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April 1901

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The following events occurred in April 1901:

April 29, 1901: President McKinley departs on nationwide U.S. tour
April 9, 1901: New U.S. $10 bill approved by Treasury Department
April 24, 1901: Ollie Pickering first to bat in the first ever American League game

April 1, 1901 (Monday) edit

April 2, 1901 (Tuesday) edit

  • The United Kingdom enacted a law establishing the military court system, with jurisdiction over acts committed by the Boer guerrillas within South Africa during the Second Boer War. Unlike the Special Court that had previously handled serious crimes committed by rebels in British-controlled areas, the military courts, which began hearing cases on April 12, had "unlimited powers of decision and the authority to pass the death sentence". Executions, usually done in public to set an example for would-be rebels, were carried out by hanging or by firing squad.[10]
  • The Victoria League for Commonwealth Friendship, a charitable service organization that currently provides assistance to persons within the British Commonwealth, was founded in London by Lady Violet Cecil. Its original vision was "patriotism, belief in racial hierarchy, respect for the monarchy, Christianity and the armed services, and admiration for the past and present British heroes who exemplified those values".[11]
  • The London County Council voted to purchase 225 acres of land in Tottenham, at the cost of $7,500,000, to create cottages to accommodate workingmen's family housing sufficient for 42,000 people.[12]
  • Born: Patrick Buchan-Hepburn, British state leader, first and only Governor-General of the West Indies Federation (d. 1974)
  • Died: Will Carver, 32, American outlaw, in a shootout with Sheriff Elijah Briant in Sonora, Texas (b. 1868)

April 3, 1901 (Wednesday) edit

April 4, 1901 (Thursday) edit

April 5, 1901 (Friday) edit

April 6, 1901 (Saturday) edit

April 7, 1901 (Sunday) edit

April 8, 1901 (Monday) edit

April 9, 1901 (Tuesday) edit

April 10, 1901 (Wednesday) edit

April 11, 1901 (Thursday) edit

April 12, 1901 (Friday) edit

  • The United States proposed to the other foreign powers in China that the Chinese indemnity for damages from the Boxer Rebellion be cut by one-half.[4]
  • Cuba's constitutional convention voted, 18–10, to oppose the terms of the Platt Amendment for the islands independence from the United States.[43]
  • The American Institute of Electrical Engineers held what it called a "Conversazione" at Columbia University in New York, "an exhibition of various electrical appliances that had been recently invented, or the models of which had been improved of late",[44] demonstrating 32 different experiments to 400 guests, including Thomas Edison. Nikola Tesla, the most prominent of the group, transmitted wave vibrations from an electric oscillator "which were to be discharged in various parts of the room". In another experiment by Tesla, "Sparks leaped six feet in all directions" from a "huge flat coil ten feet high... in the front of the room".[45] Peter Cooper Hewitt explained his newly invented mercury-vapor lamp, where "a gas is used as the illuminating medium instead of a film ... current is transmitted to the mercury direct, and not by means of the usual coil, for which reason less power is needed to produce the same amount of light." The New York Times noted what Hewitt noted was "a disadvantage" that needed to be worked on, in that "A most peculiar colored light is emitted from the tubes. It is half purple, half green," and that "everybody who came into the room had his or her features so distorted that the skin of the face appeared to be covered all over with ghastly, violet-colored eruptions ... The lips that came under the light seemed purplish gray. The pupils of the eye ... assumed a greenish tinge."[44] In showing his newly patented "facsimile picture telegraph",[44] Herbert R. Palmer explained how "halftone pictures, sketches, handwriting, and the like can be transmitted over long distances, employing ordinary telegraph circuits", then sent "a life-sized portrait of President William Rainey Harper of the University of Chicago" over the wires to Chicago, by a forerunner of the fax machine, to the Quadrangle Club. At the same time, Harper began receiving "a similar picture of Seth Low" (Columbia's president) that had been sent from Chicago to New York City.[46] M. R. Hutchinson demonstrated the "akouphone", which he "described as a microtelephonic instrument ... to reproduce and largely intensify sounds and still preserve their quality", transmitted to the "akoulalion", a set of ear pieces, "intended to make the deaf hear". An administrator "of the New York Institute of the Deaf and Dumb brought eight of the deafest boys in the institution" to try the new system "with only partial success".[46]
  • The Great Comet of 1901, visible from the Southern Hemisphere, was first observed by an astronomer with the surname Viscara, at an observatory near Paysandú, Uruguay.[47][48]
  • Born: Leo Ginzburg, Polish-Russian conductor and pianist, in Warsaw (d. 1979)
  • Died: George Q. Cannon, 74, First Counselor in the First Presidency in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) for four Presidents, starting in 1873 when selected by Brigham Young; also a Church Apostle since 1860 and a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles on three occasions (b. 1827)

April 13, 1901 (Saturday) edit

April 14, 1901 (Sunday) edit

  • Cen Chunxuan, a British-educated Chinese official who would later lead a rebellion against the central government of China, became the new Governor of the Shanxi Province and began implementing major reforms.[50]
  • The Imperial government of China signed a contract with Japan to set up a police academy in Beijing.[51]
  • The government of Korea passed a law applying the death penalty for anyone convicted of the smoking of opium.[52]
  • Anti-government protests continued throughout the Russian Empire, and 1,500 demonstrators were arrested during a demonstration in the Ukrainian city of Odessa.[53]
  • The state of South Carolina declared that it would stop paying the federal tax on liquor, on the ground that as the sole authorized wholesale and retail seller of liquor in the state, its exercise of its sovereign power rendered it immune to regulation by the United States. The U.S. soon filed suit, and the U.S. Supreme Court would reject the state's argument in a 6–3 decision in South Carolina v. United States in 1905.[54]
  • The Texas Fuel Company began the practice of uncapping an oil well for members of the general public, as a means of impressing prospective investors. Passengers from 26 train coaches were treated to a demonstration where a well was "opened up and permitted to flow a 6-inch stream of oil 120 feet into the air", then closed after a few minutes. The exhibition was impressive, but also "fraught with danger to life and property" because of the lack of precautions against explosions and fire, such as not smoking near a producing well or pool of oil.[55]
  • Born: Józef Wojaczek, Polish Roman Catholic Priest; in Neustadt, Upper Silesia, German Empire (d. 1993)[56]

April 15, 1901 (Monday) edit

April 16, 1901 (Tuesday) edit

  • British colonial authorities in the Cape Colony town of Richmond supplied rifles and ammunition to coloured residents who had volunteered to guard the town against a repeat of the Boer attack in February, creating the first armed Coloured Defence Force.[60]
  • Jōkichi Takamine was granted the trademark "Adrenalin" for the synthesized "glandular extractive product" that he had created at Parke, Davis & Company as a pure duplicate of the hormone produced by the adrenal gland. Over time, the U.S. trademark for what is also known as "epinephrine" became generic and is now more commonly spelled "adrenaline".[61]
  • Representatives of the occupying nations in Imperial China agreed to the recommendation of Minister Komura of Japan and Mr. Rockhill of the United States to require China to abolish its foreign ministry, the Zongli Yamen, and replace it with a new "Board of Foreign Affairs", referred to as the Waiwubu. An historian would later note that "as the course of subsequent events made clear, the Waiwubu was as ineffective in the establishment of good relations between China and the outside world as the Zongli Yamen had been."[62] Another reform that the foreign nations implemented, as a condition for withdrawal of their troops, was the ceremony for meetings by the ambassadors with the imperial government; "Ministers will be conveyed in imperial chairs to the palace, where they will be received in the hall in which the Emperor entertains imperial Princes".[63]
  • Mail carriers in the United States would now be allowed to wear lighter clothing while making their rounds during the summertime, by an order signed by Charles Emory Smith, the United States Postmaster General. Previously, the carriers were required to wear their heavy uniform coats and vests, regardless of the weather. Under the new rule, "During the heated term postmasters may permit letter carriers to wear a neat shirtwaist or loose-fitting blouse, instead of coat and vest, the same to be made of light gray chambray gingham, light gray cheviot, or other light gray washable material; to be worn with turn-down collar, dark tie, and a neat belt; all to be uniform at each office."[64][65]
  • Died:
    • H.A. Rowland, 52, American astrophysicist who perfected the diffraction grating for spectroscopic analysis (b. 1848)
    • James Knibbs, 73, English-American inventor who created in 1859 the first pressure valve for fire engines that could allow multiple hoses and more effective firefighting.[66]

April 17, 1901 (Wednesday) edit

April 18, 1901 (Thursday) edit

April 19, 1901 (Friday) edit

  • Emilio Aguinaldo, formerly commander of the Philippine resistance, signed a manifesto calling on all of his followers to give up the fight against the American occupation, declaring that "a complete termination of hostilities and lasting peace are not only desirable, but absolutely essential to the welfare of the Philippine Islands," and added that "The country has declared unmistakably in favor of peace; so be it. Enough of blood; enough of tears and desolation ... By acknowledging and accepting the sovereignty of the United States throughout this entire archipelago, as now do without any reservations whatsoever, I believe that I am serving thee, my beloved country. May happiness be thine!"[79][80]
  • Texas Governor Joseph D. Sayers signed a bill that provided that all state taxes collected for 1901 and 1902 from residents of the city of Galveston, Texas would be transferred directly to the city so that it could raise its grade to protect against further flood damage from hurricanes. On September 8, 1900 more than 6,000 people on Galveston Island had been killed by a hurricane.[81]
  • Anti-British newspaper publishers were given jail sentences as punishment for incitement against the British presence in South Africa, with the editors of One Land and the South African News getting 12 months imprisonment, and those of the Worcester Advertiser and Het Oozen to six months.[81]
  • Died: Alfred Horatio Belo, 61, American businessman and journalist (b. 1839)

April 20, 1901 (Saturday) edit

April 21, 1901 (Sunday) edit

  • Senator Aníbal Zañartu formed a new government in Chile, agreeing to become the new Minister of the Interior, a post at the time similar to the work of a prime minister in a parliamentary republic. He assembled a cabinet of ministers, and ending a crisis that had operated since March 18.[81][85]

