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January 1901

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The following events occurred in January 1901:

January 22, 1901: Queen Victoria, ruler of the British Empire, dies after a reign of 63 years
January 1, 1901: Commonwealth of Australia created by six colonies
Australia's Governor-General Hopetoun and Prime Minister Barton

January 1, 1901 (Tuesday) edit

January 2, 1901 (Wednesday) edit

 
Kaiser Friedrich III in 1902

January 3, 1901 (Thursday) edit

January 4, 1901 (Friday) edit

January 5, 1901 (Saturday) edit

January 6, 1901 (Sunday) edit

January 7, 1901 (Monday) edit

January 8, 1901 (Tuesday) edit

January 9, 1901 (Wednesday) edit

January 10, 1901 (Thursday) edit

 
Spindletop

January 11, 1901 (Friday) edit

January 12, 1901 (Saturday) edit

January 13, 1901 (Sunday) edit

  • A statue of Robert Burns was unveiled in Walker Park, Newcastle upon Tyne, England. The statue would later be damaged, was eventually restored in the 1970s, but then destroyed by vandals in the 1980s.[52]
  • Queen Victoria made the last entry in her journal after almost 70 years of recording her daily actions. "Had a fair night", she noted, "but was a little wakeful... Rested again afterwards, then did some signing and dictated to Lenchen", using the nickname for her daughter, Princess Helena, who often appeared on her behalf. She would become ill the next day and never write another entry in her journal, kept since 1831.[11]
  • Born: A. B. Guthrie Jr. (Alfred Bertram Guthrie), American writer, recipient of the Pulitzer Prize for his novel The Way West; in Bedford, Indiana (d. 1991)[53]

January 14, 1901 (Monday) edit

January 15, 1901 (Tuesday) edit

  • Pennsylvania would again have two U.S. Senators after a vacancy of nearly two years in one of the seats. Colonel Matthew Quay, who had been U.S. Senator from 1897 to 1899, was selected for the vacancy as the Pennsylvania General Assembly ended the stalemate. Under the state law at the time, a candidate had to receive a majority of the combined votes of all the state senators and representatives. With 248 of the 254 legislators present, 125 votes were necessary to win. Quay, a Republican, received 130 votes.[55][56][57][58]
  • Fred Alexander, an African American who had been arrested for the attempted rape of a white woman three days earlier, was burned alive by a lynch mob in the city of Leavenworth, Kansas.[59] After threats had been made against both county Sheriff Peter Everhardy and the warden of the state penitentiary in Lansing, Everhardy obtained Alexander's release at 3:10 p.m., and escorted him back to the Leavenworth County jail. At 4:30 p.m., the mob broke in and dragged him from his cell, and hauled Alexander to the scene of the November 7 murder of another woman, Pearl Forbes, on Lawrence Avenue near Spruce Street. Her father, William Forbes, reportedly told the crowd, "Don't hang the brute men... Let's take him out where he murdered my daughter and burn him."[60] The group chained Alexander to an iron stake, poured two cans of coal oil on a pile of kindling, and at 5:25, Forbes himself set Alexander ablaze. Kansas Governor William Eugene Stanley said afterward, "The Sheriff of Leavenworth is either a despicable scoundrel or a coward."[61][62]
  • The Allied military commanders of the Eight-Nation Alliance announced the organization of a new judicial system for China.[2]

January 16, 1901 (Wednesday) edit

January 17, 1901 (Thursday) edit

  • Led by Louis Couturat and Léopold Leau, the Delegation for the Adoption of an International Auxiliary Language was founded at a meeting of delegates from various "congresses" that had been interested in establishing a universal language. The delegation would work on creating an improved version of Esperanto, which would be called Ido.[65]
  • Nearly four years after leaving office, former U.S. President Grover Cleveland strongly criticized the foreign policy of the William McKinley administration, particularly its expansion and takeover of the Philippines. "We can conquer the Philippines, and after conquering them probably can govern them. It is in the strain upon our institutions, the demoralization of our people, the evasion of our constitutional limitations, and the perversion of our national mission that our danger lies," Cleveland said at the Holland Society dinner at the Waldorf Astoria Hotel in New York City. "As a distinguished bishop has said, 'The question is not what we shall do with the Philippines, but what the Philippines will do to us. Our country will never be the same again. For weal or woe, we have already irrevocably passed beyond the old lines."[66]
  • The bicentenary of the Prussian Federation was celebrated in Germany.[67] The planned week of festivities was canceled after two days, after the announcement of the imminent death of Queen Victoria, a grandmother of Kaiser Wilhelm.[68]

January 18, 1901 (Friday) edit

 
Cross of the Order of Merit of the Prussian Crown

January 19, 1901 (Saturday) edit

  • At the close of a congressional subcommittee investigation of hazing at the United States Military Academy, superintendent Colonel Albert L. Mills and four cadets presented a statement signed by all of the members of the Academy, pledging to abolish hazing. The statement, which would appear on the front pages of many American newspapers the next day, said in part "we... while maintaining that we have pursued our system from the best motives, yet realizing that the deliberate judgment of the people would, in a country like ours, be above all other considerations, do now reaffirm our former action abolishing the exercising of fourth class men, and do further agree to discontinue hazing, the requiring of fourth class men to eat anything against their desire, and the practice of 'calling out' fourth class men by class action; and that we will not devise other similar practices to replace those abandoned."[72] The hazing practices had come to national attention after the death of first-year cadet Oscar Lyle Booz on December 3. The statement to forcing men to "eat anything against their desire" was a reference to burns sustained by Booz after a tabasco sauce had been poured down his throat.[73]
  • Died: Jacques-Victor-Albert, 79, French politician and Prime Minister of France 1873 to 1874 and again in 1877 (b. 1821)

January 20, 1901 (Sunday) edit

  • "Without a protest from any Christian," as a horrified press report noted, five women and girls were openly offered for sale as slaves at a public auction in the United States.[74] Notwithstanding the 13th Amendment and California state law, the five females had been the slaves of Leong Kow in China and continued to serve him after his immigration to San Francisco. When Mr. Leong wanted to return to his homeland, he advertised the midday sale by posting notices in the Chinatown neighborhood, and his creditors pasted their notices of claims against his estate. Four of the women were purchased, but the youngest, Leong's 12-year-old daughter, received no bids. The next day, she was rescued from her home by the local Society for the Suppression of Vice and by a Presbyterian missionary.[75] The incident would lead to state legislative hearings investigating the practice of human trafficking that took place with the tolerance of the San Francisco police[76] and by federal prosecutors.[77]
  • Lord Strathcona's Horse, a Canadian mounted unit, left South Africa following service in the Second Boer War. It was disbanded shortly afterwards, but would become an official regiment of the Canadian Army later in the year.[78]
  • Born: Jesús Colón, Puerto Rican writer; in Cayey (d. 1974)

January 21, 1901 (Monday) edit

  • The first RCA Victor record was created, as popular musician Vess Ossman played the banjo in a studio cut of the song "Tell Me, Pretty Maiden", from the popular musical comedy Florodora, which was pressed and released as a 10-inch disc. By 1946, RCA would sell its one billionth record.[79]
  • R. R. Racey, a British colonial official in charge of administering sections of the British protectorate in Uganda, oversaw the replacement of a prior tribal monarch of the Igala people, Musinga, the Onu of Igara. King Mosinga had committed suicide rather than leaving his kingdom to be taken by Racey to the administrative office. Racey convened a meeting of 55 sub-chiefs, who elected Musinga's young son as the Onu Mukotani of Igara. Since Mukotani was too young to govern, Racey arranged another relative, Bakora, to serve as regent and to swear allegiance to the British Empire.[80]
  • Nine days after securing her release from a jail in Wichita, Kansas, alcohol opponent Carrie Nation convened a meeting of the Woman's Christian Temperance Union and successfully persuaded other members to join her in her lone crusade of destroying places that sold liquor. That evening, she began to use a hatchet on her raids, which served as both a symbol of her cause and as an instrument for vandalism.[51] She and three of her followers laid waste to two saloons in Wichita, and were in the process of invading a third when she was arrested by police.[81][82]
  • Dr. Henry V. Passage, a physician from Peru, Indiana, as well as a Democrat member of the Indiana House of Representatives, introduced one of the earliest proposals for lethal injection as a means of capital punishment. Dr. Passage proposed that an overdose of morphine should replace hanging as the state's means of executing a murderer; the proposed amendment bill was voted down along party lines.[83]
  • After recovering from a long illness, King Oscar of the United Kingdoms of Sweden and Norway resumed his governmental duties, which he had entrusted to Crown Prince Gustaf.[84]
  • Died: Elisha Gray, 65, American electrical engineer, co-founder of the Western Electric company who is sometimes credited with the invention of the telephone (b. 1835)[84]

