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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

<< December 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  
December 10, 1901: The first Nobel Prizes are awarded
December 12, 1901: Wireless radio received from 1,700 miles away
December 3, 1901: Gillette patents disposable razor blade system

The following events occurred in December 1901:

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  • 10th December 1901: First Nobel Prizes awarded
  • Charles Frederick Tunnicliffe

Transcription

December 1, 1901 (Sunday)

Foucauld

December 2, 1901 (Monday)

December 3, 1901 (Tuesday)

  • The Immigration Restriction Act 1901 was passed by the Parliament of Australia, primarily to restrict non-Europeans from permanently entering the country. Under the new law, which was given royal assent on December 23, a person seeking to legally immigrate was required "to write a passage of 50 words in a European language chosen at the examiner's discretion"[13] as dictated by the examiner.
  • During a celebration at the Portuguese Indian city of Goa for the feast day of Saint Francis Xavier, an overcrowded launch capsized and sank 50 yards (46 m) from shore, drowning 140 Roman Catholic celebrants.[14]
  • The weekly Romanian magazine Sămănătorul was published for the first time, and would endure until 1910.[15]
  • The Aero Club of Great Britain (now called the Royal Aero Club) was founded by Frank Hedges Butler, his daughter Vera Butler, and Charles Rolls for "the encouragement of aero auto-mobilism and ballooning as a sport".[16]
Gillette
  • King C. Gillette applied for the patent for the first safety razor that would use disposable razor blades. U.S. Patent 775,134 would be granted on November 15, 1904.[17] Gillette, whose American Safety Razor Company would become the multibillion-dollar Gillette Company, is said to have been given the idea by his employer, inventor William Painter, who suggested that Gillette's success would come from something which could be used and eventually thrown away.[18]
  • U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt gave his first message to the United States Congress, but in the manner that was customary for that time, with the text being read aloud by persons other than the President.[19] Roosevelt's speech was more than 20,000 words. With antitrust measures as his first item, Roosevelt asked Congress to create what would become the United States Department of Commerce and Labor with a Bureau of Corporations, as well as an expansion of the United States Navy.[20] He also placed conservation high on the list of national goals, asking Congress to develop irrigation and forestry in the U.S.[21] and, in light of the September assassination of President William McKinley by an anarchist, called for a tightening of immigration laws to bar "all persons who are of a low moral tendency or unsavory reputation".[22]

December 4, 1901 (Wednesday)

December 5, 1901 (Thursday)

December 6, 1901 (Friday)

  • The secret Turkish organization Committee of Union and Progress, composed of members of the Young Turks movement, approved a plan to carry out the assassination of Abdul Hamid II, the Sultan of the Ottoman Empire. One of the people at the meeting, however, was a spy for the Sultan, and informed security forces, who shut down the CUP's center in Istanbul.[29]
  • The French Parliament passed a law allowing the French government to borrow against the Chinese indemnity payments that it expected would be made over the next 39 years, and directed the immediate payment of the French military for the expedition costs and the reimbursement for French missionaries, industrialists and private individuals who suffered damages during the Boxer Rebellion.[30]
  • Austria's Reichsrath, the lower house of the Austrian side of the Austria-Hungary empire, rejected a bill to establish a university for its Slav minority.[7]
  • The London Society for Promoting Christianity Amongst Jews received a transfer of land holdings in Haifa, then a part of Palestine, from David Christian Joseph, a former Jew who had converted to Christianity and founded a Christian mission in Haifa.[31]
  • The first five people to venture to the new Finnish colony on British Columbia's Malcolm Island, Sointula, departed Nanaimo on a 175-mile journey by sailboat. One of the men, Johan Mikkelson, was injured when his shotgun misfired, and had to be dropped off at Alert Bay for treatment, but the other four (Teodor Tanner, Kalle Hendrikson, Otto Ross and Malakias Kytomma) arrived at the island on December 15.[32]
  • A mishandled execution at Danville, Arkansas, left the victim alive even after he had been removed from the scaffold. Bud Wilson, a prisoner who had killed a guard at the Yell County jail, was hanged at 9:45 in the morning, and, 20 minutes later, lowered into a coffin. "Before the lid was placed upon the coffin," a report the next day noted, "the body began moving about. Wilson opened his eyes and his whole frame shook with tremors." Rather than rendering him medical treatment, the county deputies saw to it that he was "carried up the steps to the scaffold for the purpose of hanging him again", but he died from his injuries before he could be executed.[33]
  • Born: Carl Langbehn, German lawyer and resistance leader who was hanged for treason after making a secret trip to Switzerland to meet with the American OSS, in Padang, Dutch East Indies (d. 1943)

