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May 1900

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May 1900 was the fifth month of that exceptional common year. It began on a Tuesday and ended after 31 days on a Thursday.

May 17, 1900: The Wonderful Wizard of Oz published
May 28, 1900: United Kingdom conquers Orange Free State

The following events occurred in May 1900:

May 1, 1900 (Tuesday) edit

May 2, 1900 (Wednesday) edit

May 3, 1900 (Thursday) edit

May 4, 1900 (Friday) edit

May 5, 1900 (Saturday) edit

May 6, 1900 (Sunday) edit

May 7, 1900 (Monday) edit

  • San Francisco Mayor James D. Phelan addressed an anti-Asian rally at Union Square and declared "The Chinese and Japanese are not bonafide citizens. They are not the stuff of which American citizens can be made."[20]
  • Mount Vesuvius began erupting, with lava threatening the city of Torre del Greco, Italy.[21]
  • Died: Harry Burke, University of Cincinnati track meet captain, due to a fatal injury to his spine after an accident involving the pole vault[10][11]

May 8, 1900 (Tuesday) edit

May 9, 1900 (Wednesday) edit

May 10, 1900 (Thursday) edit

  • Japan's Crown Prince Yoshihito and Princess Kujo Sadako were married in Tokyo, marking the first Japanese imperial wedding to include a religious ceremony.[28] Soon thereafter, commoners began requesting similar ceremonies and the Shinto wedding soon became popular throughout the nation.[29]
  • Responding to the famine in British India, the United States paid for the shipment of donations of 200,000 bushels of corn and substantial quantities of seed, via the ship Quito, which sailed from Brooklyn. Christian Herald editor Louis Klopsch, who had lobbied the government to pay the shipping costs, also cabled $40,000 to India for famine relief.[30]

May 11, 1900 (Friday) edit

  • One construction worker was killed, and another severely injured, in a 70-foot (21 m) fall while working on the Manhattan anchorage of the new Williamsburg Bridge.[31]
  • Former heavyweight boxing champion "Gentleman Jim" Corbett took on title holder James J. Jeffries, attempting to regain the title that he had lost in 1897, and almost succeeded. In the bout at the New York Athletic Club, Corbett was the better fighter for the first 22 rounds, but in the 23rd, Jeffries knocked him down with a right to the jaw. Corbett's amazing endurance and Jeffries's comeback made the fight a boxing classic.[32]

May 12, 1900 (Saturday) edit

May 13, 1900 (Sunday) edit

  • Wilbur Wright wrote to aviation expert Octave Chanute, sharing his own findings and seeking advice on the ideal place to test a flying machine. Written on the letterhead of the Wright Cycle Co. of 1127 West Third Street in Dayton, Ohio, Wright's initial missive began, "For some years I have been afflicted with the belief that flight is possible to man. My disease has increased in severity and I feel that it will soon cost me an increased amount of money, if not my life." Over the next several years, the correspondence continued between Wright and Chanute, whose suggestions aided in the Wright brothers' first flight on December 17, 1903.[34]

May 14, 1900 (Monday) edit

May 15, 1900 (Tuesday) edit

May 16, 1900 (Wednesday) edit

  • Chicago's Chief Milk Inspector, Thomas Grady, announced plans to ban dangerous additives from milk. "Formalin, the chemical used in milk preservatives, will kill a cat", he told reporters. "What will it do to a child?"[40] Formalin, a diluted form of formaldehyde, had been added to raw milk near the end of the 19th century before its toxic effects were realized. The United Kingdom banned the practice in 1901.[41]

May 17, 1900 (Thursday) edit

May 18, 1900 (Friday) edit

  • At 9:17 p.m. in London, the Reuters news agency broke the news of the victory at Mafeking, South Africa. As author Phillip Knightley noted, "Britain went mad. The celebrations lasted for five nights, and surpassed the victory celebrations of the First and Second World Wars in size, intensity, and enthusiasm. Baden-Powell became the most popular English hero since Nelson, and a household name not only in Britain but also throughout the United States."[46]

May 19, 1900 (Saturday) edit

May 20, 1900 (Sunday) edit

  • Voters in Switzerland overwhelmingly rejected a law providing for sickness and accident insurance. The Kranken und Unfallversicherungsgesetz (KUVG), sponsored by Ludwig Forrer and passed the Federal Assembly, but was challenged by a referendum, where more than 70% of the voters were against it. Health reform would finally pass in 1911.[51]
  • The Free Homes Bill was signed into law by U.S. President William McKinley, and the debts of all homesteaders in Oklahoma were forgiven by the United States government. Up until then, settlers had been compelled to pay, in addition to other requirements, an annual federal fee ranging from $1.00 to $2.50 per acre.[52]
  • Born: Sumitranandan Pant, Hindi poet; in Kausani, Punjab Province, British India (now Uttarakhand state (d. 1977)

May 21, 1900 (Monday) edit

May 22, 1900 (Tuesday) edit

  • At 4:30 in the afternoon, an explosion at the Cumnock Mining Company, near Sanford, North Carolina, killed 22 coal miners. The accident was believed to have been "caused by a broken gauze in a safety lamp".[55]
 
Volney (right) presenting the original Pianola to the Smithsonian Institution in 1922
  • The first patent for the "player piano", a self-playing mechanical piano that used a role of perforated paper to guide the movement of the piano keys, was granted to American inventor Edwin S. Votey, who marketed the device under the brand name "Pianola".[56]
  • The first test was made of the Adams Air Splitting Train, on a run from Washington, D.C., to Baltimore, then back again. Inventor Frederick Adams had forecast that the aerodynamic, "cigar-shaped" train could be run at a speed of 100 miles per hour (160 km/h) with less expenditure than is now required to keep up a speed of 50 miles per hour (80 km/h).[57] However, the train achieved no more than 60 miles per hour (97 km/h).[58]
  • Born: Clyde Tolson, first Associate Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation and right-hand man of J. Edgar Hoover; in Laredo, Missouri (d. 1975)

