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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

<< August 1901 >>
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01 02 03
04 05 06 07 08 09 10
11 12 13 14 15 16 17
18 19 20 21 22 23 24
25 26 27 28 29 30 31
August 6, 1901: Scott leads RRS Discovery on the British Antarctic Expedition
August 15, 1901: SS Islander sinks in Alaskan waters
August 11, 1901: Drygalski leads the Gauss on the German Antarctic Expedition
August 3, 1901: World's fastest ship, HMS Viper, wrecked
August 14, 1901: The alleged flight of the Condor 21

The following events occurred in August 1901:

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  • U.S.,African American Newspaper April 13,1901
  • The Largest Gold Heist In American History!
  • Victoria, Princess Royal German Empress, Queen consort of Prussia 9 March 1840 –5 August 1901
  • Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom 1819 – 1901
  • The Scramble for Africa: Every Month

Transcription

August 1, 1901 (Thursday)

  • A constitutional change that disenfranchised most African-American voters was approved in Maryland.[1]
  • W. F. Wright, a farmer and a former official with the Nebraska Department of Agriculture, ended his experiment at bring a rainfall by firing cannons at a clear sky after two days.[2] Starting the previous afternoon, Wright and his assistants lined up 24 mortars at his farm near Lincoln, Nebraska, loaded them with gunpowder, and fired them once a minute until his supply of several thousand pounds of gunpowder was exhausted, to test Wright's own theory of "special vibration".[3] Wright explained his theory that clouds were not formed from evaporation of water and that hydrogen and oxygen in the atmosphere could only combine to form water if "outside force is brought to bear upon them", and that the force was atmospheric electricity. The concussion from firing a cannon, Wright told reporters, created friction that would produce the atmospheric electricity necessary to form water.[4] The next day, the area around Lincoln steadily cooled off and temperatures dropped 41 degrees over a period of 38 hours, and on August 3, heavy rain came down "throughout the northern portion of Nebraska, southern South Dakota and the northern portion of Iowa",[5] and Wright declared that he had been the person responsible.[6][7]
  • Born: Francisco Guilledo, Filipino professional boxer who competed under the name "Pancho Villa" and was the one-time world flyweight boxing champion, in Ilog, Negros Occidental, Philippines (d. 1925)

August 2, 1901 (Friday)

August 3, 1901 (Saturday)

August 4, 1901 (Sunday)

  • Prime Minister Katsura Tarō of Japan convened a secret meeting of the genrō, the empire's group of elder statesmen, and discussed an alliance with the British Empire. Former Prime Minister Itō Hirobumi, who had advocated an alliance with the Russian Empire as a means of averting the conflict over the control of the Korean peninsula, agreed with the rest of the elders that an alliance with the United Kingdom would be in Japan's best interests.[14] and volunteered to prepare a draft proposal for negotiating with the British.[15] With the possibility of an agreement with Russia no longer under consideration, relations between the Japanese and Russian Empires would continue to deteriorate and the two would go to war within two and a half years.
  • Born: Louis Armstrong, American jazz musician, in New Orleans (d. 1971). During his lifetime, Louis Armstrong believed that he had been born on July 4, 1900. In 1988, seventeen years after Armstrong's death, however, biographer Gary Giddins located the record of the musician's 1901 baptism at the Sacred Heart of Jesus Church and found the true birthdate.[16][17]

August 5, 1901 (Monday)

August 6, 1901 (Tuesday)

August 7, 1901 (Wednesday)

Barton
Kitchener

August 8, 1901 (Thursday)