December 7, 1901 (Saturday)

December 8, 1901 (Sunday)

Colonel Bell

December 9, 1901 (Monday)

December 10, 1901 (Tuesday)

Roentgen

December 11, 1901 (Wednesday)

December 12, 1901 (Thursday)

  • Millicent Fawcett and the "Ladies' Commission" that had been sent by the British Government to follow up on the reports by Emily Hobhouse of mistreatment of internees at concentration camps in South Africa, completed its report, confirming many of Miss Hobhouse's statements.[54]
  • Guglielmo Marconi received the first trans-Atlantic radio signal, sent 1,700 miles (2,700 km) from Poldhu in Cornwall, England to Signal Hill in St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador in Canada. It was the letter "S" ("..." in Morse code). The breakthrough would be announced to the world three days later, on December 14. Marconi said in a statement, "On arriving in Newfoundland and installing my station on Signal Hill, the entrance to St. John's, I sent up kites every day this week with the vertical aerial wire appended, by which our signals are received. I had previously cabled to Cornwall Station to begin sending the prearranged signal. Tuesday my kite broke away and nothing resulted. Wednesday, however, I had better luck. My arrangement was for Cornwall to send at five-minute intervals between 3 and 6 o'clock p.m. the Morse letter 'S', which consists of three dots. The hours named were equivalent to from noon to 3 p.m. at St. Johns, and on Wednesday, during the hours, myself and my two assistants received these signals under such conditions as assured us they were genuine... on Thursday, we tried again during the same hours and were again rewarded with audible signals, though fainter than on Wednesday."[55] "[W]hile some scientists still debate the technical detail of that experiment," an author would note later, "there was no doubt that the principle of wireless communication had arrived on a transatlantic scale... This was a utility, and would prove itself beyond argument as a vital aid to shipping and military communication."[56]

December 13, 1901 (Friday)

December 14, 1901 (Saturday)

December 15, 1901 (Sunday)

December 16, 1901 (Monday)

Beatrix Potter

December 17, 1901 (Tuesday)

December 18, 1901 (Wednesday)

Lloyd George
  • Future British Prime Minister David Lloyd George, a Liberal member of the House of Commons, spoke to a hostile crowd of thousands of people in the Town Hall in Birmingham, after being invited by the Birmingham Liberal Association to give a speech against the Second Boer War and in criticism of Birmingham's MP, Joseph Chamberlain. Despite being asked by the Chief Constable of Birmingham to cancel the address because the police could not guarantee his safety, Lloyd George refused and nearly found himself the victim of a riot. There were 30,000 pro-war protesters surrounding the Hall, which was guarded by 350 policemen,[82] and although the "peace meeting" inside was supposed to be attended only by people who had an invitation, many of the 7,000 people inside began shouting and throwing objects as soon as Lloyd George rose to speak.[83] Lloyd George was shouted down after delivering his opening line ("This is a rather lively meeting for a peace meeting"),[84] which caused the crowd outside to being breaking windows and pelting the walls with bricks and other missiles. In order to effect his escape, Lloyd George dressed in a policeman's uniform marched out of the Hall in the middle of a large group of Birmingham police.[83][85]
  • Alfred Milner, British High Commissioner for Southern Africa, and Manuel Rafael Gorjão, the Portuguese Governor-General of Mozambique, signed an agreement for Mozambican workers to labor in South Africa's mines.[86] For each worker supplied, the South African colonial government agreed to pay Portuguese authorities 13 shillings for one year's service, along with an additional sixpence for each month beyond the initial contract, as well as paying half of each worker's salary to Portugal "in gold at a favourable rate of exchange".[87]
  • "Barbados Joe" Walcott, a black native of British Guiana, won the world welterweight boxing championship, defeating white boxer James "The Kansas Rube" Ferns, with a technical knockout in the fifth round at a bout in Buffalo, New York.[88][89] Arnold Cream, an admirer of the Barbadian fighter, would win the world heavyweight boxing title while fighting as "Jersey Joe Walcott".
  • Albert Einstein resigned from his job as a high school mathematics teacher in Schaffhausen, Switzerland, to apply for an opening at the Swiss Patent Office in Bern.[90]

