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1888 (MDCCCLXXXVIII)
was a leap year starting on
Sunday of the Gregorian calendar and
a leap year
starting on Friday of the Julian calendar, the 1888th year of
the Common Era (CE) and Anno Domini (AD) designations, the
888th year of the 2nd millennium,
the 88th year of the 19th century,
and the 9th year of the 1880s decade. As of
the start of 1888, the Gregorian calendar was 12 days ahead of the Julian
calendar, which remained in localized use until 1923. In Germany, 1888 is
known as the Year of the
Three Emperors. Currently, it is the year that, when written in
Roman numerals, has the most digits (13). The next year that also has 13
digits is the year 2388. The record will be surpassed as late as 2888, which
has 14 digits. Contents · 1Events · 2Births · 3Deaths · 5Further
reading and year books Events[edit] January–March[edit] March 11: Great Blizzard of
1888. ·
January 3 – The 91-centimeter telescope
is first used, at Lick Observatory in California. ·
January 12 – The Schoolhouse Blizzard hits Dakota Territory, the states of Montana, Minnesota, Nebraska, Kansas, and Texas, leaving 235 dead, many of them
children on their way home from school. ·
January 13 – The National
Geographic Society is founded in Washington, D.C. ·
January 21 – The Amateur Athletic
Union is founded by William
Buckingham Curtis, in the United States. ·
January 26 – The Lawn Tennis
Association is founded in England. ·
February 6 – Gillis Bildt becomes Prime Minister
of Sweden (1888–1889). ·
February 27 – In West Orange, New
Jersey, Thomas Edison meets
with Eadweard Muybridge,
who proposes a scheme for sound film. ·
March 8 – The Agriculture College of
Utah (later Utah State
University) is founded in Logan, Utah. ·
March 9 – Frederick
III becomes German Emperor and King of Prussia. ·
March 11 – The Great Blizzard of
1888 begins along the eastern
seaboard of the United States, shutting down commerce and
killing more than 400. ·
March 13 – De Beers Consolidated Mines Ltd. is
founded in Kimberley. ·
March 15 – The Sikkim Expedition,
a British military expedition to expel the Tibetans from northern Sikkim, begins. ·
March 16 – The foundation stone for a
new National
Library of Greece is laid in Athens. ·
March 20 – The very first Romani language operetta premieres
in Moscow, Russia. ·
March 23 – A meeting called by William
McGregor, to discuss establishment of The Football League,
is held in London. ·
March 25 – Opening of an
international Congress for Women's Rights organized by Susan B. Anthony in Washington, D.C.,
leading to formation of the International
Council of Women, a key event in the international women's
movement. ·
March 27 – The Rescue of
the Renown: Dorus Rijkers saves the 30-man crew of
the Renown off the Netherlands coast, risking his own life. April–June[edit] ·
April 3 ·
London
prostitute Emma Elizabeth Smith is
brutally attacked by two or three men, dying of her injuries the following
day, first of the Whitechapel murders,
but probably not a victim of Jack the Ripper. ·
The Brighton Beach Hotel in Coney Island (New York) is moved
520 ft (160 m), using six steam locomotives, by civil engineer B. C. Miller, to save it
from ocean storms. ·
April 6 – The first New Year's Day is observed, of
the solar calendar adopted
by Siamese King Chulalongkorn,
with the 106th anniversary of Bangkok's founding in 1782 as its epoch (reference
date). ·
April 11 – The Concertgebouw orchestra in Amsterdam is inaugurated. ·
April 16 – The German Empire annexes the island
of Nauru. ·
April
18 - Westminster
School is founded in Simsbury, Connecticut ·
April 21 – The Texas State Capitol building,