  • Alberto Santos-Dumont was nearly killed on his third attempt at flying a dirigible around the Eiffel Tower to win the Deutsch Prize 100,000 French francs. As before, his task was to depart the Longchamp Racecourse, fly to the Tower and circle it three times, then return to his starting point in less than half an hour. Departing at 6:12 in the morning, he reached the Tower and completed the circuits within nine minutes, but then lost control of the airship on his way back. The balloon deflated, and several of the wires connecting the framework and Santos-Dumont were severed by the turning screw that propelled the ship forward, sending the Brazilian-born aviator skimming over rooftops before wrecking on the roof of the Exposition Trocadro hotel. A team of firemen rescued him after the frame became wedged between two buildings.[36][37] Asked what he would do now that his airship was wrecked, Santos-Dumont reportedly said, "Why begin again, of course. One has to have patience."[38]
  • Born: Ernest Lawrence, American physicist and 1939 Nobel Prize laureate for his invention of the cyclotron, in Canton, South Dakota (d. 1958)
  • Died:

August 9, 1901 (Friday)

August 10, 1901 (Saturday)

August 11, 1901 (Sunday)

  • The German Antarctic Expedition, led by Professor Erich von Drygalski, began with the departure of the ship Gauss from Kiel. Guided by Captain Hans Ruser, the ship had a crew of five officers, 27 crew, and Drygalski's five-member team.[54] After reaching the previously-unexplored area of Antarctica between 60° E and 100° E, the ship would come within 46 miles (74 km) of the coast of what Drygalski would claim for Germany as Kaiser Wilhelm II Land, but would be trapped in an icefield on February 22, 1902, and be unable to depart for 14 months. After getting free, the Gauss would successfully return to Kiel on November 24, 1903.[55]
  • Venezuela and Colombia severed diplomatic relations following the second of two invasions from Colombia by Venezuelan exiles. Colombia authorized the American chargé d'affaires in Caracas to act on its behalf.[1]

August 12, 1901 (Monday)

August 13, 1901 (Tuesday)

Jolly Jane Toppan
  • Serial killer Jane Toppan claimed her last victim, with the death of Minnie Davis Gibbs. During the summer of 1901, the nurse nicknamed "Jolly Jane" because of her cheerful disposition had come to work for the Davis family in Boston, and within the space of six weeks, Minnie's mother, father and two sisters had passed away.[57] When Minnie died, the cause of death was listed as "exhaustion", blamed on her grief from losing her family, but her father-in-law was suspicious and sought the help of Dr. Edward S. Wood of Harvard University's College of Medicine.[58] Minnie's body would be exhumed for an autopsy, which would show high levels of arsenic, morphine and atropine, and Toppan would be arrested on October 29.[59]

August 14, 1901 (Wednesday)

  • German-born American aviator Gustave Whitehead drove the Condor 21 along a road in Bridgeport, Connecticut, pulled its canvassed wings taut, and flew for fifty feet, banked sharply to avoid hitting a stand of chestnut trees, and continued "through the air for more than a mile" before landing again, according to his own account and that of a reporter for the Bridgeport Herald. However, no photograph was ever taken of the Condor 21 in flight, nor of even longer flights that the newspaper reported to have been made in the two years before the Wright brothers flew at Kitty Hawk, North Carolina.[60] Reproductions of the Condor, constructed from Whitehead's blueprints, would be flown in 1986 and in 1997.[61] More than 35 years after the event, on April 2, 1937, a person identified as a Whitehead assistant in the Herald articles, James Dickie, would write, "I believe the entire story in the Herald was imaginary, and grew out of comments of Whitehead in discussing what he hoped to get from his plane. I was not present and did not witness any airplane flight on August 14, 1901."[62][63]
  • Russia declared its right of suzerainty over the Chinese port of Nuzhuang (now Yingkou).[1]
Clara Maass
  • In Havana, American nurse Clara Maass, who had already survived allowing herself to be bitten by an infected mosquito on June 24 for the cause of discovering a vaccine against yellow fever, volunteered for the experiment a second time, "hoping to prove that her earlier case of yellow fever had immunized her against the disease."[64] Instead, she would become even more severely ill, and die ten days later. The Las Animas Hospital would be renamed in her honor, and she would be honored decades later as a martyr to the cause of medicine, on postage stamps issued in Cuba in 1951, and in the United States in 1979.
  • Born:

August 15, 1901 (Thursday)

August 16, 1901 (Friday)

