1863: Difference between revisions

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== Events ==
== Events ==
* [[April 3]]: Welsh miner [[Llewellyn Johns]] arrived at New York Harbor.
* [[April 3]]: Welsh miner [[Llewellyn Johns]] arrived at New York Harbor.
* [[December 1]]: [[Thomas H. Watts]] succeeded [[John Gill Shorter]] as [[List of Governors of Alabama|governor of Alabama]].
* [[December 1]]: [[Thomas Hill Watts]] succeeded [[John Gill Shorter]] as [[List of Governors of Alabama|governor of Alabama]].


=== Battles ===
=== Battles ===
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* [[February 22]]: [[Wallace McElwain]] purchased an 80-acre parcel from [[Willis B. Eastis]] to erect the [[Cahaba Iron Works]].
* [[February 22]]: [[Wallace McElwain]] purchased an 80-acre parcel from [[Willis B. Eastis]] to erect the [[Cahaba Iron Works]].
* March: [[Shelby Furnace|Shelby Furnace No. 2]] was blown in.
* March: [[Shelby Furnace|Shelby Furnace No. 2]] was blown in.
* [[September 9]]: The Confederate government purchased [[Brierfield Ironworks]] for $600,000 in Confederate tender.  
* [[September 9]]: The Confederate government purchased [[Brierfield Ironworks]] for $600,000 in Confederate tender.
* November: [[Oxmoor Furnace No. 1]] was blown in.
* November: [[Oxmoor Furnace No. 1]] was blown in.
* [[George Baker]] purchased [[William Browne]]'s coal mines near [[Montevallo]].
* [[George Baker]] purchased [[William Browne]]'s coal mines near [[Montevallo]].
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* [[James Walton]] succeeded [[Richard H. Brasher]] as [[Shelby County Sheriff]].
* [[James Walton]] succeeded [[Richard H. Brasher]] as [[Shelby County Sheriff]].
* Captain [[Goldsmith Hewitt II]] was wounded at the Battle of Chickamauga in North Georgia.
* Captain [[Goldsmith Hewitt II]] was wounded at the Battle of Chickamauga in North Georgia.
* Lieutenant Colonel [[J. F. B. Jackson]] was captured at the Siege of Vicksburg, Mississippi.


[[Image:William Elias B Davis.jpg|right|thumb|150px|William Elias B. Davis in 1887]]
[[Image:William Elias B Davis.jpg|right|thumb|150px|William Elias B. Davis in 1887]]
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* May: [[William Hassinger]], chemist and industrialist
* May: [[William Hassinger]], chemist and industrialist
* [[August 8]]: [[Daniel Greene]], judge
* [[August 8]]: [[Daniel Greene]], judge
* [[August 9]]: [[Jake Wells]], theater owner
* [[September 1]]: [[William Tynes]], co-founder of [[Hardie-Tynes]]
* [[November 25]]: [[William Elias B. Davis]], surgeon
* [[November 25]]: [[William Elias B. Davis]], surgeon
* [[December 20]]: [[Christian Rambow]], saloon keeper and alderman
* [[December 20]]: [[Christian Rambow]], saloon keeper and alderman
* [[Thad Mullin]], [[Birmingham_Fire_and_Rescue_Service#Chiefs|Birmingham Fire Chief]]
* [[Lewis Houston]], railroad laborer
* [[Thad Mullin]], [[Birmingham Fire and Rescue Service#Chiefs|Birmingham Fire Chief]]


===Deaths===
===Deaths===

Latest revision as of 11:17, 11 January 2024

1863 was 8 years before the founding of the City of Birmingham, 44 years after Alabama became a state, and 2 years after Alabama joined the Confederacy.

Events

Battles

Business


Individuals

William Elias B. Davis in 1887

Births

Deaths


Context

In 1863, the Civil War and Taiping Rebellion continued. Harper's Weekly published Thomas Nast's first drawing of the modern Santa Claus. The first section of the London Underground Railway opened. The world-famous midgets General Tom Thumb and Lavinia Warren were married in New York City. Arizona and Idaho were organized as territories. West Virginia was admitted as a state. The largest battle of the Civil War, the Battle of Gettysburg, was fought. Thanksgiving was proclaimed a national holiday.

Books published in 1863 included The Water-Babies by Charles Kingsley, Five Weeks in a Balloon by Jules Verne, and The Cossacks by Leo Tolstoy.

Notable births in 1863 included automobile pioneer Henry Royce, newspaper publisher William Randolph Hearst, automobile manufacturer Henry Ford, statesman Austen Chamberlain, and astronomer Annie Jump Cannon. Notable deaths included Confederate General Stonewall Jackson, Confederate General Lewis Armistead, statesman Sam Houston, painter Eugène Delacroix, folklorist Jacob Grimm, King Frederick VII of Denmark, and novelist William Makepeace Thackeray.

1860s
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