April 22, 1901 (Monday) edit

  • The Imperial government of China issued its first edict of reform since the end of the Boxer Rebellion, abolishing the Privy Council that had previously governed the nation in the name of the Emperor, and creating the new "General Board of State Affairs", composed of three Manchu members and three Chinese. Yikuang (Prince Qing) was president, and the other members were including Li Hongzhang, Yung Lu, Kun Kang, Wang Wen Shao, and Lu Chuan Lin. Two viceroys, Li Kun Yih and Zhang Zhidong, were made assistant members.[86]
  • A 2,000 man force of French and German troops, accompanied by local Christians, attacked Chinese troops at the Niangzi Pass and the Guguan Pass that led through the Taihang Mountains separating the Shanxi province from the imperial capital in the Hebei province and Beijing.[87]
  • Ameer Ben Ali, an Algerian Arab who had been in prison for almost ten years after being wrongfully convicted of the brutal 1891 murder of Carrie Brown in a New York City hotel, was released after evidence was found that exonerated him.[88]
  • In a featherweight ("nine-stone" or 126 pounds) boxing bout at the National Sporting Club in London, Murray Livingston of New York City was fighting, as Billy Smith, against Jack Roberts for the nine-stone championship of England. Smith was knocked out, but suffered a fatal injury when he struck his head while falling.[89] A prosecutor indicted Roberts and nine other members of the Club for "feloniously killing and slaying", but conceded at the trial that he was seeking to outlaw boxing rather than to punish the defendants. The jury would conclude that since Smith's death was accidental and happened in a properly regulated boxing contest, the defendants were not guilty.[90] The landmark decision would lead to a police policy to keep order among the crowds, and to presume that properly organized boxing matches were legal.[91]
  • Died: William Stubbs, 75, English historian and University of Oxford scholar (b. 1825)

April 23, 1901 (Tuesday) edit

  • Work began in the Philippines for the recovery of the remains of hundreds of American servicemen and civilians who had been killed or who had passed away while away from home. David H. Rhodes, the Superintendent of the U.S. Burial and Disinterment Corps arrived on the ship El Cano along with his team of 14 morticians, embalmers and grave diggers, and bringing "shovels, pickaxes, spades, screwdrivers, hammers, white lead, disinfectants, and twelve hundred metallic California caskets and wooden shipping crates."[92] During the first expedition of the El Cano, 716 sets of remains were shipped back home to the United States.
  • German and Chinese armies battled in the Shanxi Province near the Great Wall of China. The Chinese Army was turned back, but the Germans sustained 30 casualties.[93]
  • Voters in the U.S. Alabama overwhelmingly approved a call for a new state constitution that would disenfranchise African Americans, by a margin of 70,305 to 45,505, which included many black voters. In Lowndes County, where more than 80% of the registered voters were black, the call for a constitutional convention was supported by 3,226 of 3,564 votes,[94] and in Dallas County, future site of the Selma March but 80% black at the time, the support was 5,668 to 200.[95]

April 24, 1901 (Wednesday) edit

 
Patterson
 
Hoy

Thursday, April 25, 1901 (Thursday) edit

  • New York became the first state of the United States to require license plates, as Governor Benjamin Odell signed a bill requiring all automobiles to be registered with the Secretary of State's office. The bill, sponsored by Assemblyman George W. Doughty, had been suggested by the Automobile Club of America, and also set a uniform speed limit of eight miles an hour within cities and villages, and as much as 15 miles an hour on highways in rural locations.[99][100]
  • German engineer Richard Fiedler was granted the first patent for the flamethrower, which he described as Verfahren zur Erzeugung grosser Flammenwassen ("Method of Producing Large Masses of Flame").[101]
  • An explosion and fire at a chemical factory in the city of Griesheim, (now a district in Frankfurt), Germany, killed 25 people and severely injured more than 150. At about 4:00 in the afternoon, a small fire ignited containers of picric acid into a fiery blaze that then exploded 18 cylinders of smokeless powder.[102]
  • In their very first Major League Baseball game, the Detroit Tigers set a record that continues to stand more than a century later, with the biggest ninth-inning comeback in MLB history.[103][104] Going into the final inning of the game, the Tigers were losing to the original AL Milwaukee Brewers, 13–4, but team captain Jimmy "Doc" Casey made the first hit for what would become a ten run rally and a 14–13 win.[105][106]
  • Erve Beck of the Cleveland Blues (now the Guardians) hit the first home run in American League history, in a 7–3 loss to the host Chicago White Stockings (now the White Sox).[107]
  • The British Army ordered that all householders in occupied territory in South Africa would be required to display signs identifying the names of the persons living inside.[81]
  • Oil executive and multimillionaire Henry Flagler succeeded in getting the state of Florida to pass a bill that would allow him to divorce his wife of 20 years, Ida, so that he could marry his mistress, Mary Lily Kenan, whom he would marry on August 24.[108] Under the terms of the bill, which had been introduced only 16 days earlier after Flagler's lobbying of legislators, incurable insanity for at least four years was made a ground for divorce.[109]
  • Italian polar explorer Umberto Cagni was forced to turn back, after only 44 days, from his attempt to become the first person to reach the North Pole, but managed to plant the Italian flag further north than any previous explorer. Reaching a latitude of 86° 34′ N, Cagni, who had set off from Russia's Franz Josef Land on March 11, was able to get 20 miles closer to the Pole than Fridtjof Nansen of Norway had done on April 7, 1895.[110]

April 26, 1901 (Friday) edit

 
Ketchum hanged
  • Tom "Black Jack" Ketchum, 37, a train robber and member of the Hole-in-the-Wall Gang, was hanged at 1:21 p.m. in Clayton, New Mexico.[111] Ketchum is better remembered for his gruesome execution. Union County Sheriff Solome Garcia had never performed a hanging before, misjudged the length of the drop and used a rope that was too thin.[112] Ketchum was decapitated by the force of his 215 pound frame and the quick tightening of the rope, and his body, separated from his head, reportedly "alighted squarely upon its feet, stood for a moment, swayed and fell"[113][114]
  • The Engineering Standards Committee of the United Kingdom held its first meeting, with a goal of reducing the number of different measurements for British products. The Committee's first achievement was to reduce the number of different gauges for streetcar rails from 75 to only five, and the variety of structural steel sections from 175 different sizes to 113, lowering the costs of manufacturing and warehousing steel products.[115] The entity would later change its name to the British Standards Institution, and is known as the BSI Group.
  • Died: Halle Tanner Dillon Johnson, 36, African-American physician who became the first woman of any race licensed to practice medicine in the state of Alabama (b. 1864)

