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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

<< May 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  
May 1, 1901: Pan-American Exposition opens in Buffalo
May 2, 1901: Glasgow International Exposition opens in Scotland
May 9, 1901: The first Parliament of Australia is opened by the Duke of Cornwall and York, the Crown Prince George
May 3, 1901: Jacksonville, Florida, destroyed

The following events occurred in May 1901:

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Transcription

Wednesday, May 1, 1901

Hirobimi

Thursday, May 2, 1901

Friday, May 3, 1901

Harriman and Schiff
  • A massive fire destroyed 148 city blocks in Jacksonville, Florida, over an area of 455 acres (1.85 square kilometers) and burning 2,361 buildings.[13] At 12:39 p.m., the 36-member city fire department was notified that a fire had broken out at the American Fiber Company at the corner of Davis Street and Union Street. Sparks had ignited a pile of Spanish moss to be used as stuffing, and the fire then spread to the adjacent W. W. Cleveland & Son mattress factory.[14] Destroyed in the blaze were the Duval Country Courthouse, the Jacksonville City Hall, the Windsor Hotel and St. James Hotel, as well as "the city armory, the opera-house, the leading churches of the city, the convent, acres of residences and scores of wholesale and retail business houses."[15] The city would be rebuilt and within two and a half years, thousands of new buildings would be erected;[13] over the next decade, the amount of cargo being handled by the Port of Jacksonville had increased to five times what it had been at the time of the fire.[16]
  • An upheaval in the stock market, known as the Panic of 1901 started as E. H. Harriman, who controlled the Union Pacific Railroad, began his attempt to acquire majority ownership of the Northern Pacific Railroad Company (NP), and directed his broker, Jacob Schiff of Kuhn, Loeb & Co. to buy as much as possible. By the end of the day, Harriman owned more than 370,000 of the 800,000 shares of NP common stock and 420,000 of the NP preferred stock.[17]
  • Civil government was established in Manila after years of American occupation.[2]
  • Born: Hugo Friedhofer, American film score composer, Academy Award winner for the music for The Best Years of Our Lives, in San Francisco (d. 1981)

Saturday, May 4, 1901

  • The Caste War of Yucatán, the decades-long resistance of the Maya peoples against the Mexican government, ended as General Ignacio Bravo marched his troops into the Mayan capital at Noh Cah Balam (now Chan Santa Cruz) and set up his new headquarters.[18][19]
  • Realizing that he did not have a majority of Northern Pacific common stock, E. H. Harriman had decided on Friday evening that he would need to buy 40,000 additional common shares before the New York Stock Exchange closed at noon on Saturday. He was unwell when he woke up, and instead telephoned Kuhn, Loeb & Co. to place the order, on credit. Harriman's broker, Jacob Schiff, was attending synagogue services that morning,[20] so Harriman spoke with Mr. Heinsheimer, who sent a messenger to find Schiff at the Saturday worship services. Schiff, however, who was buying the stocks on credit for Harriman, concluded that since Harriman had a majority of all of the NP stock, incurring more debt was unnecessary, and no order was placed.[17]
  • Italy rejected a request from the Ottoman government to help prevent the settlement of foreign Jews in Palestine, at the time a part of Turkish territory.[2]

Sunday, May 5, 1901

Monday, May 6, 1901

James J. Hill and J. P. Morgan
  • In a rebound during the Panic of 1901, the price of Northern Pacific Railway stock increased by $23 a share, an unprecedented increase in value on Wall Street, as J. P. Morgan responded to the mass purchases made by E. H. Harriman. "Before the market here had been open ten minutes" a reporter noted, "it was seen that somebody was hiking Northern Pacific stock." The NP shares had closed at $110 on Saturday, and by noon were as high as $133, before closing at $127.50.[30][31][32] During the weekend, Northern Pacific Railway chairman James J. Hill had realized that someone was trying to acquire control of the NP stock, and got the authority from railroad magnate J. P. Morgan to buy 156,000 common shares of NP. At the same time, Harriman called his broker and learned that his order for 40,000 common shares had not been carried out; as historian Lloyd J. Mercer would note later, "those 40,000 shares were the missing nail that cost Harriman this particular kingdom."[17]
    The first issue of Gorkhapatra, still running oldest Nepali newspaper
    The first issue of Gorkhapatra, still running oldest Nepali newspaper
  • The British Ministry of War announced that nearly 15,000 British officers and troops had died in the Second Boer War against South African forces, with 14,264 enlisted men and 714 officers as casualties.[2]
  • The House of Commons of the United Kingdom voted 333 to 227 to approve a tax on the sale of coal.[2]
  • Gorkhapatra, the oldest still running Nepali newspaper was started on this day. The newspaper was distributed weekly then.[33][34]

