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1877 (MDCCCLXXVII)
was a common year starting
on Monday of the Gregorian calendar and
a common
year starting on Saturday of the Julian calendar, the 1877th year of
the Common Era (CE) and Anno Domini(AD) designations, the 877th
year of the 2nd millennium,
the 77th year of the 19th century,
and the 8th year of the 1870s decade. As of
the start of 1877, the Gregorian calendar was 12 days ahead of the Julian
calendar, which remained in localized use until 1923. Contents · 1Events · 2Births · 3Deaths · 5Further
reading and year books Events[edit] January–March[edit] ·
January 1 – Queen Victoria is proclaimed Empress of India by the Royal Titles Act
1876, introduced by Benjamin Disraeli,
the Prime
Minister of the United Kingdom . ·
January 8 – American Indian Wars – Battle of Wolf
Mountain: Crazy Horse and
his warriors fight their last battle with the United States
Cavalry in Montana. ·
January 20 – The Conference of
Constantinople ends, with Ottoman Turkey rejecting proposals of
internal reform and Balkan provisions. ·
January 29 – The Satsuma Rebellion,
a revolt of disaffected samurai in Japan,
breaks out against the new imperial government; it lasts until September,
when it is crushed by a professionally led army of draftees.[1] ·
February 17 – Major General Charles George
Gordon of the British Army is appointed Governor-General
of the Sudan.[2] ·
March – The
Nineteenth Century magazine is founded in London. ·
March 2 – In the Compromise of 1877,
the U.S.
presidential election, 1876 is resolved with the selection
of Rutherford B. Hayes as
the winner, even though Samuel J. Tilden won the popular vote
on November 7, 1876. ·
March 4 ·
Emile Berliner invents the microphone. ·
Pyotr Ilyich
Tchaikovsky's ballet Swan Lake debuts. ·
Rutherford B. Hayes is
sworn in, as the 19th President of the United States. ·
March 15 – 1877 Australia v.
England Series: The first Test cricket match is held between
England and Australia. ·
March 24 – For the only time in
history, The Boat Race between
the Universities of Cambridge and Oxford is
declared a "dead heat" (i.e., a draw). April–June[edit] ·
April 10 – The first human cannonball act in the British
Isles, and perhaps the world, is performed by 14-year-old Rossa Matilda
Richter ("Zazel") at the London Royal Aquarium.[3] ·
April 12 ·
The
United Kingdom annexes the South African
Republic, violating the Sand River
Convention of 1852,
causing a new Xhosa War.[4] ·
The University of Tokyo is
officially established in Japan. ·
April 24 – Russo-Turkish
War (1877–78): Russia declares war on the Ottoman Empire. ·
May 5 – American Indian Wars: Sitting Bull leads his band of Lakota into Canada, to avoid harassment by the United
States Army under Colonel Nelson Miles. ·
May 6 – Realizing that his people are
weakened by cold and hunger, Chief Crazy Horse of the Oglala Siouxsurrenders to United States
troops in Nebraska. ·
May 8–11 – At Gilmore's Gardens in New York
City, the first Westminster
Kennel Club Dog Show is held. ·
May 9 (May 10 0:59 UTC)
– Iquique
Earthquake and tsunami: An earthquake of at least magnitude
8.5 Ms occurs on the
west coast of South America, killing 2,541 around the Pacific Rim. ·
May 16 – The 16 May 1877 crisis occurs
in France. ·
May 21 (May 9 O.S.) – By a speech in the Parliament of
Romania by Mihail