completed at a cost of 3 million dollars, opens to the public in Austin. ·
May 1 – Fort
Belknap Indian Reservation is established by the United States
Congress. ·
May 8 – The International Exhibition of Science, Art and Industry in Kelvingrove Park, Glasgow opens (continues to November). ·
May 12 – The North
Borneo Chartered Company's territories (including Sabah) become the British protectorate of North Borneo. ·
May 13 – In Brazil, the Lei Áurea abolishes the last
remnants of slavery. ·
May 28 – In Scotland, Celtic F.C. plays its first official
match, winning 5–2 against Rangers F.C. ·
May 30 – Hong Kong's Peak Tram begins operation. ·
June 3 ·
The Kingdom of Sedang is
formed, in modern-day Vietnam. ·
American
writer Ernest Thayer's baseball poem "Casey at the Bat" is first published
(under the pen name "Phin") as the last of his humorous
contributions to The San
Francisco Examiner. ·
June 14 – The White Rajahs territories become the
British protectorate of Sarawak. ·
June 15 – Wilhelm II becomes German Emperor and King of Prussia;
1888 is the Year of the
Three Emperors. ·
June 19 – In Chicago, the Republican
Convention opens at the Auditorium Building. Benjamin Harrison and Levi P. Morton win the nominations
for President and Vice
President of the United States, respectively. ·
June 29 – Handel's Israel in Egypt is recorded onto
wax cylinder at The Crystal Palace in
London, the earliest known recording of classical music. ·
June 30 – The Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom opens
its laboratory, on Plymouth Hoe. July–September[edit] August 31: Victim found from Jack the Ripper? ·
July 2–27 – London
matchgirls strike of 1888: About 200 workers, mainly teenaged
girls, strike following the dismissal of three colleagues from the Bryant and May match factory, precipitated by an
article on their working conditions published on June 23 by campaigning journalist Annie Besant, and the workers unionise on
July 27.[1] ·
July 25 – Frank Edward McGurrin, a
court stenographer from Salt Lake City, Utah, purportedly the only person
using touch typing at
this time, wins a decisive victory over Louis Traub in a typing contest held
in Cincinnati, Ohio. This date can be called the birthday of the touch typing method that is widely used now. ·
August 5 – Bertha Benz arrives in Pforzheim having driven 40 miles
(64 km) from Mannheim in a car
manufactured by her husband Karl Benz, thus completing the first
"long-distance" drive in the history of the automobile. ·
August 7 – Whitechapel murders:
The body of London prostitute Martha Tabram is found, a possible
victim of Jack the Ripper.[2] ·
August 9 ·
A
fire destroys the Main Building, the heart of Wells College in Aurora,
New York, causing a loss of $130,000.[3] ·
The Oaths Act permits the oath of allegiance taken
to the Sovereign by Members of
Parliament to be affirmed,
rather than sworn to God, thus confirming the
ability of atheists to sit in
the House
of Commons of the United Kingdom. ·
August 10 – Dr Friedrich
Hermann Wölfert’s motorised airship successfully completes the
world’s first engine-driven flight, from Cannstatt to Kornwestheim in Germany.[4] ·
August 13 – The Local Government
Act, effective from 1889,
establishes county councils and county borough councils in England and Wales,
redraws some county boundaries, and gives women the vote in local elections.
It also declares that "bicycles, tricycles, velocipedes, and other
similar machines" be carriages within the meaning of the Highway Acts
(which remains the case), and requires that they give audible warning when
overtaking "any cart or carriage, or any horse, mule, or other beast of
burden, or any foot passenger", a rule abolished in 1930. ·