January 22, 1901 (Tuesday) edit

  • Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland and Empress of India, died at the age of 81, at Osborne House, her residence on the Isle of Wight, at 6:30 in the evening. After a reign of more than 63 years, Victoria had ruled during the lifetimes of most living Britons. She had continued to conduct official business less than two weeks before her death. At the time of her death, the Queen was survived by six children, 32 grandchildren and 35 great-grandchildren.
  • Russia completed its transfer of the Shan-hai-kwan (now Shanhaiguan Railway), built in China, to German administration.[84]
  • At least 35 people in Herre, Norway, died in a hurricane.[84]
 
King Edward VII

January 23, 1901 (Wednesday) edit

January 24, 1901 (Thursday) edit

  • In a state ceremony at Dublin Castle, Edward VII was proclaimed King of Ireland.[96]
  • Emily Hobhouse arrived at Bloemfontein concentration camp to report on conditions. Horrified by what she saw, she would write:

    "They went to sleep without any provision having been made for them and without anything to eat or to drink. I saw crowds of them along railway lines in bitterly cold weather, in pouring rain–hungry, sick, dying and dead. Soap was not dispensed. The water supply was inadequate. No bedstead or mattress was procurable. Fuel was scarce and had to be collected from the green bushes on the opes of the kopjes (small hills) by the people themselves. The rations were extremely meagre and when, as I frequently experienced, the actual quantity dispensed fell short of the amount prescribed, it simply meant famine."[97]

  • Hubert von Herkomer was commissioned by King Edward VII of the United Kingdom to paint a watercolor portrait of the recently deceased Queen Victoria as she lay in her coffin, a not uncommon practice of the day as a respectful means of preserving the final image of a person. A century later, a critic would write, as praise, "the brightness of a flowing and translucent shroud seems already to be transporting the Queen into another world."[98]

January 25, 1901 (Friday) edit

January 26, 1901 (Saturday) edit

  • Tomb KV44, in Egypt's Valley of the Kings, was opened by a team of archaeologists led by Howard Carter. The tomb was found to contain the mummies of ten people, the most notable of whom was Tentkerer, a woman who had served the Pharaoh Osorkon I, who reigned from 922 BC to 887 BC.[100]
  • Thirty-two captured leaders of the Filipino resistance to American rule were deported to Guam on a U.S. Navy ship which steamed out of Manila Bay to send the nationalists into exile.[101] The 32 men had refused to take the oath of allegiance to the American territorial government, and were considered likely to foment unrest against the U.S. Territorial authorities. Foremost among the deportees was Apolinario Mabini, who had been the first Prime Minister of the First Philippine Republic during its temporary independence from Spain. Mabini would finally be allowed to return to the Philippines in 1903, two months before his death.[102]
  • Edouard Orban de Xivry, the Governor of the Luxembourg Province of Belgium, was assassinated in his office by one of his employees. Messr. Schneider asked for a meeting with the Governor. After they began talking, he drew out a revolver, shot Orban de Xivry, then killed himself.[103]

January 27, 1901 (Sunday) edit

 
"Crazy Snake", Chitto Harjo

January 28, 1901 (Monday) edit

January 29, 1901 (Tuesday) edit

  • China's Empress Dowager Cixi issued an imperial decree in the name of the Emperor. "After we moved out of the capital city," the Emperor's statement began, "the empress has been constantly busy with state affairs. As Emperor, I deeply regret my mistakes... we mindlessly followed the old ways, leading to the calamity we face today. Now that peace negotiations are underway, we should reform all political affairs so that the country can become strong and prosperous." The decree directed all government officials to suggest reforms during the next two months, determining "What should be done to strengthen China, develop human talent, reach fiscal balance, and build a strong army?"[115]
  • In French Algeria, Swiss travel writer Isabelle Eberhardt, who posed as the Sufi tribesman Si Mahmoud Saadi, was stabbed and severely wounded by a fanatic member of the Tidjani Muslims, who regarded her and other members of the Qadiriyya Muslims as infidels.[116] The trauma was enough to make Eberhardt move back to Marseille. She would die in an accident in 1903.
 