Kogălniceanu, the country declares itself independent from
the Ottoman Empire (recognized
in 1878 after the end of the Romanian
independence war). ·
June 15 – Henry Ossian Flipper becomes
the first African American cadet
to graduate from the United
States Military Academy. ·
June 17 – American Indian Wars – Battle of
White Bird Canyon: The Nez Perce defeat the U.S. Cavalry at
White Bird Canyon, in the Idaho Territory. ·
June 20 – Alexander Graham
Bell installs the world's first commercial telephone service
in Hamilton, Ontario,
Canada. ·
June 21 – The Molly Maguires are hanged at Carbon County Prison,
in Mauch Chunk,
Pennsylvania. ·
June 26 – The eruption of the
volcano Cotopaxi in Ecuador causes severe mudflows that
wipe out surrounding cities and valleys, killing 1,000. ·
June 30 – The British Mediterranean
fleet is sent to Besika Bay. July–September[edit] ·
July –
The serial publication of Leo Tolstoy's Anna Karenina is concluded,
in The Russian
Messenger.[5] ·
July 9 – The All
England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club begins its first lawn
tennis tournament at Wimbledon. ·
July 16 – Great
Railroad Strike of 1877: Riots by Baltimore and
Ohio Railroad railroad workers in Baltimore lead to a sympathy strike and rioting in
Pittsburgh, and a full-scale worker's rebellion in St. Louis, briefly
establishing a Communist government, before U.S. President Rutherford B. Hayes calls
in the armed forces.[6] ·
July 19 – Russo-Turkish
War: The first battle in the Siege of Plevna is fought. ·
July 30 – Russo-Turkish
War: The second battle in the Siege of Plevna is fought. ·
July 30 – Russo-Turkish
War: The Turkish army and its allies destroy the Bulgarian city of Stara Zagora and massacre the
inhabitants. ·
August 9 – American Indian Wars – Battle of the Big
Hole: Near Big Hole River, Montana, a small band of Nez Perce people who refuse government
orders to move to a reservation, clash with the United States Army.
The army loses 29 soldiers, and the Indians lose 89 warriors, in an Army
victory. ·
August 12 – American astronomer Asaph Hall discovers Deimos, the outer moon of Mars. ·
August 18 – Asaph Hall discovers Phobos, the inner moon of Mars. ·
September 1 – The Battle of Lovcha, third battle in the Siege of Plevna, is fought. Russian forces
successfully reduce the Ottoman fortress at Lovcha. ·
September 5 – American Indian Wars:
Oglala Sioux chief Crazy Horse is bayoneted by a United States soldier,
after resisting confinement in a guardhouse at Fort Robinson in Nebraska. ·
September 22 – Treaty 7 is concluded between several
mainly Blackfoot First Nations tribes and the Canadian
Confederation, at the Blackfoot Crossing of
the Bow River, settling the Blackfoot on Indian reserves in what will become
southern Alberta. ·
September 24 – Battle of Shiroyama in Kagoshima, Japan: The Imperial Japanese
Army annihilates heavily outnumbered rebel samurai under Saigō Takamori (who
is killed), ending the Satsuma Rebellion. October–December[edit] ·
October 22 – The Blantyre mining
disaster in Scotland kills 207 miners. ·
November 14 – Henrik Ibsen's first contemporary realist
drama The Pillars of
Society is premièred at the Odense Teater.[7] ·
November 21 – Thomas Edison announces his invention
of the phonograph, a machine
that can record sound, considered Edison's first great invention. Edison
