November 1900

November 1900

January – February – March – April – May – June – July – August – September – OctoberNovemberDecember

November 6, 1900: William McKinley and Theodore Roosevelt win election
November 30, 1900: Oscar Wilde dies of meningitis

The following events occurred in November 1900.

Contents

November 1, 1900 (Thursday)

  • Tsar Nicholas II became seriously ill with typhoid fever, precipitating a crisis in the Russian Empire during the entire month. When it appeared that the Tsar's death was imminent, his advisors argued over whether he should be succeeded by his brother, Grand Duke Michael Alexandrovich, or, since he had no sons, by his young daughter Olga. Sergei Witte, later the Prime Minister, related later that a revision of the succession law came from the crisis, that would have allowed women to succeed to the throne. Nicholas began recovering on November 28, and reigned until being deposed during the Bolshevik Revolution. Nicholas, Michael, Olga, and the rest of the royal family were murdered in 1918.[1]
  • Pope Leo XIII issued the encyclical Tametsi Futura Prospicientibus [2]

November 2, 1900 (Friday)

  • "Terrible Terry" McGovern successfully defended his title as featherweight boxing champion against challenger Joe Bernstein in a bout at Louisville.[3]

November 3, 1900 (Saturday)

  • The first automobile show in the United States was held at Madison Square Garden, sponsored by the Automobile Club of America. More than 70 manufacturers put on exhibits and more than 7,000 spectators appeared on the first day of what detractors called "the horseless horse show".[4]
  • The first "ground control" station was set up at Ostend, Belgium, allowing constant contact between the station and Belgian ships sailing the route between Ostend and Dover. The Princess Clementine stayed in communication with the shore during its entire journey.[5]
  • Born: Adolf "Adi" Dassler, founder of the Adidas shoe company, in Herzogenaurach, Germany; (d. 1978)

November 4, 1900 (Sunday)

November 5, 1900 (Monday)

  • Chemist Jokichi Takamine applied for a patent on the first chemical synthesis of a human hormone, epinephrine, which he named "Adrenalin" based on the adrenal gland from which the compound is produced. The patent, granted on April 16, 1901, made a millionaire of the Japanese-born scientist.[7]
  • At the Marti Theatre in Havana, Cuba's American Governor, Leonard Wood, opened a convention to decide on a Constitution for Cuba. The convention, called to order on the day before the American presidential election, would adopt a republican system of government, similar to that of the United States, on February 21, 1901.[8]
  • Born: Martin Dies, Jr., Texas Congressman (1931–45 and 1953–59) and Chairman of House Un-American Activities Committee, in Colorado City, Texas; (d. 1972)
Natalie Schafer, American actress who portrayed "Mrs. Howell" on Gilligan's Island, in Red Bank, New Jersey; (d. 1991)

November 6, 1900 (Tuesday)

  • William McKinley was re-elected as President of the United States, with 292 electoral votes over 155 for Democrat challenger William Jennings Bryan. The Republican party increased its lead in the Senate to 57–33, and in the House 202–155 [9]

November 7, 1900 (Wednesday)

  • The day after voting in the United States, elections were held in Canada for the House of Commons. The Liberal Party, led by Prime Minister Wilfrid Laurier, increased its majority, with 128 of the 213 seats. Charles Tupper, former Prime Minister and leader of the Conservatives, lost re-election as representative from Cape Breton.[10]
  • With President McKinley re-elected, Spain sold the Sulu Islands to the United States for $100,000.[11]
  • The flag and the coat of arms for Ecuador were formally adopted, after being proposed on October 31. The coat of arms, on a yellow, blue and red tricolor, depicts a condor and Mount Chimborazo.[12]

November 8, 1900 (Thursday)

November 9, 1900 (Friday)

  • Benjamin Holt applied for the patent for the Track-Type Tractor, the continuous track or the caterpillar track, used for heavy machinery including tanks and bulldozers. Because the tracks distribute a vehicle's weight over a larger surface than wheels can, tracked vehicles are less prone to sink or get stuck., [6]
  • At Mukden, Admiral Yevgeni Alekseyev signed an agreement with the Military Governor of Manchuria, Tseng-sh'i, giving Russia control of the area.[15]

November 10, 1900 (Saturday)

November 11, 1900 (Sunday)