Congressman White

January 30, 1901 (Wednesday) edit

January 31, 1901 (Thursday) edit

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january, 1901, 1901, january, february, march, april, june, july, august, september, october, november, december, following, events, occurred, january, 1901, queen, victoria, ruler, british, empire, dies, after, reign, years, january, 1901, commonwealth, austr. 1901 January February March April May June July August September October November December lt lt January 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 31 The following events occurred in January 1901 January 22 1901 Queen Victoria ruler of the British Empire dies after a reign of 63 years January 1 1901 Commonwealth of Australia created by six colonies Australia s Governor General Hopetoun and Prime Minister Barton Contents 1 January 1 1901 Tuesday 2 January 2 1901 Wednesday 3 January 3 1901 Thursday 4 January 4 1901 Friday 5 January 5 1901 Saturday 6 January 6 1901 Sunday 7 January 7 1901 Monday 8 January 8 1901 Tuesday 9 January 9 1901 Wednesday 10 January 10 1901 Thursday 11 January 11 1901 Friday 12 January 12 1901 Saturday 13 January 13 1901 Sunday 14 January 14 1901 Monday 15 January 15 1901 Tuesday 16 January 16 1901 Wednesday 17 January 17 1901 Thursday 18 January 18 1901 Friday 19 January 19 1901 Saturday 20 January 20 1901 Sunday 21 January 21 1901 Monday 22 January 22 1901 Tuesday 23 January 23 1901 Wednesday 24 January 24 1901 Thursday 25 January 25 1901 Friday 26 January 26 1901 Saturday 27 January 27 1901 Sunday 28 January 28 1901 Monday 29 January 29 1901 Tuesday 30 January 30 1901 Wednesday 31 January 31 1901 Thursday 32 ReferencesJanuary 1 1901 Tuesday editThe British colonies of New South Wales Queensland South Australia Tasmania Victoria and Western Australia federated as the Commonwealth of Australia John Adrian Louis Hope was appointed the first Governor General of Australia Edmund Barton became the first Prime Minister of Australia The Barton ministry was made up of Protectionist Party members 1 2 3 The first day of the 20th century was celebrated 4 5 There was little celebration in Melbourne Australia because as the local newspaper noted everybody who is anybody is in Sydney the first capital of the new Commonwealth 6 Nigeria became a British protectorate Pentecostalism was founded at a prayer meeting at Bethel Bible College in Topeka Kansas 7 The centenary of the Act of Union was celebrated by British forces in Ireland The New Year Honours List for the United Kingdom and British Empire was published in The Times 8 Those honoured included Queen Victoria s physician Professor Thomas Barlow who became a baronet Between 11 00 a m and 2 00 p m more than 5 300 members of the general public visited the White House for the annual New Year s Day tradition of being able to walk in and to shake hands with the President of the United States In order to accommodate the remaining people in line in the final half hour William McKinley shook hands at the rate of sixty five a minute by actual count 9 The President would be assassinated in September while shaking hands with the public January 2 1901 Wednesday edit nbsp Kaiser Friedrich III in 1902 While en route from Danzig to Kiel on 2 January 1901 the German battleship SMS Kaiser Friedrich III struck an underwater obstacle the impact damaged four of the ship s watertight compartments which then filled with water and caused the ship to list to port The shock from the collision damaged the ship s boilers and started a fire in the coal bunkers All of the ship s ammunition magazines engine rooms and storage compartments had to be flooded in order to prevent the fire from spreading 10 Two men were seriously injured while fighting the fire and a third died of his injuries After several hours the fire was extinguished and the engines were restarted Throughout the incident Prince Henry of Prussia steadfastly refused requests for him to leave the ship In one of her final public appearances Queen Victoria greeted Lord Roberts in his triumphant return from South Africa meeting him at Osborne Castle on the Isle of Wight Roberts was knighted as Order of the Garter and had the title of the First Earl Roberts conferred upon him 2 11 12 Ignatius L Donnelly 69 a former U S Congressman who wrote popular speculative books about long destroyed civilizations supposed to have existed on Earth died following a heart attack he suffered that evening at his father in law s home in Minneapolis Donnelly s works included Atlantis The Antediluvian World 1882 and Ragnarok The Age of Fire and Gravel 1883 Using the pen name Edmund Boisgilbert M D he wrote the 1890 science fiction novel Caesar s Column about what the world of 1988 would look like The book was subtitled A Story of the Twentieth Century Donnelly lived only to see the first day of the 20th century his passing took place three minutes after midnight 13 January 3 1901 Thursday editThe Victor Talking Machine Company introduced the first 10 inch phonographic record a breakthrough permitting the playing of at least three minutes of recorded music A longer version of the 1900 hit song When Reuben Comes To Town sung by S H Dudley was the first offering 14 The St Louis Southwestern Railway purchased the Stuttgart and Arkansas River Railroad 15 Born Ngo Dinh Diem Vietnamese state leader first President of South Vietnam in Quảng Binh French Indochina assassinated 1963 Alfred Tarski Polish Jewish mathematician in Warsaw d 1983 16 Eric Voegelin German philosopher in Koln d 1985 17 January 4 1901 Friday editThe United Kingdom announced its appointments of the new administrators for its colonies in southern Africa with Sir Alfred Milner to be the British High Commissioner and the Governor of the Transvaal Sir Walter Hely Hutchinson as Governor of the Cape Colony and Lieutenant Colonel Henry McCallum as Governor of Natal 18 Rootok Island the smallest of the Krenitzin Islands was set aside to house a lighthouse that would never be built 19 The United States Senate unanimously passed the Native Races Act a resolution sponsored by Senator Henry Cabot Lodge of Massachusetts declaring a policy that aboriginal tribes and uncivilized people both within the United States and its overseas possessions should not be sold intoxicating beverages or opium 20 Born C L R James Trinidadian writer and journalis in Tunapuna d 1989 21 January 5 1901 Saturday editIn response to the imminent organization of the American League as a second major baseball league the National League announced in Louisville Kentucky that it was going to revive an old minor league the American Association 22 American League President Ban Johnson told reporters in Cleveland You can poo hoo that story right from the start I don t know if the National League contemplates such a move but if they do it will never be born 23 On January 19 the league was formally launched and the cities for the new AA were announced to be Baltimore Boston Detroit Indianapolis Lousville Milwaukee Philadelphia and Washington D C 24 The AA lineup happened to coincide with six of the eight American League teams and Boston and Philadelphia had franchises in the NL and the AL The sporting press reacted negatively to the anti competitive proposal and the National League would announce its abandonment of the idea on February 27 25 Syracuse University played its first college basketball game a 21 8 loss to Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute Although the Syracuse men s team would make four appearances in the Final Four in later years it would not be until 102 years after its first game that it would win the national championship 26 Typhoid fever broke out in a Seattle jail the first of two typhoid outbreaks in the United States during the year The ten games of the intermediate round of the 30th FA Cup were played in England The nineteenth rugby union Home Nations Championship commenced in the United Kingdom with Wales defeating England 13 0 in Cardiff Born Tommy Cook English athlete who was a star both in professional cricket and in association football in Cuckfield Sussex committed suicide 1950 27 January 6 1901 Sunday editAt his apartment at 6 West 102nd Street in Manhattan New York City Theodore Dreiser began writing a new novel Jennie Gerhardt with the working title of The Transgressor After four weeks he would complete nine chapters and 40 chapters by mid April but do repeated rewrites In 1903 he would abandon it after suffering a nervous breakdown but would resume writing in 1910 and publish the novel which would later be adapted into a film in 1911 28 Ottoman Sultan Abdul Hamid received the first telegram that opened a direct telegraph line between the Ottoman capital at Istanbul and its largest Middle Eastern city at Dimesk Damascus the capital of its Suriye province now Syria Prior to that time the Palestinian city of Al Salt was the furthest extent that the line would reach hindering communications with the outer provinces in the Arabian Peninsula 29 Died Philip Armour Sr 68 American entrepreneur b 1832 He acquired control of most of the American meatpacking industry through his corporation Armour and Company 30 the brand name still survives Frederick Vosper 31 Australian journalist newspaper proprietor and politician died of appendicitis b 1869 31 January 7 1901 Monday editAs the Second Boer War continued in South Africa British positions along the Delagoa Bay Railway were attacked by Boer fighters and both sides sustained heavy losses in the battle 2 Voters in