May 23, 1900 (Wednesday) edit

May 24, 1900 (Thursday) edit

May 25, 1900 (Friday) edit

  • The Lacey Act, 16 U.S.C. § 3371–3378, was signed into law by U.S. President William McKinley. Sponsored by conservationist and Iowa Congressman John F. Lacey, the Act was described on its centennial as the "first far-reaching federal wildlife protection law" and one "setting the stage for a century of progress in safeguarding wildlife resources".[67] Its most important provision was to make it a federal crime to ship "wild animals and birds take in defiance of existing state laws" across state lines.[68]

May 26, 1900 (Saturday) edit

  • The Battle of Palonegro concluded after fifteen days in Santander, Colombia, marking a turning point in the Thousand Days' War. General Próspero Pinzón of the Conservative forces defeated Liberal forces commander Gabriel Vargas Santos. An estimated 2,500 people died during the fighting.[69] In January 1901, a pile of hundreds of human skulls would be assembled as a grisly monument that would not be dismantled until 12 years later.[70]

May 27, 1900 (Sunday) edit

May 28, 1900 (Monday) edit

May 29, 1900 (Tuesday) edit

  • The word "escalator" was introduced into the English language, as the Patent and Trademark Office formally granted the trademark to Charles Seeberger for a moving stairway.[77] However, Seeberger lost the trademark fifty years later when a patent commissioner ruled that the term had become generic, in Haughton Elevator Co. v. Seeberger, 85 U.S.P.Q. 80 (Comm'r Pat. 1950)[78]
  • William P. Dun Lany and Herbert R. Palmer were awarded a patent for their invention, described as "a certain new and useful improvement in Facsimile Telegraphs ... to simplify such telegraph instrument, to render them more accurate and efficient, more easily adjustable to meet the varying conditions presented, and adapt them to receive a message or picture by a direct impression or a hammer and anvil movement instead of by an electrochemical change in the receiving surface." They received U.S. Patent No. 650,381 for the device,[79] which Palmer would demonstrate a year later at Columbia University.[80]

May 30, 1900 (Wednesday) edit

  • Lord Roberts was met outside of Johannesburg by its Governor, Fritz Krause, for terms of surrender. "He begged me to defer entering the town for twenty-four hours, as there were many armed burghers still inside," General Roberts cabled. "I agreed to this, as I am most anxious to avert the possibility of anything like disturbance inside the town ..."[81] At 10:00 the next morning, Lord Roberts and the British army entered the town, hauled down the South African flag from the courthouse, and raised the Union Jack in its place.[82] The armies then began the march to the capital, Pretoria, which had been evacuated the day before.

May 31, 1900 (Thursday) edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The Scroll gives the day of Burke's injury as May 2.[11]