  • The population of Canada was announced as 5,338,883 people, an increase of ten percent in the previous decade.[69]

August 17, 1901 (Saturday)

August 18, 1901 (Sunday)

  • In Pierce City, Missouri, all of the African-American residents were driven from town by a white mob following the murder of Gisella Wild, a 24-year-old white woman. The vigilantes invaded the black section of the segregated town, burned and looted houses, and ordered the more than 200 black citizens to get on a train leave permanently, or risk being killed. Other rural towns and counties in southwestern Missouri would follow Pierce City's example, including neighboring Barry County, Monett and Neosho. Stroud, Oklahoma followed the Pierce City example two weeks later. Miss Wild's murderer was never convicted, but one black suspect was taken from jail by the mob and lynched, while another was tried and acquitted, and two others were released without being indicted.[73][74][75] The 2010 census for Pierce City would show two African-American residents (0.22%) among its population of 1,292 people.[76] Disgusted by the mob mentality in his home state of Missouri, author Mark Twain would write an essay, "The United States of Lyncherdom", commenting on "man's commonest weakness, his aversion to being unpleasantly conspicuous, pointed at, shunned, as being on the unpopular side. Its other name is Moral Cowardice, and is the commanding feature of the make-up of 9,999 men in the 10,000." He added that in the case of a lynching, most of the vast majority of people were "right-hearted and compassionate, and would be cruelly pained by such a spectacle— and would attend it, and let on to be pleased with it, if the public approval seemed to require it."[77]
  • Born:
  • Died: Edmond Audran, 59, French composer (b. 1840)

August 19, 1901 (Monday)

August 20, 1901 (Tuesday)

"Umpire" Al Orth
  • In the years when only one umpire was provided for a major league baseball game, it was not unusual for players not in the lineup to handle the officiating if the regular umpire failed to show up, in which case the procedure was for the opposing managers to each select a player to handle officiating duties. Al Orth of the Philadelphia Phillies earned the distinction of umpiring and playing in the same game, when he was put in as a pinch hitter in the ninth inning, and hit a single to drive in a run in a 3–2 loss to the Brooklyn Dodgers.[81] Orth's feat would later be described as "the first instance on record where an umpire was called to bat to win a game."[82]
  • The battleship USS Iowa was dispatched to the Pacific coast of the isthmus of Panama as the third U.S. Navy ship to monitor fighting between Colombia and Venezuela.[80]
  • The disenfranchisement of African-American voters in Alabama was made possible as the constitutional convention in Montgomery closed with the approval for a draft of the state's 1901  constitution, which would be ratified by the voters on November 21. [80]
  • Born: Salvatore Quasimodo, Italian writer, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 1968)

August 21, 1901 (Wednesday)

August 22, 1901 (Thursday)

  • Wilbur and Orville Wright departed from Kitty Hawk, North Carolina after the failure of their experiments with a glider that could be adapted to become a heavier-than-air flying machine. Their design for a wing provided only one-third of the lift that they had predicted from their calculations. Wilbur would recount later that on the train back to Dayton, Ohio, he told Orville, "Not within a thousand years will man ever fly!" [92] Upon their arrival, however, they concluded that the problem lay in the data gathered by Otto Lilienthal and John Smeaton was incorrect and "they decided to recheck all the earlier data, taking nothing as proven until they proved it themselves." [93]

August 23, 1901 (Friday)

Morant
Fawcett

August 24, 1901 (Saturday)

  • A war between the Ottoman Empire and the British Empire seemed imminent after the Ottoman gunboat Zuhaf was turned back by a British warship as it attempted to enter the harbor of Kuwait City. Concerned that the Ottomans would attempt to take the port, the British government ordered the Royal Navy to prevent any Ottoman soldiers from debarking. The captain of the British ship warned the Zuhaf captain that any attempt to land men or supplies at Kuwait would be resisted by force, and the Ottoman captain misunderstood and telegraphed a report to Istanbul that the United Kingdom had conquered the Kuwaiti emirate as a colony. The German Empire, alarmed over the perceived change of the balance of power in the Middle East, would join the Ottomans in accusing the British Foreign Office of reneging on its previous pledges. In clearing up the misunderstanding the powers would come to a new agreement that Britain would permit the Kuwait's right to self-rule (suzerainty) but not to the extent that Kuwait would have control over its foreign relations (sovereignty).[96]
  • Died: Clara Maass, 25, American nurse who sacrificed her life in an attempt to contribute to a cure for yellow fever (b. 1876) [97]

