1889: Difference between revisions

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* [[May 27]]: The [[Birmingham Brewing Company (1889)|Birmingham Brewing Company]] was incorporated.
* [[May 27]]: The [[Birmingham Brewing Company (1889)|Birmingham Brewing Company]] was incorporated.
* [[July 16]]: The [[Birmingham Athletic Club]] was incorporated.
* [[July 16]]: The [[Birmingham Athletic Club]] was incorporated.
* [[September 4]]: The [[Red Mountain Railroad]] began streetcar service to [[Rosedale]].
* The [[Clifton Land Company]] reorganized as the [[South Birmingham Land Company]].
* The [[Clifton Land Company]] reorganized as the [[South Birmingham Land Company]].
* ''[[Birmingham News|The Evening News]]'' changed its name to ''The Daily News''.
* ''[[Birmingham News|The Evening News]]'' changed its name to ''The Daily News''.
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* [[Mary Pratt Furnace]] was rebuilt to increase capacity from 15,000 to 20,000 tons per year.
* [[Mary Pratt Furnace]] was rebuilt to increase capacity from 15,000 to 20,000 tons per year.
* [[The Casino|Mortimer's Dime Theatre]] closed.
* [[The Casino|Mortimer's Dime Theatre]] closed.
* The [[Red Mountain Railroad Line]] opened.
* Attorneys [[James Weatherly]] and [[John Walker Percy|Walker Percy]] partnered in the firm of [[Weatherly & Percy]].
* Attorneys [[James Weatherly]] and [[John Walker Percy|Walker Percy]] partnered in the firm of [[Weatherly & Percy]].
* The ''[[Weekly Herald]]'' began publication.
* The ''[[Weekly Herald]]'' began publication.

Revision as of 10:42, 18 November 2014

1889 was the 18th year after the founding of the City of Birmingham.

According to a pamphlet published in September of that year, the district's population numbered 55,000 (about half of whom resided in the city limits). Twenty-five churches were enumerated in the city, with a total of 8,479 communicants. Fifty-five teachers were employed in the public schools, which had an enrollment of 3,115. Monthly payroll of local industrial plants was reported at $1,478,365 with twenty-one furnaces in blast, two thousand men employed at rolling mills, and record output from mines, quarries, and coke ovens.

Events

Richard Hawes

Business

Street railways in 1889

Religion

Sports

Individuals

Births

Graduations

Mortimer Jordan, Jr

Marriages

Deaths

Works

Buildings

1889 Jefferson County Courthouse

Publications

Context

In 1889, what would later become the Coca-Cola Company was incorporated. The Eiffel Tower was completed. The Wall Street Journal was established. Nintendo was founded to produce and market Hanafuda playing cards. North Dakota, South Dakota, Montana, and Washington were admitted to the United States.

Notable books published in 1889 included Three Men in a Boat by Jerome K. Jerome, Master of Ballantrae by Robert Louis Stevenson, The Kreutzer Sonata by Leo Tolstoy, and A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court by Mark Twain. Notable music released included "Oh, Promise Me" by Clement Scott and Reginald de Koven, "The Thunderer" and "The Washington Post" by John Philip Sousa, and comic opera The Gondoliers by Gilbert and Sullivan.

Notable births in 1889 included film director Victor Fleming, actor and director Charlie Chaplin, dictator Adolf Hitler, aviation pioneer Igor Sikorsky, actor Claude Rains, astronomer Edwin Hubble, and farmer Walter Knott. Notable deaths included outlaw Belle Starr, Father Damien, former Confederate president Jefferson Davis, physicist James Prescott Joule, and poet Robert Browning.

1880s
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