Tuesday, May 7, 1901

Wednesday, May 8, 1901

Thursday, May 9, 1901

Friday, May 10, 1901

Saturday, May 11, 1901

  • Sir Harry Johnston, a biologist and the British Commissioner of Uganda, cabled London to announce that the remains of an animal, long thought to be extinct, were on their way to the British Museum and that the "okapi" continued to exist. Described as "a giraffe-like creature which is closely akin to the ox in size" [60] the okapi was rediscovered by European zoologists in the forests of what is now the Semuliki National Park.
  • Professor Charles Peabody, an archaeologist from Harvard University, became the first scholar to discover the variety of music that would become known as "Delta blues". Although he had arrived in Coahoma County, Mississippi, to oversee the excavation of a Choctaw Indian burial mound, his more important finding was the folk songs that the African-American work crew was singing while doing the excavation "and the mesmerizing power of their music continued to haunt Peabody's imagination long after he returned to Cambridge". He would publish his observations under the title "Notes on Negro Music" in the Journal of American Folklore, popularizing the genre.[61][62]
  • Born: Rose Ausländer, German poet (d. 1988)

Sunday, May 12, 1901

Monday, May 13, 1901

  • In the British House of Commons, Winston Churchill defied his fellow Conservative Party members of parliament by speaking out against a proposal to increase the size and the budget of the British Army. "Has the wealth of the country doubled? Has the population doubled? Have the armies of Europe doubled? Is there no poverty at home? Has the English Channel dried up and we are no longer an island?" [64] In the decades that followed, the words of the young politician, 26 years old at the time and in his first year in Commons, would frequently be re-quoted. Noting the effect that changing technology had on the nature of war, Churchill observed, "In former years, when wars arose from individual causes... when they were fought by small regular armies of professional soldiers, and when their course was retarded by the difficulties of communication and supply, and often suspended by the winter season, it was possible to limit the liabilities of the combatants. But now, when mighty populations are impelled on each other, each individual severally embittered and inflamed, when the resources of science and civilisation sweep away everything that might mitigate their fury, a European war can only end in the ruin of the vanquished and the scarcely less fatal commercial dislocation and exhaustion of the conquerors." Noting that "Democracy is more vindictive than Cabinets", Churchill prophesied that "The wars of peoples will be more terrible than those of kings."[65][66][67] The Parliament would favor the increased military expenditure anyway, in what one historian would later describe as "the jettisoning of Pax Britannica by Britain herself" [68]
  • Born: Witold Pilecki, Polish resistance leader (d. 1948)

Tuesday, May 14, 1901

Wednesday, May 15, 1901

Thursday, May 16, 1901

Friday, May 17, 1901

Muslim Caliph Abdul Hamid II and Zionist leader Herzl

Saturday, May 18, 1901

Sunday, May 19, 1901

Monday, May 20, 1901

Decorated arch erected over George Street, Brisbane, for the royal visit of the future King George V to Australia.

Tuesday, May 21, 1901

Wednesday, May 22, 1901

Ahmed ʻUrabi
  • Ahmed ʻUrabi Pasha, who led the Egyptian rebellion against the British in 1882 and had been banished to British Ceylon, was pardoned by the British government.[109]
  • Five hundred Boer prisoners of war arrived in India, to be relocated to a POW camp in Ahmednagar.[95]
  • Queen Yaa Asantewaa, who had led the Ashanti War against the British colonial government in Ghana in 1900 was sent into exile along with 15 other rebel leaders and their dependents, and would live for the rest of her life on the other side of Africa, on the Seychelles Islands.[110]
  • Sir Thomas Lipton and his seven guests, including King Edward of the United Kingdom, were sailing in Lipton's yacht, Shamrock II, in the strait of The Solent off the coast of the Isle of Wight, when a storm suddenly struck. The spars, masts and sails of the yacht were destroyed, effectively preventing the management of the sails, but Lipton was able to bring the monarch back to safety.[95][111]
  • Vice-President Theodore Roosevelt was the victim of an elaborate practical joke staged by the organizers of the Pan-American Exposition. The future President was asked to lead dignitaries to visit an old log cabin behind the fairgrounds, and "as he stooped to enter the cabin door there was a terrific warwhoop and two Indians in full war paint and feathers leaped up from the darkness and seized Colonel Roosevelt. Instantly there was a tremendous tumult of warwhoops and the report of many guns," the press noted the next day. The two "attackers" were well-known Oglala Sioux leaders, American Horse and Jack Red Cloud. When Roosevelt realized that it was a prank, he laughed and said, "By Jove, this is a rum on me."[112]
  • Born: Clarissa Scott Delany, African-American poet and educator (d. 1927)
  • Died: Gaetano Bresci, 31, the anarchist who assassinated King Umberto of Italy, hanged himself in his cell at the San Stefano Prison. After his arrest at the assassination scene on July 29, 1900, Bresci was sentenced to life imprisonment, the highest penalty in Italy. According to an American commentator, however, his suicide "was the result of a series of tortures inflicted by order of the government, with the intention of driving him to end his life" and that "From the hour of his conviction those in charge of the prisoner sought by every method known to make him inflict the extreme penalty for his crime."[113][114]

