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October 23, 1901: U.S. General Smith orders Philippine civilian massacre
October 19, 1901: Santos-Dumont wins the 100,000 francs Deutsch Prize
October 16, 1901: Racists outraged after Negro Booker T. Washington dines at the White House
October 10, 1901: Henry Ford wins history-changing race

The following events occurred in October 1901:

October 1, 1901 (Tuesday)

Rudyard Kipling
  • Rudyard Kipling's novel Kim, about the life of Irish orphan Kimball O'Hara in British India, was published as a book for the first time and soon became a bestseller. The story had first been printed in monthly installments as a serial in the United States in McClure's Magazine, running from December 1900 to the October 1901 issue, and in the United Kingdom in Cassell's Magazine starting in January 1901. The Macmillan & Co. book in the United Kingdom was sold for six shillings a copy.[1] and by Doubleday, Page & Co. in the United States [2]
  • Voters in Connecticut voted overwhelmingly (47,317 to 26,745) to write a new state constitution to replace the one promulgated in 1818. A convention would be held in 1902 and a revised constitution would be drawn, which voters would reject even more overwhelmingly, by a more than 2 to 1 margin (10,377 for and 21,234 against).[3]
  • Born: Partap Singh Kairon, India politician and Chief Minister of the Punjab from 1956 to 1964 (assassinated 1965)

October 2, 1901 (Wednesday)

HMS Holland 1

October 3, 1901 (Thursday)

picture1
picture2
Afghanistan's Emir Abdur Rahman and King Habibullah

October 4, 1901 (Friday)

October 5, 1901 (Saturday)

October 6, 1901 (Sunday)

October 7, 1901 (Monday)

October 8, 1901 (Tuesday)

October 9, 1901 (Wednesday)

Lord Milner

October 10, 1901 (Thursday)

Alexander Winton
  • Two automobile manufacturers, Alexander Winton of Cleveland and Henry Ford of Detroit, competed against each other at a track in Grosse Pointe, Michigan, in a race that "would set the future of American automobile and tire sales", according to one historian.[29] The meeting at the Grosse Pointe horse racing track attracted various drivers, but Ford and Winton were the only two who felt that their cars could go the distance in the third and most important race, the $1,000 ten-lap, "ten-mile sweepstakes event". The Winton Motor Carriage Company auto was the 40-horsepower Bullet, and Winton was the most successful race car driver in America. Ford had never raced a car before, and was using the smaller, 26-horsepower Detroit Automobile Company vehicle, but he had one feature in his design, "a spark coil wrapped in a porcelain insulating case fashioned by a dentist",[30] an early version of the spark plug. Heavily favored to win, Winton took the early lead, and was 0.2 miles (0.32 km) ahead after 3 miles (4.8 km), particularly because he was on the inside and better at rounding curves and Ford often "shut off power and ran wide on each curve".[31] Ford, however, gradually closed the gap on the straightaways and was catching up by the sixth lap. Winton, on the other hand, began to have trouble as the ball bearings in his engine were overheating. After 7 miles (11 km), Ford passed Winton on the eighth lap, and won with an average speed of 43.5 miles per hour (70.0 km/h). The upset win not only brought Ford (who would never race again) nationwide fame, but also attracted Detroit investors who wanted to form a new corporation, which would be named the "Henry Ford Company" to capitalize on Ford's celebrity. Despite the loss to Ford, Winton won most of the headlines, because he had broken the world record for the fastest speed to drive a mile, setting a new mark of one minute, 12.4 seconds and an average speed of 49.72 miles per hour (80.02 km/h).[32]
  • Thousands of spectators in Toronto heard the song O Canada for the first time in their lives, as the band of The Royal Canadian Regiment played the music while troops marched past the visiting Duke of York. O Canada, which would become the Canadian national anthem, had been performed in Quebec since 1880, but had rarely been heard outside of the province because there was no English translation to the French words. Augustus Vogt, the conductor of the Toronto Mendelssohn Choir, was among the listeners and requested Dr. Thomas Bedford Richardson to compose an English-language version.[33][34]
  • Laurent Tailhade, editor of the French anarchist newspaper Libertaire, was sentenced to a year's imprisonment and fined 1,000 French francs as punishment for his "incendiary" comments made during the Russian Tsar's visit to France.[35]
  • General Redvers Buller of the British Army said in a speech that he had recommended the surrender of the fortress of Ladysmith during the Second Boer War, making remarks that would lead to his censure and removal from command.[36][37]
  • Born:
  • Died: Lorenzo Snow, 87, president of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints since 1898 (b. 1814)