demonstrates the device for the first time on November 29. ·
November 22 – The first college lacrosse game is played
between New York University and Manhattan College. ·
December 9 – The fourth battle of
the Russo-Turkish
War is fought, concluding the Siege of Plevna. ·
December 13 – Serbia restates its previous
declaration of war against Turkey. ·
December 17 – disastrous premiere
of Anton Bruckner's
Third Symphony in D minor at the Vienna Philharmonic ·
December 30 – Brahms' Symphony
No. 2 premieres in Vienna. Births[edit] January–June[edit] ·
January 2 – Slava Raškaj, Croatian painter (d. 1906) ·
January 3 – Josephine Hull, American actress (d. 1957) ·
January 22 – Hjalmar Schacht, German economist,
politician and banker (d. 1970) ·
January 26 – Kees van Dongen, Dutch-French painter
(d. 1968) ·
February 4 – Eddie Cochems, father of the forward pass in American
football (d. 1953) ·
G. H. Hardy, British mathematician (d. 1947) ·
Alfred Williams, British poet (d. 1930) ·
February 12 – Louis
Renault, French industrialist, founder of Renault (d. 1944) ·
February 14 – Edmund Landau, German mathematician
(d. 1938) ·
Isabelle Eberhardt,
Swiss explorer, writer (d. 1904) ·
André Maginot, French politician (d. 1932) ·
February 19 – Gabriele Münter,
German painter (d. 1962) ·
February 25 – Erich von Hornbostel,
Austrian musicologist (d. 1935) ·
March 2 – Consuelo Vanderbilt,
Duchess of Marlborough (d. 1964) ·
March 4 ·
Alexander
Fyodorovich Gedike, Russian composer (d. 1957) ·
Fritz Graebner, German ethnologist (d. 1934) ·
Garrett Morgan, American inventor (d. 1963) ·
March 9 – Albert Leo Stevens,
pioneering American balloonist (d. 1944) ·
March 12 – Wilhelm Frick, German Nazi politician
(d. 1946) ·
March 16 – Reza Shah Pahlavi,
Shah of Iran (d. 1944) ·
March 18 – Edgar Cayce, American psychic (d. 1945) ·
March 21 – Maurice Farman, French pilot, aircraft
designer (d. 1964) ·
March 25 – Walter Little,
Canadian politician (d. 1961) ·
March 29 – Alois Kayser, German missionary (d. 1944) ·
April 15 – Georg Kolbe, German sculptor (d. 1947) ·
April 17 – Lionel Pape, English actor (d. 1944) ·
April 23 – Charles D. Herron,
United States Army general (d. 1977) ·
April 30 – Alice B. Toklas, American writer (d. 1967) ·
May 3 – Karl Abraham, German psychoanalyst (d. 1925) ·
May 5 – Halfdan Egedius, Norwegian painter,
illustrator (d. 1899) ·
May 23 – Grace Ingalls, youngest sister of American
author Laura Ingalls Wilder (d. 1941) ·
May 24 – Samuel W. Bryant, American admiral (d. 1938) ·
May 27 – Isadora Duncan, American dancer (d. 1927) ·
June 4 – Heinrich Otto
Wieland, German chemist, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 1957) ·
June 7 – Charles Glover
Barkla, English physicist, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 1944) ·
June 11 – Renée Vivien, British poet who wrote in
French (d. 1909) ·
June 12 – Thomas C. Hart, American admiral, politician
(d. 1971) ·
June 14 – Jane Bathori, French opera singer (d. 1970) ·
June 19 – Charles Coburn, American actor (d. 1961) July–December[edit] ·
July 2 ·
Rinaldo Cuneo, American artist ("the
painter of San Francisco") (d. 1939) ·
Hermann Hesse, German-born writer, Nobel
Prize laureate (d. 1962) ·
July 6 – Arnaud Massy, French golfer (d. 1950) ·
July 13 – Erik Scavenius, Prime Minister of Denmark
(d. 1962) ·
July 17 – Ernst von Dohnányi,
Hungarian conductor (d. 1960) ·