  • The Baron de Coubertin announced that the 1904 Olympic Games would be hosted by the United States.[17]
  • The musical Florodora began its run on Broadway, a year after first being shown in London. After 505 performances, it was revived in 1902, 1905 and 1920. The six "Florodora Girls"-- Marie Wilson, Agnes Wayburn, Marjorie Relyea, Vaughn Texsmith, Daisy Green and Margaret Walker—each stood 5'4 and each weighed 130 pounds.[18]
  • Born: Halina Konopacka, Polish track athlete, Olympic medalist and record holder, in Rawa Mazowiecka; (d. 1989)

November 12, 1900 (Monday)

  • The Exposition Universelle of 1900 closed in Paris. Three cannon shots fired from the Eiffel Tower signalled the end of the world's fair that had started in April.[19]
  • The U.S. War Department announced that, effective December 15, the "Department of Porto Rico" would be discontinued, and that Brig. Gen. George W. Davis, the military governor of Puerto Rico, would be transferred to the Philippines in conjunction with the reduction of troops there.[20]

November 13, 1900 (Tuesday)

  • Arthur Jenner, Britain's Sub-Commissioner assigned to the Jubaland province in colony of British Somaliland, was murdered on orders of two of the Chiefs of the Ogaden, Hassan Yera and Hassan Odel. Yera had been arrested earlier on Jenner's orders as part of a murder investigation.[21]
  • Valdemar Poulsen of Denmark was awarded U.S. Patent No. 661,619 for the first sound recording device, which he called the telegraphone.[22] In the summer of 1898, Poulsen found that a telephone, connected to an electromagnet, which in turn moved along a piece of piano wire could store the sound of his voice; and that the sound could be "played back" to a telephone receiver by moving the magnet back over the wire.[23]
  • Born: "Carbine" Williams, American inventor, in Cumberland County, North Carolina (d. 1975)

November 14, 1900 (Wednesday)

  • After 100 players from baseball's National League jumped to the new American League – including Cy Young and Nap Lajoie – war between the circuits began and the NL declared the AL to be an "outlaw league".[24]
  • Born: Aaron Copland, American composer, in Brooklyn; (d. 1990)

November 15, 1900 (Thursday)

  • Carnegie Tech (now Carnegie Mellon University) had its genesis with the donation of one million dollars by Andrew Carnegie to the city of Pittsburgh, to build a college on land provided by the city. The buildings of the Carnegie Technical Schools were constructed at Schenley Park over the next several years, and on October 16, 1905, the first 120 engineering students were admitted.[25]

November 16, 1900 (Friday)

  • The Philadelphia Orchestra gave its first public concert, conducted by Fritz Scheel. From 1912 to 1938, the orchestra was conducted by Leopold Stokowski.[26]
  • In a gruesome lynching, 16-year old Preston Porter, Jr., was burned at the stake in Limon, Colorado, a week after he had killed 11 year old Louise Frost at the same location. At 3:45 p.m., a mob of 300 citizens stopped a train transporting Porter to the county jail and removed Porter from the train, with an intent to hang him. Richard W. Frost, the girl's father, was given a choice for the method of execution, and a 6:23 p.m., he set fire to a kerosene soaked pile of wood as the mob, and reporters, watched. Porter took 20 minutes to die.[27]
  • During a parade in Breslau, Germany (now Wroclaw), Poland, a woman threw a hatchet at the open carriage of Kaiser Wilhelm II. Selma Schnapke, later ruled to be insane, threw well enough that the "hand chopper" struck the imperial carriage, and was arrested.[28]

November 17, 1900 (Saturday)

  • Tests were completed at the Indian Head Proving Ground in Maryland of the most advanced American weapon up to that time. The twelve-inch naval gun was designed to fire shells that "would pierce any armor ever made". Forty of the guns were scheduled to be placed on new battleships and armored cruisers.[29]
  • General Kitchener announced plans to "depopulate the towns in the Transvaal".[30] In accordance with the order, the burning of farms was discontinued, and civilians were relocated to what became described by British M.P. John Ellis as "concentration camps", a term coined from "reconcentrado" camps that Spain had set up in Cuba. By October 1901, the camps housed 111,619 white and 43,780 black citizens, and had a death rate of 34 percent.[31]

November 18, 1900 (Sunday)

  • Herbert Hoover, "an American mining engineer who was present at the siege of Tien-Tsin", was interviewed by the New York Times and predicted that "Unless out government adopts a more forcible policy, we will have a calamity in China that has not been equaled in the history of the world." The 26 year old engineer, destined to become the 31st President of the United States, went on to say "Our whole policy has been to pat a rattlesnake on the head." [32]

November 19, 1900 (Monday)

  • The Colombian Navy seized the British steamer Taboga after the shi's captain refused to allow Colomban troops to be transported on the ship to Buenaventura.[33]
  • The Baylor University College of Medicine opened.

