September 14, 1744
1744 At the Faculty Office of the Archbishop of Canterbury in London, a marriage license was issued to "Hon. James Oglethorpe, of St. Margaret’s, Westminster, Esq., Bachelor, above 40 and Elizabeth Wright, of Cranham, Essex, spinster, above 25." In reality, Oglethorpe was 48 at the time, while his bride-to-be was probably closer to 30. Incidentally, the reference to St. Margaret’s was St. Margaret’s Parish, which encompassed the area of Westminster where Oglethorpe lived while in London. His home was still in Godalming in Surrey County, though he would soon move to new wife’s estate in Cranham east of London.
September 14, 1823
1823 Lawyer and politician Benjamin Hill was born in Jasper County, Georgia. He graduated from the University of Georgia in 1844, read law in Athens, and was admitted to the bar in 1845. Hill served a term in the Georgia House of Representatives (1851-52) and in the Georgia Senate (1959-60). After Georgia seceded, Hill served in the Confederate provisional congress and was a Confederate senator throughout the Civil War. After the war, Hill served in the U.S. House of Representatives (1875-76) and in the U.S. Senate from 1877 until his death on Aug. 16, 1882. [See Ben Hill statue.] In 1906, the General Assembly created a new county named in his honor.
September 14, 1881
Georgia cities and towns incorporated by acts approved on Sept. 14:
1881 Pelham (Mitchell County)
September 14, 1885
1885 Gov. Henry McDaniel signed an act of the General Assembly ceding to the United States jurisdiction over such land in Fulton and DeKalb counties the U.S. might acquire for the purpose of building a military installation up to 200 acres in size (amended to 250 acres in 1886). The action came after Congress appropriated $500,000 to build a military post somewhere in the Atlanta area. In May 1885, Gen. Winfield Scott Hancock had chosen a 140-acre site on the Central Railroad at a point near the road to East Point. In 1886, construction began a new federal post -- initially to be called Fort Hancock. However, before completion of the faciity in 1889, federal authorities had decided instead to name it in honor Union Maj. Gen. James McPherson, who had been killed in the Battle of Atlanta in 1864.
September 14, 1885
Other actions affecting Georgia cities and towns approved on Sept. 14: 1885 Atlanta’s city limits were extended to include Grant Park.
September 14, 1891
Georgia cities and towns incorporated by acts approved on Sept. 14:1891 Arabi (originally Dooly County but today Crisp County)
September 14, 1917
1917 Poet and novelist Byron Herbert Reece was born near Blairsville, Georgia. Despite never completing a formal college education, Reese wrote several novels and collections of poetry in north Georgia before taking the position of poet in residence at UCLA in the early 1950s. While there, he wrote Bow Down in Jericho. Later, he took positions of poet in residence at Young Harris College and Emory University. He committed suicide at Young Harris College on June 3, 1958.
September 14, 1955
1955 Macon’s Little Richard recorded "Tutti Frutti" in a two-day recording session at Specialty Records in Hollywood.
September 14, 1976
1976 The Georgia World Congress Center opened in Atlanta. Mayor Maynard Jackson characterized it as "the most magnificent show convention facility in the world." Governor George Busbee described the center as "a benchmark in the economic life of this city." Busbee added that Atlanta had long been "a city of national stature. Starting today it is a city of international significance."
September 14, 1979
1979 Former Oglethorpe County resident Kenny Rogers received a star in the Hollywood Walk of Fame.
September 14, 1980
1980 Eleven year old Darron Glass disappeared in Atlanta. He was the latest victim in the Atlanta Child Murders case.











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