Thursday, May 23, 1901

Friday, May 24, 1901

Saturday, May 25, 1901

Sunday, May 26, 1901

  • The government of Imperial China announced that it had reached an agreement with the members of the Eight-Nation Alliance (the six European superpowers, along with Japan and the United States) on the indemnity to be paid by China for damages arising from the Boxer Rebellion of 1900. Economists at the time estimated that it would take China 39 years to pay the reparations amount of 450 million taels (£67,500,000 or $175,500,000) along with four percent annual interest, and that China would have to raise 23,000,000 taels in tax revenues each year in order to avoid default.[137][138]

Monday, May 27, 1901

  • The United States Supreme Court decided the first of the "Insular Cases" that arose from questions over the status of the first overseas territories captured by the U.S. in a war against a foreign power. DeLima v. Bidwell and Downes v. Bidwell were both lawsuits over the status of Puerto Rico (referred to at the time as "Porto Rico"), ceded to the United States by Spain following the Spanish–American War, but the decision would apply to all territories, including the Philippines. The cases arose when the State of New York continued to collect a tariffs and duties on a "foreign import" after the cession; as Justice Brown described it in the 5–4 majority opinion in DeLima, the question was "whether Porto Rico was a 'foreign country' at the time the sugars were shipped", and more specifically, "whether a country which had been ceded to us, the cession accepted, possession delivered and the island occupied and administered without interference by Spain or any other power, was a foreign country or domestic territory". The Court concluded "that... Porto Rico was not a foreign country within the meaning of the tariff laws, but a territory of the United States, that the duties were illegally exacted, and that the plaintiffs are entitled to recover them back." [139] In the Downes case, however, the Court concluded that although Puerto Rico was not a foreign nation, it "is a territory appurtenant and belonging to the United States, but not a part of the United States within the revenue clauses of the Constitution... and that the plaintiff cannot recover back the duties exacted in this case." The Court also ruled that "the guarantee against deprivation of life, liberty and property without due process of law is fundamental and hence applicable in all the possessions of the United States", but added that "in the case of Porto Rico and the Philippines... there is an implied denial of the right of the inhabitants to American citizenship until Congress by further action shall signify its assent thereto." [140][141]
  • In New Jersey, the Edison Storage Battery Company was founded.[142]
  • Twenty-one coal miners in the Richland Mining Company's underground excavation near Dayton, Tennessee, were killed by two simultaneous explosions that resulted from poor placement of black powder charges.[143] Because the person doing the coal firing used too much of the powder, the explosion "blew outward in a long flame" which "ignited coal dust particles suspended in a mine atmosphere, resulting in an instantaneous flash fire through the entire length of the mine", then caused massive sections of the roof to collapse.[144]
  • Boer troops captured the British outpost of the Midland Mounted Rifles, taking 41 British troops prisoner on their way to Maraisburg, South Africa.[95]
  • Died: Artur Hazelius, 77, Swedish scholar and creator of the Nordic Museum (b. 1833)

Tuesday, May 28, 1901

Oilman D'Arcy and Shah of Iran

Wednesday, May 29, 1901

  • Fifty-one British Army soldiers and six officers of the Seventh Battalion of Imperial Yeomanry were killed, and another 122 wounded, near the South African town of Vlakfontein, in an attack on Brigadier General Henry Dixon's brigade by Boer General Jan Kemp.[155] Kemp's cavalry of 500 burghers had charged the British column, using a new technique where the soldiers fired their rifles from horseback.[156]
  • The opera Manru, written by Polish Ignacy Jan Paderewski, was performed for the first time, with the premiere at the Royal Opera in Dresden.[157]
  • The world's foremost automobile race, the James Gordon Bennett Cup, was won by Henri Fournier, who completed the 345-mile (555 km) distance from Paris to Bourdeaux in less than nine hours, crossing the finish line in a time of 8:44:44. Fournier had been a distant third until the two race leaders, Fernand Charron and Alfred Levegh (pseudonym for Alfred Velghe), collided at Orléans and were forced to withdraw.[158][159]