December 19, 1901 (Thursday)

December 20, 1901 (Friday)

December 21, 1901 (Saturday)

December 22, 1901 (Sunday)

Tagore

December 23, 1901 (Monday)

December 24, 1901 (Tuesday)

December 25, 1901 (Wednesday)

December 26, 1901 (Thursday)

December 27, 1901 (Friday)

Sir Marcus Samuel

December 28, 1901 (Saturday)

  • Major Littleton Waller of the U.S. Marines led his men on the disastrous March across Samar in the Philippines, ostensibly to scout the route for a telegraph cable from one side of the island of Samar to the other. He started with three junior officers, 54 enlisted men, and 35 Filipino natives to serve as scouts and carriers of supplies, but had miscalculated the amount of food necessary on the march through the Samar jungle, and was unprepared for the constant rain during the three-week expedition. By march's end, 10 of Major Waller's Marine troops would die, and after a mutiny by some of the carriers, Waller would have 11 of the Filipinos executed without trial.[130][131][132]
  • The USS Missouri, second of the new Maine-class battleships, was launched from Newport News, Virginia.[133]
  • Died: Franz Xaver Kraus, 61, German priest and art historian (b. 1840)

December 29, 1901 (Sunday)

December 29, 1901: A donation tin for the Jewish National Fund

December 30, 1901 (Monday)

December 31, 1901 (Tuesday)

References

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  3. ^ "Flag Followed by Constitution to All Islands". Chicago Daily Tribune. December 3, 1901. p. 1.
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  40. ^ "Battle Costs 400 Lives— Details of Fight at Honda, Colombia, Received", Chicago Daily Tribune, December 28, 1901, p. 4
  41. ^ "D'Annunzio's Theatre", by John Woodhouse, in A History of Italian Theatre (Cambridge University Press, 2006) p. 330
  42. ^ David E. Martin, Images of America: Around Oswegatchie (Arcadia Publishing, 2005) p. 31
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  53. ^ "Catholics Unite Their Societies". Chicago Daily Tribune. December 12, 1901. p. 4.
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  55. ^ "Marconi Telegraphs Across the Atlantic Ocean Without Wires— Signals Come over the Sea through Air". Chicago Sunday Tribune. December 12, 1901. p. 1.
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  113. ^ "Chile in Favor of Arbitration— South American Republics Reported to Have Signed a Protocol". Chicago Daily Tribune. December 24, 1901. p. 4.
  114. ^ "Chile's Offer Accepted". Chicago Daily Tribune. December 25, 1901. p. 4.
  115. ^ "'Jennie June' Is Dead— Well-Known Authoress Dies of Heart Disease". Chicago Daily Tribune. December 24, 1901. p. 4.
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  119. ^ "Peace Treaty Is Signed— Chile and Argentina Avert Danger of War". Chicago Daily Tribune. December 26, 1901. p. 4.
  120. ^ "De Wet Captures Troops and Guns". Chicago Daily Tribune. December 27, 1901. p. 4.
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  122. ^ Fisher, James; Londré, Felicia Hardison (2009). "Du Barry". The A to Z of American Theater: Modernism. Scarecrow Press. p. 144.
  123. ^ Marra, Kim (2009). Strange Duets: Impresarios and Actresses in the American Theatre, 1865–1914. University of Iowa Press. p. 238.
  124. ^ Gavett, Joseph L. (2008). North Dakota: Counties, Towns & People. Watchmaker Publishing. p. 273.
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  126. ^ Peter B. Doran, Breaking Rockefeller: The Incredible Story of the Ambitious Rivals Who Toppled an Oil Empire (Penguin, 2016) p. 161
  127. ^ "German Cruiser Off Venezuela", Chicago Daily Tribune, December 28, 1901, p. 5
  128. ^ "Bulgaria's Cabinet Is Out", Chicago Daily Tribune, December 28, 1901, p. 4
  129. ^ Karen Bush Gibson, The Chumash: Seafarers of the Pacific Coast (Capstone, 2003) p. 32
  130. ^ Max Boot, The Savage Wars Of Peace: Small Wars And The Rise Of American Power (Basic Books, 2014) pp. 121-122
  131. ^ "Waller, Littleton Waller Tazewell", in The War of 1898 and U.S. Interventions, 1898 to 1934: An Encyclopedia, Benjamin R. Beede, ed. (Routledge, 2013) p. 574
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