August 25, 1901 (Sunday)

  • The diplomatic crisis between France and the Ottoman Empire appeared settled when the Turkish government agreed to pay 700,000 French francs (equivalent to 150,000 American dollars) to the Quays Company of France as compensation for a breach of contract.[98] Two days later, however, came word that the Sultan had changed his mind, and Ambassador Costans left Constantinople, while Turkey's Ambassador to France, Munir Bey, was sent a request by the French Foreign Ministry to not return to Paris.[99]
  • Born:

August 26, 1901 (Monday)

American version

August 27, 1901 (Tuesday)

  • In the Congo Free State, a column of Belgian and Congolese soldiers invaded the Kasaï region, where the Batetela tribesmen and their leader, King Kabongo, had been conducting raids against the Luba people for the previous four years. The two sides, both armed with rifles, fought a pitched battle at the village of Kakipango, and the Belgians defeated the Batetela, although small groups would continue to make sporadic raids for another ten years.[102]

August 28, 1901 (Wednesday)

  • Twenty-four people were killed when a boiler on board the steamer City of Trenton exploded. The ship was racing up the Delaware River toward Philadelphia with 150 passengers on board, and was ten minutes behind schedule when the ship's captain ordered it to move full steam. Reports the next day speculated that Captain Worrell had been attempting to catch up to the Twilight, a steamer from a rival company, which began speeding up as the Trenton approached it. At about 2:00 in the afternoon, the explosion of the port side boiler caused the ship to list and threw passengers from upper decks into the river, while others were scalded by clouds of escaping steam.[103][104] The final death toll was reported on September 4 to be 24.[105]
  • Silliman University, the first American private school in the Philippines, was founded by Presbyterian missionaries David Sutherland Hibbard and his wife, Laura Crooks Hibbard, as the Silliman Institute, a primary school for Filipino boys, with money given by a New York City philanthropist, Dr. Horace Silliman. It would become a university in 1938.[106][107]
  • Voters in Los Angeles approved a bond issue to purchase the privately owned Los Angeles Water Company.[108] The final vote was 6,284 in favor, 1,267 against, well above the necessary two-thirds majority required to allow the city to borrow two million dollars for the purchase.[109] Control of the distribution of water would help the city of 103,000 people triple in size by 1910, and surpass one million residents by the end of the 1920s.[110]
  • Born::
  • Died::

August 29, 1901 (Thursday)

  • The British concentration camp at Standerton, in South Africa, became the first to be completely enclosed by barbed wire fences. With 3,329 inmates occupying 550 tents, the camp was surrounded by two rows of fences, by order of the British superintendent, Frank Winfield, who had ordered the inmates to erect the enclosure. On August 11, a party of Boer soldiers had raided the camp and stolen 157 cattle, and the ostensible purpose was to keep in the livestock and keep the enemy from making further raids. However, as author Reviel Netz would note later, this was "a new phenomenon: a human settlement whose boundaries are defined by barbed wire... while raised to prevent motion of Boer men from outside the camp to its inside, the fence immediately served also to prevent the motion of Boer women inside the camp to its outside. They were no longer under curfew; they were now imprisoned."[111]
  • The German passenger liner SS Deutschland set a new record for the fastest crossing of the Atlantic Ocean, steaming into Lower New York Bay at 1:20 in the morning, only 5 days, 12 hours and 5 minutes after its departure from Liverpool on Friday evening, August 23. The new mark was 24 minutes faster than the previous record, set by the Deutschland on September 1, 1900.[112]

August 30, 1901 (Friday)