Toronto approved municipal control of the city s natural gas plant 2 American prospector Alferd Packer was released from prison after serving 18 years in jail for manslaughter for cannibalism Outgoing Colorado Governor Charles S Thomas in his last official act paroled Packer because of physical condition and advanced age of almost 59 years Packer would live another six years dying on April 17 1907 32 Died James Dunwoody Bulloch 77 diplomat for the Confederate States of America to the United Kingdom during the American Civil War Bulloch retired to the United Kingdom after the defeat of the Confederacy and was buried in Liverpool 33 January 8 1901 Tuesday editAt his headquarters at San Isidro on the Philippine island of Luzon U S Army Brigadier General Frederick Funston received a telegram revealing that the Filipino rebel president Emilio Aguinaldo was in a heavily guarded compound in the Sierra Madre mountains at Palanan This bit of intelligence obtained from American interrogation of a courier Cecilio Segismundo would lead General Funston to lead a mission to capture Aguinaldo dead or alive 34 Irish Private John Barry 27 surrounded by Boer troops on Monument Hill South Africa destroyed his Maxim gun to make it useless to the enemy and was killed in doing so an action for which he would be posthumously awarded the Victoria Cross 35 Paul Deschanel was re elected as the president of the French Chamber of Deputies defeating challenger Henri Brisson by a margin of 296 220 36 The United States House of Representatives voted 165 102 to approve the Burleigh reapportionment bill increasing the number of U S Representatives from 357 to 387 37 The United States Senate would approve the bill three days later 2 Twenty eight residents of an orphanage in Rochester New York were killed in a fire All but three of them were children 38 The first national bowling tournament in the United States opened in Chicago in conjunction with the convention of the American Bowling Congress In all 42 men s teams and five women s teams each with five players participated 39 January 9 1901 Wednesday editMaori politician Hōne Heke Ngapua was re elected to the Northern Maori electorate seat in New Zealand less than two months after having vacated the seat because of bankruptcy Lord Kitchener reported that Christiaan de Wet had shot one of the peace envoys and flogged two more who had gone to his commando to ask the Burgher citizens of South Africa to halt fighting 40 Steel magnate Charles M Schwab hosted the Millionaire s Dinner at the Hotel Schenley in Pittsburgh bringing together an unprecedented assembly of wealthy individuals In all 89 millionaires gathered for a proposal to form combine forces to create U S Steel 41 Peter Ryu arrived in Honolulu Hawaii as a passenger on the Japanese ship Kongkong Maru and was recorded as the first Korean immigrant to enter the United States 42 Born Chic Young Murat Bernard Young American cartoonist in Chicago In 1930 Young would create the popular comic strip Blondie He would continue to draw it until his death on March 14 1973 January 10 1901 Thursday edit nbsp Spindletop In the first great Texas gusher oil was discovered at Spindletop in Beaumont Texas The Spindletop gusher subsequently blew for nine days at a rate estimated at 100 000 barrels 16 000 m3 of oil per day 43 Pattillo Higgins had been told by fellow geologists that it would be pointless to prospect for oil in the salt dome known as Spindletop Hill so he eventually placed an advertisement to look for someone to take on the job of drilling The one person who agreed to enter into a lease was Anthony Francis Lucas a Croatian American immigrant who began drilling in October 1900 When the drill reached 1 139 feet 347 m mud began to bubble and a geyser 100 feet 30 m high erupted by the end of the year 235 000 000 would be invested in Texas oil fields 44 Joseph Chamberlain the British Empire s Secretary of State for the Colonies became the last Cabinet minister to report to Queen Victoria giving an update on the Second Boer War and noted that she showed not the slightest sign of failing intelligence She told him that she regretted the length of the war but added I am not anxious about the result 11 Born Henning von Tresckow German army officer member of the unsuccessful assassination attempt against Adolf Hitler in 1944 in Magdeburg committed suicide 1944 January 11 1901 Friday editThe American Bowling Congress crowned its first national champion men s bowler as Frank Brill bowled games of 212 237 and 199 pins for a total of 648 ahead of J Koster who totaled 621 The Greater New York team beat St Louis two games to one A mother and daughter both named Agnes Fuellgraff had the best scores for the women 45 Less than two months before he was due to be inaugurated as Vice President of the United States Theodore Roosevelt was on a hunting trip near Meeker Colorado when he found himself fighting fist to jaw with an enraged North American cougar but managed to survive the ordeal without serious injury 46 Born Joachim Ernst German noble last ruler of Anhalt in Dessau German Empire d 1947 Kwon Ki ok Korean air force officer first woman to fly an airplane in China first Korean female aviator co founder of the Republic of Korea Air Force in Sangsugu Village Pyongyang Korea d 1988 January 12 1901 Saturday editLi Hongzhang Li Hung Chang and Yikuang known as the Prince Ch ing signing on behalf of the Chinese Emperor acknowledged the protocol that contained the preliminary demands of the Eight Nation Alliance for peace and for the normalization of relations following the Boxer Rebellion 47 48 The Electrical Review announced that the patent of Dr Mihajlo Pupin a professor of physics at Columbia College had been purchased by the American Telephone and Telegraph Company AT amp T and that it would facilitate long distance telephone communication 49 Dr Pupin had patented the loading coil in 1900 making it possible to transmit and receive sounds of the human voice regardless of the length of the land line Dr Pupin was paid 500 000 for the device that AT amp T called the most important invention since that of the telephone itself that would revolutionize the entire telephone system 50 equivalent to 12 000 000 in 2016 By a writ of habeas corpus from the Kansas Supreme Court anti alcohol crusader Carrie Nation was released from the Sedgwick County jail in Wichita Kansas where she had been held for the destruction of the bar at the Carey Hotel Nine days after her release Nation held an emergency meeting of the local Woman s Christian Temperance Union and was able to get volunteers to join her in her mission of ridding American cities of saloons and taverns 51 Born Kurt Jooss German dancer and choreographer in Wasseralfingen d 1979 January 13 1901 Sunday editA statue of Robert Burns was unveiled in Walker Park Newcastle upon Tyne England The statue would later be damaged was eventually restored in the 1970s but then destroyed by vandals in the 1980s 52 Queen Victoria made the last entry in her journal after almost 70 years of recording her daily actions Had a fair night she noted but was a little wakeful Rested again afterwards then did some signing and dictated to Lenchen using the nickname for her daughter Princess Helena who often appeared on her behalf She would become ill the next day and never write another entry in her journal kept since 1831 11 Born A B Guthrie Jr Alfred Bertram Guthrie American writer recipient of the Pulitzer Prize for his novel The Way West in Bedford Indiana d 1991 53 January 14 1901 Monday editThe first day of the 20th century was observed throughout the Russian Empire and the Ottoman Empire which had not yet adopted the Gregorian calendar The two large powers would use the Julian calendar until World War I and by 1901 the difference between the two had grown to 13 days January 1 1901 for the rest of the world had been December 18 1900 on the Julian calendar Russia ordered the withdrawal of its troops from the Zhili province of China and moved them to Manchuria 2 France s Chamber of Deputies voted 310 110 for its continued approval of the government s treatment of religious associations 2 Members of the United States Electoral College cast their votes in their respective state capitals and by a margin of 292 155 formally approved the re election of William McKinley as President of the United States McKinley received all of the electoral votes from 28 states including all of those above the Ohio River and those along the Pacific Coast along with most of the prairie states His challenger from the Democratic Party William Jennings Bryan received the votes of the other 17 states including all of the ones that had seceded during the American Civil War 2 Born Bebe Daniels American actress singer dancer writer and producer in Dallas d 1971 Died Victor Balaguer i Cirera 76 Catalan Spanish playwright and poet b 1824 Mandell Creighton 58 British clergyman Bishop of London for the Church of England and historian best known for his five volume set The History of the Papacy During the Period of Reformation b 1843 Charles Hermite 78 French mathematician known for the Hermite interpolation process and Hermite polynomials b 1822 54 January 15 1901 Tuesday editPennsylvania would again have two U S Senators after a vacancy of nearly two years in one of the seats Colonel Matthew Quay who had been U S Senator from 1897 to 1899 was selected for the vacancy as the Pennsylvania General Assembly ended the stalemate Under the state law at the time a candidate