April 27, 1901 (Saturday) edit

April 28, 1901 (Sunday) edit

April 29, 1901 (Monday) edit

April 30, 1901 (Tuesday) edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Aguinaldo Takes the Oath— The Filipino Leader Accepts the Inevitable and Swears Allegiance to the United States". St. Louis Post-Dispatch. April 3, 1901. p. 1.
  2. ^ Hewitt, Marco (2009). "Philippine-American War". In Tucker, Spencer C. (ed.). The Encyclopedia of the Spanish–American and Philippine–American Wars: A Political, Social, and Military History. ABC-CLIO. p. 477.
  3. ^ Census of England and Wales (63 Vict. C. 4.) 1901: General Report with Appendices. Great Britain: Census Office, H.M. Stationery Office. 1904. p. 302.
  4. ^ a b c d e f The American Monthly Review of Reviews: 538–542. May 1901. {{cite journal}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  5. ^ Roberts, Richard L.; Miers, Suzanne (1988). The End of Slavery in Africa. University of Wisconsin Press. p. 23.
  6. ^ Clarence-Smith, W. G. (2006). Islam and the Abolition of Slavery. Oxford University Press. p. 127. ISBN 978-0-19-522151-0.
  7. ^ Warren, Kenneth (1987). The American Steel Industry, 1850–1970: A Geographical Interpretation. University of Pittsburgh Press. p. 125.
  8. ^ Batchelor, Bob (2002). American Popular Culture Through History: The 1900s. Greenwood. p. 133.
  9. ^ "She Saw the Prize Fight— But Mrs. Moore Was Afterward Arrested and Fined for Wearing Male Attire". St. Louis Post-Dispatch. April 3, 1901. p. 11.
  10. ^ Graham Jooste and Roger Webster, Innocent Blood: Executions during the Anglo-Boer War (New Africa Books, 2002) p. 26
  11. ^ Archie L. Dick, The Hidden History of South Africa's Book and Reading Cultures (University of Toronto Press, 2013)
  12. ^ "Homes for London Workmen— County Council to Build 5,779 Cottages in Tottenham— Rents to be from About $1.50 to $2.50 a Week", New York Times, April 3, 1901, p. 1
  13. ^ Building the Nation: N.F.S. Grundtvig and Danish National Identity John A. Hall and Ove Korsgaard, eds. (McGill-Queen's University Press, 2015) p. 20
  14. ^ The International Year Book: A Compendium of the World's Progress during the Year 1901, Frank Moore Colby, ed. (Dodd, Mead & Company, 1902) p. 243
  15. ^ Bo Lidegaard, A Short History of Denmark in the 20th Century (Gyldendal A/S, 2014)
  16. ^ "Danish Cabinet Loses— Folkething Election Results in Government Defeat", Chicago Daily Tribune, April 4, 1901, p1
  17. ^ "Zulus and the War", by John Laband, The Boer War: Direction, Experience and Image, John Gooch, ed. (Routledge, 2013)
  18. ^ Marline Otte, Jewish Identities in German Popular Entertainment, 1890–1933 (Cambridge University Press, 2006) pp. 38-39
  19. ^ "Moorhouse, George", in The American Soccer League: The Golden Years of American Soccer 1921–1931, Colin Jose, ed. (Scarecrow Press, 1998) p. 487
  20. ^ "Yale Team Beaten— Allegheny College Plays the Blues in a Basket Ball Game", The Pittsburg [sic] Post, April 6, 1901, p. 6
  21. ^ "Allegheny College Beats Yale", Chicago Daily Tribune, April 6, 1901, p. 6
  22. ^ "The truth behind the Helms Committee", by Jon Scott
  23. ^ Albert H. Walker, History of the Sherman Law (1910, reprinted by Beard Books, 2000) p. 124
  24. ^ "P. C. Knox in the Cabinet", New York Times, April 6, 1901, p1
  25. ^ "Knox Now in Office— Pittsburger Takes the Oath as United States Attorney General", Pittsburgh Press, April 9, 1901, p. 1
  26. ^ "Hulk of Merrimac Destroyed—Collier Sunk at Santiago, Cuba, to Bottle Up Cervera's Fleet Blown Up with Dynamite, Chicago Sunday Tribune, April 7, 1901, p. 1
  27. ^ "Famous Canvas Stolen in 1876 Is Recovered", Chicago Daily Tribune, April 6, 1901, p. 1
  28. ^ "Millville Lost to New York—Jerseymen Went to Pieces and Gothamites Rolled Up Big Score", Philadelphia Times, April 7, 1901, p. 12
  29. ^ Association of Professional Basketball Researchers
  30. ^ John L. DiGaetani and Josef P. Sirefman, Opera and the Golden West: The Past, Present, and Future of Opera in the U.S.A. (Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 1994 pp. 129-130
  31. ^ John Baxter, French Riviera and Its Artists: Art, Literature, Love, and Life on the Côte d'Azur (Museyon, 2015) pp. 80-81
  32. ^ "Two Missionaries Killed". The New York Times. April 22, 1901. p. 7.
  33. ^ "The New Guinea Massacre— A Military Force Despatched". Sydney Morning Herald. April 25, 1901. p. 6.
  34. ^ Goldman, Laurence (1999). The Anthropology of Cannibalism. Greenwood Publishing. p. 19.
  35. ^ White, Tom; et al. (2002). Extreme Devotion: The Voice of the Martyrs. HarperCollins. p. 348.
  36. ^ Kirk, Robert W. (2012). Paradise Past: The Transformation of the South Pacific, 1520–1920. McFarland. p. 223.
  37. ^ Davis, Lee Allyn (2010). Natural Disasters. Infobase Publishing. p. 218.
  38. ^ "Coal for First Foreign Port— Collier Alexander Taking Five Thousand Tons to Stock Station on the West Coast of Mexico". Chicago Daily Tribune. April 10, 1901. p. 2.
  39. ^ "New Ten Dollar Buffalo Bill— Secretary of the Treasury Approves Design for Note Soon to Be Issued as Legal Tender". Chicago Daily Tribune. April 10, 1901. p. 2.
  40. ^ "Botha Again for Peace". Chicago Daily Tribune. April 11, 1901. p. 1.
  41. ^ "Illinois Town Changes Name". Chicago Daily Tribune. April 10, 1901. p. 3.
  42. ^ Abbott, Lynn; Seroff, Doug (2009). Ragged but Right: Black Traveling Shows, 'Coon Songs,' and the Dark Pathway to Blues and Jazz. University Press of Mississippi. p. 71.
  43. ^ "Cubans Reject American Terms". Chicago Daily Tribune. April 13, 1901. p. 1.
  44. ^ a b c "Marvelous Electrical Inventions Displayed; Attractions at a 'Conversazione' at Columbia University". The New York Times. April 13, 1901. p. 1.
  45. ^ "Tesla Plays the Wizard— He Makes Electricity Do Weird Things before the Public". New York Sun. April 13, 1901. p. 1.
  46. ^ a b "Pictures Sent by Wire". Chicago Daily Tribune. April 13, 1901. p. 1.
  47. ^ "The First Comet of 1901". The British Almanac and Family Cyclopedia 1902. Charles Letts & Co. 1902. p. 6.
  48. ^ Grego, Peter (2013). Blazing a Ghostly Trail: ISON and Great Comets of the Past and Future. Springer. p. 123.
  49. ^ Rose Roberts, Radical Human Ecology: Intercultural and Indigenous Approaches (Routledge, 2016) p. 332
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  51. ^ Wong, Kam C. (2009). Chinese Policing: History and Reform. Peter Lang. p. 48.
  52. ^ "Says Corea is Fortifying". Chicago Daily Tribune. April 15, 1901. p. 5.
  53. ^ "Russia Far from Calm". Chicago Daily Tribune. April 17, 1901. p. 5.
  54. ^ Bartholomew, Paul C.; Menez, Joseph F. (2000). Summaries of Leading Cases on the Constitution. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 372.
  55. ^ Warner, C. A. (2007). Texas Oil & Gas Since 1543. Copano Bay Press. p. 52.
  56. ^ "Kultura w Gminie Narok - Gmina Dąbrowa". gminadabrowa.pl. Retrieved 2021-10-28.
  57. ^ Hugh Rockoff, America's Economic Way of War: War and the US Economy from the Spanish–American War to the Persian Gulf War (Cambridge University Press, 2012) p. 79
  58. ^ "New York Wins from St. James", Philadelphia Inquirer, April 16, 1901, p. 6
  59. ^ Harold Rich, Fort Worth: Outpost, Cowtown, Boomtown (University of Oklahoma Press, 2014) p. 95
  60. ^ Bill Nasson, Abraham Esau's War: A Black South African War in the Cape, 1899–1902 (Cambridge University Press, 2003) p. 45
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  62. ^ S. M. Meng, The Tsungli Yamen: Its Organization and Functions (East Asian Research Center, 1962) p. 81
  63. ^ "Tsung-Li-Yamen to Go", Chicago Daily Tribune, April 17, 1901, p. 5
  64. ^ "Letter Carriers May Wear Neat Shirt Waists", Chicago Daily Tribune, April 17, 1901, p. 3
  65. ^ (Illustration) Chicago Daily Tribune, April 18, 1901, p. 3
  66. ^ Timothy Starr, Great Inventors of New York's Capital District (The History Press, 2010)
  67. ^ "National League Repents— Batter Allowed to Take Base When Hit by Pitcher", Chicago Daily Tribune, April 18, 1901, p. 6
  68. ^ L. Edward Purcell, Vice Presidents: A Biographical Dictionary (Infobase Publishing, 2010) p. 248
  69. ^ Tom Savage, A Dictionary of Iowa Place-Names (University of Iowa Press, 2007) p128
  70. ^ Olin Sewall Pettingill, Jr., Ornithology in Laboratory and Field (Academic Press, 1984) p. 422
  71. ^ Julian P. Hume and Michael Walters, Extinct Birds (A & C Black, 2012) p. 188
  72. ^ Oliver Janz and Daniel Schonpflug, Gender History in a Transnational Perspective: Networks, Biographies, Gender Orders (Berghahn Books, 2014) p. 48
  73. ^ "Empress' Palace Burns at Pekin— Headquarters of Field Marshal Von Waldersee and Staff are Destroyed", Chicago Daily Tribune, April 18, 1901, p. 3
  74. ^ "Gives His Life to Save a Dog— Body of General Schwartzkopf Found in Palace Ruins at Pekin", Chicago Daily Tribune, April 19, 1901, p. 2
  75. ^ Luís Trindade, The Making of Modern Portugal (Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2013) p. 235
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  77. ^ a b James D. Szalontai, Small Ball in the Big Leagues: A History of Stealing, Bunting, Walking and Otherwise Scratching for Runs (McFarland, 2010) p. 20
  78. ^ "Philippine Army to Be Reduced", Chicago Daily Tribune, April 19, 1901, p. 1
  79. ^ "Aguinaldo Asks People to Yield— Long Expected Manifesto from Insurgent Leader Is Issued from Manila", Chicago Daily Tribune, April 20, 1901, p. 1
  80. ^ Robert C. Doyle, The Enemy in Our Hands: America's Treatment of Prisoners of War from the Revolution to the War on Terror (University Press of Kentucky, 2010) p. 155
  81. ^ a b c d The American Monthly Review of Reviews(June 1901) pp. 666-669
  82. ^ "Few Insurgents Left in the Philippines— Gen. Tinio has Surrendered, as Have Malvar's Best Officers", New York Times, May 1, 1901, p. 1
  83. ^ "The Football Association Cup. The Final Tie. Tottenham Hotspur v. Sheffield United.", The Times (London), April 22, 1901, p11
  84. ^ "England's Football Game— The Annual Contest for the Association Cup Ends in a Draw", New York Times, April 21, 1901, p. 9
  85. ^ "New Cabinet for Chile", New York Times, April 22, 1901, p. 7
  86. ^ "China Issues Edict of Reform", Chicago Daily Tribune, April 24, 1901, p. 5
  87. ^ "Newspapers and nationalism in rural China 1890–1929", by Henrietta Harrison, in Twentieth-Century China: New Approaches (Routledge, 2013) p. 87
  88. ^ James Morton, Justice Denied: Extraordinary Miscarriages of Justice (Little, Brown Book Group, 2015)
  89. ^ "London Fight Proves Fatal— American Pugilist Smith Dies from the Effects of Monday Night's Ring Encounter", Chicago Tribune, April 25, 1901, p. 6
  90. ^ "Pugilists Acquitted— At Second Trial of Jack Roberts in London", Brooklyn Daily Eagle, June 28, 1901, p. 2
  91. ^ Friedrich Unterharnscheidt and Julia Taylor Unterharnscheidt, Boxing: Medical Aspects (Academic Press, 2003) p. 713
  92. ^ Westfall, Matthew (2012). The Devil's Causeway: The True Story of America's First Prisoners of War in the Philippines, and the Heroic Expedition Sent to Their Rescue. Globe Pequot.
  93. ^ "Germans Fight at Great Wall". Chicago Daily Tribune. April 29, 1901. p. 5.
  94. ^ Jackson, Harvey H. (2004). Inside Alabama: A Personal History of My State. University of Alabama Press. p. 136.
  95. ^ Thomson, Bailey (2002). A Century of Controversy: Constitutional Reform in Alabama. University of Alabama Press. p. 22.
  96. ^ "Pennant to Be Raised Today— Opening of the American League's Season at White Stocking Park". Chicago Daily Tribune. April 24, 1901. p. 7.
  97. ^ "Champions Win Opening Game". Chicago Daily Tribune. April 25, 1901. p. 6.
  98. ^ "Lincoln's Body Rests at Last". Chicago Daily Tribune. April 25, 1901. p. 4.
  99. ^ "Automobile Bill Signed", New York Times, April 26, 1901, p. 5
  100. ^ Patrick Robertson, Robertson's Book of Firsts: Who Did What for the First Time (Bloomsbury Publishing, 2011)
  101. ^ Chris McNab, The Flamethrower (Bloomsbury Publishing, 2015)
  102. ^ "Explosion Kills and Injures 150", Chicago Daily Tribune, April 26, 1901, p. 3
  103. ^ "Baseball's Biggest Ninth-Inning Comebacks", by Carl Bialik, Wall Street Journal, July 28, 2008
  104. ^ Patrick Harrigan, The Detroit Tigers: Club and Community, 1945–1995 (University of Toronto Press, 1997) p. 41
  105. ^ "Ten Runs Won in the Ninth", Detroit Free Press, April 26, 1901, p. 1
  106. ^ "Ten Runs in Ninth Inning— Detroit Pulls a Game Lost to Milwaukee Out of Fire by Great Batting Rally", Chicago Daily Tribune, April 26, 1901, p. 1
  107. ^ Mark Ribowsky, The Complete History of the Home Run (Citadel Press, 2003) p. 34
  108. ^ Gene M. Burnett, Florida's Past: People and Events That Shaped the State (Pineapple Press, 1996) p. 248
  109. ^ Sidney Walter Martin, Florida's Flagler (University of Georgia Press, 2010) p. 186
  110. ^ Eric Newby, Great Ascents: A Narrative History of Mountaineering (Viking Press, 1977) p. 146
  111. ^ "Ketchum Hanged!", Albuquerque (NM) Citizen, April 26, 1901, p. 1
  112. ^ Matthew P. Mayo, Cowboys, Mountain Men, and Grizzly Bears: Fifty of the Grittiest Moments in the History of the Wild West (Rowman & Littlefield, 2010) p. 227
  113. ^ Robert J. Tórrez, Myth of the Hanging Tree: Stories of Crime and Punishment in Territorial New Mexico (University of New Mexico, Press, 2008) pp. 39-40
  114. ^ "Black Jack Decapitated; Rope Used at Hanging Cuts off the Outlaw's Head", Chicago Daily Tribune, April 26, 1901, p. 3
  115. ^ J. Luis Guasch, et al., Quality Systems and Standards for a Competitive Edge (World Bank Publications, 2007) pp17-18
  116. ^ "Win English Football Cup". Chicago Sunday Tribune. April 28, 1901. p. 18.
  117. ^ "The Football Association Cup". The Times. London. April 29, 1901. p. 7.
  118. ^ Donnelley, Paul (2010). Firsts, Lasts & Onlys of Football: The Most Amazing Football Facts from the Last 160 Years. Hamlyn.
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  121. ^ Hoster, Jay (2014). Early Wall Street: 1830–1940. Arcadia Publishing. p. 49.
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  124. ^ "M'Kinley's Trip to West Begun", Chicago Daily Tribune, April 30, 1901, p. 5
  125. ^ "His Eminence Wins the Derby", Chicago Daily Tribune, April 30, 1901, p. 7
  126. ^ John Williams, Red Men: Liverpool Football Club (Random House, 2011)
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  128. ^ R. Michael Wilson, Great Train Robberies of the Old West (Globe Pequot, 2007) p. 132
  129. ^ Larry Pointer, In Search of Butch Cassidy (University of Oklahoma Press, 2013) p. 255