October 11, 1901 (Friday)

  • Bert Williams and George Walker "became the first African-American recording artists" [38] when they sang together for the first of 28 phonograph records under a contract for the Victor Talking Machine Company, including two songs from their popular vaudeville show Sons of Ham— "The Phrenologist Coon" and "All Going Out and Nothing Coming In", as well as "I Don't Like That Face You Wear", "Good Morning, Carrie", "In My Castle on the River Nile", and "Where Was Moses When the Light Went Out?".[39]
  • The county seat of Baldwin County, Alabama was quietly transferred from Daphne, Alabama to Bay Minette, with the loading of courthouse records into wagons in the evening, and the driving of the wagons to the new courthouse the next day. Despite stories that courthouse records were taken in a "raid", prior arrangements were made between the two towns and the operation was carried out without incident.[40]
  • Born: Colonel Masanobu Tsuji, Imperial Japanese Army officer notable for atrocities committed during World War II, including the Bataan Death March of 1942; in Ishikawa Prefecture, Japan. Colonel Tsuji evaded prosecution for war crimes, and became a best-selling author after Allied prosecutions were dropped in 1950, but disappeared during a trip to Laos in 1961 and was declared dead in 1968.

October 12, 1901 (Saturday)

October 13, 1901 (Sunday)

  • Count Henri de la Vaulx of France, winner of the previous year's Gran Prix of Ballooning, departed Les Sablettes, near Toulon, on his quest to sail a balloon south across the Mediterranean Sea to French Algeria, in hopes of winning a government defense contract for his experiment in "using balloons between France, Corsica and Algeria in time of war." De La Vauix, accompanied by three other men, took along 75 homing pigeons in order to regularly send back messages about his position over the Sea, and the first one arrived in the evening, bearing a note that said that his airship had made it 50 miles (80 km) off out to sea by noon, at an altitude of 40 feet (12 m).[41] After 42 hours, he ran into a storm and was near Port-Vendres when he signaled the French cruiser Du Chayla to bring the crew on board.[42]
  • Born:

October 14, 1901 (Monday)

October 15, 1901 (Tuesday)

  • Soprano Geraldine Farrar made her operatic debut, as Marguerite in the Berlin production of Charles Gounod's Faust.[48]
  • Nearly five years after he had served as President of the United States, Grover Cleveland came out of retirement to begin service as a member of the board of trustees of Princeton University.[49]
  • Henry Lee Higginson, one of the trustees of Harvard University, opened the Harvard Union, one of the first student unions in the United States, for the purpose of creating an inexpensive and democratic alternative to the university clubs that existed on the campus. Initially, the Harvard Union charged an annual membership fee of five dollars, which, as The New York Times would note later, "the great majority of Harvard students can easily afford." At the dedication, Higginson, who had donated the money to construct the union's building, said, "Like the Arabs, nail open your doors and offer freely to all comers the salt of hospitality."[50]
  • One of the more unusual deaths of a football player during a game happened at Fairmount Park in West Philadelphia in Pennsylvania. David Wark, aged 20, was playing a game involving "two scrub teams" when a punted football lodged in the globe of an electric streetlight. As players lowered the arm of the streetlamp, Wark grasped the wet football and was electrocuted.[51]
  • Born: Hermann Josef Abs, German banker who was on the board of directors of Deutsche Bank of other German corporations during the Nazi era, and who managed the German economic recovery after World War II, including the rebuilding of Deutsche Bank, for whom he served as chairman of the board from 1957 to 1967; in Bonn (d. 1994)
  • Died: Carlos María Fitz-James Stuart, 16th Duke of Alba, 51, Spanish nobleman described as "the leader of Spanish society", suffered a fatal heart attack at his hotel in New York City, after having arrived four weeks earlier to watch the America's Cup on board Sir Thomas Lipton's yacht, the Shamrock II. The Duke, who was said to have the largest tract of private property in Spain, had finished hosting a party when he was stricken. (b. 1849)[52]