had to receive a majority of the combined votes of all the state senators and representatives With 248 of the 254 legislators present 125 votes were necessary to win Quay a Republican received 130 votes 55 56 57 58 Fred Alexander an African American who had been arrested for the attempted rape of a white woman three days earlier was burned alive by a lynch mob in the city of Leavenworth Kansas 59 After threats had been made against both county Sheriff Peter Everhardy and the warden of the state penitentiary in Lansing Everhardy obtained Alexander s release at 3 10 p m and escorted him back to the Leavenworth County jail At 4 30 p m the mob broke in and dragged him from his cell and hauled Alexander to the scene of the November 7 murder of another woman Pearl Forbes on Lawrence Avenue near Spruce Street Her father William Forbes reportedly told the crowd Don t hang the brute men Let s take him out where he murdered my daughter and burn him 60 The group chained Alexander to an iron stake poured two cans of coal oil on a pile of kindling and at 5 25 Forbes himself set Alexander ablaze Kansas Governor William Eugene Stanley said afterward The Sheriff of Leavenworth is either a despicable scoundrel or a coward 61 62 The Allied military commanders of the Eight Nation Alliance announced the organization of a new judicial system for China 2 January 16 1901 Wednesday editAfter arriving in the United States to begin lobbying for the building of a canal across Panama French engineer Philippe Bunau Varilla made his first English language public speech at a lecture in Cincinnati Ohio to the Cincinnati Commercial Club and the Society of Civil Engineers Bunau Varilla had chosen the location because it afforded him the opportunity to be introduced to Ohio Senator Mark Hanna the closest adviser to U S President William McKinley 63 James A Mount 57 died only two days after his term as 24th Governor of Indiana had expired 64 Born Fulgencio Batista Cuban state leader 9th President of Cuba and Cuba s military dictator until his overthrow by Fidel Castro in 1959 in Banes d 1973 Laura Riding American poet novelist and critic in New York City d 1991 Died Hiram Rhodes Revels 73 American politician first African American to serve in the United States Congress b 1827 During the Reconstruction era Revels was elected by the Mississippi Legislature as one of the state s two U S Senators January 17 1901 Thursday editLed by Louis Couturat and Leopold Leau the Delegation for the Adoption of an International Auxiliary Language was founded at a meeting of delegates from various congresses that had been interested in establishing a universal language The delegation would work on creating an improved version of Esperanto which would be called Ido 65 Nearly four years after leaving office former U S President Grover Cleveland strongly criticized the foreign policy of the William McKinley administration particularly its expansion and takeover of the Philippines We can conquer the Philippines and after conquering them probably can govern them It is in the strain upon our institutions the demoralization of our people the evasion of our constitutional limitations and the perversion of our national mission that our danger lies Cleveland said at the Holland Society dinner at the Waldorf Astoria Hotel in New York City As a distinguished bishop has said The question is not what we shall do with the Philippines but what the Philippines will do to us Our country will never be the same again For weal or woe we have already irrevocably passed beyond the old lines 66 The bicentenary of the Prussian Federation was celebrated in Germany 67 The planned week of festivities was canceled after two days after the announcement of the imminent death of Queen Victoria a grandmother of Kaiser Wilhelm 68 January 18 1901 Friday edit nbsp Cross of the Order of Merit of the Prussian Crown The Order of Merit of the Prussian Crown was established by Kaiser Wilhelm on the occasion of the bicentennial of the establishment of the Kingdom of Prussia The Uberbrettl the first venue in Germany for literary cabaret or Kabarett opened in Berlin at Alexanderstrasse No 40 Ernst von Wolzogen an admirer of Friedrich Nietzsche named the locale the Buntes Theater but soon began calling it the Superstage as a play on Nietzsche s Ubermensch 69 Pope Leo issued the encyclical Graves de communi re While reaffirming the Catholic Church s opposition to individualistic liberal capitalism it also denied that the new ideals of Christian democracy were an endorsement of the principles of a democratic political system 70 Colonel Grey led a combined force of New Zealanders and Bushmen and routed the force of 800 Boers from Ventersburg South Africa 2 Born Ivan Petrovsky Soviet mathematician known for the Petrovsky lacuna in Sevsk Russian Empire d 1973 Died Australian outlaw Jimmy Governor 25 was hanged at the Darlinghurst Gaol in Darlinghurst New South Wales for the July 20 1900 murder of the Mawbey family His accomplice Jacky Underwood had been executed four days earlier at the Old Dubbo Gaol in Dubbo New South Wales 71 January 19 1901 Saturday editAt the close of a congressional subcommittee investigation of hazing at the United States Military Academy superintendent Colonel Albert L Mills and four cadets presented a statement signed by all of the members of the Academy pledging to abolish hazing The statement which would appear on the front pages of many American newspapers the next day said in part we while maintaining that we have pursued our system from the best motives yet realizing that the deliberate judgment of the people would in a country like ours be above all other considerations do now reaffirm our former action abolishing the exercising of fourth class men and do further agree to discontinue hazing the requiring of fourth class men to eat anything against their desire and the practice of calling out fourth class men by class action and that we will not devise other similar practices to replace those abandoned 72 The hazing practices had come to national attention after the death of first year cadet Oscar Lyle Booz on December 3 The statement to forcing men to eat anything against their desire was a reference to burns sustained by Booz after a tabasco sauce had been poured down his throat 73 Died Jacques Victor Albert 79 French politician and Prime Minister of France 1873 to 1874 and again in 1877 b 1821 January 20 1901 Sunday edit Without a protest from any Christian as a horrified press report noted five women and girls were openly offered for sale as slaves at a public auction in the United States 74 Notwithstanding the 13th Amendment and California state law the five females had been the slaves of Leong Kow in China and continued to serve him after his immigration to San Francisco When Mr Leong wanted to return to his homeland he advertised the midday sale by posting notices in the Chinatown neighborhood and his creditors pasted their notices of claims against his estate Four of the women were purchased but the youngest Leong s 12 year old daughter received no bids The next day she was rescued from her home by the local Society for the Suppression of Vice and by a Presbyterian missionary 75 The incident would lead to state legislative hearings investigating the practice of human trafficking that took place with the tolerance of the San Francisco police 76 and by federal prosecutors 77 Lord Strathcona s Horse a Canadian mounted unit left South Africa following service in the Second Boer War It was disbanded shortly afterwards but would become an official regiment of the Canadian Army later in the year 78 Born Jesus Colon Puerto Rican writer in Cayey d 1974 January 21 1901 Monday editThe first RCA Victor record was created as popular musician Vess Ossman played the banjo in a studio cut of the song Tell Me Pretty Maiden from the popular musical comedy Florodora which was pressed and released as a 10 inch disc By 1946 RCA would sell its one billionth record 79 R R Racey a British colonial official in charge of administering sections of the British protectorate in Uganda oversaw the replacement of a prior tribal monarch of the Igala people Musinga the Onu of Igara King Mosinga had committed suicide rather than leaving his kingdom to be taken by Racey to the administrative office Racey convened a meeting of 55 sub chiefs who elected Musinga s young son as the Onu Mukotani of Igara Since Mukotani was too young to govern Racey arranged another relative Bakora to serve as regent and to swear allegiance to the British Empire 80 Nine days after securing her release from a jail in Wichita Kansas alcohol opponent Carrie Nation convened a meeting of the Woman s Christian Temperance Union and successfully persuaded other members to join her in her lone crusade of destroying places that sold liquor That evening she began to use a hatchet on her raids which served as both a symbol of her cause and as an instrument for vandalism 51 She and three of her followers laid waste to two saloons in Wichita and were in the process of invading a third when she was arrested by police 81 82 Dr Henry V Passage a physician from Peru Indiana as well as a Democrat member of the Indiana House of Representatives introduced one of the earliest proposals for lethal injection as a means of capital punishment Dr Passage proposed that an overdose of morphine should replace hanging as the state s means of executing a murderer the proposed amendment bill was voted down along party lines 83 After recovering from