November 20, 1900 (Tuesday)

November 21, 1900 (Wednesday)

November 22, 1900 (Thursday)

November 23, 1900 (Friday)

  • The Youngstown Sheet and Tube Company was incorporated in Ohio.[37]

November 24, 1900 (Saturday)

  • At New Haven, Connecticut, college football's two remaining undefeated and untied teams-- Yale (11–0–0) and Harvard (10–0–0) met to close the 1900 season. Yale won the unofficial national championship, 28–0.[38]
  • The Ashanti War ended, as British troops brought in 31 captured kings and chiefs as prisoners of war.[39]

November 25, 1900 (Sunday)

  • Cumann na nGaedheal (literally, "League of the Gaels"), a political party founded by Arthur Griffith to further the cause of Ireland's independence from Great Britain, held its first convention.[40]
  • Born: Rudolf Höß, German Nazi official and commandant of Auschwitz concentration camp; in Baden-Baden (executed 1947); Helen Gahagan Douglas, Actress and U.S. Representative (California 1945–1951); (d. 1980); and Arthur Schwartz, American composer (d.1984)

November 26, 1900 (Monday)

  • There is no "Allis, Wisconsin", but on this date, the Edward P. Allis Company moved to the community of North Greenfield, Wisconsin and became its largest employer. Two years later, the town incorporated as West Allis, Wisconsin. [7]

November 27, 1900 (Tuesday)

  • Died: U.S. Senator Cushman K. Davis (R-Minnesota), in St. Paul. As Chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Cushman championed American acquisition of overseas territories in Hawaii, Cuba and the Philippines. He liked to say that "I stand in the vestibule of the 20th century",, but died 34 days before the end of the 19th Century.[41] He had injured his right foot in September while campaigning for President McKinley's re-election, reportedly from "blood poisioning caused by the dye of a black silk stocking which entered his system through a slight abrasion".[42] His last words, reportedly, were "Oh, that I might live five years more for my country's sake!" [43]

November 28, 1900 (Wednesday)

  • Anton Chekhov's play The Wedding was given its first performance, making its debut at the Moscow Hunt Club.[44]
  • Died: Halcyon Skinner, eulogized as "the man who revolutionized the carpet making industry", was killed when he accidentally stepped in front of a train near his home. In 1849, Skinner had invented various looms that lowered the costs for manufacturing carpeting.[45]

November 29, 1900 (Thursday)

  • Thirteen people were killed and more than 80 seriously injured while watching the football game between Stanford and California. Over 100 persons had gathered on the roof of the Pacific Glass Works in Palo Alto for a free view of the game. When the roof collapsed, the victims fell into vats of molten glass.[46]
  • Born: Mildred Gillars, who later become the Nazi-propaganda broadcaster "Axis Sally", as Mildred Sisk in Portland, Maine (d. 1988)

November 30, 1900 (Friday)

  • Died: Oscar Wilde, 46, died of cerebral meningitis in room 16 of the Hotel d'Alsace at 13 rue des Beaux Arts in Paris.[47] His death came at 1:45 in the afternoon.[48]
  • 1,200 Filipino fighters surrender at Virgan Island [49]