april, 1901, 1901, january, february, march, april, june, july, august, september, october, november, december, following, events, occurred, april, 1901, president, mckinley, departs, nationwide, tour, april, 1901, bill, approved, treasury, department, april, . 1901 January February March April May June July August September October November December lt lt April 1901 gt gt Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa 0 1 0 2 0 3 0 4 0 5 0 6 0 7 0 8 0 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 The following events occurred in April 1901 April 29 1901 President McKinley departs on nationwide U S tour April 9 1901 New U S 10 bill approved by Treasury Department April 24 1901 Ollie Pickering first to bat in the first ever American League game Contents 1 April 1 1901 Monday 2 April 2 1901 Tuesday 3 April 3 1901 Wednesday 4 April 4 1901 Thursday 5 April 5 1901 Friday 6 April 6 1901 Saturday 7 April 7 1901 Sunday 8 April 8 1901 Monday 9 April 9 1901 Tuesday 10 April 10 1901 Wednesday 11 April 11 1901 Thursday 12 April 12 1901 Friday 13 April 13 1901 Saturday 14 April 14 1901 Sunday 15 April 15 1901 Monday 16 April 16 1901 Tuesday 17 April 17 1901 Wednesday 18 April 18 1901 Thursday 19 April 19 1901 Friday 20 April 20 1901 Saturday 21 April 21 1901 Sunday 22 April 22 1901 Monday 23 April 23 1901 Tuesday 24 April 24 1901 Wednesday 25 Thursday April 25 1901 Thursday 26 April 26 1901 Friday 27 April 27 1901 Saturday 28 April 28 1901 Sunday 29 April 29 1901 Monday 30 April 30 1901 Tuesday 31 ReferencesApril 1 1901 Monday editEmilio Aguinaldo formerly the leader of the Philippine resistance to the American occupation signed an oath of allegiance to the United States nine days after his capture in return for his release from incarceration 1 The pledge took place at the Malacanang Palace in Manila at the office of the Military Governor U S Army General Arthur MacArthur Jr 2 The 1901 United Kingdom census was taken of all persons alive in the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland at the beginning of that day defined as those returned as living at midnight on Sunday March 31st The total population of the England and Wales Scotland and Ireland including Northern Ireland and what is now the Republic of Ireland was reported as 41 458 721 broken down as England and Wales 32 527 843 Scotland 4 472 103 and Ireland 4 547 775 3 Thirty thousand iron workers in Scotland walked off of the job in a strike seeking a guaranteed maximum eight hour day 4 Sir Frederick Lugard the British Governor of Northern Nigeria issued the Slavery Proclamation outlawing the future purchase or sale of slaves and prohibiting the return of a runaway slave to his master 5 However the decree did not grant freedom to people who were enslaved other than those persons born after April 1 1901 and women who were concubines of a master could continue to be traded Slavery would continue to be legal within the Kano State of Northern Nigeria until 1926 and the institution would continue to exist in the absence of enforcement of the proclamation 6 General Leonard Wood the American military governor of Cuba refused to certify the selection of Alfredo Zayas y Alfonso as the Mayor of Havana The Havana city council had voted 12 10 for his appointment 4 The United States Steel Corporation which had been founded on February 25 began operations 7 Mrs Elizabeth Moore was arrested by police in Baltimore after attending a professional boxing match Mrs Moore wanted to see lightweight boxer and future champion Joe Gans in the ring despite a societal taboo against women joining the all male audiences that were allowed to watch the bouts She purchased third row seats after disguising herself as a man and was arrested by the police captain on the premises and charged with violating a state law against masquerading in male attire released only after her husband posted a 105 bond 8 She was fined 20 and costs for the infraction 9 Born Whittaker Chambers American activist member of Communist Party USA and editor of the Daily Worker magazine before he testified in the perjury trial of Alger Hiss in Philadelphia d 1961 April 2 1901 Tuesday editThe United Kingdom enacted a law establishing the military court system with jurisdiction over acts committed by the Boer guerrillas within South Africa during the Second Boer War Unlike the Special Court that had previously handled serious crimes committed by rebels in British controlled areas the military courts which began hearing cases on April 12 had unlimited powers of decision and the authority to pass the death sentence Executions usually done in public to set an example for would be rebels were carried out by hanging or by firing squad 10 The Victoria League for Commonwealth Friendship a charitable service organization that currently provides assistance to persons within the British Commonwealth was founded in London by Lady Violet Cecil Its original vision was patriotism belief in racial hierarchy respect for the monarchy Christianity and the armed services and admiration for the past and present British heroes who exemplified those values 11 The London County Council voted to purchase 225 acres of land in Tottenham at the cost of 7 500 000 to create cottages to accommodate workingmen s family housing sufficient for 42 000 people 12 Born Patrick Buchan Hepburn British state leader first and only Governor General of the West Indies Federation d 1974 Died Will Carver 32 American outlaw in a shootout with Sheriff Elijah Briant in Sonora Texas b 1868 April 3 1901 Wednesday editThe first elections in Denmark to use a secret ballot took place for the Folketing 13 the lower house of the Danish Parliament and left the ruling Hojre party with only 8 of the 114 seats while increasing the lead of the Venstre Reform party to 76 seats Under Denmark s political system at the time the King appointed the konseilspraesident Council President equivalent to the Prime Minister who selected his cabinet regardless of who controlled the Folketing While outnumbered 106 8 by the three liberal parties the conservative Hojre party had 42 of the 66 seats in the upper house of the Rigsdagen the Landstinget that was selected by electors 14 Because of the overwhelming defeat of the conservatives in the popular elections King Christian would accede to demands that the government led by Hannibal Sehested should resign and would appoint J H Deuntzer as the new premier 15 16 Died Richard D Oyly Carte 56 English impresario b 1844 April 4 1901 Thursday editMankulumana chief adviser to Dinuzulu king of the Zulu nation led newly armed Zulu troops to assist the British Army in an attack against the Boers in the Vryheid district of the South African Republic The Zulu force was accompanied by Dinuzulu and Colonel Herbert Bottomley of the British Army s Imperial Light Horse Regiment 17 The circus Sarrasani was founded in Germany in Radebeul by Hans Stosch Sarrasani Internationally famous prior to World War II the German circus traveled the world After its permanent theater was destroyed in the Dresden bombing the circus would be reorganized in Argentina by Stosch Sarrasani s widow as the Circo Nacional Argentino and operate until 1972 18 Born George Moorhouse English born American soccer player and captain of the 1934 United States men s national soccer team who became the first native of England to appear in a FIFA World Cup tournament game in Liverpool d 1943 Moorhouse a left back for the New York Giants soccer team of the American Soccer League was one of six natives of the United Kingdom to appear for the U S team at the inaugural World Cup in 1930 a competition which did not include England The other five British players were from Scotland 19 Died George T Anderson 77 American army officer commander of the 11th Georgia Infantry Regiment during the American Civil War police chief of Atlanta b 1824 April 5 1901 Friday editThe Allegheny College basketball team with a 6 1 record against other colleges and 13 2 overall met the Yale University team which was 5 0 against colleges after bouncing back from a string of losses against non college teams in a game at Meadville Pennsylvania In what the local paper described the next day as the greatest victory in her basket ball career Allegheny defeated Yale 21 to 12 in what was a fast well played game under the rules at that time The result of this game establishes Allegheny as equal to if not better than any other college team in the country the Pittsburgh Post noted the next day 20 21 Nevertheless the Helms Athletic Foundation would in 1957 retroactively declare that Yale had been the best team of 1901 22 Philander C Knox was named as the new United States Attorney General after being appointed to succeed John W Griggs 23 24 He would be confirmed by the United States Senate and took office four days after his appointment 25 Born Hattie Alexander American pediatrician and microbiologist who developed the first effective remedy for illnesses caused by the bacterium Haemophilus influenzae Hib diseases that had a high fatality rate among infants and young children in Baltimore d 1968 Chester Bowles American diplomat and politician 22nd United States Under Secretary of State in the Kennedy administration before being removed for opposing further U S involvement in South Vietnam and Laos 78th Governor of Connecticut in Springfield Massachusetts d 1986 Subbayya Sivasankaranarayana Pillai Indian mathematician in Nagercoil Madras Province now Tamil Nadu state British India d 1950 killed in plane crash April 6 1901 Saturday editThe wreckage of the U S Navy collier Merrimac which had been blocking the entrance to the harbor of Santiago de Cuba was successfully destroyed and removed 26 The ship had been deliberately sunk on July 2 1898 during the Spanish American War to block the Spanish fleet of Admiral Pascual Cervera y Topete from leaving the harbor The painting Portrait of Georgiana Duchess of Devonshire painted by Thomas Gainsborough returned to England 25 years after it was stolen as the steamer Etruria docked at Southampton with C Moreland Agnew on board With the help of detective William A Pinkerton Agnew had recovered the painting in Chicago on March 27 27 The New York Wanderers won the U S professional basketball championship finishing in first place in the seven team National Basket Ball League in their final game a 36 to 21 win at Millville New Jersey against the Millville Glassblowers 28 29 Born Pier Giorgio Frassati Italian religious and social activist beatified by the Catholic Church in 1990 in Turin d 1925 of polio Yong do Lee Korean religious and social activist who broke with the Korean Presbyterian Church after attempting to reform it d 1932 of tuberculosis Died George M Smith 77 British publisher creator of the Dictionary of National Biography and the literary journal The Cornhill Magazine b 1824 George Wellesley 86 British naval officer 54th First Sea Lord of the Royal Navy b 1814 April 7 1901 Sunday editTheatrical producer David Belasco who owned the rights to the stage play Madame Butterfly A Tragedy of Japan finalized an agreement with Giacomo Puccini authorizing the composer