August 20 – A mutiny at Dufile, Equatoria, results in the imprisonment of
the Emin Pasha. ·
August 24 –The first trams in Tallinn (Reval), horsecars, begin operation. ·
August 28 – The longest date in Roman numerals (VIII-XXVIII-MDCCCLXXXVIII)
occurs. ·
August 31 – Whitechapel murders:
The mutilated body of London prostitute Mary Ann Nichols is found; she is
considered the first victim of Jack the Ripper. ·
September 4 – In the United
States, George Eastman registers
the trademark Kodak, and receives a
patent for his camera, which uses roll
film. ·
September 6 – Charles
Turner becomes the first bowler in cricket to take 250 wickets
in an English season – a feat since accomplished only by Tom Richardson(twice), J. T. Hearne, Wilfred Rhodes (twice) and Tich Freeman (six times). ·
Whitechapel murders:
The mutilated body of London prostitute Annie Chapman is found (considered to
be the second victim of Jack the Ripper). ·
In
England, the first six Football League matches are played.[2] ·
In
a letter accepting renomination as President
of the United States, Grover Cleveland declares the Chinese
"impossible of assimilation with our people and dangerous to our peace
and welfare". ·
Whitechapel murders:
The 'Dear Boss letter'
signed "Jack the Ripper",
the first time the name is used, is received by London's Central News Agency.[2] ·
Stanley Park is officially opened
by Vancouver (B.C.) mayor David Oppenheimer. ·
September 30 – Whitechapel murders:
The bodies of London prostitutes Elizabeth Stride and Catherine Eddowes,
the latter mutilated, are found. They are generally considered Jack the Ripper's third and fourth victims,
respectively. October–December[edit] ·
October 1 – Sofia University officially opens,
becoming the first university in liberated Bulgaria. ·
October 2 – The Whitehall Mystery:
Dismembered remains of a woman's body are discovered at three central London
locations, one being the construction site of New Scotland Yard. ·
October 9 – The Washington Monument officially
opens to the general public, in Washington, D.C. October 9: Washington Monumentopens. ·
Louis Le Prince films the first motion
picture: Roundhay Garden
Scene in Roundhay, Leeds, West Yorkshire, England, two seconds and 18
frames in length (followed by his movie Leeds Bridge). ·
Battle of Guté Dili:
Seeking to extend Mahdist control over
what is now southwestern Ethiopia, governor
Khalil al-Khuzani is routed by an alliance of Shewan forces, under Ras Gobana Dacche and Moroda Bekere, ruler
of Leqa Naqamte. Only a handful, including Khalil, barely manage to flee the
battlefield. ·
October 25 – St Cuthbert's
Society at the University of Durham in
England is founded, after a general meeting chaired by the Reverend Hastings Rashdall. ·
October 30 – The Rudd Concession, a written concession for
exclusive mining rights in Matabeleland, Mashonaland and adjoining territories,
is granted by King Lobengula of
Matabeleland to Charles Rudd, James Rochfort
Maguire and Francis Thompson, who are acting on behalf of
South African-based politician and businessman Cecil Rhodes, providing a basis for white
settlement of Rhodesia. ·
November 6 – United
States presidential election, 1888: Democratic
Party incumbent Grover Cleveland wins the popular vote,
but loses the Electoral
College vote to Republican challenger Benjamin Harrison,
therefore losing the election. ·
November 8 – Joseph Assheton Fincher
files a patent in the United Kingdom for the
parlour game which he calls "Tiddledy-Winks". ·
November 9 – Whitechapel murders:
The mutilated body of London prostitute Mary Jane Kelly is found. She is
considered to be the fifth, and last, of Jack the Ripper's victims. A number of similar murders in England follow, but the