  • British inventor Hubert Cecil Booth patented the first motorized vacuum cleaner, after concluding that if a motor could blow air to disperse dust, it could also be reversed to suck dust into a container. Booth originally used his invention as part of his cleaning service "using a large horse-drawn, petrol-driven unit, which was parked outside the building to be cleaned, with hoses stretching through the windows."[113]
  • Commanded by Eduard von Toll, the Russian Polar Expedition resumed after the ship Zarya was able to free itself from the ice of the Kara Sea, outside of Nansen Island, located at a latitude of 76°30" N.[114]
  • Thirty-six workers who were riding on the Great Northern Railroad through Montana were killed when freight cars from one train crashed into the one on which they were riding.[115] According to reports at the scene, a line of 18 railcars broke loose from a freight train that was climbing a grade near Essex, Montana, and headed downhill toward the station at Nyack, colliding with Great Northern's Passenger Train No. 3 at almost 9:00 in the evening.[116]
  • Born:

August 31, 1901 (Saturday)

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f The American Monthly Review of Reviews (September 1901) pp. 283-286
  2. ^ "Bombardment of Sky Fails to Bring Rain, But Keeps Up". Chicago Daily Tribune. August 2, 1901. p. 2.
  3. ^ "Bombards Sky with Mortars to Get Rain in Nebraska". Chicago Daily Tribune. August 1, 1901. p. 5.
  4. ^ "Goes Gunning for Rain— W. F. Wright Opens up his Battery of Mortars". Nebraska State Journal. Lincoln, NE. August 1, 1901. p. 2.
  5. ^ "Heavy Rain in the West— Relief Comes for Crops in Nebraska, South Dakota and Iowa". Philadelphia Times. August 4, 1901. p. 2.
  6. ^ "Did Rainmaker Do It?— Whether or Not, Nebraska Got a Wetting". Saint Paul Globe. Saint Paul, Minnesota. August 4, 1901. p. 1.
  7. ^ "'Rainmaker' Claims All the Credit". Des Moines Register. August 4, 1901. p. 5.
  8. ^ Select Documents Relating to the Unification of South Africa, Arthur Percival Newton, ed. (Routledge, 2013) p. 190
  9. ^ John Boje, An Imperfect Occupation: Enduring the South African War (University of Illinois Press, 2015) p. 86
  10. ^ "Viper Sinks in Mimic Battle— British Torpedo Boat Destroyer Wrecked Off Alderney During Fleet Maneuvers". Chicago Daily Tribune. August 5, 1901. p. 1.
  11. ^ Osborne, Eric W. (2005). Destroyers: An Illustrated History of Their Impact. ABC-CLIO. p. 37.
  12. ^ Scaife, W.G.S (1999). From Galaxies to Turbines: Science, Technology and the Parsons Family. CRC Press. p. 338.
  13. ^ Sandford, Robert W. (2010). Ecology & Wonder in the Canadian Rocky Mountain Parks World Heritage Site. Athabasca University Press. p. 61.
  14. ^ Reischauer, Haru Matsukata (1986). Samurai and Silk: A Japanese and American Heritage. Harvard University Press. p. 131.
  15. ^ Ericson, Steven J.; Hockley, Allen (2008). The Treaty of Portsmouth and Its Legacies. University Press of New England. p. 29.
  16. ^ Teachout, Terry (2009). Pops: A Life of Louis Armstrong. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt.
  17. ^ Rather, Dan; Isaacson, Walter (1999). People of the Century: One Hundred Men and Women Who Shaped the Last One Hundred Years. Simon & Schuster. p. 204.
  18. ^ Savours, Ann (2013). The Voyages of the Discovery: An Illustrated History of Scott's Ship. Seaforth Publishing. p. 18.
