May 1902 Explained
The following events occurred in May 1902:
May 1, 1902 (Thursday)
- A tornado swept over the city of Dacca in British India (now Dhaka in Bangladesh) and killed 416 people.[1]
- The Canadian Pacific Railway took over the Ottawa, Northern and Western Railway.[2]
- The Cork International Exhibition, a world's fair, opened in Ireland for a six-month-long run until the end of October.[1] On the same day, the directors of the Louisiana Purchase Exposition in St. Louis, Missouri, voted to postpone the celebration from 1903 to 1904.[1]
- U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt approved the court-martial of Major Edwin F. Henn for torture of Filipino prisoners.[1]
- The imprisoned U.S. Navy officers of USS Chicago were set free after being pardoned by the King of Italy.[1]
- U.S. Representative William H. Moody of Massachusetts resigned to become the new United States Secretary of the Navy.
- The 13th County Championship cricket season began in the United Kingdom, with 15 counties competing.[3]
- Fujimoto Bill Broker Banking, as predecessor of Daiwa Securities Group, was founded in Osaka, Japan.[4]
May 2, 1902 (Friday)
- The town of Maharg, Oklahoma, located on Turkey Creek of Washita County, was destroyed by a flash flood. The survivors relocated to higher ground and incorporated it as "Foss".
- Died:
May 3, 1902 (Saturday)
May 4, 1902 (Sunday)
May 5, 1902 (Monday)
May 6, 1902 (Tuesday)
May 7, 1902 (Wednesday)
May 8, 1902 (Thursday)
- Over 30,000 people on the island of Martinique were killed when the Mount Pelée volcano erupted, destroying the town of Saint-Pierre.
- Born: André Michel Lwoff, French microbiologist, recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine; in Paris (died 1994)
- Died: Paul Leicester Ford, 37, American novelist, was shot and killed by his older brother, Malcolm Webster Ford, 40, American amateur athlete, in a murder-suicide (born 1865)
May 9, 1902 (Friday)
May 10, 1902 (Saturday)
May 11, 1902 (Sunday)
May 12, 1902 (Monday)
- Brazilian inventor Augusto Severo de Albuquerque Maranhão, 38, and his companion, French engineer Georges Saché, 25, flew Severo's semi-rigid airship Pax over Paris. They lost control of the aircraft, which caught fire and exploded over Montparnasse Cemetery, killing both men.[18]
- A strike by the United Mine Workers closed all of the unionized coal mines in the anthracite district of Pennsylvania.[1]
- Multiple explosions of naphtha killed 28 people at Sheraden, Pennsylvania, at the time an unincorporated community outside of the city limits of Pittsburgh, and injured 200 others.[1]
- Born: Jack Trice, American college football player; in Hiram, Ohio (died 1923)
May 13, 1902 (Tuesday)
May 14, 1902 (Wednesday)
May 15, 1902 (Thursday)
May 16, 1902 (Friday)
- In the first and only time in Major League Baseball history that a deaf batter faced a deaf pitcher, William "Dummy" Hoy of the Cincinnati Reds went up to bat against Luther Taylor of the New York Giants.[21]
- The Catholic Church issued Decree 4097 of the Sacred Congregation of Rites, declaring that churches were prohibited from substituting electric lights for candles on the altar during Solemn High Mass.[22]
- Born:
- Elizabeth Nord, British-American labor leader and executive of the Textile Workers Union of America; in Lancashire, England (died 1986)
- Karamshi Jethabhai Somaiya, Indian entrepreneur who established Somaiya University near Bombay; in Malunjar, Ahmednagar, Bombay Presidency (now Maharashtra, India) (died 1999)
- Judith Tyberg, American Sanskrit scholar and yogi; in Point Loma, California (died 1980)
- Carles Fages de Climent, Spanish Catalonian writer, poet and journalist; in Figueres (died 1968)
- Died:
May 17, 1902 (Saturday)
May 18, 1902 (Sunday)
May 19, 1902 (Monday)
May 20, 1902 (Tuesday)
May 21, 1902 (Wednesday)
May 22, 1902 (Thursday)
May 23, 1902 (Friday)
May 24, 1902 (Saturday)
May 25, 1902 (Sunday)
May 26, 1902 (Monday)
May 27, 1902 (Tuesday)
May 28, 1902 (Wednesday)
May 29, 1902 (Thursday)
- A major breakthrough was achieved in the construction of the Albula Tunnel in Switzerland — at — more than 3.6 miles and almost six kilometers — as the two construction crews from the north side and south side of one of the mountains of the Swiss Alps connected 13 years after drilling began. The railway tunnel opened the following year.