to adapt the plot to what would become an oft performed Italian language opera Madama Butterfly with a premiere in 1904 30 Emile Loubet President of France officiated at the opening of the lavish Gare de Lyon restaurant of the Paris station of the Chemins de fer de Paris a Lyon et a la Mediterranee PLM Railway The new establishment was as much of a museum as it was a restaurant with 41 original paintings and scores of life sized statutes and reliefs all celebrating travel by train 31 Born Andre Trocme French missionary in Saint Quentin en Tourmont d 1971 He and his wife Magda would be recognized with the Righteous Among the Nations honor by Israel for their role in saving Jews from extermination during The Holocaust Died Josephine Louise Newcomb 84 American philanthropist founder of H Sophie Newcomb Memorial College as a women s college to supplement the all male Tulane University in New Orleans b 1816 Eden Upton Eddis 88 British portrait artist b 1812 Buz Luckey 31 American train robber in the Nathaniel Reed gang at the federal prison in Columbus OhioApril 8 1901 Monday editJames Chalmers 59 and Oliver Fellows Tomkins 28 both Scottish missionaries went ashore on Goaribari Island in New Guinea with eleven Papuan assistants After arriving they were invited by islanders to come into a longhouse where they were clubbed to death then eaten by cannibals 32 33 34 35 In retaliation British colonial officials dispatched troops from Port Moresby Papua New Guinea who killed at least 24 of the tribesmen then burned the longhouses in the village In 1903 an expedition would be sent to search for Tomkins s skull and more villagers would be killed 36 U S President William McKinley and Surgeon General Dr Walter Wyman began federal aid to eliminate an outbreak of bubonic plague in San Francisco and to see to it that Chinatown was scrubbed clean earlier the city s Board of Health had proposed a plan to demolish the Chinese American area of the city and to remove all Chinese residents in the city to detention camps on Angel Island 37 The British colonial authorities at the Cape Colony announced that beginning on April 12 any new rebellion would be tried under the old common law and the death penalty applied as necessary 4 April 9 1901 Tuesday editThe United States Department of the Navy established its first foreign base a coaling station in Mexico at Pichilinque The U S Navy collier USS Alexander was ordered to ship 5 000 tons of coal from the Atlantic Ocean port of Baltimore to the Pacific Ocean base in Mexico 38 Lyman J Gage the United States Secretary of the Treasury approved the first change for the American ten dollar bill in more than 20 years The front of the new bill to be put into circulation later in the year featured a picture of an American buffalo in the center and explorers Meriwether Lewis and William Clark on left and right side respectively 39 Born Howard A Rusk American physician founder of the practice of rehabilitation medicine with the creation in 1948 of the Rusk Institute of Rehabilitation Medicine in Brookfield Missouri d 1989 April 10 1901 Wednesday editGeneral Louis Botha renewed peace negotiations between the South African Republic and the United Kingdom 40 Cipriano Castro President of Venezuela since 1899 began a new term in office following election 4 The city of Brookport Illinois was created by the merger of the railroad town of Brooklyn and the unincorporated area of Pellonia 41 April 11 1901 Thursday editMartin Teofilo Delgado who had formerly been a leader of the Filipino insurgency until he had sworn allegiance to the United States was appointed the Governor of Iloilo Province 4 The African American songwriting and performing team of Bob Cole and Billy Johnson filed for bankruptcy during the fourth season of their musical A Trip to Coontown The closing of the show and the bankruptcy caused Cole to part ways with his partner and Bob Cole s fame and prestige only increased while Billy Johnson settled into a less conspicuous career in mainstream vaudeville 42 Born Adriano Olivetti Italian engineer designer of the Olivetti typewriters and computers in Ivrea d 1960 Carl Alberg Swedish yacht designer in Gothenburg d 1986 Glenway Wescott American novelist nonfiction author and poet in Kewaskum Wisconsin d 1987 April 12 1901 Friday editThe United States proposed to the other foreign powers in China that the Chinese indemnity for damages from the Boxer Rebellion be cut by one half 4 Cuba s constitutional convention voted 18 10 to oppose the terms of the Platt Amendment for the islands independence from the United States 43 The American Institute of Electrical Engineers held what it called a Conversazione at Columbia University in New York an exhibition of various electrical appliances that had been recently invented or the models of which had been improved of late 44 demonstrating 32 different experiments to 400 guests including Thomas Edison Nikola Tesla the most prominent of the group transmitted wave vibrations from an electric oscillator which were to be discharged in various parts of the room In another experiment by Tesla Sparks leaped six feet in all directions from a huge flat coil ten feet high in the front of the room 45 Peter Cooper Hewitt explained his newly invented mercury vapor lamp where a gas is used as the illuminating medium instead of a film current is transmitted to the mercury direct and not by means of the usual coil for which reason less power is needed to produce the same amount of light The New York Times noted what Hewitt noted was a disadvantage that needed to be worked on in that A most peculiar colored light is emitted from the tubes It is half purple half green and that everybody who came into the room had his or her features so distorted that the skin of the face appeared to be covered all over with ghastly violet colored eruptions The lips that came under the light seemed purplish gray The pupils of the eye assumed a greenish tinge 44 In showing his newly patented facsimile picture telegraph 44 Herbert R Palmer explained how halftone pictures sketches handwriting and the like can be transmitted over long distances employing ordinary telegraph circuits then sent a life sized portrait of President William Rainey Harper of the University of Chicago over the wires to Chicago by a forerunner of the fax machine to the Quadrangle Club At the same time Harper began receiving a similar picture of Seth Low Columbia s president that had been sent from Chicago to New York City 46 M R Hutchinson demonstrated the akouphone which he described as a microtelephonic instrument to reproduce and largely intensify sounds and still preserve their quality transmitted to the akoulalion a set of ear pieces intended to make the deaf hear An administrator of the New York Institute of the Deaf and Dumb brought eight of the deafest boys in the institution to try the new system with only partial success 46 The Great Comet of 1901 visible from the Southern Hemisphere was first observed by an astronomer with the surname Viscara at an observatory near Paysandu Uruguay 47 48 Born Leo Ginzburg Polish Russian conductor and pianist in Warsaw d 1979 Died George Q Cannon 74 First Counselor in the First Presidency in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints LDS Church for four Presidents starting in 1873 when selected by Brigham Young also a Church Apostle since 1860 and a member of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles on three occasions b 1827 April 13 1901 Saturday editAngered over the aggressive efforts of the Capuchin missionaries in attempting to dismantle their villages and move their children to the mission at Alto Alegre do Maranhao the Guajajara Indians of Brazil began the rebellion of Alto Alegre Led by Joao Cabore known as Kawire Iman the Guajajara attacked the mission and massacred the Christian friars During the insurrection hundreds of people would die most of them Guajajaras killed in expeditions by the Brazilian Army 49 Born Jacques Lacan French psychoanalyst and psychiatrist in Paris d 1981 Zhao Shiyan Chinese communist activist in Youyang Sichuan d 1927 executed Georgy I Pokrovsky Soviet physicist inventor and author and pioneer in geotechnical centrifuge modeling d 1979 April 14 1901 Sunday editCen Chunxuan a British educated Chinese official who would later lead a rebellion against the central government of China became the new Governor of the Shanxi Province and began implementing major reforms 50 The Imperial government of China signed a contract with Japan to set up a police academy in Beijing 51 The government of Korea passed a law applying the death penalty for anyone convicted of the smoking of opium 52 Anti government protests continued throughout the Russian Empire and 1 500 demonstrators were arrested during a demonstration in the Ukrainian city of Odessa 53 The state of South Carolina declared that it would stop paying the federal tax on liquor on the ground that as the sole authorized wholesale and retail seller of liquor in the state its exercise of its sovereign power rendered it immune to regulation by the United States The U S soon filed suit and the U S Supreme Court would reject the state s argument in a 6 3 decision in South Carolina v United States in 1905 54 The Texas Fuel Company began the practice of uncapping an oil well for members of the general public as a means of impressing prospective investors Passengers from 26 train coaches were treated to a demonstration where a well was opened up and permitted to flow a 6 inch stream of oil 120 feet into the air then closed after a few minutes The exhibition was impressive but also fraught with danger to life and property because of the lack of precautions against explosions and fire such as not smoking near a producing well or pool of oil 55 Born Jozef Wojaczek Polish Roman Catholic Priest in Neustadt Upper Silesia German Empire d 1993 56 April 15 1901 Monday editOn the Philippine island of Marinduque Colonel Maximo Abad the Filipino resistance leader who led the defeat of American forces at the Battle of Pulang Lupa became the latest of the insurgents to surrender to the United States following the capture of Emilio Aguinaldo on Luzon 57 The championship of professional basketball was played in Philadelphia between New York City pennant winners of the National Basket Ball League and St James of Philadelphia the top finisher of the Interstate Basketball League Despite falling behind early in the first half the New York Nationals and St James were tied at halftime and again late in the game before New York went ahead in a rush and won 35 to 22 Reed New York s designated free throw shooter led the scoring with 11 points on 3 field goals and 6 goals from offense foul shots 58 Born Joe Davis English snooker and billiards player 15 time winner of the World Snooker Championship and four time English billiards world champion in Whitwell Derbyshire d 1978 Rene Pleven French state leader 68th Prime Minister of France in Rennes d 1993 Thomas Ricketts Dominion of Newfoundland soldier youngest winner of the Victoria Cross at 17 years old in 1918 in St John s Newfoundland and