police attribute them to copy-cat killers. ·
November 20 – The first St V parade by students is held
in Brussels. ·
November 27 – International
sorority Delta Delta Delta is
founded at Boston University. ·
November 29 – The celebration of Thanksgiving
(United States) and the first day of Hanukkah coincide. ·
December 7 – John Boyd Dunlop patents the pneumatic
bicycle tyre in the United Kingdom. ·
December 17 – The Lyric Theatre
(London) opens. ·
December 18 – Richard Wetherill and
his brother-in-law discover the Indian ruins of Mesa Verde in
southwestern Colorado. ·
December 23 – During a bout of mental illness (and having quarreled
with his friend Paul Gauguin), Dutch painter Vincent van Gogh infamously cuts off
the lower part of his own left ear in a brothel, and is removed to the
local hospital
in Arles. Date unknown[edit] ·
Edward
King, Anglican bishop of
Lincoln in England, is prosecuted for using ritualistic
practices; the special ecclesiastical court finds largely in his
favour.[5] ·
The
dolphin Pelorus Jack is
first sighted in Cook Strait, New
Zealand. ·
The Camborne School
of Mines is founded in Cornwall, England. ·
John Robert Gregg first
publishes Gregg shorthand in
the United States. ·
Rudyard Kipling's short story collection Plain Tales
from the Hills is published in Calcutta, India. ·
The
Finnish epic Kalevala is
published for the first time in the English language, by American linguist John
Martin Crawford. ·
The Baldwin School is founded in Bryn Mawr,
Pennsylvania, as "Miss [Florence] Baldwin's School for Girls,
Preparatory for Bryn Mawr College". ·
Chin Gee Hee starts the Quong Tuck
Company to supply construction workers to North American railroads. ·
G. D. Searle is founded as a
pharmaceutical company, originally in Omaha, Nebraska. ·
Katz's Delicatessen is
founded in the Lower East Side of Manhattan. ·
First
International Forestry Exhibition opens in Edinburgh.[6] ·
First
British rugby union tour
of Australia and New Zealand. Births[edit] January–February[edit] ·
January 1 – Victor Goldschmidt,
Swiss geochemist (d. 1947) ·
January 8 – Matt Moore,
Irish-born actor (d. 1960) ·
January 16 – Robert Henry English, American admiral (d. 1943) ·
January 18 – Thomas Sopwith, English aviation pioneer, yachtsman
(d. 1989) ·
January 19 – Millard Harmon, American general (d. 1945) ·
c. January 20 – Huddie William Ledbetter (Lead Belly), American folk, blues singer (d. 1949) ·
January 22 – Carlos Quintanilla,
44th President of Bolivia (d. 1964) ·
January 23 – Aritomo Gotō, Japanese admiral
(d. 1942) ·
Vicki Baum, Austrian writer (d. 1960) ·
Ernst Heinkel, German aircraft designer
(d. 1958) ·
February 2 – Frederick Lane, Australian swimmer (d. 1969) ·
February 5 – Bruce
Fraser, British admiral (d. 1981) ·
February 8 – Edith Evans, British actress (d. 1976) ·
February 13 – Georgios Papandreou,
Prime Minister of Greece (d. 1968) ·
February 17 – Otto Stern, German physicist, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 1969) ·
Adelina Domingues, World's oldest person between May and August
2002 (d. 2002) ·
Tom
Phillips, British admiral (d. 1941) ·
Aurora Quezon, First Lady
of the Philippines (d. 1949) ·
José Eustasio Rivera,
Colombian writer (d. 1928) ·
February 20 – Georges Bernanos, French writer (d. 1948) ·
February 25 – John Foster Dulles, United
States Secretary of State (d. 1959) ·
Arthur
Schlesinger, Sr., American historian (d. 1965) ·
Lotte Lehmann, German singer (d. 1976) March–April[edit] ·
March 1 – Ewart Astill, English cricketer
(Leicestershire) (d. 1948) ·
March 4 – Knute Rockne, American football player,
coach (d. 1931) ·
March 7 ·
William L. Laurence,
American journalist (d. 1977) ·