a long illness King Oscar of the United Kingdoms of Sweden and Norway resumed his governmental duties which he had entrusted to Crown Prince Gustaf 84 Died Elisha Gray 65 American electrical engineer co founder of the Western Electric company who is sometimes credited with the invention of the telephone b 1835 84 January 22 1901 Tuesday editQueen Victoria of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland and Empress of India died at the age of 81 at Osborne House her residence on the Isle of Wight at 6 30 in the evening After a reign of more than 63 years Victoria had ruled during the lifetimes of most living Britons She had continued to conduct official business less than two weeks before her death At the time of her death the Queen was survived by six children 32 grandchildren and 35 great grandchildren Russia completed its transfer of the Shan hai kwan now Shanhaiguan Railway built in China to German administration 84 At least 35 people in Herre Norway died in a hurricane 84 nbsp King Edward VII Albert Prince of Wales came to the throne of the United Kingdom as King Edward VII following the death of his mother Queen Victoria In the Jamaican general election 14 members were elected although one indicated that he would refuse to take his seat and the others pledged to revise the constitution to remove a provision that four additional members be appointed by the Governor at the request of the British Secretary of State for the Colonies Joseph Chamberlain 85 The election also saw the first elected black member of the Council win a seat 86 In the U S the Grand Opera House in Cincinnati Ohio was destroyed in a fire along with other adjacent buildings Although the theater was filled with hundreds of people watching a production of Hamlet nobody was injured Credit was given to stage actor E H Sothern who interrupted the second scene of the play to calmly request the audience to carefully make their way to the exits 87 The village of Ivanhoe Minnesota which would become the county seat for Lincoln County was incorporated 88 The United States Senate ratified a treaty with Spain to purchase the islands of Sibutu and Babuyan for 100 000 89 Born Saint Alberto Hurtado Chilean Jesuit priest who would be canonized as a Roman Catholic saint in 2005 in Vina del Mar d 1952 January 23 1901 Wednesday editAt 9 00 in the morning Edward VII took the oath as the new monarch of the United Kingdom at St James Palace London and the councillors assembled swore their allegiance to him In Parliament the members of the House of Commons and the House of Lords swore their allegiance as well 90 Probably never before in the history of the world have there been so many flags and of so many nations displayed at half mast as were floated today in memory of the dead Queen of England sic and Empress of India the American press noted Even in the United States nearly 135 years independent of the United Kingdom U S President William McKinley ordered that the American flag be lowered to half staff at the White House and at all U S government buildings 91 92 Guglielmo Marconi sent a wireless communication 299 km 186 mi over the horizon in the British Isles from Niton on the Isle of Wight to The Lizard in Cornwall England 93 Mouvement des caisses Desjardins which would become the largest association of credit unions in North America conducted its first transactions Operating under the name of La Caisse Populaire de Levis at the home of Alphonse Desjardins in the city of Levis Quebec the popular credit union represented Desjardins goal of making it possible for farmers and workers to save their earnings and to be able to borrow money at lower interest rates than were offered at banks 94 The Weekly Commoner a new national newspaper in the United States created by William Jennings Bryan published its first issue with a distribution of 50 000 copies There will be no attempt at giving the current news a report at the time noted Mr Bryan expects to write most of the editorial comment himself while the other articles will be contributed by noted Democrats under his immediate supervision 95 January 24 1901 Thursday editIn a state ceremony at Dublin Castle Edward VII was proclaimed King of Ireland 96 Emily Hobhouse arrived at Bloemfontein concentration camp to report on conditions Horrified by what she saw she would write They went to sleep without any provision having been made for them and without anything to eat or to drink I saw crowds of them along railway lines in bitterly cold weather in pouring rain hungry sick dying and dead Soap was not dispensed The water supply was inadequate No bedstead or mattress was procurable Fuel was scarce and had to be collected from the green bushes on the opes of thekopjes small hills by the people themselves The rations were extremely meagre and when as I frequently experienced the actual quantity dispensed fell short of the amount prescribed it simply meant famine 97 Hubert von Herkomer was commissioned by King Edward VII of the United Kingdom to paint a watercolor portrait of the recently deceased Queen Victoria as she lay in her coffin a not uncommon practice of the day as a respectful means of preserving the final image of a person A century later a critic would write as praise the brightness of a flowing and translucent shroud seems already to be transporting the Queen into another world 98 January 25 1901 Friday editLi Hongzhang and Prince Ching requested that the Eight Nation Alliance in Beijing restore Chinese ownership of the Forbidden City but were refused 84 Racho Petrov replaced Todor Ivanchov as Prime Minister of Bulgaria serving as the non party head of an interim administration The survey of the Chickasaw Nation in Oklahoma authorized by the Dawes Commission was completed paving the way for the allotment of lands and the eventual dismantling of the territory that had been set aside for the Chicasaw Indians during their forced removal from the southeastern United States 99 The Chickasaw Nation encompassed what are now 13 counties in south central Oklahoma Bryan Carter Coal Garvin Grady Jefferson Johnston Love McClain Marshall Murray Pontotoc and Stephens Born Mildred Dunnock American stage and film actress in Baltimore d 1991 Died Wilhelm Carl von Rothschild 72 German noble financier who operated the House of Rothschild in Frankfurt b 1828 January 26 1901 Saturday editTomb KV44 in Egypt s Valley of the Kings was opened by a team of archaeologists led by Howard Carter The tomb was found to contain the mummies of ten people the most notable of whom was Tentkerer a woman who had served the Pharaoh Osorkon I who reigned from 922 BC to 887 BC 100 Thirty two captured leaders of the Filipino resistance to American rule were deported to Guam on a U S Navy ship which steamed out of Manila Bay to send the nationalists into exile 101 The 32 men had refused to take the oath of allegiance to the American territorial government and were considered likely to foment unrest against the U S Territorial authorities Foremost among the deportees was Apolinario Mabini who had been the first Prime Minister of the First Philippine Republic during its temporary independence from Spain Mabini would finally be allowed to return to the Philippines in 1903 two months before his death 102 Edouard Orban de Xivry the Governor of the Luxembourg Province of Belgium was assassinated in his office by one of his employees Messr Schneider asked for a meeting with the Governor After they began talking he drew out a revolver shot Orban de Xivry then killed himself 103 January 27 1901 Sunday edit nbsp Crazy Snake Chitto Harjo Chief Chitto Harjo a Muscogee Indian who was known in the press as Crazy Snake a literal translation of the Creek Indian tribe surrendered to Lieutenant H B Dixon of the Eighth U S Cavalry in Oklahoma Chitto had attempted to create a government separate from the Creek Nation in order to resist the forcible acquisition of Creek lands by the federal government and the arrest came three days after a gun battle between his Snake Indian men and a team from the United States Marshals Service 99 104 On the occasion of his 42nd birthday Kaiser Wilhelm was appointed an honorary Field Marshal of the British Army King Edward uncle of the Kaiser personally bestowed the honor in a ceremony at East Cowes on the Isle of Wight and presented Field Marshall von Hohenzollern with the Order of the Garter Queen Victoria had originally planned to make the presentation to her German grandson as a birthday gift 105 King Alexander of Serbia acquired the rank of field marshal Born Willy Fritsch German actor in Kattowitz German Empire now Katowice in Poland d 1973 Art Rooney American sports executive founder and owner of the Pittsburgh Steelers in Coulter Pennsylvania d 1988 Died Giuseppe Verdi 87 Italian composer known for his operas La traviata and Aida b 1813 January 28 1901 Monday editFor the first time an automobile arrived on the Indian Ocean island of Mauritius The steamship Iraouady delivered the vehicle 106 By the middle of 2014 there were would be over 450 000 motor vehicles registered in the Republic of Mauritius 107 Parliamentary elections were held in Bulgaria Despite receiving only the third highest number of votes the Progressive Liberal Party emerged as the largest party in Parliament with 40 of the 164 seats on a turnout of 42 7 108 Lord Kitchener commander of British forces in the Second Boer War began a large scale drive against the Boers with 14 000 British troops being transported through the Transvaal by rail