October 16, 1901 (Wednesday)

  • Ten of the 46 members of Company E of the U.S. 9th Infantry Regiment were killed, and six wounded, on the Philippine island of Samar by 500 men wielding bolo knives. The Americans were better prepared than Company C had been in the September 28 attack.[53]
  • The Swedish Antarctic Expedition, led by Professor Otto Nordenskjöld of Uppsala University, departed from Gothenburg, Sweden on the ship Antarctic, captained by Carl Anton Larsen.[54]
  • Police in Italy confirmed that they had captured outlaw Giuseppe Andrea Mussolino, after two years of searching. Mussolino, suspected in at least 25 murders, was captured near Urbino by police who initially were unaware of his identity.[55] Mussolino had escaped from prison in 1899 while serving a 21-year sentence, and then set about to get revenge on everyone who had caused his conviction, killing the trial judge, jurors and prosecution witnesses. On June 1, 1902, he would be sentenced to life imprisonment.[56]
  • French inventor Jean-Luc Krieger set a new world record for the greatest distance driven by an electric car without recharging the battery, traveling 307 kilometres (191 mi) from Paris to Châtellerault.[57]
  • U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt hosted African American leader and Tuskegee Institute President Booker T. Washington at a private dinner at the White House. "Colored men have been received at receptions and state affairs for many years," the Chicago Tribune observed the next day, "but President Roosevelt is the first to give a private invitation to a negro. Diplomatically and at all state functions no distinction is drawn as to races."[58] Other newspaper publishers and members of Congress, particularly those from the American South, would harshly criticize Roosevelt for having a black person as the sole guest to have the honor to join him, his wife and four children for dinner in his home.[59][60][61] Roosevelt did not invite Washington back during the remaining seven years of his term.[62]

October 17, 1901 (Thursday)

"The Executive Mansion" officially renamed

October 18, 1901 (Friday)

October 19, 1901 (Saturday)

October 20, 1901 (Sunday)

  • Leonora Piper, who had attained international fame as a medium who could communicate with the dead through séance rituals, announced her retirement from the field in a two-and-a-half page article in the New York Herald under the headline "I Am No Telephone to the Spirit World". "I must truthfully say," she wrote to disappointed believers, "that I do not believe that spirits of the dead have spoken through me." Despite her confession, however, she quickly recanted;[75] people continued to approach her and she would conduct séances for most of her remaining years, dying in 1950.[76]
  • Born: Adelaide Hall, American jazz singer and entertainer; in Brooklyn, New York (d. 1993)

October 21, 1901 (Monday)

October 22, 1901 (Tuesday)

General Buller, fired

October 23, 1901 (Wednesday)

Brig. Gen. Smith
  • In the Philippines, Brigadier General Jacob H. Smith directed Major Littleton Waller of the U.S. Marines to lead a battalion of 300 men to take control of Samar Island, where the American occupation continued to be resisted. According to one historian, General Smith ordered Major Waller to turn Samar into "a howling wilderness" with directions "to kill everyone over ten" years old and to take no prisoners. "I wish you to kill and burn, and the more you kill and burn the better you will please me. I want all persons killed who are capable of bearing arms in actual hostilities against the United States."[86] Over the next three months, more than 50,000 Filipinos would be killed (the population of Samar reportedly "dropped from 312,192 to 257,125") until the surrender of resistance leader Vicente Lukban on February 22, 1902. Major Waller would deliver his first report, that he had burned 165 villages and settlements around Basey, Samar.[87]
Prime Minister Kuyper

October 24, 1901 (Thursday)

First to survive the plunge

October 25, 1901 (Friday)