References edit

  1. ^ Dinhobl, Gunter; Roth, Ralf (2008). Across the Borders: Financing the World's Railways in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd. pp. 196–97.
  2. ^ Haimson, Leopold H. (1987). The Making of Three Russian Revolutionaries: Voices from the Menshevik Past. Cambridge University Press. p. 472.
  3. ^ Rowe, Leo Stanton (1904). The United States and Porto Rico. Longmans, Green, and Co. p. 118.
  4. ^ "Most Appalling Mine Horror!". The Salt Lake Tribune. May 2, 1900. p. 1.
  5. ^ World Almanac and Book of Facts 1901. p. 96.
  6. ^ "House Votes for Nicaragua Canal". The New York Times. May 3, 1900. p. 1.
  7. ^ "Text of the Bill", NYT, Id.
  8. ^ The Annual Register: A Review of Public Events at Home and Abroad For the Year 1900. Longmans, Green, and Co. 1901. pp. 13–16.
  9. ^ "Sale of Islands Abandoned". Atlanta Constitution. May 4, 1900. p. 1.
  10. ^ a b "College Athlete Badly Hurt". The New York Times. May 4, 1900. p. 1.
  11. ^ a b c The Scroll of Phi Delta Theta. Vol. 24. Phi Delta Theta Fraternity. 1900. p. 542. Retrieved July 10, 2021.
  12. ^ Annual Register, p. 13
  13. ^ Woolsey, Theodore S. (1901). "The Naval War Code". Columbia Law Review: 305.
  14. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2009-03-27. Retrieved 2009-01-11.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  15. ^ McIntyre, W. David (2014). Winding up the British Empire in the Pacific Islands. Oxford University Press. p. 14.
  16. ^ Stanley, David (1996). Fiji Islands Handbook. Moon Publications. p. 223.
  17. ^ Nimmo, William F. (2001). Stars and Stripes Across the Pacific. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 38.
  18. ^ Annual Register, p13
  19. ^ "Berlin Festivities End". The New York Times. May 7, 1900. p. 7.
  20. ^ Kent, Noel J. (2000). America in 1900. M. E. Sharpe. pp. 107–108.
  21. ^ Annual Register, p. 13
  22. ^ Carolyn Bonner and Kit Bonner, Always Ready: Today's U.S. Coast Guard (Zenith Imprint, 2004), p. 10
  23. ^ Kevin Davies, Cracking the Genome: Inside the Race to Unlock Human DNA (Simon and Schuster, 2001), p. 250
  24. ^ T. R. Birkhead, A Brand New Bird: How Two Amateur Scientists Created the First Genetically Engineered Animal (Basic Books, 2003) p. 116
  25. ^ "Trenton Defeats Millville", Philadelphia Inquirer, May 9, 1900, p. 6
  26. ^ "1900: Basketball's first dynasty", by Jon Blackwell, The Trentonian; "NATIONAL BASKET BALL LEAGUE (1898–99 TO 1903–04), by John Grasso and Robert Bradley, APBR.org
  27. ^ American Pharmacy (1852–2002): A Collection of Historical Essays, p. 93
  28. ^ Jaffe, Richard M. (2001). Neither Monk Nor Layman: Clerical Marriage in Modern Japanese Buddhism. Princeton University Press. p. 218.
  29. ^ Edwards, Walter (1990). Modern Japan Through Its Weddings. Stanford University Press. pp. 103–104.
  30. ^ Merle Eugene Curti, American Philanthropy Abroad (Rutgers University Press, 1963; Transaction Publishers, 1988), p. 136
  31. ^ "TWO MEN FALL SEVENTY FEET. One Killed, Other Terribly Injured at New East River Bridge Anchorage" (PDF). The New York Times. 12 May 1900. Retrieved 13 December 2021.
  32. ^ Miller, Stuart (2006). The 100 Greatest Days in New York Sports. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. pp. 215–219.
  33. ^ Oakley, David. "On the Trail of Lin Shao-Mao, the Last Outlaw".
  34. ^ McPherson, Stephanie Sammartino; Gardner, Joseph Sammartino (2003). Wilbur & Orville Wright: Taking Flight. Twenty-First Century Books. pp. 38–40.
  35. ^ Annual Register, p. 14
  36. ^ "Clark Gives Up Seat in Senate", New York Times, May 16, 1900, p1
  37. ^ "Another Man Named to Succeed Clark", New York Times, May 19, 1900, p. 1
  38. ^ Robert E. Martin, "It Does Rain FISH!", Popular Science (July 1932), pp. 24–25;
  39. ^ "Rained Fish", AP report in the Lowell (Mass.) Sun, May 16, 1900, p. 4
  40. ^ "Food Preservative Fatal". The New York Times. May 17, 1900. p. 2.
  41. ^ Gratzer, Walter Bruno (2005). Terrors of the Table: The Curious History of Nutrition. Oxford University Press. pp. 101–102.
  42. ^ Forrest, George (1901). Sepoy Generals, Wellington to Roberts. W. Blackwood. p. 434.
  43. ^ Thompson, Peter; Macklin, Robert (2008). The Life and Adventures of Morrison of China. Allen & Unwin. p. 204.
  44. ^ Papers Relating to the Foreign Relations of the United States. G.P.O. 1902. p. 127.
  45. ^ Katharine M. Rogers, L. Frank Baum, pp73–94
  46. ^ Phillip Knightley, The First Casualty: The War Correspondent as Hero and Myth-maker from the Crimea to Iraq (JHU Press, 2004) p. 76
  47. ^ Rutherford, Noel (1996). Shirley Baker and the King of Tonga. University of Hawaii Press. p. 222.
  48. ^ MacKenzie, John M. (1997). The Empire of Nature: Hunting, Conservation, and British Imperialism. Manchester University Press. p. 202.
  49. ^ Knapp, Arthur Bernard; Pigott, Vincent C.; Herbert, Eugenia W. (1998). Social Approaches to an Industrial Past: The Archaeology and Anthropology of Mining. Routledge. pp. 103–104.
  50. ^ Elliott, Russell R.; Rowley, William D. (1987). History of Nevada. University of Nebraska Press. p. 211.
  51. ^ Matthius Leimgruber, Solidarity Without the State?: Business and the Shaping of the Swiss Welfare State, 1890–2000 (Cambridge University Press, 2008), p. 36
  52. ^ Oklahoma Historical Society, Review of Inception and Progress (1905) pp. 27–28
  53. ^ "Set-Back for the Nicaragua Canal", New York Times, May 22, 1900, p. 1
  54. ^ X. L. Woo, Empress Dowager Cixi (Algora Publishing, 2002), p. 214
  55. ^ "Twenty-Two Killed". Nebraska State Journal. May 24, 1900. p. 2.
  56. ^ Ord-Hume, Arthur W. J. G. (1970). Player Piano: History of Mechanical Piano. The H. W. Wilson Company.
  57. ^ "Atmospheric Resistance; Its Relation to the Speed of Railway Trains". Railway and Locomotive. August 1900. p. 345.
  58. ^ "'Air Splitting' Train Tried". The New York Times. May 23, 1900. p. 1.
  59. ^ Ron Owens, Medal of Honor: Historical Facts & Figures (Turner Publishing Company, 2004), pp. 20–21
  60. ^ "Associated Press Loses", The Post-Standard (Syracuse), February 20, 1900, p. 2
  61. ^ . Associated Press. Archived from the original on 2011-07-29. Retrieved 2007-11-30.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link); James Melvin Lee, History of American Journalism (Houghton Mifflin 1917), p. 415
  62. ^ Edwin Howard Simmons, The United States Marines: A History (Naval Institute Press, 2003), p. 73
  63. ^ "Beautiful Rites in Rome Today", The Daily Gazette (Janesville, Wis.), May 24, 1900, p1
  64. ^ "John Baptist de la Salle", The Catholic Encyclopedia (Universal Knowledge Foundation, 1913), pp444–48.
  65. ^ Ferdinand Holböck, Married Saints and Blesseds: Through the Centuries (Ignatius Press, 2002), pp. 269–271
  66. ^ Annual Register, p. 16
  67. ^ "Nation Marks Lacy Act Centennial, 100 Years of Federal Wildlife Law Enforcement". United States Fish and Wildlife Service. May 30, 2000.
  68. ^ Mark V. Barrow, A Passion for Birds: American Ornithology After Audubon (Princeton University Press, 2000), pp. 132–133
  69. ^ Ruiz, Bert (2001). The Colombian Civil War. McFarland. pp. 41–42.
  70. ^ De La Pedraja, René (2006). Wars of Latin America, 1899–1941. McFarland. p. 25.
  71. ^ "117 Vietnamese church martyrs are canonized". Chicago Herald. June 20, 1988. p. 3.
  72. ^ "The Free State Annexation". The New York Times. May 31, 1900. p. 2.
  73. ^ Appletons' Annual Cyclopaedia and Register of Important Events 1903. p. 638.
  74. ^ "Local Eclipse Preparations". The New York Times. May 28, 1900. p. 1.
  75. ^ "Eclipse Observers Report Success". The New York Times. May 29, 1900. p. 1.
  76. ^ "Princeton Party's Success", Id.
  77. ^ Patent and Trade Mark Review, p. 304
  78. ^ Siegrun D. Kane, Trademark Law, pp. 5–18
  79. ^ "Facsimile telegraph."
  80. ^ "Pictures Sent by Wire", Chicago Daily Tribune, April 13, 1901, p. 1
  81. ^ "Fate of Pretoria Not Yet Certain", New York Times, June 1, 1900, p. 1
  82. ^ The Times History of the War in South Africa 1899–1902 (Sampson Low, Marston, 1906), v.4, pp. 151–152
  83. ^ Byron Farwell, The Encyclopedia of Nineteenth-century Land Warfare (W. W. Norton & Company, 2001), 124
  84. ^ Chester M. Biggs, Jr., The United States Marines in North China, 1894–1942 (McFarland Press, 2003) pp. 65–66
  85. ^ Annual Register, p. 16

