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This Day in Georgia History
August 16 1798 Mirabeau Lamar was born in Louisville, Georgia. He later emigrated to the new Republic of Texas, where he became its second president. Lamar died in Richmond, Texas on Dec. 19, 1859.
See Dec. 19, 1859 entry for biographical information on Lamar. 1880 Former Georgia governor Herschel Johnson died in Jefferson County, Georgia.
See Sep. 18, 1812 entry for biographical information on Johnson. 1882 Georgia politician Benjamin H. Hill died in Atlanta at age 59. Born in Jasper County, Georgia on Sept. 14, 1823, he would serve in both the U.S. and Confederate senates.
See Sept. 14, 1823 entry for biographical information on Hill. 1888 John Pemberton died at his home in Atlanta. Born in Knoxville, Georgia in 1831, Pemberton became a pharmacist in Columbus. During the Atlanta Campaign, he organized Pemberton's Cavalry and served as a captain under Gen. Joe Wheeler until the end of the war. In 1869, he moved to Atlanta, where he eventually started the Pemberton Chemical Company. In 1886, he invented a syrup blend consisting of extracts of coca and kola for use in treating headaches. The next year, fate led a customer to ask for the syrup diluted with carbonated water – and thus was born Coca-Cola.
1913 On the eighteenth day in the trial of Leo Frank, many more female employees of the National Pencil factory were called – all testifying to Frank's good character and that he had never done anything improper to them. One did say he opened the door to the girls' dressing room once, but the defense claimed this was because some girls were flirting out the window and he wanted to stop it. Residents of the area where the Franks lived testified that he had walked around the neighborhood the evening after the murder, and seemed calm and normal. Finally, on this Saturday afternoon, the defense announced what most of the crowd had been waiting to hear; Leo Frank himself would take the stand on Monday. Click here for a detailed accounting of the case. 1915 A caravan of eight vehicles bearing 25 armed men from the Atlanta area arrived at the Georgia State Prison at Milledgeville around 10 p.m. Cutting the telephone lines, they surprised the guards and entered the barrack of Leo Frank, who two years earlier had been convicted of the murder of 14-year-old Mary Phagan in one of the most infamous trials of the century. The intruders seized Frank and departed into the night. Seven of the cars then took back roads headed for Marietta, while one car acted as a decoy in case of pursuit. 1916 Gov. Nathaniel Harris signed legislation designating the State Prison Commission, the State Geologist, the Dean of Civil Engineering of the State University, and the Professor of Highway Engineering at Georgia Tech as the State Highway Department of Georgia in order to comply with provisions of Federal Aid Road Act of 1916 under which Congress authorized federal aid to states for construction of highways. 1919 Gov. Hugh Dorsey signed an act of the General Assembly creating a state Department of Banking and providing for the examination and regulation of banks in Georgia.
1924 Gov. Clifford Walker signed an act providing that persons sentenced to death die by electrocution rather than hanging. The law further directed the State Prison Commission to immediately build a death chamber with electric chair at the state prison at Milledgeville.
1949 Margaret Mitchell, author of Gone With the Wind, died in Atlanta, five days after being hit by a speeding taxi while crossing the intersection of Peachtree and 13th – only three blocks from her house.
Margaret Mitchell Marsh – her married name – was buried two days later in Atlanta's Oakland Cemetery.
1996 In Atlanta-Fulton County Stadium, the Atlanta Braves beat the Pittsburgh Pirates. In the win over future Braves pitcher Denny Neagle, John Smoltz recorded his 20th win – establishing a Braves record for winning 20 games so quickly in a season and strengthening his claim for the 1996 Cy Young Award.
In his first home game, 19-year-old Andruw Jones tripled on his first at-bat, followed by his first Major League homer on his third at-bat.
The third star of the game was reliever Mark Wohlers, who got his 30th save – tying Gene Garber's franchise record.
2005 Coretta Scott King suffered a major stroke.
Georgia towns and cities incorporated by acts approved on August 16: 1907 Annestown (Gwinnett County), Eleanor (Monroe County), and Norristown (Emanuel County) 1909 Grovania (Houston County), Manchester (Meriwether and Talbot counties), Mitchells District (Pulaski County), Rays Mill (Berrien County), and Swords (Morgan County). 1912 Rex (Clayton County), Sardis (Burke County), and Shingler (Worth County) 1913 Aline (Emanuel County) and Robertstown (White County) 1920 Farrar (Jasper County), Hoboken (Pierce County) and Manassas (Tattnall County)
In Their Own Words on This Day. . . 1745 Georgia president William Stephens recorded in his journal the capture of a bungling group of Spanish privateers:
Source: E. Merton Coulter (ed.), The Journal of William Stephens, 1743-1745 (Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1959), p. 238. 1864 Col. Fredrick Winkler of the 26th Wisconsin Infantry wrote to his wife about another side of life during the siege of Atlanta:
Source: Civil War Letters of Major Fredrick C. Winkler, in 26th Wisconsin Infantry Volunteers Home Page For more, see This Week in Georgia Civil War History. 1864 The Southern Recorder of Milledgeville reprinted an item from a Macon newspaper on how citizens should prepare for a Civil War raid.
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