Labrador d 1967 Ajoy Mukherjee Indian politician 4th Chief Minister of West Bengal in Calcutta d 1986 Died John Peter Smith 69 known as The Father of Fort Worth for his role in developing Fort Worth Texas of blood poisoning nine days after being beaten and robbed during a visit to St Louis 59 April 16 1901 Tuesday editBritish colonial authorities in the Cape Colony town of Richmond supplied rifles and ammunition to coloured residents who had volunteered to guard the town against a repeat of the Boer attack in February creating the first armed Coloured Defence Force 60 Jōkichi Takamine was granted the trademark Adrenalin for the synthesized glandular extractive product that he had created at Parke Davis amp Company as a pure duplicate of the hormone produced by the adrenal gland Over time the U S trademark for what is also known as epinephrine became generic and is now more commonly spelled adrenaline 61 Representatives of the occupying nations in Imperial China agreed to the recommendation of Minister Komura of Japan and Mr Rockhill of the United States to require China to abolish its foreign ministry the Zongli Yamen and replace it with a new Board of Foreign Affairs referred to as the Waiwubu An historian would later note that as the course of subsequent events made clear the Waiwubu was as ineffective in the establishment of good relations between China and the outside world as the Zongli Yamen had been 62 Another reform that the foreign nations implemented as a condition for withdrawal of their troops was the ceremony for meetings by the ambassadors with the imperial government Ministers will be conveyed in imperial chairs to the palace where they will be received in the hall in which the Emperor entertains imperial Princes 63 Mail carriers in the United States would now be allowed to wear lighter clothing while making their rounds during the summertime by an order signed by Charles Emory Smith the United States Postmaster General Previously the carriers were required to wear their heavy uniform coats and vests regardless of the weather Under the new rule During the heated term postmasters may permit letter carriers to wear a neat shirtwaist or loose fitting blouse instead of coat and vest the same to be made of light gray chambray gingham light gray cheviot or other light gray washable material to be worn with turn down collar dark tie and a neat belt all to be uniform at each office 64 65 Died H A Rowland 52 American astrophysicist who perfected the diffraction grating for spectroscopic analysis b 1848 James Knibbs 73 English American inventor who created in 1859 the first pressure valve for fire engines that could allow multiple hoses and more effective firefighting 66 April 17 1901 Wednesday editOn the day before the new regular season was to open National League owners reversed a rule change that would have allowed pitchers to hit a batter at least three times with the baseball without penalty and restored the hit by pitch rule that had been abolished on February 27 67 In a letter to General Leonard Wood U S Vice President Theodore Roosevelt wrote that the Vice Presidency is an utterly anomalous office one which I think ought to be abolished The man who occupies it may at any moment be everything but meanwhile he is practically nothing 68 The town of Latimer Iowa was incorporated 69 Born Raul Prebisch Argentine economist proponent of structuralist economics co creator of the Prebisch Singer hypothesis in Tucuman d 1986 April 18 1901 Thursday editThe last Carolina parakeet Conuropsis carolinensis in the wild was shot by E A Hearns at Paget Creek in Brevard County Florida An ornithologist would note later that among this species of parakeet those individuals escaping the first blast from the gun hovered over those killed until they too were shot 70 The last Carolina parakeet in captivity would die on February 21 1918 at the Cincinnati Zoo 71 The National Council of French Women Conseil National des femmes francaises or CNFF was founded in Paris to unite the various French feminist groups that existed in France and remains the oldest of the women s rights organizations in that nation CNFF was encouraged by May Wright Sewall an American who was the second president of the International Council of Women and had toured Europe to secure the formation of national councils 72 The Beijing palace of Empress Dowager Cixi temporarily occupied by the Imperial German Army as headquarters for the staff was set on fire and burned to the ground Count Alfred von Waldersee the German Commander escaped through a window but his chief of staff Major General Julius von Schwartzkopf apparently died in the blaze after going back into the burning building to rescue his pet dog 73 74 Religious institutions in Portugal were secularized by decree of Prime Minister Ernesto Hintze Ribeiro 75 Under the new rules religious congregations were allowed to exist as long as they were dedicated exclusively to instruction or good works or to spreading Christianity and civilization in the colonies 76 Baseball s National League began its 1901 season and what has become known as the Deadball Era unofficially began 77 Games in New York City St Louis and Cincinnati were canceled because of rain but the Philadelphia Phillies were able to host the Brooklyn Superbas later the Dodgers Brooklyn won 12 7 in front of 4 593 spectators in a game with 19 singles six doubles and five triples but no home runs The score was atypical for the season when teams averaged less than five runs per game for the first time in 13 years a pattern that would continue annually until 1922 The average at season s end would be 4 63 runs 77 United States Secretary of War Elihu Root ordered the withdrawal of 40 000 U S Army troops and officers from the Philippines where they had been deployed to fight Filipino resistance to American control U S President William McKinley by separate order directed that no further recruitments for overseas service be made 78 Born Alexandre Alexeieff Russian born French animator and co creator of pinscreen animation in Kazan Russia d 1982 Al Lewis American songwriter in New York City d 1967 April 19 1901 Friday editEmilio Aguinaldo formerly commander of the Philippine resistance signed a manifesto calling on all of his followers to give up the fight against the American occupation declaring that a complete termination of hostilities and lasting peace are not only desirable but absolutely essential to the welfare of the Philippine Islands and added that The country has declared unmistakably in favor of peace so be it Enough of blood enough of tears and desolation By acknowledging and accepting the sovereignty of the United States throughout this entire archipelago as now do without any reservations whatsoever I believe that I am serving thee my beloved country May happiness be thine 79 80 Texas Governor Joseph D Sayers signed a bill that provided that all state taxes collected for 1901 and 1902 from residents of the city of Galveston Texas would be transferred directly to the city so that it could raise its grade to protect against further flood damage from hurricanes On September 8 1900 more than 6 000 people on Galveston Island had been killed by a hurricane 81 Anti British newspaper publishers were given jail sentences as punishment for incitement against the British presence in South Africa with the editors of One Land and the South African News getting 12 months imprisonment and those of the Worcester Advertiser and Het Oozen to six months 81 Died Alfred Horatio Belo 61 American businessman and journalist b 1839 April 20 1901 Saturday editGeneral Manuel Tinio one of the remaining Filipino insurgent leaders on the island of Luzon surrendered to U S Army Captain Frederick V Krug along with his entire command at Sinait in the Ilocos Sur province Philippines 82 The finals of England s Football Association Cup took place before a record crowd of 114 815 spectators at London s Crystal Palace outdoor stadium Tottenham Hotspur a member of the Southern League had just taken a 2 1 lead when Sheffield s Walter Bennett got a controversial goal to tie the game Referee Arthur Kingscott ruled that a save by Spur s George Clawley was over the goal line There was no scoring in the second half and the 2 2 tie forced a replay for the following Saturday 83 84 Born Michel Leiris French ethnographer and surrealist writer in Paris d 1990 April 21 1901 Sunday editSenator Anibal Zanartu formed a new government in Chile agreeing to become the new Minister of the Interior a post at the time similar to the work of a prime minister in a parliamentary republic He assembled a cabinet of ministers and ending a crisis that had operated since March 18 81 85 April 22 1901 Monday editThe Imperial government of China issued its first edict of reform since the end of the Boxer Rebellion abolishing the Privy Council that had previously governed the nation in the name of the Emperor and creating the new General Board of State Affairs composed of three Manchu members and three Chinese Yikuang Prince Qing was president and the other members were including Li Hongzhang Yung Lu Kun Kang Wang Wen Shao and Lu Chuan Lin Two viceroys Li Kun Yih and Zhang Zhidong were made assistant members 86 A 2 000 man force of French and German troops accompanied by local Christians attacked Chinese troops at the Niangzi Pass and the Guguan Pass that led through the Taihang Mountains separating the Shanxi province from the imperial capital in the Hebei province and Beijing 87 Ameer Ben Ali an Algerian Arab who had been in prison for almost ten years after being wrongfully convicted of the brutal 1891 murder of Carrie Brown in a New York City hotel was released after evidence was found that exonerated him 88 In a featherweight nine stone or 126 pounds boxing bout at the National Sporting Club in London Murray Livingston of New York City was fighting as Billy Smith against Jack Roberts for the nine stone championship of England Smith was knocked out but suffered a fatal injury when he struck his head while falling 89 A prosecutor indicted Roberts and nine other members of the Club for feloniously killing and slaying but conceded at the trial that he was seeking to outlaw boxing rather than to punish the defendants The jury would conclude that since Smith s death was accidental and happened in a properly regulated boxing contest the defendants were not guilty 90 The landmark decision would lead to a police policy to keep order among the crowds and to presume that properly organized boxing matches were legal 91 Died William Stubbs 75 English historian and University of Oxford scholar b 1825 April 23 1901 Tuesday editWork began in the Philippines for the recovery of the remains of hundreds of American servicemen and civilians who had been killed or who had passed away while away from home David H Rhodes the Superintendent of the U S Burial and Disinterment Corps arrived on the ship El Cano along with his team of 14 morticians embalmers and grave diggers and bringing shovels pickaxes spades screwdrivers hammers white lead disinfectants and twelve hundred metallic California caskets and wooden