Claude Roger-Marx,
French writer (d. 1977) ·
March 10 ·
Barry Fitzgerald, Irish actor (d. 1961) ·
Ilo Wallace, Second
Lady of the United States (d. 1981) ·
March 16 – Anton Köllisch,
German chemist noted for synthesising MDMA (d. 1916) ·
March 17 – Paul Ramadier, Prime Minister of France
(d. 1961) ·
March 26 – Elsa Brändström,
Swedish nurse (d. 1948) ·
March 28 – Léon Noël, French diplomat, politician and
historian (d. 1987) ·
March 29 ·
Enea Bossi, Sr., Italian-born American
aerospace engineer, aviation pioneer (d. 1963) ·
James E. Casey, American founder of
the United Parcel
Service (d. 1983) ·
March 30 – Anna Q. Nilsson, Swedish-American silent
film star (d. 1974) ·
April 1 – Terry de la
Mesa Allen, Sr., American general (d. 1969) ·
April 3 ·
Sir Neville Cardus, British music, cricket
writer (d. 1975) ·
Thomas C. Kinkaid,
American admiral (d. 1972) ·
April 4 ·
Tris Speaker, American professional baseball
player, member of the Baseball Hall of Fame (d. 1958) ·
Zdzisław
Żygulski, Sr., Polish literary historian (d. 1975) ·
April 6 ·
Hans Richter,
German filmmaker (d. 1976) ·
Gerhard Ritter, German historian (d. 1967) ·
April 12 – Carlos Julio
Arosemena Tola, 28th President of Ecuador (d. 1952) ·
April 18 – Duffy Lewis, American Major League
Baseball player (d. 1979) ·
April 26 – Anita Loos, American writer (d. 1981) ·
April 27 – Florence La Badie,
Canadian actress (d. 1917) May–June[edit] ·
May 8 – Maurice Boyau, French World War I fighter
ace (d. 1918) ·
May 9 – Francesco Baracca,
Italian World War I fighter ace (d. 1918) ·
May 10 – Max Steiner, Austrian-American composer
(d. 1971) ·
May 11 ·
Irving Berlin, American composer (d. 1989) ·
Willis Augustus Lee,
American admiral (d. 1945) ·
May 13 – Inge Lehmann, Danish seismologist,
geophysicist (d. 1993) ·
May 17 – Tich Freeman, English cricketer (d. 1965) ·
May 18 – William Hood Simpson,
American general (d. 1980) ·
May 23 – Zack Wheat, American Baseball
Hall of Famer (d. 1972) ·
May 24 – Stanley Sylvester Alexander
Watkins, English talking pictures pioneer ·
May 25 ·
Harukichi Hyakutake,
Japanese general (d. 1947) ·
Miles Malleson, English actor (d. 1969) ·
May 27 – Louis Durey, French composer (d. 1979) ·
May 28 – Kaarel Eenpalu, Prime Minister of Estonia
(d. 1942) ·
May 31 – Jack Holt,
American actor (d. 1951) ·
June 3 – Tom Brown,
American jazz musician (d. 1958) ·
June 5 – Armand Annet, French colonial official
(d. 1973) ·
June 6 – Pete Wendling, American composer, pianist,
and piano roll recording artist (d. 1974) ·
June 9 – Ida Rentoul Outhwaite,
Australian illustrator (d. 1960) ·
June 13 – Fernando Pessoa, Portuguese writer (d. 1935) ·
June 16 – Peter Stoner, American mathematician,
astronomer and Christian apologist (d. 1980) ·
June 17 – Heinz Guderian, German general (d. 1954) ·
June 21 – Cecil King,
New Zealand rugby league footballer (d. 1975) ·
June 22 ·
Milton Allen, Governor of Saint
Christopher-Nevis-Anguilla (d. 1981) ·
Harold Hitz Burton,
American politician, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United
States (d. 1964) ·
June 23 – F. Ryan Duffy, American judge and politician
(d. 1979) ·
June 24 ·
Boshirō
Hosogaya, Japanese admiral (d. 1964) ·
Gerrit Rietveld, Dutch architect (d. 1964) ·
June 27 – Antoinette Perry, New York stage director
for whom the Tony Award was
named (d. 1946) ·
June 29 – Joseph 'Squizzy' Taylor, Australian
underworld figure (d. 1927) July–August[edit] ·
July 5 – Herbert Spencer
Gasser, American physiologist, Nobel
Prize laureate (d. 1963) ·
July 8 – John R. Sinnock, 8th Chief Engraver of the
United States Mint (d. 1947) ·
July 9 – Wang Yun-wu, Chinese scholar of history and
political science (d. 1979) ·
July 10 – Giorgio de Chirico,