- Radio engineer Greenleaf Whittier Pickard of Wireless Telephone and Telegraph Company inadvertently discovered that the recently-invented crystal detector that could maintain the quality of radio sound regardless of the change of volume.[32]
- Born: Henri Guillaumet, French aviator, in Bouy, Marne département (died 1940)
May 30, 1902 (Friday)
- U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt delivered the keynote speech on Decoration Day at the Arlington National Cemetery and used the occasion of the almost-concluded war in the Philippines, and the courts-martial of U.S. Army officers for atrocities, to denounce racist violence in the United States. "Is it only in the army in the Philippines that Americans sometimes commit deeds that cause all other Americans regret?" he asked and then answered "No! From time to time there occur in our country, to the deep and lasting shame of our people, lynchings carried on under circumstances of inhuman cruelty and barbarity infinitely worse than any that has ever been committed by our troops in the Philippines ... The men who fail to condemn these lynchings, and yet clamor about what has been done in the Philippines, are indeed guilty of neglecting the beam in their own eye while taunting their brother about the mote in his."[33]
- Born: Stepin Fetchit (stage name for Lincoln Perry), African-American film actor and comedian and the first black actor to have successful movie career; in Key West, Florida (died 1985)
- Died: Sylvester Pennoyer, 70, Governor of Oregon from 1887 to 1895. His name is famous as a party in the landmark 1878 U.S. Supreme Court case of Pennoyer v. Neff. (born 1831)
May 31, 1902 (Saturday)
- The Treaty of Vereeniging was signed at Pretoria, bringing an end the Second Boer War with the surrender of the South African Republic and the Orange Free State to the United Kingdom.[34] Lord Milner (the British Colonial Secretary) and the commander of the British Army's forces, Earl Kitchener, signed on behalf of the United Kingdom while South African President Schalk Burger and Orange Free State President Christiaan de Wet signed the articles, bringing an end to existence of their Boer Republics.
- Following a court ruling that the reserve clause in contracts between players and United States National League baseball clubs did not apply to players signed with an American League team,[35] Connie Mack traded Nap Lajoie and Bill Bernhard with the Cleveland Bronchos.[36]
- U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt issued an order through the United States Department of War reducing the size of the United States Army by 14 percent, from 77,287 to 66,497 troops.[28]
- On the final day of a drawn match against England, the Australia national cricket team are dismissed for 36 runs, their lowest ever Test innings score.[37]
Notes and References
- The American Monthly Review of Reviews (June, 1902), pp. 667–671
- Web site: Colin Churcher's Railway Pages . November 4, 2008 . Significant dates in Ottawa railway history . November 20, 2008 . https://web.archive.org/web/20060427061656/http://www.railways.incanada.net/candate/ottawa.htm . April 27, 2006.
- Web site: County Champions 1890–2013 / County Championship . . 11 December 2014. .
- [:ja:藤本ビルブローカー銀行]
- Book: United States. Congress. Joel D. Treese. Biographical Directory of the American Congress, 1774–1996. 1997. CQ Staff Directories, Incorporated. 978-0-87289-124-1.
- Book: Physics, 1963–1970. 1998. World Scientific. 978-981-02-3404-1. 205.
- Rene R. Escalante, The Bearer of Pax Americana: The Philippine Career of William H. Taft,1900–1903 (New Day Publishers, 2007) p. 184
- Affairs in the Philippine Islands: Hearings Before the Committee on the Philippines, Jan. 31 – June 28, 1902 (United States Senate, 1902) pp. 2233–2234
- Book: National Academy of Sciences (U.S.). Report of the National Academy of Sciences. 1973. U.S. Government Printing Office. 193.
- Book: Australia. The Acts of the Parliament of the Commonwealth of Australia: (except Appropriation and Supply Acts) Passed from 1901 to 1911, and in Force on 1st January, 1912. 1913. government of the commonwealth of Australia. 897.