1900, 1900, january, february, march, april, june, july, august, september, october, november, december, 1213, 1920, 2627, fifth, month, that, exceptional, common, year, began, tuesday, ended, after, days, thursday, 1900, wonderful, wizard, publishedmay, 1900,. 1900 January February March April May June July August September October November December lt lt May 1900 gt gt Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa0 1 0 2 0 3 0 4 0 50 6 0 7 0 8 0 9 10 11 1213 14 15 16 17 18 1920 21 22 23 24 25 2627 28 29 30 31 May 1900 was the fifth month of that exceptional common year It began on a Tuesday and ended after 31 days on a Thursday May 17 1900 The Wonderful Wizard of Oz publishedMay 28 1900 United Kingdom conquers Orange Free State The following events occurred in May 1900 Contents 1 May 1 1900 Tuesday 2 May 2 1900 Wednesday 3 May 3 1900 Thursday 4 May 4 1900 Friday 5 May 5 1900 Saturday 6 May 6 1900 Sunday 7 May 7 1900 Monday 8 May 8 1900 Tuesday 9 May 9 1900 Wednesday 10 May 10 1900 Thursday 11 May 11 1900 Friday 12 May 12 1900 Saturday 13 May 13 1900 Sunday 14 May 14 1900 Monday 15 May 15 1900 Tuesday 16 May 16 1900 Wednesday 17 May 17 1900 Thursday 18 May 18 1900 Friday 19 May 19 1900 Saturday 20 May 20 1900 Sunday 21 May 21 1900 Monday 22 May 22 1900 Tuesday 23 May 23 1900 Wednesday 24 May 24 1900 Thursday 25 May 25 1900 Friday 26 May 26 1900 Saturday 27 May 27 1900 Sunday 28 May 28 1900 Monday 29 May 29 1900 Tuesday 30 May 30 1900 Wednesday 31 May 31 1900 Thursday 32 Notes 33 ReferencesMay 1 1900 Tuesday editOttoman Sultan Abdul Hamid issued an imperial edict for the construction of the Hejaz railway to link Damascus to the holy cities of Mecca and Medina 1 Thousands of Russian workers marched in the streets of Kharkov the first in what would be a series of large protests in Russia s cities 2 Military rule of Puerto Rico by the United States ended Charles Herbert Allen was sworn in as the American territorial governor replacing military governor George Whitefield Davis 3 An explosion killed 246 coal miners by carbon monoxide poisoning The blast at 10 28 pm at the Pleasant Valley Coal Company near Scofield Utah sent CO into two different shafts 4 Born Ignazio Silone Italian writer in Pescina d 1978 May 2 1900 Wednesday editThe Hepburn Bill for construction of the proposed Nicaragua Canal passed the United States House of Representatives by a vote of 225 35 but would end up stalling in the United States Senate 5 6 The bill proposed American purchase of land in Costa Rica and Nicaragua to build a canal from Greytown Nicaragua on the Caribbean to Breto on the Pacific 7 May 3 1900 Thursday editNegotiations between Denmark and the United States for purchase of what would become the Virgin Islands fell through 8 9 The Danish West Indies would eventually be sold to America in 1917 Harry Burke captain of the University of Cincinnati track team was fatally injured while practicing the pole vault The pole snapped and the fall broke Burke s thoracic spine 10 He died four days later 11 note 1 May 4 1900 Friday editKaiser Wilhelm pledged 500 000 marks to India for famine relief 12 The United States Senate ratified the 1899 amendment to the Geneva Conventions applying it to naval war 13 In Lubbock Texas The Avalanche published its first issue as the city s first major newspaper Through mergers it eventually became the Lubbock Avalanche Journal 14 Died Augustus Pitt Rivers 73 British army officer ethnologist and archaeologist b 1827 May 5 1900 Saturday editAlbert Ellis of the Pacific Islands Company signed a lease with the chiefs of the Banaban people of Ocean Island a tiny atoll that is now part of the nation of Kiribati granting the company a 999 year exclusive right to mine phosphate 15 in exchange for 50 British pounds per year The islanders including the misidentified King of Ocean Island Temate did not have the authority to sell mining rights and were likely not aware of what Ellis intended to do Following the British annexation of Ocean Island on September 28 1901 The British government reduced the term of the lease to a more realistic 99 years 16 General Arthur MacArthur replaced General Elwell Stephen Otis as military governor of the Philippines The father of General Douglas MacArthur set up his office at the Malacanan Palace in Manila 17 May 6 1900 Sunday editThe 18th birthday of Crown Prince Wilhelm of Germany was celebrated in ceremonies at the Royal Chapel in Berlin Austrian Emperor Franz Joseph named the Crown Prince as Chief of the Hussar regiment The Prince became Governor of Pomerania and the Prince of Oeis titles lost after his father was deposed in 1918 18 19 May 7 1900 Monday editSan Francisco Mayor James D Phelan addressed an anti Asian rally at Union Square and declared The Chinese and Japanese are not bonafide citizens They are not the stuff of which American citizens can be made 20 Mount Vesuvius began erupting with lava threatening the city of Torre del Greco Italy 21 Died Harry Burke University of Cincinnati track meet captain due to a fatal injury to his spine after an accident involving the pole vault 10 11 May 8 1900 Tuesday editRichard Etheridge the first African American keeper of a Coast Guard station died while attempting a rescue near the Pea Island Life Saving Station at North Carolina He was posthumously awarded the Gold Life Saving Medal for heroism albeit not until March 5 1996 22 University of Cambridge zoologist William Bateson was riding a train to London when he read the recently rediscovered 1866 paper by Gregor Mendel and soon became the greatest champion of Mendel s discoveries of the laws of heredity As one author would later note the first half of genetics was officially underway 23 Bateson translated Mendel s paper and published it in the 1902 book Mendel s Principles of Heredity A Defence 24 The