In London, the court martial trial of Maj. Gen. James Oglethorpe began. Oglethorpe was suspected of having Jacobite loyalties for his tactics in the campaign against Bonnie Prince Charlie in 1745, and he was charged with neglecting or disobeying orders in allowing the Jacobites to escape. However, the board of general officers hearing the case acquitted the general of any wrong-doing.

1863 Confederate Gen. Howell Cobb was appointed to command the Georgia State Troops, with his headquarters to be in Atlanta. One of his first orders that day was to command all volunteer companies and battalions not yet formed into regiments to do so by Nov. 1.

1914 The Boston Braves beat the Chicago Cubs to win the National League pennant. What made the feat so significant is that on July 15, the Braves had been in last place. In the course of 11 weeks, the "Miracle Braves" had gone from last to first.

1934 U.S. Secretary of Interior Harold Ickes, who also served as Pres. Franklin Roosevelt's public works administrator, arrived by an early Saturday morning train in Atlanta to inaugurate the Techwood and University Homes public housing projects. Proceeding to the Atlanta University area, Ickes threw the switch igniting dynamite that blew up two shanties. Later that morning, he took a similar action to level some slum housing in the Techwood area. Between the two detonations, Ickes told a national NBC-radio audience that the two Atlanta slum-clearing projects -- which would be followed by the first federally supported public housing in the nation -- represented "a milestone in the social history of America." And, indeed, similar New Deal public housing projects were launched in 36 other cities across the country.

1948 Owners of Atlanta's WSB radio station launched WSB-TV -- Georgia's first television station. Earlier that year, station WTVR in Richmond, Va. went on the air on April 22, become the first television station in the South. [Thanks to Scott Johnson for the information.]

1956 Hundreds of members of the Ku Klux Klan gathered near the base of Stone Mountain. Three large crosses were burned, and organizers proclaimed that the Klan was "as Solid as Stone Mountain." Based on the car tags of those attending the event, the majority were from Alabama, Mississippi, South Carolina, and Tennessee.

1967 Author Carson Smith McCullers died in Nyack, New York. Born in Columbus, Georgia on February 19, 1917. After graduating from Columbus High School in 1933, she moved to New York City. She attended Columbia University in 1934, followed by two years at New York University. In 1937, Smith married Reeves McCullers. The next year, they moved to Fayetteville, North Carolina, where she wrote her most famous work, The Heart is a Lonely Hunter. In 1997, the Carson McCullers Society was created to promote scholarship in her life and works.

1992 For the second consecutive year, the Atlanta Braves clinched the eastern division title -- a feat they would repeat in 1993, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, and 1999, then continue the amazing streak from 2000-2005.

2004 The Atlanta Braves defeated the New York Mets, giving Braves' manager Bobby Cox his 2000th win as a manager. This made Cox only the ninth man in major league baseball history to reach this milestone.

Georgia cities and towns incorporated by acts approved on Sept. 29:

1891 Alapaha (Berrien County), Groveton (Columbia County), and Sycamore (Irwin County)

 

In Their Own Words on This Day. . .

1777 American history books tend to emphasize Britain's 13 American colonies that declared their independence. In fact, not counting its colonies in Canada or the Caribbean, Britain had 15 American colonies in 1776. The two overlooked provinces were East Florida and West Florida, both of which remained loyal to Britain in the Revolution. In this excerpt from a letter to Henry Laurens, Savannah merchant Joseph Clay noted one problem Georgians were having with bands of raiders from East Florida:

". . .The Scouts from Augustine have for some Months past been continually making incursions into our State for Cattle & I believed they have carried some away lately from the No'side of the Great Ogechee, this to our very great shame they have done with very little interruption . . . the Number of the People who have committed these depredations have never exceeded 150 . . . this is very much complained of by the Inhabitants & with great reason that they cannot be protected from such an inferior force. . . ."

Source: Collections of the Georgia Historical Society, Vol. VIII, Letters of Joseph Clay, Merchant of Savannah, 1776-1793 (Savannah: Georgia Historical Society, 1913), p. 40.

1864 From camp in Yorktown, Va. B. E. Yerby wrote to his father back in Athens, Ga. of a humorous incident he observed of a soldier on guard duty one night:

". . .Some of the sentinels are very awkward. One night the countersign (or password) was 'Rockbridge.' And a man attempted to cross over the line. the sentinel stopped him and said, 'If you don't say "Rockbridge," I will shoot you!' . . ."

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. 70-71.


© 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 Charly Pou.


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