- Web site: Annual report of the Supervising Inspector-general Steamboat-inspection Service, Year ending June 30, 1903. 25 July 2019.
- Web site: Charles-Louis de Beaumont. IOC. 29 November 2020.
- https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=vfT5ieZw1WcC&dat=19020506&printsec=frontpage&hl=en Newburgh Daily Journal
- "Shipping Disasters", The Times, 15 May 1902
- Frederick Albion Ober, Our West Indian Neighbors: The Islands of the Caribbean Sea, " America's Mediterranean", 2010 republish of 1908 book by Nabu Press book
- https://web.archive.org/web/20070617225647/http://www.magicsam.com/about.asp "About the S.A.M."
- Gildea, R., Children of the Revolution, London, 2008, pp. 278–282
- Book: Phythyon, John R. Jr. . John R. Phythyon, Jr. . Great War at Sea: Zeppelins . . . 2007 . 41.
- 1934. The Gilmore Brothers Were Real Pioneers. Popular Aviation. 15. 5. 312 .
- http://www.athletic-club.eus/en/match-statistics/1_2354/1901-02_bizcaya_fc-barcelona.html
- Chris Jensen, Baseball State by State: Major and Negro League Players, Ballparks, Museums and Historical Sites (McFarland, 2012) p. 228
- "Studies and Conferences", The Ecclesiastical Review (March, 1934) p. 318
- https://query.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=9C06E2D9103BE733A2575AC2A9659C946397D6CF&scp=101&sq=Alfonso+XIII&st=p "Alfonso's Reign Begins on 17 May; He Will Take the Oath on That Day – Festivities to Last a Week,"
- Book: Haughton, Brian. Hidden History: Lost Civilizations, Secret Knowledge, and Ancient Mysteries. 2011-05-16. 2006. Franklin Lakes, NJ. Career Press. 978-1-56414-897-1. 43–44.
- Book: Louis A. Pérez. Cuba Between Empires: 1878–1902 . July 19, 2013. 1998. University of Pittsburgh Pre. 978-0-8229-7197-9. xv.
- Ireland. Belfast. 23 May 1902 . 4 . 36775. (at the time, Ireland was a unified part of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland).
- Web site: Fernie, BC Coal Mine Explosion, May 1902 | GenDisasters ... Genealogy in Tragedy, Disasters, Fires, Floods. www.gendisasters.com. 2019-12-26. 2019-12-26. https://web.archive.org/web/20191226225959/http://www.gendisasters.com/british-columbia/12386/fernie-bc-coal-mine-explosion-may-1902. dead.
- The American Monthly Review of Reviews (July, 1902), pp. 26–30
- Web site: Belgian Merchant P-Z . Belgische Koopvaardij . 1 December 2010 .
- Katherine Wilcox Thompson, "Penfield's Past", 1960, pub. by the Town of Penfield, NY, pp. 178–179
- "Canal de Beagle: El Laudo arbitral de la corona británica" by José Enrique Greño Velasco in Universidad de La Rioja:La Convención sobre limitación de armamentos comprende cinco artículos, y tiene el privilegio de ser—de acuerdo a Rizzo Romano—el primer convenio en su tipo ajustado entre naciones. (p. 70)
- The Crystal Detector . Alan . Douglas . . April 1981 . 18 . 4 . 64–69.
- Book: Murphy, Erin L. . No Middle Ground Anti-Imperialists and Ethical Witnessing During the Philippine-American War . . 2019 . 130.
- Book: Diamonds, Gold and War. The Making of South Africa . Simon & Schuster . Meredith, Martin . 2007 . London, Great Britain . 978-0-7432-8614-5. 462–3.
- News: American League Celebrates 75th Year. January 30, 1975. September 14, 2012. 3C. Associated Press. Daytona Beach Morning Journal.
- Web site: 1902 Cleveland Bronchos Batting, Pitching & Fielding Statistics. September 14, 2012. Baseball-Reference.com.
- Book: Bill Frindall. The Wisden Book of Test Cricket, 1877–1977. 1 February 2010. A&C Black. 978-1-4081-2756-8. 72.