  19. ^ "Robbers Secure $280,000 in Gold". Chicago Daily Tribune. August 7, 1901. p. 1.
  20. ^ "Stolen Gold Is Found". Chicago Sunday Tribune. August 11, 1901. p. 2.
  21. ^ "Kaiser's Mother Dies at Cronberg— Dowager Empress Frederick Passes Away After Long Period of Suffering". Chicago Daily Tribune. August 6, 1901. p. 2.
  22. ^ "Scott, Robert Falcon", in Historical Dictionary of the British Empire, by Kenneth J. Panto (Rowman & Littlefield, 2015) p. 465
  23. ^ Satya S. Sharma, Breaking the Ice in Antarctica: The First Indian Wintering in Antarctica (New Age International, 2001) p. 19
  24. ^ Gilbert T. Rowe, Deep-Sea Biology (Harvard University Press, 2005) p. 50
  25. ^ The WPA Guide to Oklahoma: The Sooner State (Federal Writers Project, 1939; reprinted by Trinity University Press, 2013) pp. 142-143
  26. ^ "Town of Lawton Springs from Prairie in a Night", Chicago Daily Tribune, August 3, 1901, p1
  27. ^ Tingle, Laura (2013). Great Expectations: Government, Entitlement and an Angry Nation. Black Inc.
  28. ^ Omara-Otunnu, Amii (1987). Politics and the Military in Uganda, 1890–1985. Springer. p. 27.
  29. ^ "Threat of Exile for Boer Chiefs— All Who Do Not Surrender Before Sept. 15 Will Be Banished". Chicago Daily Tribune. August 10, 1901. p. 4.
  30. ^ Boje, John (2015). An Imperfect Occupation: Enduring the South African War. University of Illinois Press. p. 30.
  31. ^ Wilkinson-Latham, Christopher (2012). The Boer War. Bloomsbury Publishing.
  32. ^ "Oceanic Sinks Irish Steamer". Chicago Daily Tribune. August 9, 1901. p. 1.
  33. ^ "Manager Duffy Strikes Umpire". Chicago Daily Tribune. August 8, 1901. p. 4.
  34. ^ Dewey, Donald; Acocella, Nicholas (2002). "Hugh Duffy". The New Biographical History of Baseball. Triumph Books.
  35. ^ "Hurry Gunboat to the Isthmus". Chicago Daily Tribune. August 8, 1901. p. 1.
  36. ^ "Bad Wreck Stops Airship's Test— Santos-Dumont Has Narrow Escape from Death on the Housetops of Paris". Chicago Daily Tribune. August 9, 1901. p. 1.
  37. ^ Illustration, Chicago Daily Tribune, August 20, 1901, p. 5
  38. ^ Baker, Ray Stannard; et al. (1904). Modern Inventions and Discoveries. J. A. Hill and Company. pp. 70–71.
  39. ^ "Seneca Indian Chief Is Killed in Ugly Fight". August 9, 1901. p. 1.
  40. ^ "M'Kinley to Visit Exposition— Chief Executive Sets Date of 'President's Day' at Pan-American for Sept. 5". Chicago Daily Tribune. August 10, 1901. p. 1.
  41. ^ "Town Hard Hit by Fire— Rantoul, Ill., Loses Every Business House but One". Chicago Daily Tribune. August 10, 1901. p. 2.
  42. ^ Hanson, Mark D. (2011). Rantoul and Chanute Air Force Base. Arcadia Publishing. p. 8.
  43. ^ "French Troops Leave Pekin". Chicago Sunday Tribune. August 11, 1901. p. 1.
  44. ^ Fraser, Antonia (2002). Marie Antoinette: The Journey. Knopf Doubleday. p. 448.
  45. ^ Breighner, Russell. Memory, Fear and Ghosts: A Scientific Analysis of Ghost Stories.
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  48. ^ "King Goes to Germany". Chicago Daily Tribune. August 10, 1901. p. 1.
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  50. ^ "Order out for All to Strike". Chicago Daily Tribune. August 7, 1901. p. 1.
  51. ^ "Strike Order Is in Full Effect". Chicago Sunday Tribune. August 11, 1901. p. 1.
  52. ^ "Half of Corn Crop Is Lost". Chicago Sunday Tribune. August 11, 1901. p. 1.
  53. ^ "Record Prices for Food". Chicago Sunday Tribune. August 11, 1901. p. 1.