July 19 ·
Cécile Brunschvicg,
French politician (d. 1946) ·
Arthur Fielder, English cricketer (d. 1949) ·
August 1 ·
George Hackenschmidt,
Estonian strongman, professional wrestler (d. 1968) ·
Charlotte
Milburn Hughes, the longest-lived British person ever documented
(d. 1993) ·
August 6 – Wallace H. White,
Jr., U.S. Senator from Maine (d. 1952) ·
August 7 – Ulrich Salchow, Swedish figure skater
(d. 1949) ·
August 15 – Stanley Vestal, American writer, poet,
historian (d. 1957) ·
August 16 – Roque Ruaño, Spanish priest, civil engineer
(d. 1935) ·
August 22 – Ananda Coomaraswamy,
Ceylonese Tamil philosopher (d. 1947) ·
August 26 – John Latham,
Australian politician, judge (d. 1964) ·
Lloyd C. Douglas, American minister, author
(d. 1951) ·
Charles Rolls, Welsh co-founder of the Rolls-Royce car
firm, pioneer aviator (d. 1910) ·
August 29 – Dudley Pound, British admiral (d. 1943) ·
Francis William
Aston, English chemist, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 1945) ·
Rex Beach, American novelist, playwright,
and Olympic water polo player (d. 1949) ·
September 2 – Frederick Soddy, English chemist, Nobel
Prize laureate (d. 1956) ·
September 6 – Buddy Bolden, American jazz musician
(d. 1931) ·
Alfred Cortot, Swiss pianist (d. 1962) ·
Edmund Gwenn, English actor (d. 1959) ·
Bertha De Vriese, Belgian physician
(d. 1958) ·
October 4 – Razor Smith, English cricketer (d. 1946) ·
October 10 – William
Morris, 1st Viscount Nuffield, British businessman, philanthropist
(d. 1963) ·
October 15 – Helen Ware, American stage, film actress
(d. 1939) ·
October 21 – Oswald Avery, Canadian-American physician,
medical researcher (d. 1955) ·
October 22 – Frederick Twort, English bacteriologist
(d. 1950) ·
October 24 – Ernst Mielck, Finnish composer (d. 1899) ·
October 27 – George
Thompson, English cricketer (d. 1943) ·
October 29 – Narcisa de Leon, Filipino film mogul
(d. 1966) ·
October 30 – Hugo Celmiņš,
2-time Prime Minister of Latvia (d. 1941) ·
November 1 – Else Ury, German writer, children's book
author (d. 1943) ·
November 2 – Claire McDowell, American silent film
actress (d. 1966) ·
November 3 – Carlos Ibáñez del
Campo, 2-time President of Chile (d. 1960) ·
Enrico De Nicola, 1st President of Italy
(d. 1959) ·
Allama Iqbal, Indian philosopher, one of the
founding fathers of the Muslims of India (d. 1938) ·
November 15 – William Hope Hodgson,
English author (d. 1918) ·
November 17 – Frank Lahm, Brigadier General USAF, airship
pilot, early military aviator trained by the Wright brothers (d. 1963) ·
Endre Ady, Hungarian poet (d. 1919) ·
Joan Gamper, Swiss-born businessman, founder
of FC Barcelona (d. 1930) ·
Alben W. Barkley, 35th Vice
President of the United States (d. 1956) ·
Edward C. Kalbfus,
American admiral (d. 1954) ·
Kavasji
Jamshedji Petigara, Indian police commissioner of Bombay (d. 1941) ·
December 3 – Richard Pearse, New Zealand airplane pioneer
(d. 1953) ·
December 24 – Sigrid Schauman, Finnish painter (d. 1979) Date Unknown[edit] ·
Rashid Tali’a,
Prime Minister of Jordan (d. 1926) Deaths[edit] January–June[edit] ·
January 2 – Alexander Bain,
Scottish inventor (b. 1811) ·
January 4 – Cornelius Vanderbilt,
American entrepreneur (b. 1794) ·
January 20 – Dato Maharajalela
Lela, Malay nationalist ·
February 18 – Henrietta A. Bingham,
American editor (b. 1841) ·
February 20 – Louis M.
