1873: Difference between revisions

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(New page: right|thumb|400px|Birmingham in 1873 by [[A. C. Oxford]] '''1873''' was the second year after the founding of the city of Birmingham. ==Events==...)
 
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* [[May 5]]: Voters in [[Jefferson County]] passed [[1873 Jefferson County seat referendum|a referendum]] moving the county seat from [[Elyton]] to Birmingham.
* [[May 5]]: Voters in [[Jefferson County]] passed [[1873 Jefferson County seat referendum|a referendum]] moving the county seat from [[Elyton]] to Birmingham.
* [[May 13]]: Birmingham's first [[Birmingham Water Works Company|municipal water]] was pumped from the [[North Birmingham Water Works]] to the [[Relay House]].
* [[May 13]]: Birmingham's first [[Birmingham Water Works Company|municipal water]] was pumped from the [[North Birmingham Water Works]] to the [[Relay House]].
* [[June 9]]: An ill man arriving from Huntsville touched off a [[1873 cholera epidemic]] in Birmingham.
* [[June 12]]: The first victim of Birmingham's [[1873 cholera epidemic]], a visitor from Huntsville, fell ill.
* [[June 21]]: The [[Elyton Land Company]] donated a lot at the corner of [[24th Street North|24th Street]] and [[6th Avenue North]] to the city "for the purpose of a [[Powell School|free school]] for white children now residing in, and may reside hereafter in said city or within one-half mile of the limits of said city."
* [[June 21]]: The [[Elyton Land Company]] donated a lot at the corner of [[24th Street North|24th Street]] and [[6th Avenue North]] to the city "for the purpose of a [[Powell School|free school]] for white children now residing in, and may reside hereafter in said city or within one-half mile of the limits of said city."
* [[July 4]]: The cholera epidemic spread to the general population following an Independence Day celebration at [[Blount Springs]].  
* [[July 4]]: The cholera epidemic spread to the general population following an Independence Day celebration at [[Blount Springs]].  

Revision as of 19:41, 18 January 2012

Birmingham in 1873 by A. C. Oxford

1873 was the second year after the founding of the city of Birmingham.

Events

Business

Religion

Individuals

Wallace Rayfield.jpg

Births

Graduation

Deaths

See also, 1873 cholera epidemic.

Works

Buildings

Context

In 1873, Congress enacted the Comstock Law, making it illegal to send any "obscene, lewd, or lascivious" books through the mail. President Ulysses S. Grant began his second term. Levi Strauss and Jacob Davis received a patent for using copper rivets to strengthen the pockets of denim work pants. The Canadian Parliament established the North-West Mounted Police (later renamed the Royal Canadian Mounted Police). The New York stock market crash triggered the Panic of 1873, part of the Long Depression.

Notable books published in 1873 included Around the World in Eighty Days by Jules Verne and The Gilded Age: A Tale of Today by Mark Twain and Charles Warner.

Notable births in 1873 included film mogul Adolph Zukor, writer Colette, baseball player & manager John McGraw, pharmacologist Otto Loewi, surgeon Alexis Carrel, inventor Lee De Forest, etiquette expert Emily Post, businessman Charles Rudolph Walgreen, athlete Ray Ewry, blues composer W. C. Handy, writer Ford Madox Ford, and politician Al Smith. Notable deaths included Emperor of the French Napoleon III, murderer Mary Ann Cotton (executed), painter Wilhelm Marstrand, General Edward Canby, chemist Justus von Liebig, explorer David Livingstone, Chief Justice Salmon P. Chase, and philosopher John Stuart Mill.

1870s
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