Italian painter (d. 1978) ·
July 16 ·
Percy Kilbride, American actor (d. 1964) ·
Frits Zernike, Dutch physicist, Nobel Prize laureate
(d. 1966) ·
July 17 – Shmuel Yosef Agnon,
Israeli writer, Nobel Prize laureate
(d. 1970) ·
July 20 – Geneve L. A. Shaffer,
American realtor, lecturer and author (d. 1976) ·
July 22 ·
Kirk Bryan,
American geologist (d. 1950) ·
Selman Waksman, Ukrainian-born biochemist,
recipient of the Nobel
Prize in Physiology or Medicine (d. 1973) ·
July 23 – Raymond Chandler, American-born novelist
(d. 1959) ·
July 25 – Wilhelm Fritz
von Roettig, German Waffen SS general (d. 1939) ·
August 4 – Syedna Taher
Saifuddin, Indian Bohra spiritual leader (d. 1965) ·
August 6 ·
Stephen Galatti, American Field
Service director (d. 1964) ·
Heinrich Schlusnus,
German baritone (d. 1952) ·
August 9 – Eduard Ritter
von Schleich, German fighter ace, air force general (d. 1947) ·
Gleb W. Derujinsky,
Russian-American sculptor (d. 1975) ·
John Logie Baird, Scottish inventor
(d. 1946) ·
Armand J. Piron, American jazz musician
(d. 1943) ·
T. E. Lawrence ("Lawrence of
Arabia"), British liaison officer during the Arab Revolt, writer, and
academic (d. 1935) ·
August 17 – Monty Woolley, American actor (d. 1963) ·
August 20 – Tôn
Đức Thắng, 2nd President of Vietnam (d. 1980) ·
August 25 – Allama Mashriqi, Pakistani scholar,
politician (d. 1963) ·
August 28 – Evadne Price, Australian-British writer,
actress and astrologer (d. 1985) ·
August 29 – Gunichi Mikawa, Japanese admiral (d. 1981) September–October[edit] ·
September 4 – Margaret Henley, J. M. Barrie's inspiration
for the name "Wendy" in Peter Pan (d. 1894) ·
September 5 – Sarvepalli
Radhakrishnan, Indian philosopher, politician and 2nd President of India (d. 1975) ·
Joseph P. Kennedy,
Sr., American politician (d. 1969) ·
Zeng Junchen, Chinese drug baron (d. 1964) ·
September 12 – Maurice Chevalier,
French singer and actor (d. 1972) ·
September 14 – Thakur Anukulchandra,
Indian social reformer and philanthropist (d. 1969) ·
Frans Eemil
Sillanpää, Finnish writer, Nobel Prize laureate
(d. 1964) ·
W. O. Bentley, English engineer,
entrepreneur (d. 1971) ·
September 18 – Grey Owl, British impostor, writer (d. 1938) ·
September 20 – John
Painter, American supercentenarian, world's oldest man between 1999 and
2001 (d. 2001) ·
J. Frank Dobie, American folklorist,
journalist (d. 1964) ·
T. S. Eliot, British (American-born)
poet, Nobel Prize laureate
(d. 1965) ·
October 3 – Claud Allister, English actor (d. 1970) ·
Lucy Tayiah Eads, Kaw tribal chief (d. 1961) ·
Friedrich Olbricht,
German general (d. 1944) ·
October 6 – Roland Garros,
French pilot (killed in action 1918) ·
October 7 – Henry A. Wallace, 33rd Vice
President of the United States (d. 1965) ·
October 8 – Ernst Kretschmer, German psychiatrist
(d. 1964) ·
October 9 – Nikolai
Ivanovich Bukharin, Russian politician (d. 1938) ·
October 14 – Katherine Mansfield,
New Zealand fiction writer (d. 1923) ·
Eugene O'Neill, American playwright, Nobel Prize laureate
(d. 1953) ·
Paul Popenoe, American eugenicist (d. 1979) ·
October 17 – Paul Bernays, Swiss mathematician (d. 1977) ·
October 19 – Venkatarama
Ramalingam Pillai, Indian freedom fighter and Tamil poet (d. 1972) ·
October 20 – Sadayoshi Tanabe, Japanese academic,
bibliographer (d. 2000) ·
October 24 – Carlo Bergamini,
Italian admiral (d. 1943) ·
October 25 – Lester Cuneo, American actor (d. 1925) ·
October 30 – Alan Goodrich Kirk,
American admiral (d. 1963) ·
October 31 – Hubert Wilkins, Australian explorer of the
Arctic (d. 1958) November–December[edit] ·
George Kenner, German artist, made 110
paintings and drawings during World War I while interned as a prisoner of war
(d. 1971) ·
Michał
