1871
1871 in topic: |
Subjects: Archaeology – Architecture – |
Art – Literature (Poetry) – Music – Science |
Sports – Rail Transport |
Countries: Australia – Canada – China – France – Germany – Ireland – Mexico – Netherlands – New Zealand – Norway – South Africa – Spain – UK – USA |
Leaders: State leaders – Colonial governors |
Category: Establishments – Disestablishments |
Births – Deaths – Works |
Year 1871 (MDCCCLXXI) was a common year starting on Sunday (link will display the full calendar) of the Gregorian calendar (or a common year starting on Friday of the 12-day slower Julian calendar).
Events of 1871
January–March
April–June
July–September
- July 20
- July 21 – August 26 – First ever photographs of Yellowstone National Park region taken by the photographer William Henry Jackson during Hayden Geological Survey of 1871
- July 28 – The Annie, the first boat ever launched on Yellowstone Lake in Yellowstone National Park region.
- August 29 – The abolition of the han system is carried out in Japan.
- August 31 – Adolphe Thiers becomes the President of the French Republic.
- September – Whaling Disaster of 1871: 1,219 people abandon 33 whaling ships caught in the ice pack off the northern coast of Alaska.
October–December
- October 8 – Four major fires break out on the shores of Lake Michigan in Chicago, Illinois, Peshtigo, Wisconsin, Holland, Michigan, and Manistee, Michigan. The Great Chicago Fire is the most famous of these, leaving nearly 100,000 people homeless, although the Peshtigo Fire kills as many as 2,500 people, making it the deadliest fire in United States history.
- October 12 – Criminal Tribes Act (CTA) enacted by British rule in India, which named over 160 communities "Criminal Tribes", i.e. hereditary criminals. It was Repealed in 1949, after Independence of India.
- October 20 – The Royal Regiment of Artillery forms the first regular Canadian army units when they create two batteries of garrison artillery, which later become the Royal Canadian Artillery.
- October 27
- The Comte de Chambord refuses to be crowned "King Henry V of France" until France abandons its tricolor and returns to the old Bourbon flag.
- The Grand Sachem of Tammany Hall (Boss Tweed) is arrested.
- November 5 – Wickenburg massacre: six men travelling by stagecoach are reportedly murdered by the Yavapai Indians.
- November 10 – Henry Morton Stanley locates the missing explorer and missionary Dr. David Livingstone in Ujiji, near Lake Tanganyika, and greets him by saying "Dr. Livingstone, I presume?"
- November 17 – The National Rifle Association is granted a charter by the state of New York.
- December 10 – German chancellor Otto von Bismarck tries to ban Catholics from the political stage by introducing harsh laws concerning the separation of church and state.
- December 19 – The city of Birmingham, Alabama, is incorporated with the merger of three pre-existing towns.
- December 25 – The Reading Football Club is formed.
- December 26 – Thespis, the first of the Gilbert and Sullivan operas, premières. It does modestly well, but the two composers will not collaborate again for four years.
Undated
- The provinces of Alsace and Lorraine are transferred from France to Germany.
- British trade unions are legalized.
- Heinrich Schliemann begins the excavation of Troy.
- Japan forms its own nationwide police force based on the French model.
- George Biddell Airy discovers that astronomical aberration is independent of the local medium.
- William M. Tweed serves his last year as the "Boss" of the Tammany Hall political machine in New York.
- The South Improvement Company is formed by John D. Rockefeller and a group of major railroad interests in an early effort to organize and control the petroleum industry in the U.S.A.
- The Harvard Summer School is founded.
- The Constitution of the German Empire abolishes all restrictions on Jewish marriage, choice of occupation, place of residence, and property ownership. Exclusion from government employment and discrimination in social relations remain in effect.
- The Ameican minister to China takes five warships to attempt to "open up" Korea, but his forces leave after exchanges of fire result in 250 Koreans dying and the Korean government still unwilling to make any concessions.
- Virginia adopts a new Constitution, taking into account of, among other things, all of the counties that had left Virginia in 1863 to form the new non-slave state of West Virginia and became a new state of the United States, with all of the rights and privileges thereof. This exiting of one state to form a new one has never been done otherwise without the permission / consent of the Legislature of the one involved, as was done in the cases of Vermont, Kentucky, and Maine.