shipping crates 92 During the first expedition of the El Cano 716 sets of remains were shipped back home to the United States German and Chinese armies battled in the Shanxi Province near the Great Wall of China The Chinese Army was turned back but the Germans sustained 30 casualties 93 Voters in the U S Alabama overwhelmingly approved a call for a new state constitution that would disenfranchise African Americans by a margin of 70 305 to 45 505 which included many black voters In Lowndes County where more than 80 of the registered voters were black the call for a constitutional convention was supported by 3 226 of 3 564 votes 94 and in Dallas County future site of the Selma March but 80 black at the time the support was 5 668 to 200 95 April 24 1901 Wednesday edit nbsp Patterson nbsp Hoy The first ever game of baseball s American League was played in Chicago as the Cleveland Blues met the Chicago White Stockings at South Side Park Ceremonies began at 3 00 in the afternoon the teams practiced for 30 minutes Chicago Mayor Carter Harrison Jr gave a short speech and then tossed out the first ball 96 The other three games in the eight team league Milwaukee at Detroit Boston at Baltimore and Washington D C at Philadelphia were canceled by rain Roy Patterson of Chicago was the first pitcher and Ollie Pickering was the first to bat for Cleveland with a ball a strike and a fly ball that deaf center fielder William Dummy Hoy caught for the first out Chicago s Fielder Jones who was also a center fielder was the first person to score A crowd of about 9 000 fans watched Chicago champions from the 1900 when the AL had been a minor league win the game 8 2 in a game that took 90 minutes to play 97 The remains of Abraham Lincoln were moved for the eleventh and last time and placed in the Lincoln Tomb at the Oak Ridge Cemetery in Springfield Illinois where the Chicago Tribune predicted the revered bones will be permitted the peace they have failed to secure through their first thirty five years of decay 98 Lincoln s sister in law Elizabeth Todd Edwards was part of a crowd that was permitted to pass through the tomb and take a final look at the coffin which it is expected will never again be exposed Born Everett Hall American philosopher noted for his advocacy of common sense realism in Janesville Wisconsin d 1960 Died Richard Henry Brunton 59 Scottish architect and engineer known as the Father of Japanese Lighthouses for his construction of 26 lighthouses along Japan s coasts b 1841 Thursday April 25 1901 Thursday editNew York became the first state of the United States to require license plates as Governor Benjamin Odell signed a bill requiring all automobiles to be registered with the Secretary of State s office The bill sponsored by Assemblyman George W Doughty had been suggested by the Automobile Club of America and also set a uniform speed limit of eight miles an hour within cities and villages and as much as 15 miles an hour on highways in rural locations 99 100 German engineer Richard Fiedler was granted the first patent for the flamethrower which he described as Verfahren zur Erzeugung grosser Flammenwassen Method of Producing Large Masses of Flame 101 An explosion and fire at a chemical factory in the city of Griesheim now a district in Frankfurt Germany killed 25 people and severely injured more than 150 At about 4 00 in the afternoon a small fire ignited containers of picric acid into a fiery blaze that then exploded 18 cylinders of smokeless powder 102 In their very first Major League Baseball game the Detroit Tigers set a record that continues to stand more than a century later with the biggest ninth inning comeback in MLB history 103 104 Going into the final inning of the game the Tigers were losing to the original AL Milwaukee Brewers 13 4 but team captain Jimmy Doc Casey made the first hit for what would become a ten run rally and a 14 13 win 105 106 Erve Beck of the Cleveland Blues now the Guardians hit the first home run in American League history in a 7 3 loss to the host Chicago White Stockings now the White Sox 107 The British Army ordered that all householders in occupied territory in South Africa would be required to display signs identifying the names of the persons living inside 81 Oil executive and multimillionaire Henry Flagler succeeded in getting the state of Florida to pass a bill that would allow him to divorce his wife of 20 years Ida so that he could marry his mistress Mary Lily Kenan whom he would marry on August 24 108 Under the terms of the bill which had been introduced only 16 days earlier after Flagler s lobbying of legislators incurable insanity for at least four years was made a ground for divorce 109 Italian polar explorer Umberto Cagni was forced to turn back after only 44 days from his attempt to become the first person to reach the North Pole but managed to plant the Italian flag further north than any previous explorer Reaching a latitude of 86 34 N Cagni who had set off from Russia s Franz Josef Land on March 11 was able to get 20 miles closer to the Pole than Fridtjof Nansen of Norway had done on April 7 1895 110 April 26 1901 Friday edit nbsp Ketchum hanged Tom Black Jack Ketchum 37 a train robber and member of the Hole in the Wall Gang was hanged at 1 21 p m in Clayton New Mexico 111 Ketchum is better remembered for his gruesome execution Union County Sheriff Solome Garcia had never performed a hanging before misjudged the length of the drop and used a rope that was too thin 112 Ketchum was decapitated by the force of his 215 pound frame and the quick tightening of the rope and his body separated from his head reportedly alighted squarely upon its feet stood for a moment swayed and fell 113 114 The Engineering Standards Committee of the United Kingdom held its first meeting with a goal of reducing the number of different measurements for British products The Committee s first achievement was to reduce the number of different gauges for streetcar rails from 75 to only five and the variety of structural steel sections from 175 different sizes to 113 lowering the costs of manufacturing and warehousing steel products 115 The entity would later change its name to the British Standards Institution and is known as the BSI Group Died Halle Tanner Dillon Johnson 36 African American physician who became the first woman of any race licensed to practice medicine in the state of Alabama b 1864 April 27 1901 Saturday editTottenham Hotspur defeated Sheffield United 3 1 to become the only non member of The Football League of England to ever win the FA Cup The game which took place at Burnden Park in Bolton was a replay since Spurs then a member of the Southern League and Sheffield had played to a 2 2 draw the previous Saturday 116 117 118 April 28 1901 Sunday editGeneral Miguel Malvar took over as the new commander of the Philippine resistance after the capture of Emilio Aguinaldo 119 In Algeria the village of Marguerite with more than 150 French settlers and located about 50 miles from Algiers was attacked by a force of 400 Berber rebels and most of the inhabitants were massacred 120 The building housing the New York Stock Exchange at 10 Broad Street was closed 20 years after the opening of an expanded location that had been designed by architect James Renwick Jr Over the next two years the NYSE occupied space in the New York Produce Exchange on 2 Broadway until its current location at 11 Wall Street could be constructed 121 The exchange would move to its current location on April 23 1903 122 Died Paule Mink 61 French feminist and activist b 1839 April 29 1901 Monday editU S President William McKinley departed Washington D C by train at 10 30 a m for a 15 000 mile month long tour of 25 of the 45 U S states traveling to the west coast and back 123 124 The Kentucky Derby now run on the first Saturday of May took place on a Monday afternoon at Churchill Downs in Louisville and was won by His Eminence ridden by African American jockey Jimmy Winkfield The favored racehorse Alard Scheck finished in last place 125 Liverpool clinched The Football League championship in England on the last day of the season with a narrow 1 0 win over last place West Bromwich Albion Going into the match Liverpool 18 7 8 and Sunderland 15 13 6 were tied in the standings with 43 points apiece but Sunderland s season was over and Liverpool needed only to avoid losing 126 127 Born Hirohito 124th Emperor of Japan from 1926 until his death in 1989 in the Aoyama Palace in TokyoApril 30 1901 Tuesday editCamillo Deaf Charley Hanks was released from prison in Montana after serving almost eight years of a ten year sentence 128 Initially sentenced to hanging after being convicted of murder he was spared by the Governor in 1894 Upon gaining his freedom he quickly went back to crime and joined Butch Cassidy s Wild Bunch gang in a train robbery near Wagner Montana on July 3 He would be killed in a shootout with San Antonio detectives on April 15 1902 129 Born Simon Kuznets Ukrainian American economist and 1971 Nobel Prize laureate in Kharkov Russian Empire d 1985 References edit Aguinaldo Takes the Oath The Filipino Leader Accepts the Inevitable and Swears Allegiance to the United States St Louis Post Dispatch April 3 1901 p 1 Hewitt Marco 2009 Philippine American War In Tucker Spencer C ed The Encyclopedia of the Spanish American and Philippine American Wars A Political Social and Military History ABC CLIO p 477 Census of England and Wales 63 Vict C 4 1901 General Report with Appendices Great Britain Census Office H M Stationery Office 1904 p 302 a b c d e f The American Monthly Review of Reviews 538 542 May 1901 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Missing or empty title help Roberts Richard L Miers Suzanne 1988 The End of Slavery in Africa University of Wisconsin Press p 23 Clarence Smith W G 2006 Islam and the Abolition of Slavery Oxford University Press p 127 ISBN 978 0 19 522151 0 Warren Kenneth 1987 The American Steel Industry 1850 1970 A Geographical Interpretation University of Pittsburgh Press p 125 Batchelor Bob 2002 American Popular Culture Through History The 1900s Greenwood p 133 She Saw the Prize Fight But Mrs Moore Was Afterward Arrested and Fined for Wearing Male Attire St Louis Post Dispatch April 3 1901 p 11 Graham Jooste and Roger Webster Innocent Blood Executions during the Anglo Boer War New Africa Books 2002 p 26 Archie L Dick The Hidden History of South Africa s Book and Reading Cultures University of Toronto Press 2013 Homes for London Workmen County Council to Build 5 779 Cottages in Tottenham Rents to be from About 1 50 to 2 50 a Week New York Times April 3 1901 p 1 Building the Nation N F S Grundtvig and Danish National Identity John A Hall and Ove Korsgaard eds McGill Queen s University Press 2015 p 20 The International Year Book A Compendium of the World s Progress during the Year 1901 Frank Moore Colby ed Dodd Mead amp Company 1902 p 243 Bo Lidegaard A Short History of Denmark in the 20th Century Gyldendal A S 2014 Danish Cabinet Loses Folkething Election Results in Government Defeat Chicago Daily Tribune April 4 1901 p1 Zulus and the War by John Laband The Boer War Direction