Thursday, May 30, 1901

Friday, May 31, 1901

  • Bulgaria amended its election law to disenfranchise the Muslim members of the Romani (or "gypsy") minority, and people classified as nomads, despite constitutional guarantees of equal voting rights.[164]
  • Detective Edward Henry began work at London's Scotland Yard as the new Assistant Commissioner, and began the process of implementing his Henry Classification System of fingerprints to create the first Central Fingerprint Branch by July.[165]
  • Bechstein Hall (now Wigmore Hall), the leading international venue for performances of chamber music because of its acoustics, held its first concert, with Ferruccio Busoni on the piano and Eugène Ysaÿe on the violin inaugurating the London facility.[166]
  • A Baptist minister from Pittsburg, Texas, Burrell Cannon, was granted U.S. Patent No. 62,509[167] for the key component to what he called the Ezekiel Airship, registering his design for the "marine propeller" that he said was inspired by the "wheel in the middle of a wheel" referred to in the Bible in the Book of Ezekiel, verse 1:16.[168] Using the Ezekiel reference as a guide, Cannon proposed four of the wheels as propellers for a heavier-than-air flying machine, and sold $20,000 worth of stock in the Ezekiel Airship Manufacturing Company to potential investors. "If it is true that he actually flew the craft," an author would note later, "then he beat the Wright Brothers by more than two years."[169] However, the airship itself would never be patented, nor do any blueprints survive, and the model would be accidentally destroyed while it was being shipped in a railroad car.[170] On June 23, newspapers in the United States carried a drawing of the airship and announced that "The first product of the Ezekiel Airship company will take its trial spin July 1... The ship will be launched at Pittsburg, Tex." with Cannon "at the steering gear."[171]
  • Five people, ranging in age from 16 to 72 years old, were lynched by a mob in Lookout, California, after being arrested for petty theft. At 2:00 in the morning, Calvin Hall was visiting the local hotel where his three sons, Frank, James and Martin, were being held in custody along with a friend, B. D. Yantis, when "a mob of fifty persons" overpowered the two constables guarding the group, then took the Hall family and Yantis to a bridge over the Pit River. Frank was put to death even before the group reached the main bridge, and the mob hanged the other four shortly afterward.[172]
  • Born: Alfredo Antonini, Italian-born American conductor and composer, in Milan (d. 1983)

References

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  2. ^ a b c d e f g The American Monthly Review of Reviews (June 1901), pp. 666-669.
  3. ^ "Big Buffalo Fair Is Opened". Chicago Daily Tribune. May 2, 1901. p. 1.
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  7. ^ "Glasgow Fair Is Opened", Chicago Daily Tribune, May 3, 1901, p. 4
  8. ^ Ida M. Tarbell, The History of the Standard Oil Company (McClure, Phillips and Co., 1904; reprinted by Cosimo, Inc., 2010) p. 187
  9. ^ "New Look, Old Cinders", by George Jackson, in Dance Chronicle, pp. 135-141 (2008)
  10. ^ Gustav Mahler: Letters to His Wife, edited by Henry-Louis de La Grange and Günther Weiss (Cornell University Press, 2004) pp. 34-35
  11. ^ David Blevins, The Sports Hall of Fame Encyclopedia: Baseball, Basketball, Football, Hockey, Soccer (Rowman & Littlefield, 2012) pp. 387-388
  12. ^ "White Stockings Forfeit a Game", Chicago Daily Tribune, May 3, 1901, p. 8
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  16. ^ William Garrott Brown, The South at Work: Observations from 1904 (University of South Carolina Press, 2014)
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  81. ^ Howard A. Patten, Israel and the Cold War: Diplomacy, Strategy and the Policy of the Periphery at the United Nations (I. B. Tauris, 2013) p. 14
  82. ^ Stanford J. Shaw, The Jews of the Ottoman Empire and the Turkish Republic (New York University Press, 1991) pp. 213-214
  83. ^ "Death Blow to Reserve Rule— Philadelphia Court Decides Against National League in the La Joie Case", Chicago Daily Tribune, May 18, 1901, p. 6
  84. ^ Patrick K. Thornton, Legal Decisions That Shaped Modern Baseball (McFarland, 2012) pp. 42-46
  85. ^ "Athletics Turn the Tables", Chicago Sunday Tribune, May 19, 1901, p. 17
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