National Basket Ball League title was won by the Trenton Nationals who defeated the Millville Glass Blowers 22 19 25 in the third game of the best of three championship of the first professional basketball league in the United States 26 May 9 1900 Wednesday editAt the annual convention of the American Pharmaceutical Association in Richmond Virginia the first organization of pharmacy schools was created The American Conference on Pharmaceutical Facilities later was renamed the American Association of Colleges of Pharmacy 27 May 10 1900 Thursday editJapan s Crown Prince Yoshihito and Princess Kujo Sadako were married in Tokyo marking the first Japanese imperial wedding to include a religious ceremony 28 Soon thereafter commoners began requesting similar ceremonies and the Shinto wedding soon became popular throughout the nation 29 Responding to the famine in British India the United States paid for the shipment of donations of 200 000 bushels of corn and substantial quantities of seed via the ship Quito which sailed from Brooklyn Christian Herald editor Louis Klopsch who had lobbied the government to pay the shipping costs also cabled 40 000 to India for famine relief 30 May 11 1900 Friday editOne construction worker was killed and another severely injured in a 70 foot 21 m fall while working on the Manhattan anchorage of the new Williamsburg Bridge 31 Former heavyweight boxing champion Gentleman Jim Corbett took on title holder James J Jeffries attempting to regain the title that he had lost in 1897 and almost succeeded In the bout at the New York Athletic Club Corbett was the better fighter for the first 22 rounds but in the 23rd Jeffries knocked him down with a right to the jaw Corbett s amazing endurance and Jeffries s comeback made the fight a boxing classic 32 May 12 1900 Saturday editLin Shao mao who had led a rebellion on the island of Taiwan against its Japanese rulers surrendered along with his men in a formal ceremony held at Ahou now Pingtung City Lin and his men were allowed to live peaceably at Houpilin but he was eventually killed in a battle on May 30 1902 33 Field cornet S Eloff led a force of 240 Boers in an assault on the town of Mafeking South Africa during the Siege of Mafeking Born Helene Weigel Austrian born German actress wife of Bertolt Brecht in Vienna d 1971 May 13 1900 Sunday editWilbur Wright wrote to aviation expert Octave Chanute sharing his own findings and seeking advice on the ideal place to test a flying machine Written on the letterhead of the Wright Cycle Co of 1127 West Third Street in Dayton Ohio Wright s initial missive began For some years I have been afflicted with the belief that flight is possible to man My disease has increased in severity and I feel that it will soon cost me an increased amount of money if not my life Over the next several years the correspondence continued between Wright and Chanute whose suggestions aided in the Wright brothers first flight on December 17 1903 34 May 14 1900 Monday editThe International Olympic Committee staged the second modern Olympic games in Paris starting with competition held in fencing There were no opening or closing ceremonies and the games were spread over five months Joseph Chamberlain Member of Parliament of the United Kingdom and Secretary of State for the Colonies introduced the Australian Commonwealth Bill in the House of Commons The bill became law on July 9 and Australia became independent on January 1 1901 35 Born Leo Smit Dutch composer in Amsterdam d 1943 May 15 1900 Tuesday editMontana s William A Clark resigned from the United States Senate while that body debated his expulsion After Clark s name was stricken from the Senate roster the news came that Montana Lieutenant Governor Archibald E Spriggs acting in the absence of Governor Robert Burns Smith had reappointed Clark to fill the vacancy 36 When Governor Smith returned Martin Maginnis was appointed on May 18 37 Fish fell from the sky during a late afternoon thunderstorm in Providence Rhode Island Richard H Tingley a witness reported that streets and yards for several blocks were alive with squirming little perch and bullspouts 38 The fish were heaviest at Olneyville 39 May 16 1900 Wednesday editChicago s Chief Milk Inspector Thomas Grady announced plans to ban dangerous additives from milk Formalin the chemical used in milk preservatives will kill a cat he told reporters What will it do to a child 40 Formalin a diluted form of formaldehyde had been added to raw milk near the end of the 19th century before its toxic effects were realized The United Kingdom banned the practice in 1901 41 May 17 1900 Thursday editAt 3 30 in the morning the Siege of Mafeking ended after seven months when Colonel Bryan Mahon led troops to relieve the besieged British residents during the Second Boer War General Piet Cronje attacked the city on October 13 1899 and Colonel Robert Baden Powell had led the defence 42 At the village of Kaolo midway between Peking Beijing and Paotingfu Baoding 61 Chinese Christian converts were massacred in the worst attack to that time in the Boxer Rebellion 43 American minister Conger telegraphed Situation becoming serious Request warship Taku soon as possible 44 The first copy of The Wonderful Wizard of Oz by L Frank Baum came off the press The first run of 10 000 copies sold out prior to publication 45 May 18 1900 Friday editAt 9 17 p m in London the Reuters news agency broke the news of the victory at Mafeking South Africa As author Phillip Knightley noted Britain went mad The celebrations lasted for five nights and surpassed the victory celebrations of the First and Second World Wars in size intensity and enthusiasm Baden Powell became the most popular English hero since Nelson and a household name not only in Britain but also throughout the United States 46 May 19 1900 Saturday