  • The ship Helen Miller Gould, described as "the first engine-powered schooner", was destroyed only 19 months after its launch when its gasoline engine caught fire at North Sydney, Nova Scotia and burned all the way down to the waterline.[96]
  • Nineteen people were killed in a fast-moving fire in the business district on Market Street in downtown Philadelphia, and another 12 seriously burned. The blaze broke out in an eight-story building occupied by the Hunt & Wilkinson furniture and upholstery store, then spread to three neighboring buildings. Many of the victims jumped to their deaths when flames burst out on the fire escape below them. The flames apparently started in the basement at the bottom of a newly installed freight elevator shaft and spread rapidly up the rest of the structure.[97]
  • The Amalgamated Copper Mining Company fired 8,000 employees in a single day as it curtailed production of mining operations.[79]

October 26, 1901 (Saturday)

  • Russia announced that it had reached an agreement with China on concessions in Manchuria.[79]
  • Della Moore, one of the partners in crime of Butch Cassidy's Wild Bunch and girlfriend of gang member Harvey "Kid Curry" Logan, was arrested in Nashville, Tennessee, after she attempted to deposit thousands of dollars in cash at the Fourth National Bank of Nashville. The teller, suspicious about the stack of currency, consulted a list of serial numbers of stolen bills and confirmed that the money was part of the $41,000 taken in a train robbery near Wagner, Montana on July 3 and called the city police and Moore, alias "Annie Rogers", was charged with receiving stolen property. She would be acquitted after a trial on June 18, 1902.[98]
  • The death of a five-year-old girl at City Hospital in St. Louis was the first of 13 from a contaminated antitoxin distributed by that city's health department, would lead to the United States Congress finally passing the first federal law to regulate medicines, and paved the way for the Pure Food and Drug Act of 1906. Specifically, the young victims had been given shots to treat diphtheria, but the tainted serum had given them tetanus and the new law, which would take effect on July 1, 1902, authorized the United States Public Health Service to inspect producers and test their medicines, as well as to require the first expiration dates to be placed on a health product.[99][100]

October 27, 1901 (Sunday)

October 28, 1901 (Monday)

October 29, 1901 (Tuesday)

Czolgosz executed
  • Convicted presidential assassin Leon Czolgosz was strapped into the electric chair at the Auburn State Prison in Auburn, New York, at 7:00 in the morning, wearing "a neatly pressed suit, soft collar and black tie"[105] as well as dress shoes that he had polished "to a high gloss". Asked if he had any last words to say in the presence of witnesses, Czolgosz said, "I am not sorry for my crime," and then added, "I am awfully sorry that I could not see my father." According to one source, before the electric current was activated, Czolgosz said, "I shot the President and I did it because I thought it would benefit the poor people and for the name of the working people of all nations. I am not sorry for my crime. That is all I have to say.[106] A current of 1,700 volts was administered at 7:12, and Czolgosz was pronounced dead at 7:15.[107]
  • In Amherst, New Hampshire, nurse Jane Toppan was arrested for murdering the Davis family of Boston with overdoses of morphine.[108][109][110]
  • The train conveying the performers of Buffalo Bill's Wild West show was wrecked near Lexington, Virginia, while conveying the troupe from Charlotte, North Carolina to Danville, Virginia, for its last scheduled performance of the season.[111][112] Several of the Lakota Indian performers were killed, as well as 110 horses, and Annie Oakley was seriously injured, putting an end to her career as a talented sharpshooter. Oakley, whose story would be dramatized in the musical Annie Get Your Gun, would undergo five separate operations for her spinal injuries.[113][114]
  • Died: James McGarry, Irish-American saloon operator who was the inspiration for Finley Peter Dunne's character "Mr. Dooley" in Dunne's humorous newspaper column, "The Dooley Papers".[115]

October 30, 1901 (Wednesday)

First Nobel Prize winner
  • Dr. Emil von Behring was selected to become the very first recipient of the new Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, as voted by the Nobel Committee members at Sweden's foremost college of medicine, the Karolinska Institute. Dr. Behring had discovered the antitoxin to cure the disease of diphtheria, and then applied the same principles of blood serum isolation to create a cure for tetanus.[116]
  • In the Battle of Bakenlaagte, Eastern Transvaal Boer Commandos, led by General Louis Botha, overwhelmed the British Army No. 3 Flying Column, led by Lieutenant Colonel George Elliot Benson. Under Benson's leadership, the No. 3 column had specialized in night raids against the commandos. In a rearguard attack, 66 of the British Army were killed (including Lt. Col. Benson), 165 wounded, and 120 taken prisoner.[117] One of the newer techniques employed by the Boers was to ride horses toward the enemy, then "dismounting at close rifle range" to spring the attack.[118]

October 31, 1901 (Thursday)

  • City leaders in Liverpool announced that the port had become infected with the bubonic plague.[79]
  • Died:
    Sepia-tone photo from a contemporary postcard showing Tom Ketchum's decapitated body. Caption reads "Body of Black Jack after the hanging showing head snapped off."

