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January 1901

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

The following events occurred in January 1901:

Tuesday, January 1, 1901

Wednesday, January 2, 1901

Kaiser Friedrich III in 1902

Thursday, January 3, 1901

Friday, January 4, 1901

Saturday, January 5, 1901

Sunday, January 6, 1901

Monday, January 7, 1901

Tuesday, January 8, 1901

Wednesday, January 9, 1901

Thursday, January 10, 1901

Spindletop

Friday, January 11, 1901

Saturday, January 12, 1901

Sunday, January 13, 1901

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

Monday, January 14, 1901

Tuesday, January 15, 1901

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

Wednesday, January 16, 1901

Thursday, January 17, 1901

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

Friday, January 18, 1901

Cross of the Order of Merit of the Prussian Crown

Saturday, January 19, 1901

  • Aboard the protected cruiser USS Chicago, Apprentice 3rd Class Louis Gorden slipped on the deck and sustained a fatal skull fracture.[69]
  • At the close of a congressional subcommittee investigation of hazing at the United States Military Academy, superintendent Colonel Albert L. Mills and four cadets presented a statement signed by all of the members of the Academy, pledging to abolish hazing. The statement, which would appear on the front pages of many American newspapers the next day, said in part "we... while maintaining that we have pursued our system from the best motives, yet realizing that the deliberate judgment of the people would, in a country like ours, be above all other considerations, do now reaffirm our former action abolishing the exercising of fourth class men, and do further agree to discontinue hazing, the requiring of fourth class men to eat anything against their desire, and the practice of 'calling out' fourth class men by class action; and that we will not devise other similar practices to replace those abandoned."[73] The hazing practices had come to national attention after the death of first-year cadet Oscar Lyle Booz on December 3. The statement to forcing men to "eat anything against their desire" was a reference to burns sustained by Booz after a tabasco sauce had been poured down his throat.[74]
  • Died: Jacques-Victor-Albert, 79, French politician and former Prime Minister of France in 1873-1874 and again in 1877 (b. 1821)

Sunday, January 20, 1901

  • "Without a protest from any Christian," as a horrified press report noted, five women and girls were openly offered for sale as slaves at a public auction in the United States.[75] Notwithstanding the 13th Amendment and California state law, the five females had been the slaves of Leong Kow in China and continued to serve him after his immigration to San Francisco. When Mr. Leong wanted to return to his homeland, he advertised the midday sale by posting notices in the Chinatown neighborhood, and his creditors pasted their notices of claims against his estate. Four of the women were purchased, but the youngest, Leong's 12-year-old daughter, received no bids. The next day, she was rescued from her home by the local Society for the Suppression of Vice and by a Presbyterian missionary.[76] The incident would lead to state legislative hearings investigating the practice of human trafficking that took place with the tolerance of the San Francisco police[77] and by federal prosecutors.[78]
  • Lord Strathcona's Horse, a Canadian mounted unit, left South Africa following service in the Second Boer War. It was disbanded shortly afterwards, but would become an official regiment of the Canadian Army later in the year.[79]
  • Born: Jesús Colón, Puerto Rican writer, in Cayey (d. 1974)

Monday, January 21, 1901

  • The first RCA Victor record was created, as popular musician Vess Ossman played the banjo in a studio cut of the song "Tell Me, Pretty Maiden", from the popular musical comedy Florodora, which was pressed and released as a 10-inch disc. By 1946, RCA would sell its one billionth record.[80]
  • R. R. Racey, a British colonial official in charge of administering sections of the British protectorate in Uganda, oversaw the replacement of a prior tribal monarch of the Igala people, Musinga, the Onu of Igara. King Mosinga had committed suicide rather than leaving his kingdom to be taken by Racey to the administrative office. Racey convened a meeting of 55 sub-chiefs, who elected Musinga's young son as the Onu Mukotani of Igara. Since Mukotani was too young to govern, Racey arranged another relative, Bakora, to serve as regent and to swear allegiance to the British Empire.[81]
  • Nine days after securing her release from a jail in Wichita, Kansas, alcohol opponent Carrie Nation convened a meeting of the Woman's Christian Temperance Union and successfully persuaded other members to join her in her lone crusade of destroying places that sold liquor. That evening, she began to use a hatchet on her raids, which served as both a symbol of her cause and as an instrument for vandalism.[51] She and three of her followers laid waste to two saloons in Wichita, and were in the process of invading a third when she was arrested by police.[82][83]
  • Dr. Henry V. Passage, a physician from Peru, Indiana, as well as a Democrat member of the Indiana House of Representatives, introduced one of the earliest proposals for lethal injection as a means of capital punishment. Dr. Passage proposed that an overdose of morphine should replace hanging as the state's means of executing a murderer; the proposed amendment bill was voted down along party lines.[84]
  • After recovering from a long illness, King Oscar of the United Kingdoms of Sweden and Norway resumed his governmental duties, which he had entrusted to Crown Prince Gustaf.[85]
  • Died: Elisha Gray, 65, American electrical engineer, co-founder of the Western Electric company who is sometimes credited with the invention of the telephone (b. 1835)[85]

Tuesday, January 22, 1901

King Edward VII

Wednesday, January 23, 1901

Thursday, January 24, 1901

  • In a state ceremony at Dublin Castle, Edward VII was proclaimed King of Ireland.[97]
  • Emily Hobhouse arrived at Bloemfontein concentration camp to report on conditions. Horrified by what she saw, she would write:

    "They went to sleep without any provision having been made for them and without anything to eat or to drink. I saw crowds of them along railway lines in bitterly cold weather, in pouring rain–hungry, sick, dying and dead. Soap was not dispensed. The water supply was inadequate. No bedstead or mattress was procurable. Fuel was scarce and had to be collected from the green bushes on the opes of the kopjes (small hills) by the people themselves. The rations were extremely meagre and when, as I frequently experienced, the actual quantity dispensed fell short of the amount prescribed, it simply meant famine."[98]

  • Hubert von Herkomer was commissioned by King Edward VII of the United Kingdom to paint a watercolor portrait of the recently deceased Queen Victoria as she lay in her coffin, a not uncommon practice of the day as a respectful means of preserving the final image of a person. A century later, a critic would write, as praise, "the brightness of a flowing and translucent shroud seems already to be transporting the Queen into another world."[99]

Friday, January 25, 1901

Saturday, January 26, 1901

  • Tomb KV44, in Egypt's Valley of the Kings, was opened by a team of archaeologists led by Howard Carter. The tomb was found to contain the mummies of ten people, the most notable of whom was Tentkerer, a woman who had served the Pharaoh Osorkon I, who reigned from 922 BC to 887 BC.[101]
  • Thirty-two captured leaders of the Filipino resistance to American rule were deported to Guam on a U.S. Navy ship which steamed out of Manila Bay to send the nationalists into exile.[102] The 32 men had refused to take the oath of allegiance to the American territorial government, and were considered likely to foment unrest against the U.S. Territorial authorities. Foremost among the deportees was Apolinario Mabini, who had been the first Prime Minister of the First Philippine Republic during its temporary independence from Spain. Mabini would finally be allowed to return to the Philippines in 1903, two months before his death.[103]
  • Edouard Orban de Xivry, the Governor of the Luxembourg Province of Belgium, was assassinated in his office by one of his employees. Messr. Schneider asked for a meeting with the Governor. After they began talking, he drew out a revolver, shot Orban de Xivry, then killed himself.[104]

Sunday, January 27, 1901

"Crazy Snake", Chitto Harjo

Monday, January 28, 1901

Tuesday, January 29, 1901

Congressman White
  • China's Empress Dowager Cixi issued an imperial decree in the name of the Emperor. "After we moved out of the capital city," the Emperor's statement began, "the empress has been constantly busy with state affairs. As Emperor, I deeply regret my mistakes... we mindlessly followed the old ways, leading to the calamity we face today. Now that peace negotiations are underway, we should reform all political affairs so that the country can become strong and prosperous." The decree directed all government officials to suggest reforms during the next two months, determining "What should be done to strengthen China, develop human talent, reach fiscal balance, and build a strong army?"[116]
  • In French Algeria, Swiss travel writer Isabelle Eberhardt, who posed as the Sufi tribesman Si Mahmoud Saadi, was stabbed and severely wounded by a fanatic member of the Tidjani Muslims, who regarded her and other members of the Qadiriyya Muslims as infidels.[117] The trauma was enough to make Eberhardt move back to Marseille. She would die in an accident in 1903.
  • U.S. Representative George Henry White of North Carolina's 2nd congressional district, the 22nd and last remaining African-American member of the United States Congress, gave his farewell speech. "This is perhaps the Negroes' temporary farewell to the American Congress," he told his colleagues, "but let me say, Phoenix-like, he will rise up some day and come again. These parting words are in behalf of an outraged, heart-broken, bruised and bleeding, but God-fearing people; faithful, industrious, loyal, rising people – full of potential force."[118][119] There would not be another black member of the U.S. Congress for 28 years; in 1928, Oscar Stanton De Priest would be elected to represent Illinois's 2nd congressional district.
  • Born:

Wednesday, January 30, 1901

Thursday, January 31, 1901

  • Anton Chekhov's Three Sisters (Три сeстры, Tri sestry) opened at the Moscow Art Theatre under the direction of Konstantin Stanislavski and Vladimir Nemirovich-Danchenko with Stanislavski as Vershinin, Olga Knipper as Masha, Margarita Savetskaya as Olga, Maria Andreyeva as Irina and Maria Lilina (Stanislavsky's wife) as Natasha.[121]
  • St. Louis sports promoter C. W. Daniels met with Chicago White Stockings owner Charles Comiskey and the new Chicago team's manager, Clark Griffith, with a proposal for a professional soccer league that would be composed of teams made up by American League baseball players, and located in AL cities, to play in the autumn. On March 17, Griffith and Baltimore Orioles manager John McGraw would stage a soccer game in St. Louis,[122] and during the fall, a Chicago team would play at the White Stockings' ballpark, but with soccer players rather than baseball players.[123]
  • The Winnipeg Victorias of the Manitoba Hockey Association won ice hockey's Stanley Cup in the second game of a best-of-three series against the Montreal Shamrocks of the Canadian Amateur Hockey League. The game was tied 3–3 at the end of regulation time, and for the first time in Stanley Cup history, a game went into extra time. During the four minute period, Winnipeg's Dan Bain made the winning goal for the 4–3 win.[124]
  • Born: Marie Luise Kaschnitz (Marie Luise von Holzing-Berslett), German short story writer, novelist and poet; in Karlsruhe (d. 1974)[125]
  • Died: Steve Brodie, 39, American who had gained worldwide fame in 1885 after being credited with surviving a jump off of the Brooklyn Bridge, died from complications of diabetes (b. 1861)<ref>"Steve Brodie dead". Providence News. Feb 1, 1901. p. 3. Retrieved July 29, 2021.</ref

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