Experience and Image John Gooch ed Routledge 2013 Marline Otte Jewish Identities in German Popular Entertainment 1890 1933 Cambridge University Press 2006 pp 38 39 Moorhouse George in The American Soccer League The Golden Years of American Soccer 1921 1931 Colin Jose ed Scarecrow Press 1998 p 487 Yale Team Beaten Allegheny College Plays the Blues in a Basket Ball Game The Pittsburg sic Post April 6 1901 p 6 Allegheny College Beats Yale Chicago Daily Tribune April 6 1901 p 6 The truth behind the Helms Committee by Jon Scott Albert H Walker History of the Sherman Law 1910 reprinted by Beard Books 2000 p 124 P C Knox in the Cabinet New York Times April 6 1901 p1 Knox Now in Office Pittsburger Takes the Oath as United States Attorney General Pittsburgh Press April 9 1901 p 1 Hulk of Merrimac Destroyed Collier Sunk at Santiago Cuba to Bottle Up Cervera s Fleet Blown Up with Dynamite Chicago Sunday Tribune April 7 1901 p 1 Famous Canvas Stolen in 1876 Is Recovered Chicago Daily Tribune April 6 1901 p 1 Millville Lost to New York Jerseymen Went to Pieces and Gothamites Rolled Up Big Score Philadelphia Times April 7 1901 p 12 Association of Professional Basketball Researchers John L DiGaetani and Josef P Sirefman Opera and the Golden West The Past Present and Future of Opera in the U S A Fairleigh Dickinson University Press 1994 pp 129 130 John Baxter French Riviera and Its Artists Art Literature Love and Life on the Cote d Azur Museyon 2015 pp 80 81 Two Missionaries Killed The New York Times April 22 1901 p 7 The New Guinea Massacre A Military Force Despatched Sydney Morning Herald April 25 1901 p 6 Goldman Laurence 1999 The Anthropology of Cannibalism Greenwood Publishing p 19 White Tom et al 2002 Extreme Devotion The Voice of the Martyrs HarperCollins p 348 Kirk Robert W 2012 Paradise Past The Transformation of the South Pacific 1520 1920 McFarland p 223 Davis Lee Allyn 2010 Natural Disasters Infobase Publishing p 218 Coal for First Foreign Port Collier Alexander Taking Five Thousand Tons to Stock Station on the West Coast of Mexico Chicago Daily Tribune April 10 1901 p 2 New Ten Dollar Buffalo Bill Secretary of the Treasury Approves Design for Note Soon to Be Issued as Legal Tender Chicago Daily Tribune April 10 1901 p 2 Botha Again for Peace Chicago Daily Tribune April 11 1901 p 1 Illinois Town Changes Name Chicago Daily Tribune April 10 1901 p 3 Abbott Lynn Seroff Doug 2009 Ragged but Right Black Traveling Shows Coon Songs and the Dark Pathway to Blues and Jazz University Press of Mississippi p 71 Cubans Reject American Terms Chicago Daily Tribune April 13 1901 p 1 a b c Marvelous Electrical Inventions Displayed Attractions at a Conversazione at Columbia University The New York Times April 13 1901 p 1 Tesla Plays the Wizard He Makes Electricity Do Weird Things before the Public New York Sun April 13 1901 p 1 a b Pictures Sent by Wire Chicago Daily Tribune April 13 1901 p 1 The First Comet of 1901 The British Almanac and Family Cyclopedia 1902 Charles Letts amp Co 1902 p 6 Grego Peter 2013 Blazing a Ghostly Trail ISON and Great Comets of the Past and Future Springer p 123 Rose Roberts Radical Human Ecology Intercultural and Indigenous Approaches Routledge 2016 p 332 Trump Roger R 2000 Military dimensions of the Boxer Uprising in Shanxi 1898 1901 In van de Ven Hans ed Warfare in Chinese History Brill p 316 Wong Kam C 2009 Chinese Policing History and Reform Peter Lang p 48 Says Corea is Fortifying Chicago Daily Tribune April 15 1901 p 5 Russia Far from Calm Chicago Daily Tribune April 17 1901 p 5 Bartholomew Paul C Menez Joseph F 2000 Summaries of Leading Cases on the Constitution Rowman amp Littlefield p 372 Warner C A 2007 Texas Oil amp Gas Since 1543 Copano Bay Press p 52 Kultura w Gminie Narok Gmina Dabrowa gminadabrowa pl Retrieved 2021 10 28 Hugh Rockoff America s Economic Way of War War and the US Economy from the Spanish American War to the Persian Gulf War Cambridge University Press 2012 p 79 New York Wins from St James Philadelphia Inquirer April 16 1901 p 6 Harold Rich Fort Worth Outpost Cowtown Boomtown University of Oklahoma Press 2014 p 95 Bill Nasson Abraham Esau s War A Black South African War in the Cape 1899 1902 Cambridge University Press 2003 p 45 Richard L Myers 100 Most Important Chemical Compounds The A Reference Guide A Reference Guide ABC CLIO 2007 p 108 S M Meng The Tsungli Yamen Its Organization and Functions East Asian Research Center 1962 p 81 Tsung Li Yamen to Go Chicago Daily Tribune April 17 1901 p 5 Letter Carriers May Wear Neat Shirt Waists Chicago Daily Tribune April 17 1901 p 3 Illustration Chicago Daily Tribune April 18 1901 p 3 Timothy Starr Great Inventors of New York s Capital District The History Press 2010 National League Repents Batter Allowed to Take Base When Hit by Pitcher Chicago Daily Tribune April 18 1901 p 6 L Edward Purcell Vice Presidents A Biographical Dictionary Infobase Publishing 2010 p 248 Tom Savage A Dictionary of Iowa Place Names University of Iowa Press 2007 p128 Olin Sewall Pettingill Jr Ornithology in Laboratory and Field Academic Press 1984 p 422 Julian P Hume and Michael Walters Extinct Birds A amp C Black 2012 p 188 Oliver Janz and Daniel Schonpflug Gender History in a Transnational Perspective Networks Biographies Gender Orders Berghahn Books 2014 p 48 Empress Palace Burns at Pekin Headquarters of Field Marshal Von Waldersee and Staff are Destroyed Chicago Daily Tribune April 18 1901 p 3 Gives His Life to Save a Dog Body of General Schwartzkopf Found in Palace Ruins at Pekin Chicago Daily Tribune April 19 1901 p 2 Luis Trindade The Making of Modern Portugal Cambridge Scholars Publishing 2013 p 235 Portugal in The Catholic Encyclopedia An International Work of Reference on the Constitution Doctrine Discipline and History of the Catholic Church Volume 12 Catholic Encyclopedia Incorporated 1913 p 305 a b James D Szalontai Small Ball in the Big Leagues A History of Stealing Bunting Walking and Otherwise Scratching for Runs McFarland 2010 p 20 Philippine Army to Be Reduced Chicago Daily Tribune April 19 1901 p 1 Aguinaldo Asks People to Yield Long Expected Manifesto from Insurgent Leader Is Issued from Manila Chicago Daily Tribune April 20 1901 p 1 Robert C Doyle The Enemy in Our Hands America s Treatment of Prisoners of War from the Revolution to the War on Terror University Press of Kentucky 2010 p 155 a b c d The American Monthly Review of Reviews June 1901 pp 666 669 Few Insurgents Left in the Philippines Gen Tinio has Surrendered as Have Malvar s Best Officers New York Times May 1 1901 p 1 The Football Association Cup The Final Tie Tottenham Hotspur v Sheffield United The Times London April 22 1901 p11 England s Football Game The Annual Contest for the Association Cup Ends in a Draw New York Times April 21 1901 p 9 New Cabinet for Chile New York Times April 22 1901 p 7 China Issues Edict of Reform Chicago Daily Tribune April 24 1901 p 5 Newspapers and nationalism in rural China 1890 1929 by Henrietta Harrison in Twentieth Century China New Approaches Routledge 2013 p 87 James Morton Justice Denied Extraordinary Miscarriages of Justice Little Brown Book Group 2015 London Fight Proves Fatal American Pugilist Smith Dies from the Effects of Monday Night s Ring Encounter Chicago Tribune April 25 1901 p 6 Pugilists Acquitted At Second Trial of Jack Roberts in London Brooklyn Daily Eagle June 28 1901 p 2 Friedrich Unterharnscheidt and Julia Taylor Unterharnscheidt Boxing Medical Aspects Academic Press 2003 p 713 Westfall Matthew 2012 The Devil s Causeway The True Story of America s First Prisoners of War in the Philippines and the Heroic Expedition Sent to Their Rescue Globe Pequot Germans Fight at Great Wall Chicago Daily Tribune April 29 1901 p 5 Jackson Harvey H 2004 Inside Alabama A Personal History of My State University of Alabama Press p 136 Thomson Bailey 2002 A Century of Controversy Constitutional Reform in Alabama University of Alabama Press p 22 Pennant to Be Raised Today Opening of the American League s Season at White Stocking Park Chicago Daily Tribune April 24 1901 p 7 Champions Win Opening Game Chicago Daily Tribune April 25 1901 p 6 Lincoln s Body Rests at Last Chicago Daily Tribune April 25 1901 p 4 Automobile Bill Signed New York Times April 26 1901 p 5 Patrick Robertson Robertson s Book of Firsts Who Did What for the First Time Bloomsbury Publishing 2011 Chris McNab The Flamethrower Bloomsbury Publishing 2015 Explosion Kills and Injures 150 Chicago Daily Tribune April 26 1901 p 3 Baseball s Biggest Ninth Inning Comebacks by Carl Bialik Wall Street Journal July 28 2008 Patrick Harrigan The Detroit Tigers Club and Community 1945 1995 University of Toronto Press 1997 p 41 Ten Runs Won in the Ninth Detroit Free Press April 26 1901 p 1 Ten Runs in Ninth Inning Detroit Pulls a Game Lost to Milwaukee Out of Fire by Great Batting Rally Chicago Daily Tribune April 26 1901 p 1 Mark Ribowsky The Complete History of the Home Run Citadel Press 2003 p 34 Gene M Burnett Florida s Past People and Events That Shaped the State Pineapple Press 1996 p 248 Sidney Walter Martin Florida s Flagler University of Georgia Press 2010 p 186 Eric Newby Great Ascents A Narrative History of Mountaineering Viking Press 1977 p 146 Ketchum Hanged Albuquerque NM Citizen April 26 1901 p 1 Matthew P Mayo Cowboys Mountain Men and Grizzly Bears Fifty of the Grittiest Moments in the History of the Wild West Rowman amp Littlefield 2010 p 227 Robert J Torrez Myth of the Hanging Tree Stories of Crime and Punishment in Territorial New Mexico University of New Mexico Press 2008 pp 39 40 Black Jack Decapitated Rope Used at Hanging Cuts off the Outlaw s Head Chicago Daily Tribune April 26 1901 p 3 J Luis Guasch et al Quality Systems and Standards for a Competitive Edge World Bank Publications 2007 pp17 18 Win English Football Cup Chicago Sunday Tribune April 28 1901 p 18 The Football Association Cup The Times London April 29 1901 p 7 Donnelley Paul 2010 Firsts Lasts amp Onlys of Football The Most Amazing Football Facts from the Last 160 Years Hamlyn Battjes Mark E 2012 Protecting Isolating and Controlling Behavior Population and Resource Control Measures in Counterinsurgency Campaigns Government Printing Office pp 61 62 Fleming Fergus 2007 The Sword and the Cross Two Men and an Empire of Sand Grove Press p 135 Hoster Jay 2014 Early Wall Street 1830 1940 Arcadia Publishing p 49 Gabrielan Randall 2000 New York City s Financial District in Vintage Postcards Arcadia Publishing p 32 President Will Begin Long Trip Chicago Daily Tribune April 29 1901 p 2 M Kinley s Trip to West Begun Chicago Daily Tribune April 30 1901 p 5 His Eminence Wins the Derby Chicago Daily Tribune April 30 1901 p 7 John Williams Red Men Liverpool Football Club Random House 2011 Football The League Championship The Times London April 30 1901 p 12 R Michael Wilson Great Train Robberies of the Old West Globe Pequot 2007 p 132 Larry Pointer In Search of Butch Cassidy University of Oklahoma Press 2013 p 255 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title April 1901 amp oldid 1221710762, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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