The Orange Free State commandos were outnumbered but managed to escape capture while Kitchener s forces would lay waste to the landscape and clear it of civilians 109 Captain William Hardham became the first New Zealand born recipient of the Victoria Cross Hardham was recognized for his bravery in action in the Second Boer War 110 Sixteen people on board the steamship Holland were drowned when the vessel was wrecked at the entrance of the Maas River from the North Sea into the Netherlands 111 The British schooner Hannah abandoned in the Irish Sea was wrecked at Mwnt Cardiganshire Wales 112 At the Grand Pacific Hotel in Chicago the American League was formally organized with intentions to become a second major baseball league competing against the established National League and continuing with the American name that the minor Western League had taken in 1900 113 Four of the eight original clubs from the year before would continue with the new eight team major league the Chicago White Stockings Cleveland Blues Detroit Tigers Milwaukee Brewers One team was shifted Washington Senators who had moved after playing in 1900 as the Kansas City Blues Three new teams the Boston Americans Baltimore Orioles and Philadelphia Athletics would replace three 1900 teams that were voted out the Indianapolis Hoosiers the Buffalo Bisons and the Minneapolis Millers 114 Teams were limited to 14 players and would play 140 games per season Born Richmond Barthe American sculptor in Bay St Louis Mississippi d 1989 Died Field Marshal Iosif Gurko 72 Russian army officer commander of the invading forces during the Russo Turkish War and later served as the Governor General of Poland and oversaw the Russification of the Polish territory b 1828 Henri de Bornier 75 French poet and playwright b 1825 January 29 1901 Tuesday editChina s Empress Dowager Cixi issued an imperial decree in the name of the Emperor After we moved out of the capital city the Emperor s statement began the empress has been constantly busy with state affairs As Emperor I deeply regret my mistakes we mindlessly followed the old ways leading to the calamity we face today Now that peace negotiations are underway we should reform all political affairs so that the country can become strong and prosperous The decree directed all government officials to suggest reforms during the next two months determining What should be done to strengthen China develop human talent reach fiscal balance and build a strong army 115 In French Algeria Swiss travel writer Isabelle Eberhardt who posed as the Sufi tribesman Si Mahmoud Saadi was stabbed and severely wounded by a fanatic member of the Tidjani Muslims who regarded her and other members of the Qadiriyya Muslims as infidels 116 The trauma was enough to make Eberhardt move back to Marseille She would die in an accident in 1903 nbsp Congressman White U S Representative George Henry White of North Carolina s 2nd congressional district the 22nd and last remaining African American member of the United States Congress gave his farewell speech This is perhaps the Negroes temporary farewell to the American Congress he told his colleagues but let me say Phoenix like he will rise up some day and come again These parting words are in behalf of an outraged heart broken bruised and bleeding but God fearing people faithful industrious loyal rising people full of potential force 117 118 There would not be another black member of the U S Congress for 28 years in 1928 Oscar Stanton De Priest would be elected to represent Illinois s 2nd congressional district Born Allen B DuMont American electronics engineer innovator of the cathode ray tube that lead to the first commercially practical television set founder of the DuMont Television Network in Brooklyn New York City d 1965 E P Taylor Canadian business executive acquired multiple beer manufacturers to build Canadian Breweries at one time the world s largest brewing company in Ottawa d 1989 January 30 1901 Wednesday editThe Permanent Court of Arbitration opened its headquarters at newly constructed Peace Palace Vredespaleis at Prinsegracht 71 in The Hague in the Netherlands 84 A fire at the Bostock Zoo in Baltimore killed 148 animals and two lions in the zoo were shot by employees when it appeared that they would break out of their cages The only animals to survive the blaze at the Cyclorama Building were an elephant a camel two donkeys and a pack of dogs 119 The unsanitary conditions of New York s Sing Sing state prison at Ossining New York led to its condemnation by the State Board of Health prompting major reforms 84 Born Samir Al Rifai Jordanian state leader who served as Prime Minister of Jordan six times in Safed Vilayet of Syria Ottoman Empire d 1965 Rudolf Caracciola German racing driver three time winner of the European Drivers Championship in Remagen d 1959 January 31 1901 Thursday editAnton Chekhov s Three Sisters Tri sestry Tri sestry opened at the Moscow Art Theatre under the direction of Konstantin Stanislavski and Vladimir Nemirovich Danchenko with Stanislavski as Vershinin Olga Knipper as Masha Margarita Savetskaya as Olga Maria Andreyeva as Irina and Maria Lilina Stanislavsky s wife as Natasha 120 St Louis sports promoter C W Daniels met with Chicago White Stockings owner Charles Comiskey and the new Chicago team s manager Clark Griffith with a proposal for a professional soccer league that would be composed of teams made up by American League baseball players and located in AL cities to play in the autumn On March 17 Griffith and Baltimore Orioles manager John McGraw would stage a soccer game in St Louis 121 and during the fall a Chicago team would play at the White Stockings ballpark but with soccer players rather than baseball players 122 The Winnipeg Victorias of the Manitoba Hockey Association won ice hockey s Stanley Cup in the second game of a best of three series against the Montreal Shamrocks of the Canadian Amateur Hockey League The game was tied 3 3 at the end of regulation time and for the first time in Stanley Cup history a game went into extra time During the four minute period Winnipeg s Dan Bain made the winning goal for the 4 3 win 123 Born Marie Luise Kaschnitz Marie Luise von Holzing Berslett German short story writer novelist and poet in Karlsruhe d 1974 124 Died Steve Brodie 39 American who had gained worldwide fame in 1885 after being credited with surviving a jump off of the Brooklyn Bridge died from complications of diabetes b 1861 125 References edit Ministries and Cabinets Parliamentary Handbook Parliament of Australia Archived from the original on 8 October 2012 Retrieved 17 September 2010 a b c d e f g h i j The American Monthly Review of Reviews February 1901 pp 152 155 Birth of a New Nation Australian Unity Achieved The Age Melbourne January 2 1901 Twentieth Century s Triumphant Entry Welcomed by New York with Tumultuous Rejoicing New York Times January 1 1901 p 1 Chicago Greets Century No 20 Chicago Daily Tribune January 1 1901 p1 The Passing of 1900 Birth of the New Century Scene in the City The Age Melbourne January 1 1901 Synan Vinson Fall 1987 Pentecostalism Varieties and Contributions Pneuma The Journal of the Society for Pentecostal Studies 9 89 92 doi 10 1163 157007487x00047 New Year Honours The Times No 36340 London 1 January 1901 p 8 State Ceremony in White House Chicago Daily Tribune January 2 1901 p 4 Marine Casualties Notes on Naval Progress Washington D C United States Office of Naval Intelligence 20 161 181 July 1901 a b c Robert K Massie Dreadnought Britain Germany and the Coming of the Great War Random House 2012 p296 Lord Roberts Made an Earl Chicago Daily Tribune January 3 1901 p 1 Finder of Bacon Cipher Is Dead Chicago Daily Tribune January 2 1901 p 1 Eldridge R Johnson s First Numbered Record Tim s Phonographs amp Old Records by Tim Gracyk Beck Wayne Cotton Belt News 1957 The History of the St Louis Southwestern Railway Archived from the original on October 18 2009 Retrieved August 6 2005 Feferman Anita Burdman 1999 Alfred Tarski American National Biography Vol 21 Oxford University Press pp 330 332 ISBN 978 0 19 512800 0 Ellis Sandoz Eric Voegelin January 3 1901 January 19 1985 Political Science Reviewer 16 1986 Milner Governs New Colonies Chicago Daily Tribune January 5 1901 p 3 Baker Marcus 1906 Geographic Dictionary of Alaska Government Printing Office p 534 Retrieved 2008 09 01 Rootok island Kleiman Mark A R Hawdon James E eds 2011 Native Races Act Encyclopedia of Drug Policy SAGE Publications C Gerald Fraser C L R James Historian Critic And Pan Africanist Is Dead at 88 Archived 21 April 2019 at the Wayback Machine The New York Times 2 June 1989 Deserts Johnson Camp Indianapolis Breaks Away from American League Chicago Sunday Tribune January 6 1901 p 17 Johnson Poo Hoos Association Chicago Daily Tribune January 6 1901 p 17 New League Is Launched American Association Signs National Agreement Chicago Daily Tribune January 19 1901 p 3 1 David M Jordan The Athletics of Philadelphia Connie Mack s White Elephants 1901 1954 McFarland 1999 p 14 John M Shea Syracuse Basketball The Rosen Publishing Group 2013 p 37 New book is a fitting tribute to Brighton amp Hove s top scorer Tommy Cook Brighton amp Hove Independent 9 January 2021 Retrieved 11 May 2021 Donald Pizer The Novels of Theodore Dreiser A Critical Study University of Minnesota Press 1976 pp 96 97 Eugene L Rogan Frontiers of the State in the Late Ottoman Empire Transjordan 1850 1921 Cambridge University Press 2002 pp 63 64 Death Closes Busy Life of P D Armour Chicago Daily