Sopoćko, Polish-Lithuanian saint, the Apostle
of Divine Mercy (d. 1975) ·
Viliami
Tungī Mailefihi, 7th Premier of Tonga (d. 1941) ·
November 7 – Chandrasekhara
Venkata Raman, Indian physicist, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 1970) ·
November 9 – Jean Monnet, French political economist,
diplomat and a founding
father of the European Union (d. 1979) ·
November 13 – Philip Francis
Nowlan, American science fiction writer, creator of
the Buck Rogers character
(d. 1940) ·
Harald
Sverdrup, Norwegian scientist (d. 1957) ·
José Raúl Capablanca,
Cuban World chess champion (1921–1927)
(d. 1942) ·
November 16 – Luis Cluzeau Mortet,
Uruguayan composer, and musician (d. 1957) ·
November 23 – Harpo Marx, American comedian (d. 1964) ·
November 26 – Francisco Canaro, Uruguayan-born violinist,
composer (d. 1964) ·
Dale Carnegie, American writer, lecturer
(d. 1955) ·
Cathleen Nesbitt, British actress (d. 1982) ·
November 28 – Edgar Church, American comic book collector (d. 1978) ·
November 30 – Ralph Hartley, American electronics
researcher, inventor (d. 1970) ·
December 3 – Rabbi Yitzhak HaLevi
Herzog, Polish-born Chief Rabbi of Ireland and Israel (d. 1959) ·
King Alexander of
Yugoslavia (d. 1934) ·
Donald B. Beary, American admiral (d. 1966) ·
December 6 – Will Hay, British actor, comedian (d. 1949) ·
Joyce Cary, Northern Irish author (d. 1957) ·
Jinichi Kusaka, Japanese admiral (d. 1972) ·
December 16 – Alphonse Juin, French general, Marshal of France (d. 1967) ·
Dame Gladys Cooper, English actress (d. 1971) ·
Robert Moses, American civil engineer, public
works director, highway and bridge builder (d. 1981) ·
December 19 – Fritz Reiner, Hungarian conductor (d. 1963) ·
December 20 – Yitzhak Baer, German-born Israeli historian
(d. 1980) ·
December 22 – Theodore Stark
Wilkinson, American admiral (d. 1946) ·
December 26 – Marius Canard, French orientalist (d. 1982) ·
December 28 – F. W. Murnau, German film director (d. 1931) Date Unknown[edit] ·
Mariano Andreu, Spanish painter (d. 1976) ·
Ibrahim Hashem, 3-time Prime Minister of
Jordan (d. 1958) Deaths[edit] January–June[edit] ·
January 19 – Anton de Bary, German biologist (b. 1831) ·
January 20 – William Pitt
Ballinger, Texas lawyer, southern statesman (b. 1825) ·
January 29 – Edward Lear, British artist, writer
(b. 1812) ·
January 31 – John Bosco, Italian priest, youth worker,
educator and founder of the Salesian Society (b. 1815) ·
February 3 – Sir Henry Maine, British jurist (b. 1822) ·
February 5 – Anton Mauve, Dutch painter (b. 1838) ·
February 7 – Jonathan Joestar, English businessman
(b. 1868) ·
February 22 – Anna Kingsford, British women's rights
activist (b. 1846) ·
February 24 – Seth Kinman, American hunter, settler
(b. 1815) ·
March 6 ·
Louisa May Alcott,
American novelist (b. 1832) ·
Josif
Pančić, Serbian botanist (b. 1814) ·
March 9 – William I,
German Emperor, King of Prussia (b. 1797) ·
March 12 – Henry Bergh, founder of the American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to
Animals (b. 1813) ·
March 16 – Hippolyte Carnot, French statesman (b. 1801) ·
March 23 – Morrison Waite, Chief
Justice of the United States (b. 1816) ·
March 27 – Francesco Faà di
Bruno, Italian mathematician (b. 1825) ·
March 29 – Charles-Valentin
Alkan, French composer, pianist (b. 1813) ·
April 4 – Emma Elizabeth Smith, Whitechapel Murders victim
(b. 1843) ·
April 15 – Matthew Arnold, English poet (b. 1822) ·
April 17 – Ephraim George
Squier, American archaeologist, newspaper editor (b. 1821) ·
April 19 – Thomas Russell
Crampton, English engineer (b. 1816) ·
May 15 – Edwin Hamilton Davis,
American archaeologist, physician (b. 1811) ·
May 19 – Julius Rockwell, United States politician
