1865: Difference between revisions
(New page: '''1865''' was 6 years before the founding of the City of Birmingham, 46 years after Alabama became a state, and 4 years after Alabama joined the Confederacy. == Events == * [[Jun...) |
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== Events == | == Events == | ||
* [[April 9]]: The [[Civil War]] ended with General Lee's surrender at Appomattox. | |||
* [[April 10]]: Alabama was made a military district of the United States. | |||
* [[June 21]]: [[Lewis E. Parsons]] was appointed provisional Governor of Alabama by United States occupation forces. | * [[June 21]]: [[Lewis E. Parsons]] was appointed provisional Governor of Alabama by United States occupation forces. | ||
* [[December 13]]: [[Robert M. Patton]] was inaugurated as Alabama's newly elected governor. | * [[December 13]]: [[Robert M. Patton]] was inaugurated as Alabama's newly elected governor. |
Revision as of 10:02, 17 March 2012
1865 was 6 years before the founding of the City of Birmingham, 46 years after Alabama became a state, and 4 years after Alabama joined the Confederacy.
Events
- April 9: The Civil War ended with General Lee's surrender at Appomattox.
- April 10: Alabama was made a military district of the United States.
- June 21: Lewis E. Parsons was appointed provisional Governor of Alabama by United States occupation forces.
- December 13: Robert M. Patton was inaugurated as Alabama's newly elected governor.
- The Jefferson County Medical Society was organized by Joseph Riley Smith.
- Talladega College was founded as a one-room school for African Americans.
Battles
- Spring: The Battle of Avondale, actually a minor skirmish, took place.
- March 22: Union Brigadier General James H. Wilson began his raid into Alabama by separating his forces in three separate columns to mask his intentions.
- March 26: Wilson's Raid continued with a skirmish at the Black Warrior River.
- March 27: Wilson's columns rejoined at Jasper.
- March: Wilson used the Arlington Home as temporary headquarters.
- March: A division of Wilson's army camped at the Williamson Hawkins plantation.
- March 28: Union troops destroyed the Oxmoor and Irondale Furnaces.
- March: Wilson's troops also destroyed the Conners Steel rolling mill in Helena and the Confederate Storehouse in Trussville.
- March 30: Wilson's troops destroyed the Central Iron Works in along Buck Creek.
- March 31: Confederate forces were routed by the larger, better-armed Union force at Montevallo, which destroyed the Shelby Furnace.
- March 31: A detachment from Wilson's forces attacked and burned the Tannehill Ironworks.
- March 31: A detachment from Wilson's forces burned the Brierfield Ironworks.
- April: A detachment from Wilson's forces burned the campus of the University of Alabama.
- April: Union forces used Washington Hall as barracks before burning it.
- April: Wilson's troops destroyed Brighthope iron furnace and the Little Cahaba Iron Works.
- April 2: The Confederates lost the Battle of Selma.
- April 12: Wilson's forces occupied Montgomery before moving on to Georgia.
Individuals
- February: Frank O'Brien was released as a prisoner of war by the North.
- July 29: William F. Hamby succeeded Abner Killough as Jefferson County Sheriff.
- November: Jabez Curry became president of Howard College.
- James H. Duran succeeded James Walton as Shelby County Sheriff. Duran was then succeeded by Charles B. Elliott.
- Mortimer Jordan, Jr moved to Cincinnati, Ohio to attend the Miami Medical College.
- A. B. Loveman emigrated to the United States.
- Alburto Martin was re-elected by the general assembly as solicitor for the Jefferson County judicial circuit.
- George Raps' parents moved his family to Murfreesboro, Tennessee.
- N. F. Thompson was hired as deputy clerk for Bedford County, Tennessee.
- Samuel Ullman moved to Natchez.
- Charles Whelan was paroled from active duty.
Births
- May 26: George Bodeker, Birmingham Police Chief
- December 4: John L. Parker, acting mayor of Birmingham
- December 10: William Wier, Birmingham Police Chief
- Roderick MacKenzie, artist
Marriages
- October: Willis Milner married Gustrine C. Key.
- October 11: Frank O'Brien married Indiana "Dannie" McBride.
Deaths
- August 29: Lemuel McMillion, state representative
Works
Buildings
Paintings
- "A Dream of Italy" by Robert Scott Duncanson
- "Looking Down Yosemite Valley, California" by Albert Bierstadt
Context
In 1865, the Confederate States surrendered, ending the Civil War. President Abraham Lincoln was assassinated by John Wilkes Booth; Andrew Johnson became President. The Christian Mission, later renamed the Salvation Army, was founded in London. The U.S. Secret Service was founded. Léopold II became King of the Belgians. The Thirteenth Amendment, abolishing slavery, was declared ratified. The original Ku Klux Klan was founded. Gregor Mendel formulated his theories of Mendelian inheritance.
Books published in 1865 included Alice's Adventures in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll and From the Earth to the Moon by Jules Verne.
Notable births in 1865 included YMCA leader John Mott, writer Robert W. Chambers, King George V of the United Kingdom, composer Carl Nielsen, writer William Butler Yeats, composer Paul Dukas, President Warren G. Harding, and writer Rudyard Kipling. Notable deaths included cook Isabella Beeton, President Abraham Lincoln, assassin John Wilkes Booth, shipping magnate Samuel Cunard, and King Leopold I of Belgium.
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