Goldsborough, United States Navy admiral (b. 1805) ·
February 25 – Jung Bahadur Rana,
Nepalese ruler (b. 1817) ·
March 1 – Antoni Patek, Polish watchmaker (b. 1811) ·
May 19 – Charlotta Djurström,
Swedish actress and theater manager (b. 1807) ·
March 24 – Walter Bagehot, British businessman,
essayist and journalist (b. 1826) ·
March 25 – Caroline Chisholm,
Australian humanitarian (b. 1808) ·
May 26 – Kido Takayoshi, Japanese statesman (b. 1833) ·
June 3 – Ludwig Ritter
von Köchel, Austrian musicologist (b. 1800) ·
June 17 – John Stevens
Cabot Abbott, American historian, pastor, and pedagogical writer
(b. 1805) ·
June 22 – John R. Goldsborough,
U.S. Navy commodore (b. 1809) July–December[edit] ·
July 16 – Samuel McLean,
American congressman (b. 1826) ·
July 27 – John Frost,
British Chartist leader (b. 1784) ·
August 8 – William Lovett, British Chartist leader
(b. 1800) ·
August 29 – Brigham Young, American Mormon leader
(b. 1801) ·
August 30 – Raphael Semmes, American and Confederate
naval officer (b. 1809) ·
September 2 – Constantine Kanaris,
Greek politician (b. 1795) ·
September 3 – Adolphe Thiers, French historian, politician
(b. 1797) ·
September 5 – Crazy Horse, American Oglala Lakota chief
(b. 1840-45) ·
September 12 – Emily Pepys, English child diarist (b. 1833) ·
September 17 – William Fox Talbot,
English photographer (b. 1800) ·
September 24 – Saigō Takamori,
Japanese samurai (b. 1828) ·
October 3 – James Roosevelt
Bayley, first Roman
Catholic Bishop of Newark, New Jersey, and the eighth Archbishop of
Baltimore (b. 1814) ·
October 10 – Johann Georg Baiter,
Swiss philologist, textual critic (b. 1801) ·
October 16 – Théodore Barrière,
French dramatist (b. 1823) ·
October 28 – Julia Kavanagh, Irish novelist (b. 1824) ·
October 29 – Nathan Bedford
Forrest, American Confederate Civil War General, first Grand Wizard of the Ku Klux Klan (b. 1821) ·
November 2 – Friedrich Graf
von Wrangel, Prussian field marshal (b. 1784) ·
December 12 – José de Alencar,
Brazilian novelist (b. 1829) ·
December 29 – Angelica
Singleton Van Buren, Acting First
Lady of the United States (b. 1818) ·
December 31 – Gustave Courbet, French painter (b. 1819) Date Unknown[edit] ·
Nicolae Golescu, 9th Prime Minister of
Romania (b. 1810) References[edit] 1.
^ Mounsey, Augustus
H. (1879). The Satsuma Rebellion: An Episode of Modern
Japanese History. London: John Murray. 2.
^ Pierre Crabitès, Gordon: The Sudan and Slavery (Routledge,
2016) 3.
^ The Guinness
Book of Records. 4.
^ Everett, Jason M., ed.
(2006). "1877". The People's
Chronology. Thomson Gale. Archived from the original on May 27, 2007.
Retrieved 2007-05-26. 5.
^ Stenbock-Fermor, Elizabeth (1975). The
Architecture of Anna Karenina. B.R. Grüner. ISBN 1588116751. 6.
^ Bruce, Robert V. (1959). 1877:
Year of Violence. Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill. 7.
^ Hanssen, Jens-Morten (2001-08-10). "Facts
about Pillars of Society". Ibsen.net. Retrieved 2013-02-08. Further reading and year books[edit] ·
1877 Annual Cyclopedia (1878) highly detailed coverage
of "Political, Military, and Ecclesiastical Affairs; Public Documents;
Biography, Statistics, Commerce, Finance, Literature, Science, Agriculture,
and Mechanical Industry" for year 1877; massive compilation of facts and
primary documents; worldwide coverage; 827 pp ·
Bellesiles,
Michael A. (2010). 1877: America's Year of Living Violently. New York:
New Press. ISBN 9781595584410. |
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