Births
January–June
- January 7 – Félix Édouard Justin Émile Borel, French mathematician and politician (d. 1956)
- January 30 – Wilfred Lucas, Canadian-born actor (d. 1940)
- February 4 – Friedrich Ebert, President of Germany (d. 1925)
- February 18 – Harry Brearley, English inventor (d. 1948)
- February 28 – Manuel Díaz Rodríguez, Venezuelan writer (d. 1927)
- March 1 – Ben Harney, American composer and pianist (d. 1938)
- March 4 – Boris Galerkin, Russian mathematician (d. 1945)
- March 5 – Rosa Luxemburg, German politician (d. 1919)
- March 19 – Schofield Haigh, English cricketer (d. 1921)
- March 27 – Heinrich Mann, German writer (d. 1950)
- March 31 – Arthur Griffith, President of Ireland (d. 1922)
- April 8 – Clarence Hudson White, American photographer (d. 1925)
- May 3 – Walter Robinson Parr, English-born pastor (d. 1922)
- May 6
- May 27 – Georges Rouault, French painter and graphic artist (d. 1958)
- June 14 – Jacob Ellehammer, Danish inventor (d. 1946)
July–December
- July 10 – Marcel Proust, French writer (d. 1922)
- July 17 – Lyonel Feininger, German painter (d. 1956)
- July 18 – Sada Yacco, Japanese stage actress (d. 1946)
- July 25 – Richard Ernest Turner, Canadian soldier (d. 1961)
- August 1 – John Lester, American cricketer (d. 1969)
- August 14 – Guangxu Emperor of China (d. 1908)
- August 19 – Orville Wright, American aviation pioneer, co-inventor of the airplane with brother Wilbur (d. 1948)
- August 25 – Ross Winn, American anarchist writer and publisher (d. 1912)
- August 27 – Theodore Dreiser, American writer (d. 1945)
- August 29 – Albert Lebrun, French politician (d. 1950)
- August 30 – Ernest Rutherford, 1st Baron Rutherford of Nelson, New Zealand physicist, recipient of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry (d. 1937)
- September 1 – J. Reuben Clark, Under Secretary of State for U.S. President Calvin Coolidge (d. 1961)
- September 10 – Charles Collett, Great Western Railway Chief mechanical engineer (d. 1952)
- September 24 – Lottie Dod, English athlete (d. 1960)
- September 26 – Winsor McCay, American cartoonist and animator (d. 1934)
- September 27 – Grazia Deledda, Italian writer, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 1936)
- October 2 – Cordell Hull, United States Secretary of State, recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize (d. 1955)
- October 19 – Walter Bradford Cannon, American physiologist (d. 1945)
- October 11 – Harriet Boyd-Hawes, American archaeologist (d. 1945)
- October 30
- November 1 – Stephen Crane, American writer (d. 1900)
- November 3 – Albert Goldthorpe, English rugby league footballer (d. 1943)
- December 9 – Joe Kelley, American Baseball Hall of Famer (d. 1943)
- December 13 – Emily Carr, Canadian artist (d. 1945)
Deaths
January–June
- January 8 – José Trinidad Cabañas, a Honduran General, President and National Hero (b. 1805)
- January 13 – Kawakami Gensai, a highly skilled swordsman and one of the four most notable assassins of the Bakumatsu period. In the manga Rurouni Kenshin, the main character is a skilled swordsman named Kenshin Himura. He is loosely based on Gensai.
- January 15 – Edward C. Delevan, American temperance movement leader (b. 1793)
- January 19 – Sir William Denison, Governor of New South Wales (b. 1804)
- February 12 – Alice Cary, American poet, sister to Phoebe Cary (1824-1871) (b. 1820)
- February 20 – Paul Kane, Irish-born painter (b. 1810)
- March 18 – Augustus De Morgan, professor of mathematics and mathematician (b. 1806)
- April 7 – Prince Alexander John of Wales (b. April 6, prematurely)
- May 11 – John Herschel, English astronomer (b. 1792)
- May 12 – Elzéar-Henri Juchereau Duchesnay, Canadian politician (b. 1809)
- May 23 – Jarosław Dąbrowski, Polish general (b. 1836)
July–December
- July 5 – Cristina Trivulzio di Belgiojoso, Italian noblewoman, patriot, writer and journalist (b. 1808)
- July 31 – Phoebe Cary, American poet, sister to Alice Cary (1820-1871) (b. 1824)
- September 20 – John Coleridge Patteson, Anglican bishop and missionary (martyred) (b. 1827)
- September 23 – Louis-Joseph Papineau, Canadian politician (b. 1786)
- October 18 – Charles Babbage, English mathematician and inventor (b. 1791)
- November 22 – Oscar James Dunn, Lieutenant Governor of Louisiana (b. 1825)
- December 28 – John Henry Pratt, English clergyman and mathematician (b. 1809)
Reference
- Appleton's Annual Cyclopedia...for 1871 (1873), comprehensive collection of facts online edition