References

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  7. "Colonialism, Conflict and Cultural Identity in the Philippines", by Volker Schult, in Nationalism and Cultural Revival in Southeast Asia: Perspectives from the Centre and the Region (Otto Harrassowitz Verlag, 1997) p. 248
  8. "Afghan Specter Alarms England— Death of the Ameer Revives Old Fear of Russian Intrigue in the Buffer State". Chicago Daily Tribune. October 4, 1901. p. 1.
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  89. "Calls Boer War British Blunder— Winston Churchill Denounces Military Mistakes in African Campaign", October 24, 1901, p. 5
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  93. "Rides Niagara in Barrel— Woman Goes over Horseshoe Fall and Lives", Chicago Daily Tribune, October 25, 1901, p. 3
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  100. Hamowy, Ronald (2008). Government and Public Health in America. Edward Elgar Publishing. pp. 120–121.
  101. The Cambridge History of Iran, Volume 7: From Nadir Shah to the Islamic Republic, Peter Avery, Gavin Hambly and Charles Melville, eds. (Cambridge University Press, Oct 10, 1991) p. 415
  102. "Emil M. Mrak", in Advances in Food and Nutrition Research, Volume 33 (Academic Press, 1989)
  103. "Will be the Fastest Cruiser— British Admiralty Launches the King Alfred at Barrow— Speed to Be 23 Knots", Chicago Daily Tribune, October 29, 1901, p. 4
  104. Christopher J. Walsh, Where Football Is King: A History of the SEC (Taylor Trade Publishing, 2006) p. 205
  105. Nash, Jay Robert (2004). "Assassination". The Great Pictorial History of World Crime. Scarecrow Press. p. 59.
  106. "Czolgosz Dies for His Crime— Makes Gloating Speech in Death Chair— Execution Passes Without a Hitch". Chicago Daily Tribune. October 30, 1901. p. 2.
  107. "Czolgosz Electrocuted at 7:12 This Morning". Chicago Daily Tribune. October 29, 1901. p. 1.
  108. "Death of Four Is Followed by Nurse's Arrest". Chicago Daily Tribune. October 31, 1901. p. 1.
  109. Vronsky, Peter (2007). Female Serial Killers: How and why Women Become Monsters. Penguin. p. 131.
  110. Schechter, Harold (2012). "Jane Toppan". The A to Z Encyclopedia of Serial Killers. Simon and Schuster. p. 283.
  111. "Buffalo Bill's Show Caught in Wreck; 110 Horses Dead". Chicago Daily Tribune. October 30, 1901. p. 2.
  112. The accident is listed in two books as happening on October 28, but occurred at 3:00 the next morning. "Buffalo Bill's Train Wrecked— Over One Hundred Horses Killed in a Collision Near Lexington this Morning", Charlotte (NC) News, October 29, 1901
  113. Riley, Glenda (1994). The Life and Legacy of Annie Oakley. University of Oklahoma Press. p. 60.
  114. Bridger, Bobby (2002). Buffalo Bill and Sitting Bull: Inventing the Wild West. University of Texas Press. p. 420.
  115. "Death Takes Mr. Dooley— James M'Garry, Who Inspired Character, Passes Away". Chicago Daily Tribune. October 30, 1901. p. 5.
  116. Linton, Derek S. (2005). Emil Von Behring: Infectious Disease, Immunology, Serum Therapy. American Philosophical Society. p. 3.
  117. Wessels, Andre (2011). The Anglo-Boer War 1889–1902: White Man's War, Black Man's War, Traumatic War. Sun Press. p. 75.
  118. Badsey, Stephen (2008). Doctrine and Reform in the British Cavalry 1880–1918. Ashgate Publishing. p. 128.
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