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  55. ^ FitzSimons, Peter (2013). Mawson and the Ice Men of the Heroic Age: Scott, Shackleton and Amundsen. Random House Australia. pp. 32–33.
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  59. ^ Peter Vronsky, Female Serial Killers: How and why Women Become Monsters (Penguin, 2007) p. 131
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  62. ^ Peter L. Jakab, The Published Writings of Wilbur and Orville Wright (Smithsonian Institution, 2016) p. 71
  63. ^ Bob Rickard and John Michell, The Rough Guide to Unexplained Phenomena (Penguin, 2007) p. 39
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  65. ^ "Ship Crashes into Iceberg; Seventy Die", Chicago Daily Tribune, August 19, 1901, p. 1
  66. ^ Peter Pigott, From Far and Wide: A Complete History of Canada's Arctic Sovereignty (Dundurn, 2011) p. 99
  67. ^ Richard Kaczynski, Perdurabo, Revised and Expanded Edition: The Life of Aleister Crowley (North Atlantic Books, 2012) p. 117
  68. ^ Peter Berresford Ellis, Celtic Dawn: The Dream of Celtic Unity (Constable and Company, 1993) p. 95
  69. ^ "Canada's Census Is Out", Chicago Daily Tribune, August 17, 1901, p. 13
  70. ^ "Plaza Ecuador's President". Chicago Sunday Tribune. August 18, 1901. p. 6.
  71. ^ "Start Riot on Steamer's Deck". Chicago Sunday Tribune. August 18, 1901. p. 4.
  72. ^ Capo, Fran (2011). Myths and Mysteries of New York: True Stories of the Unsolved and Unexplained. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 160.
  73. ^ "Negroes Killed or Driven Away— Pierce City, Mo., Mob Hangs, Shoots and Burns Three Colored Men and Exiles All Others". Chicago Daily Tribune. August 21, 1901. p. 1.
  74. ^ Jaspin, Elliot (2008). Buried in the Bitter Waters: The Hidden History of Racial Cleansing in America. Basic Books. pp. 67–78.
  75. ^ Rucker, Walter; Upton, James Nathaniel, eds. (2007). "Southwest Missouri Riots (1894–1906)". Encyclopedia of American Race Riots. Greenwood Publishing. pp. 603–609.
  76. ^ Zip-Codes.com
  77. ^ "The United States of Lyncherdom". Archived from the original on 2016-08-18. Retrieved 2016-08-17.
  78. ^ "Ohio River Steamer Lost", Chicago Daily Tribune, August 20, 1901, p. 1
  79. ^ Annual Report of the Supervising Inspector General, Steamboat Inspection Service to the Secretary of Commerce (Government Printing Office, 1902) p. 62
  80. ^ a b c The American Monthly Review of Reviews (October 1901) pp. 408-413
  81. ^ Halfon, Mark S. (2014). Tales from the Deadball Era: Ty Cobb, Home Run Baker, Shoeless Joe Jackson, and the Wildest Times in Baseball History. Potomac Books. p. 65.
  82. ^ "Another Hard Blow for the Phillies". Brooklyn Daily Eagle. August 21, 1901. p. 12.
  83. ^ Christian Huck and Stefan Bauernschmidt, Travelling Goods, Travelling Moods: Varieties of Cultural Appropriation (1850–1950) (Campus Verlag, 2012)
  84. ^ "Philippines" in Colonialism: An International, Social, Cultural, and Political Encyclopedia, Penny M. Sonnenburg, ed. (ABC-CLIO, 2003) p. 469
  85. ^ Teresa Brawner Bevis and Christopher J. Lucas, International Students in American Colleges and Universities: A History (Springer, 2007) p. 75
  86. ^ "Teachers Arrive at Manila", Chicago Daily Tribune, August 22, 1901, p. 6
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  88. ^ Charles F. Faber, Baseball Prodigies: Best Major League Seasons by Players Under 21 (McFarland, 2014) p. 227
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