editA day after signing a treaty with King Tupou of Tonga emissary Basil Thomson declared the South Pacific kingdom to be a protectorate of the United Kingdom Thomson had spent six weeks in trying to persuade the reluctant King to accept British protection before threatening to depose the monarch as a last option 47 The Convention for the Preservation of Wild Animals Birds and Fish in Africa was signed in London by representatives of the European colonial powers marking the first international agreement to protect wildlife 48 Mining prospector Jim Butler was returning to his home in Belmont Nevada when he and his burro stopped to dig at a high canyon near Tonopah There he discovered a large outcropping of silver and went from poverty to wealth while his find set off a mining boom 49 50 May 20 1900 Sunday editVoters in Switzerland overwhelmingly rejected a law providing for sickness and accident insurance The Kranken und Unfallversicherungsgesetz KUVG sponsored by Ludwig Forrer and passed the Federal Assembly but was challenged by a referendum where more than 70 of the voters were against it Health reform would finally pass in 1911 51 The Free Homes Bill was signed into law by U S President William McKinley and the debts of all homesteaders in Oklahoma were forgiven by the United States government Up until then settlers had been compelled to pay in addition to other requirements an annual federal fee ranging from 1 00 to 2 50 per acre 52 Born Sumitranandan Pant Hindi poet in Kausani Punjab Province British India now Uttarakhand state d 1977 May 21 1900 Monday editPlans for the Nicaragua Canal ended when the United States Senate killed it after they declined to bring it up for debate and a vote While the Hepburn Bill had passed the House 225 35 Alabama s Senator John Tyler Morgan was unable to persuade the Senate to vote on the matter A motion to bring an early vote as unfinished business failed by a vote of 28 21 53 A commission then recommended construction of a Panama Canal Following an emergency meeting in Beijing representatives of the foreign powers the United States the United Kingdom Germany France and Japan provided a five day ultimatum to the Empress Dowager Cixi of China If the Boxers were not arrested and punished by that time armies would be sent to invade 54 May 22 1900 Tuesday editAt 4 30 in the afternoon an explosion at the Cumnock Mining Company near Sanford North Carolina killed 22 coal miners The accident was believed to have been caused by a broken gauze in a safety lamp 55 nbsp Volney right presenting the original Pianola to the Smithsonian Institution in 1922The first patent for the player piano a self playing mechanical piano that used a role of perforated paper to guide the movement of the piano keys was granted to American inventor Edwin S Votey who marketed the device under the brand name Pianola 56 The first test was made of the Adams Air Splitting Train on a run from Washington D C to Baltimore then back again Inventor Frederick Adams had forecast that the aerodynamic cigar shaped train could be run at a speed of 100 miles per hour 160 km h with less expenditure than is now required to keep up a speed of 50 miles per hour 80 km h 57 However the train achieved no more than 60 miles per hour 97 km h 58 Born Clyde Tolson first Associate Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation and right hand man of J Edgar Hoover in Laredo Missouri d 1975 May 23 1900 Wednesday editNearly thirty seven years after performing an act of heroism in the American Civil War Sergeant William Harvey Carney of the 54th Massachusetts Colored Infantry was awarded the Medal of Honor by vote of Congress Although there had been previous African American recipients of the Medal Carney s action on July 18 1863 preceded that of all other black award winners The first award of the Medal of Honor to an African American had been to Robert Blake in 1864 59 The Associated Press was formally incorporated as a New York City corporation Although several regional corporations had shared news between publishers as early as 1848 an unfavorable ruling by the Supreme Court of Illinois on February 19 60 led AP clients to form a national organization 61 Born Hans Frank German Nazi administrator of the General Government in Poland during World War II in Karlsruhe executed 1946 May 24 1900 Thursday editThe USS Oregon arrived in China at Taku Forts with 28 U S Marines and 5 seamen under the command of Captain John Myers to protect American citizens during the Boxer Rebellion The USS Newark followed five days later 62 In Rome as part of the Feast of the Ascension Pope Leo canonized Jean Baptiste de La Salle 1651 1719 and Rita of Cascia 1381 1457 63 As founder of the Institute of the Brothers of the Christian Schools de la Salle is considered the patron saint of teachers 64 Saint Rita of Cascia the mother of two and wife of an abusive husband is one of the patron saints for domestic problems 65 Queen Victoria s birthday was celebrated for the last time during her life The 81 year old British monarch would die on 22nd January 1901 66 May 25 1900 Friday editThe Lacey Act 16 U S C 3371 3378 was signed into law by U S President William McKinley Sponsored by conservationist and Iowa Congressman John F Lacey the Act was described on its centennial as the first far reaching federal wildlife protection law and one setting the stage for a century of progress in safeguarding wildlife resources 67 Its most important provision was to make it a federal crime to ship wild animals and birds take in defiance of existing state laws across state lines 68 May 26 1900 Saturday editThe Battle of Palonegro concluded after fifteen days in Santander Colombia marking a turning point in the Thousand Days War General Prospero Pinzon of the Conservative forces defeated Liberal