Tribune January 7 1901 p 1 Mr F C B Vosper West Australian Sunday Times Perth National Library of Australia 6 January 1901 p 8 Retrieved 15 November 2012 Perry Phyllis 2011 Speaking Ill of the Dead Jerks in Colorado History Rowman amp Littlefield p 67 Kay James 2002 The Rebel raiders the astonishing history of the Confederacy s secret Navy New York Ballantine Books p 249 ISBN 978 0 345 43182 0 Boot Max 2014 The Savage Wars Of Peace Small Wars And The Rise Of American Power Basic Books pp 117 118 No 27462 The London Gazette 8 August 1902 p 5086 Deschanel is Re Elected Chicago Daily Tribune January 9 1901 p 6 Vote Increase in Size of House Chicago Daily Tribune January 9 1901 p 1 Twenty Eight Die in Fire Chicago Daily Tribune January 9 1901 p 7 Erie Bowlers Do Best Work Crowds Witness the First Day s Play in National Bowling Tournament Chicago Daily Tribune January 9 1901 p 6 Grant Neil 1993 Chronicle of 20th Century Conflict New York City Reed International Books Ltd amp Smithmark Publishers Inc pp 18 19 ISBN 0 8317 1371 2 Skrabec Quentin R Jr 2012 The Carnegie Boys The Lieutenants of Andrew Carnegie That Changed America McFarland p 104 Lee Jonathan H X 2015 History of Asian Americans Exploring Diverse Roots ABC CLIO p xxx Wooster Robert Sanders Christine Moor Spindletop Oilfield from the Handbook of Texas Online Retrieved October 18 2009 Texas State Historical Association Li Xiaobing Molina Michael eds 2014 Spindletop Gusher Oil A Cultural and Geographic Encyclopedia of Black Gold ABC CLIO p 369 Frank Brill the Champion Chicago Daily Tribune January 12 1901 p 6 Mayo Matthew P 2010 Cowboys Mountain Men and Grizzly Bears Fifty of the Grittiest Moments in the History of the Wild West Rowman amp Littlefield p 218 Chinese Sign Notes of Powers Action Taken in Compliance with Telegraphic Edict from Imperial Court Chicago Daily Tribune January 14 1901 p4 E G Ruoff ed Death Throes of a Dynasty Letters and Diaries of Charles and Bessie Ewing Missionaries to China Kent State University Press 1990 p 55 Telephone Line to Cross Ocean Inventor of a Wonderful Long Distance System Sells His Rights Chicago Sunday Tribune January 13 1901 p 3 Pupin Talks of Sea Telephone Chicago Daily Tribune January 15 1901 p 3 a b Fran Grace Carry A Nation Retelling the Life Indiana University Press 2001 pp 154 155 Robert Burns his connections to Newcastle and the North East PDF Newcastle Council Retrieved 27 July 2015 Severo Richard April 27 1991 A B Guthrie Jr Is Dead at 90 Won Pulitzer for The Way West The New York Times Retrieved 9 December 2017 Linehan Paul Henry 1910 Charles Hermite In Herbermann Charles ed Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 7 New York Robert Appleton Company Quay Was Re elected The Pennsylvania Legislature Makes Him U S Senator He Receiving 130 Votes in House and Senate Treachery of Seven Men Responsible Pittsburgh Post January 16 1901 p 1 U S Senate Election 1899 PDF Wilkes University Retrieved 23 December 2012 U S Senate Election 15 January 1901 PDF Wilkes University Retrieved 23 December 2012 Kehl James A 1981 Boss Rule in the Gilded Age Matt Quay of Pennsylvania University of Pittsburgh Press p 234 Frazier Harriet C 2015 Lynchings in Kansas 1850s 1932 McFarland p 143 Horrible Punishment For a Horrible Crime Leavenworth Times Leavenworth Kansas January 16 1901 p 1 Mob Burns Negro at Leavenworth Chicago Daily Tribune January 16 1901 p 1 Murderer of Pearl Forbes Pays Penalty of His Crime Topeka Daily Capital Topeka Kansas January 16 1901 p 1 Miles P DuVal Jr Cadiz to Cathay The Story of the Long Struggle for a Waterway Across the American Isthmus Stanford University Press 1940 p 150 James A Mount Dies Suddenly Chicago Daily Tribune January 17 1901 p 1 Hubert C Kennedy Peano Life and Works of Giuseppe Peano Springer 2012 p 112 Cleveland Sees Woe for Nation Chicago Daily Tribune January 18 1901 p 1 Imposing Day in Berlin Chicago Daily Tribune January 18 1901 p 3 Berlin Festival Given Up Remaining Part of Program of Bi centenary Celebration Abandoned Because of Queen s Illness Chicago Sunday Tribune January 20 1901 p 2 Farina William 2013 The German Cabaret Legacy in American Popular Music McFarland p 18 Conway Martin 1997 Catholic Politics in Europe 1918 1945 London New York p 24 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Walsh G P 1983 Governor Jimmy 1875 1901 Australian Dictionary of Biography National Centre of Biography Australian National University Retrieved 11 December 2021 Leon Philip W 2000 Bullies and Cowards The West Point Hazing Scandal 1898 1901 Greenwood Press p 122 Oscar Booz Is Dead Chicago Daily Tribune December 4 1900 p 2 Chinese Girl Slaves Sold in San Francisco Chicago Daily Tribune January 21 1901 p 1 Saved from Her Father Twelve Year Old Chinese Girl Was to Have Been Sold by her Parent San Francisco Chronicle January 22 1901 p 9 Tells of Slavery and Police Bribery San Francisco Call February 10 1901 pp 1 23 To Rid Chinatown of Slave Traffic United States Attorney Coombe Instructed to Co operate with State Officers San Francisco Chronicle February 28 1901 p 12 Canadian Forces Publication A DH 267 003 Insignia and Lineages of the Canadian Forces Vol 3 Combat Arms Regiments Tim Gracyk with Frank Hoffmann Popular American Recording Pioneers 1895 1925 Routledge 2012 p 265 D A Low Fabrication of Empire The British and the Uganda Kingdoms 1890 1902 Cambridge University Press 2009 Use Ax on More Saloons Mrs Nation and Three of Her Friends Resume Crusade Chicago Daily Tribune January 22 1901 p1 Plans Reform of World Scope Chicago Daily Tribune February 3 1901 p 1 Freak Measures in Indiana Bill Providing for Killing Criminals by Use of Morphine Instead of by Hanging Made Party Issue Chicago Daily Tribune January 22 1901 p 12 a b c d e f g The American Monthly Review of Reviews March 1901 pp 285 287 The Political Situation In Jamaica The Times 25 December 1900 p5 issue 36334 Weiner Myron Ozbudun Ergun 1987 Competitive Elections in Developing Countries Duke University Press p 183 Theater Burns at Cincinnati Chicago Daily Tribune January 23 1901 p 9 Upham Warren 2001 Minnesota Place Names A Geographical Encyclopedia Minnesota Historical Society Press p 331 Islands Formally Ceded Chicago Daily Tribune January 28 1901 p 2 Edward Takes Oath of King Chicago Daily Tribune January 24 1901 p 1 M Kinley Tells Nation s Grief Chicago Daily Tribune January 23 1901 p 1 All Flags Fly at Half Mast Chicago Daily Tribune January 23 1901 p 2 Stanier Peter 2010 Cornwall s Industrial Heritage Chacewater Twelveheads p 14 ISBN 978 0 906294 57 4 Birchall Johnston 2002 The New Mutualism in Public Policy Routledge pp 156 157 W J Bryan s New Weekly to Begin on Wednesday Chicago Daily Tribune January 21 1901 p 1 Dhomhnaill Nuala 2001 RTE 100 years Ireland in the 20th century Dublin TownHouse p 25 ISBN 978 1 86059 142 6 Emily Hobhouse Anglo Boer War Museum Bloemfontein Douglas Davies Death Ritual and Belief The Rhetoric of Funerary Rites A amp C Black 2002 p203 a b Carter Kent 1999 The Dawes Commission and the Allotment of the Five Civilized Tribes 1893 1914 Ancestry Publishing Carter Howard Report on Tomb Pit Opened on the 26th January 1901 in the Valley of the Kings Between no 4 and no 8 In ASAE 2 1901 p 144 145 Gregg Jones Honor in the Dust Theodore Roosevelt War in the Philippines and the Rise and Fall of America s Imperial Dream Penguin 2012 Benedict Anderson Under Three Flags Anarchism and the Anti Colonial Imagination Verso 2005 pp 224 225 Belgian Governor Is Slain Chicago Daily Tribune January 27 1901 p 11 Crazy Snake Is Captured Chicago Daily Tribune January 28 1901 p 3 England Honors German Kaiser Chicago Daily Tribune January 28 1901 p 1 De Kervern Andre Martial Yvan 2013 Mauritius 500 Early Postcards Editions Didier Millet p 109 Road Transport Jan to June 2014 Statistics Mauritius Archived from the original on 2016 04 05 Retrieved 2016 03 26 Nohlen Dieter Stover P 2010 Elections in Europe A data handbook p 368 ISBN 978 3 8329 5609 7 Fremont Barnes Gregory 2003 The Boer War 1899 1902 Osprey Publishing p 65 NZhistory net Sixteen Die in Shipwreck Chicago Daily Tribune January 29 1901 p 2 Cardigan amp District Shipwrecks and Lifeboat Service Glen Johnson Retrieved 1 February 2015 American League Fixes Its Circuit The Pittsburg Post January 29 1901 p 6 via Newspapers com Huhn Rick 2008 Eddie Collins A Baseball Biography McFarland p 38 Esherick Joseph W Wei C X George 2013 China How the Empire Fell Routledge Amoia Alba Knapp Bettina 2006 Great Women Travel Writers From 1750 to the Present A amp C Black p 173 Middleton Stephen 2002 Black Congressmen During Reconstruction A Documentary Sourcebook Greenwood Publishing p xi Defends the Negro in House Chicago Daily Tribune January 30 1901 p 4 Beasts Perish in a Zoo Fire Chicago Daily Tribune January 31 1901 p 1 Senelick Laurence 2007 Three Sisters Historical Dictionary of Russian Theater Scarecrow Press p 401 Football Match Is Arranged Chicago Daily Tribune February 27 1901 p 9 McKenna Brian 2010 Clark Griffith Baseball s Statesman p 101 Zeisler Laurel 2012 Historical Dictionary of Ice Hockey Scarecrow Press p xx Marian Arkin Barbara Shollar Longman anthology of world literature by women 1875 1975 Longman Series in College Composition and Communication Series Longman 1989 Page 389 Steve Brodie dead Providence News Feb 1 1901 p 3 Retrieved July 29 2021 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title January 1901 amp oldid 1210679726, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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