References

  1. ^ Sergei Witte, The Memoirs of Count Witte (translated by Sidney Harcave); (M.E. Sharpe, 1990), pp296–297
  2. ^ Savinien Louismet, The Mystery of Jesus (Oates & Washbourne, 1922), p54
  3. ^ "Manitoba Morning Free Press", November 3, 1900, p5
  4. ^ "Motor Show is Opened", New York Times, November 4, 1900, p10; Gregory Votolato, American Design in the Twentieth Century: Personality and Performance (Manchester University Press, 1998), p11
  5. ^ W.J. Baker, A history of the Marconi Company (Routledge, 1970), p60
  6. ^ Richard Brent Turner, Islam in the African-American Experience (Indiana University Press, 2003) pp113–114
  7. ^ Richard L. Myers, The 100 Most Important Chemical Compounds: A Reference Guide (Greenwood Publishing Group, 2007), pp108–109; Horace W. Davenport, "Epinephrin(e)" in The Physiologist (April 1982) [1]
  8. ^ Albert G. Robinson, "The Work of the Cuban Convention", The Forum (June 1901), p401
  9. ^ "M'Kinley Re-Elected", New York Times, November 7, 1900, p1
  10. ^ "The Laurier Government Is Sustained and Tupper is Trounced", Manitoba Free Press, November 8, 1900, p1
  11. ^ George A. Malcolm, The Government of the Philippine Islands: Its Development and Fundamentals (Lawyers Co-operative Publishing, 1916)
  12. ^ Whitney Smith, Flag Lore of All Nations (Millbrook Press, 2001), p33; [2]
  13. ^ Donald Pizer, The Novels of Theodore Dreiser: A Critical Study (University of Minnesota Press), pp42–44; [3]
  14. ^ "Famour Maharajah Dead", New York Times, November 11, 1900, p7
  15. ^ S. C. M. Paine, Imperial Rivals: China, Russia, and Their Disputed Frontier (M.E. Sharpe, 1996), pp271
  16. ^ "Steamer Founders; 31 Lives Are Lost", New York Times, November 11, 1900, p1
  17. ^ George R. Matthews, America's First Olympics: The St. Louis Games of 1904 (University of Missouri Press, 1904), p8
  18. ^ Glenn Litton, Musical Comedy in America: From the Black Crook Through Sweeny Todd (Routledge, 1981), pp77–78
  19. ^ "Paris Exposition Closes Its Gates", New York Times, November 13, 1900, p7
  20. ^ "To Withdraw Troops Now In Porto Rico", New York Times, November 13, 1900, p8
  21. ^ House of Commons Sessional Papers, 1901, Vol 12: Colonies and British Possessions, Africa, pp13–14
  22. ^ Marvin Camras, Magnetic Recording Handbook (Springer, 1988), p651
  23. ^ Mark H. Clark and Henry Nielsen, "The Telegraphone", in Magnetic Recording: The First 100 Years (Wiley-IEEE, 1999), pp15–16
  24. ^ Russell Schneider, The Cleveland Indians Encyclopedia (Sports Publishing LLC, 2005) p11
  25. ^ Official Guide to the Carnegie Institute of Technology (1915), pp9–10
  26. ^ "Philadelphia Orchestra", Dictionary of American History (Rowman & Littlefield, 1978), p491
  27. ^ "Boy Burned At The Stake In Colorado ", New York Times, November 17, 1900, p1
  28. ^ "Attempt to Kill Emperor William", New York Times, November 17, 1900, p7
  29. ^ "Twelve-Inch Gun a Wonder", New York Times, November 16, 1900, p1
  30. ^ "To Depopulate the Transavaal", New York Times, November 18, 1900
  31. ^ Thomas Pakenham, The Scramble for Africa: White Man's Conquest of the Dark Continent from 1876 to 1912 pp577–79
  32. ^ "Predicts a Great Uprising", New York Times, November 19, 1900, p7
  33. ^ "The Seizure of the Taboga", New York Times, November 21, 1900, p1
  34. ^ "Over Fifty Dead in Tennessee Tornado", New York Times, November 22, 1900, p1; [4].
  35. ^ [5]
  36. ^ Catholic Builders of the Nation (Continental Press, 1923), p381
  37. ^ Gertrude G. Schroeder, The Growth of Major Steel Companies, 1900–1950 (Johns Hopkins Press, 1953), p62
  38. ^ "Yale Football Champions of 1900", New York Times, November 25, 1900, p1
  39. ^ "Ashanti War (1900)", The Victorians at War, 1815–1914: An Encyclopedia of British Military History (ABC-CLIO, 2004), pp32–33
  40. ^ Brian Feeney, Sinn Feín: A Hundred Turbulent Years (University of Wisconsin Press, 2003) pp29–30
  41. ^ Barbara Stuhler, Ten Men of Minnesota and American Foreign Policy, 1898–1968 (Minnesota Historical Society Press, 1973), p19
  42. ^ "Senator Davis Very Ill", New York Times, November 5, 1900, p1
  43. ^ Stuhler, p30; "Cushman K. Davis of Minnesota Dead", New York Times, November 28, 1900, p1
  44. ^ Laurence Senelick, translator, The Complete Plays: Anton Chekhov (W. W. Norton & Company, 2007), pp563–564
  45. ^ "Halcyon Skinner Killed", New York Times, November 29, 1900, p1
  46. ^ "Killed at Football Game", New York Times, November 30, 1900, p1
  47. ^ Piers Letcher, Eccentric France: The Bradt Guide to Mad, Magical and Marvellous France (Bradt Travel Guides, 2003), pp176–177
  48. ^ Gyles Daubeney Brandreth, Oscar Wilde and a Death of No Importance: A Mystery (Simon & Schuster, 2008), pp341–342
  49. ^ The Statistician and Economist (1901–1902) (L.P. McCarty, 1902), p381

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