(b. 1805) ·
May 26 – Ascanio Sobrero, Italian chemist (b. 1812) ·
June 7 – Edmond Le Bœuf,
marshal of France (b. 1809) ·
June 8 – Sir
Duncan Cameron, British army general (b. 1808) ·
June 15 – Frederick
III, German Emperor, King of Prussia (b. 1831) ·
June 23 – Edmund Gurney, British psychologist
(b. 1847) July–December[edit] ·
July 1 – Maiden of Ludmir, Jewish religious leader
(b. 1805) ·
July 4 – Theodor Storm, German writer (b. 1817) ·
July 9 – Jan Brand,
4th president of the Orange Free State (b. 1823) ·
July 20 – Paul Langerhans, German pathologist,
biologist (b. 1847) ·
August 5 – Philip Sheridan, American general (b. 1831) ·
August 7 – Martha Tabram, possible first victim
of Jack the Ripper (b. 1849) ·
August 9 – Charles Cros, French poet (b. 1831) ·
August 16 – John Pemberton, American founder of Coca-Cola (b. 1831) ·
August 20 – Henry Richard, Welsh peace campaigner
(b. 1812) ·
August 23 – Philip Henry Gosse,
British scientist (b. 1810) ·
August 24 – Rudolf Clausius, German physicist,
contributor to thermodynamics (b. 1822) ·
August 31 – Mary Ann Nichols, first confirmed victim
of Jack the Ripper (b. 1845) ·
September 6 – John Lester Wallack,
American theater impresario (b. 1820) ·
September 8 – Annie Chapman, victim of Jack the Ripper (b. 1841) ·
September 11 – Domingo
Faustino Sarmiento, Argentine politician, writer, and father of
education (b. 1811) ·
September 23 – François Achille
Bazaine, French general (b. 1811) ·
September 24 – Karl von Prantl, German philosopher
(b. 1820) ·
Catherine Eddowes,
victim of Jack the Ripper (b. 1842) ·
Elizabeth Stride, victim of Jack the Ripper (b. 1843) ·
Horatio Spafford, American author of the
hymn It Is Well With My Soul (b. 1828) ·
John Wentworth,
Mayor of Chicago (b. 1815) ·
November 9 – Mary Jane Kelly, fifth and final confirmed
victim of Jack the Ripper (b. 1863) ·
November 10 – George
Bingham, 3rd Earl of Lucan, British army officer and aristocrat
(b. 1800) ·
November 24 – Cicero Price, American commodore (b. 1805) ·
December 2 – Namık Kemal, Turkish patriotic poet, social reformer
(b. 1840) ·
December 3 – Carl Zeiss, German optician, founder
of Carl Zeiss AG (b. 1816) ·
December 10 – William E. Le Roy,
American admiral (b. 1818) ·
December 20 – Rose Mylett, Whitechapel murders victim
(b. 1859) ·
December 22 – Mikhail
Loris-Melikov, Russian statesman, general (b. 1826) ·
December 31 – Samson Raphael
Hirsch, German rabbi (b. 1808) Date unknown[edit] ·
Caroline Howard
Gilman, American author (b. 1794) References[edit] 1.
^ "The Match Workers Strike Fund Register". Trades
Union Congress Library at the London Metropolitan University. Retrieved 2016-12-10. 2.
^ Jump up to:a b c Penguin
Pocket On This Day. Penguin Reference Library. 2006. ISBN 0-14-102715-0. 3.
^ "Wells College Destroyed" (PDF). The New York Times.
1888-08-10. 4.
^ "The first engine-driven flight". Daimler.
Retrieved 2016-04-15. 5.
^ Newton, John A. (2004). "King,
Edward (1829–1910)". Oxford
Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/34319. Retrieved 2012-10-12. (subscription or UK public library membership required) 6.
^ Pelle, Kimberley D. "Appendix D:Fairs
Not Included". In Findling, John E. Encyclopedia of World's Fairs
and Expositions. McFarland & Company, Inc. pp. 424–427. ISBN 978-0-7864-3416-9. Further reading and year books[edit] ·
1888 Annual Cyclopedia (1889) highly detailed coverage
of "Political, Military, and Ecclesiastical Affairs; Public Documents;
Biography, Statistics, Commerce, Finance, Literature, Science, Agriculture,
and Mechanical Industry" for year 1888; massive compilation of facts and
primary documents; worldwide coverage; 831 pp |
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