forces commander Gabriel Vargas Santos An estimated 2 500 people died during the fighting 69 In January 1901 a pile of hundreds of human skulls would be assembled as a grisly monument that would not be dismantled until 12 years later 70 May 27 1900 Sunday editPope Leo XIII beatified sixty four Vietnamese Martyrs The Vietnamese Martyrs including 53 others beatified later were canonized on June 19 1988 71 May 28 1900 Monday editAt noon the Orange Free State was annexed to the British Empire in a proclamation at Bloemfontein by its new military governor Major General George T Pretyman 72 Located in South Africa the Orange Free State had existed as an independent republic from 1854 until Britain s victory in the Second Boer War President Martinus Theunis Steyn who had fled Bloemfontein in March claimed control over the unoccupied areas of the state until surrendering in 1902 Adding an area of 48 326 square miles 125 200 km2 to the Empire the area was renamed the Orange River Colony 73 The colony would become part of the Union of South Africa in 1910 At the 1900 Paris Exposition Gare d Orsay opened as the first electrified urban rail terminal Millions of observers turned out to watch a total eclipse of the sun visible in a pathway that ran through Mexico and the southeastern United States and to Spain As the first since the introduction of the Brownie camera and with more advance publicity than ever before the eclipse became the most photographed event up to that time Amateur photographers throughout the city are making extensive preparations for the event noted The New York Times and it would be hard to estimate the number of snapshots that will be taken to day 74 It has been eleven years since a similar event was witnessed but the advancement of astronomical science and the marvelous improvements in telescopes photography and electrical apparatus insured more complete observations than ever before known 75 The eclipse began at about 7 26 a m Eastern time with totality at 8 36 in the morning 76 Born Tommy Ladnier American jazz musician and trumpeter known for promoting Dixieland jazz in Mandeville Louisiana d 1939 May 29 1900 Tuesday editThe word escalator was introduced into the English language as the Patent and Trademark Office formally granted the trademark to Charles Seeberger for a moving stairway 77 However Seeberger lost the trademark fifty years later when a patent commissioner ruled that the term had become generic in Haughton Elevator Co v Seeberger 85 U S P Q 80 Comm r Pat 1950 78 William P Dun Lany and Herbert R Palmer were awarded a patent for their invention described as a certain new and useful improvement in Facsimile Telegraphs to simplify such telegraph instrument to render them more accurate and efficient more easily adjustable to meet the varying conditions presented and adapt them to receive a message or picture by a direct impression or a hammer and anvil movement instead of by an electrochemical change in the receiving surface They received U S Patent No 650 381 for the device 79 which Palmer would demonstrate a year later at Columbia University 80 May 30 1900 Wednesday editLord Roberts was met outside of Johannesburg by its Governor Fritz Krause for terms of surrender He begged me to defer entering the town for twenty four hours as there were many armed burghers still inside General Roberts cabled I agreed to this as I am most anxious to avert the possibility of anything like disturbance inside the town 81 At 10 00 the next morning Lord Roberts and the British army entered the town hauled down the South African flag from the courthouse and raised the Union Jack in its place 82 The armies then began the march to the capital Pretoria which had been evacuated the day before May 31 1900 Thursday editWestern forces arrived in Beijing to protect their nations citizens during the Boxer Rebellion From the navies of the United States the United Kingdom Italy Japan and Russia were a total of only 337 men in a nation of scores of millions 83 U S Marine Captain John T Myers leading the American Legation Guard of 56 men into the Chinese capital noted later that Our entry was not opposed but the crowds were deadly silent 84 The governing body of the Free Church of Scotland voted 592 to 29 to unite with the United Presbyterian Church of Scotland which had approved the merger earlier creating the United Free Church of Scotland 85 Notes edit The Scroll gives the day of Burke s injury as May 2 11 References edit Dinhobl Gunter Roth Ralf 2008 Across the Borders Financing the World s Railways in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries Ashgate Publishing Ltd pp 196 97 Haimson Leopold H 1987 The Making of Three Russian Revolutionaries Voices from the Menshevik Past Cambridge University Press p 472 Rowe Leo Stanton 1904 The United States and Porto Rico Longmans Green and Co p 118 Most Appalling Mine Horror The Salt Lake Tribune May 2 1900 p 1 World Almanac and Book of Facts 1901 p 96 House Votes for Nicaragua Canal The New York Times May 3 1900 p 1 Text of the Bill NYT Id The Annual Register A Review of Public Events at Home and Abroad For the Year 1900 Longmans Green and Co 1901 pp 13 16 Sale of Islands Abandoned Atlanta Constitution May 4 1900 p 1 a b College Athlete Badly Hurt The New York Times May 4 1900 p 1 a b c The Scroll of Phi Delta Theta Vol 24 Phi Delta Theta Fraternity 1900 p 542 Retrieved July 10 2021 Annual Register p 13 Woolsey Theodore S 1901 The Naval War Code Columbia Law Review 305 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2009 03 27 Retrieved 2009 01 11 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link McIntyre W David 2014 Winding up the British Empire in the Pacific Islands Oxford University Press p 14 Stanley David 1996 Fiji Islands Handbook Moon Publications p 223 Nimmo William F 2001 Stars and Stripes Across the Pacific Greenwood Publishing Group p 38 Annual Register p13 Berlin Festivities End The New York Times May 7 1900 p 7 Kent Noel J 2000 America in 1900 M E Sharpe pp 107 108 Annual Register p 13 Carolyn Bonner and Kit Bonner Always Ready Today s U S Coast Guard Zenith Imprint 2004 p 10 Kevin Davies Cracking the Genome Inside the Race to Unlock Human DNA Simon and Schuster 2001 p 250 T R Birkhead A Brand New Bird How Two Amateur Scientists Created the First Genetically Engineered Animal Basic Books 2003 p 116 Trenton Defeats Millville Philadelphia Inquirer May 9 1900 p 6 1900 Basketball s first dynasty by Jon Blackwell The Trentonian NATIONAL BASKET BALL LEAGUE 1898 99 TO 1903 04 by John Grasso and Robert Bradley APBR org American Pharmacy 1852 2002 A Collection of Historical Essays p 93 Jaffe Richard M 2001 Neither Monk Nor Layman Clerical Marriage in Modern Japanese Buddhism Princeton University Press p 218 Edwards Walter 1990 Modern Japan Through Its Weddings Stanford University Press pp 103 104 Merle Eugene Curti American Philanthropy Abroad Rutgers University Press 1963 Transaction Publishers 1988 p 136 TWO MEN FALL SEVENTY FEET One Killed Other Terribly Injured at New East River Bridge Anchorage PDF The New York Times 12 May 1900 Retrieved 13 December 2021 Miller Stuart 2006 The 100 Greatest Days in New York Sports Houghton Mifflin Harcourt pp 215 219 Oakley David On the Trail of Lin Shao Mao the Last Outlaw McPherson Stephanie Sammartino Gardner Joseph Sammartino 2003 Wilbur amp Orville Wright Taking Flight Twenty First Century Books pp 38 40 Annual Register p 14 Clark Gives Up Seat in Senate New York Times May 16 1900 p1 Another Man Named to Succeed Clark New York Times May 19 1900 p 1 Robert E Martin It Does Rain FISH Popular Science July 1932 pp 24 25 Rained Fish AP report in the Lowell Mass Sun May 16 1900 p 4 Food Preservative Fatal The New York Times May 17 1900 p 2 Gratzer Walter Bruno 2005 Terrors of the Table The Curious History of Nutrition Oxford University Press pp 101 102 Forrest George 1901 Sepoy Generals Wellington to Roberts W Blackwood p 434 Thompson Peter Macklin Robert 2008 The Life and Adventures of Morrison of China Allen amp Unwin p 204 Papers Relating to the Foreign Relations of the United States G P O 1902 p 127 Katharine M Rogers L Frank Baum pp73 94 Phillip Knightley The First Casualty The War Correspondent as Hero and Myth maker from the Crimea to Iraq JHU Press 2004 p 76 Rutherford Noel 1996 Shirley Baker and the King of Tonga University of Hawaii Press p 222 MacKenzie John M 1997 The Empire of Nature Hunting Conservation and British Imperialism Manchester University Press p 202 Knapp Arthur Bernard Pigott Vincent C Herbert Eugenia W 1998 Social Approaches to an Industrial Past The Archaeology and Anthropology of Mining Routledge pp 103 104 Elliott Russell R Rowley William D 1987 History of Nevada University of Nebraska Press p 211 Matthius Leimgruber Solidarity Without the State Business and the Shaping of the Swiss Welfare State 1890 2000 Cambridge University Press 2008 p 36 Oklahoma Historical Society Review of Inception and Progress 1905 pp 27 28 Set Back for the Nicaragua Canal New York Times May 22 1900 p 1 X L Woo Empress Dowager Cixi Algora Publishing 2002 p 214 Twenty Two Killed Nebraska State Journal May 24 1900 p 2 Ord Hume Arthur W J G 1970 Player Piano History of Mechanical Piano The H W Wilson Company Atmospheric Resistance Its Relation to the Speed of Railway Trains Railway and Locomotive August 1900 p 345 Air Splitting Train Tried The New York Times May 23 1900 p 1 Ron Owens Medal of Honor Historical Facts amp Figures Turner Publishing Company 2004 pp 20 21 Associated Press Loses The Post Standard Syracuse February 20 1900 p 2 Archived copy Associated Press Archived from the original on 2011 07 29 Retrieved 2007 11 30 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link James Melvin Lee History of American Journalism Houghton Mifflin 1917 p 415 Edwin Howard Simmons The United States Marines A History Naval Institute Press 2003 p 73 Beautiful Rites in Rome Today The Daily Gazette Janesville Wis May 24 1900 p1 John Baptist de la Salle The Catholic Encyclopedia Universal Knowledge Foundation 1913 pp444 48 Ferdinand Holbock Married Saints and Blesseds Through the Centuries Ignatius Press 2002 pp 269 271 Annual Register p 16 Nation Marks Lacy Act Centennial 100 Years of Federal Wildlife Law Enforcement United States Fish and Wildlife Service May 30 2000 Mark V Barrow A Passion for Birds American Ornithology After Audubon Princeton University Press 2000 pp 132 133 Ruiz Bert 2001 The Colombian Civil War McFarland pp 41 42 De La Pedraja Rene 2006 Wars of Latin America 1899 1941 McFarland p 25 117 Vietnamese church martyrs are canonized Chicago Herald June 20 1988 p 3 The Free State Annexation The New York Times May 31 1900 p 2 Appletons Annual Cyclopaedia and Register of Important Events 1903 p 638 Local Eclipse Preparations The New York Times May 28 1900 p 1 Eclipse Observers Report Success The New York Times May 29 1900 p 1 Princeton Party s Success Id Patent and Trade Mark Review p 304 Siegrun D Kane Trademark Law pp 5 18 Facsimile telegraph Pictures Sent by Wire Chicago Daily Tribune April 13 1901 p 1 Fate of Pretoria Not Yet Certain New York Times June 1 1900 p 1 The Times History of the War in South Africa 1899 1902 Sampson Low Marston 1906 v 4 pp 151 152 Byron Farwell The Encyclopedia of Nineteenth century Land Warfare W W Norton amp Company 2001 124 Chester M Biggs Jr The United States Marines in North China 1894 1942 McFarland Press 2003 pp 65 66 Annual Register p 16 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title May 1900 amp oldid 1180981087, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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