1891: Difference between revisions

From Bhamwiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(→‎Religion: Knesseth Israel Congregation)
(Last pass)
Line 2: Line 2:


==Events==
==Events==
[[Image:Hudgins Fountain.jpg|right|thumb|225px|Hudgins' fountain in Capitol Park. Photo by O. V. Hunt courtesy Samford University Library Special Collections]]
* [[February 18]]: [[Oneonta]] was incorporated.
* [[February 18]]: [[Oneonta]] was incorporated.
* [[April 16]]: [[List of Presidential visits|President Benjamin Harrison]] delivered a speech at [[Linn Park|Capitol Park]].
* [[April 16]]: [[List of Presidential visits|President Benjamin Harrison]] delivered a speech at [[Linn Park|Capitol Park]].
* [[May 6]]: [[Pell City]] in [[St Clair County]] was incorporated.
* [[May 6]]: [[Pell City]] in [[St Clair County]] was incorporated.
* May:  The Southern Baptist Convention held a conference at the [[O'Brien Opera House]].
* May:  The Southern Baptist Convention held a conference at the [[O'Brien Opera House]].
* [[May 22]]: 11 were killed in the [[1891 Pratt No. 1 Mine explosion]].
* [[June 12]]: Charles Swinney gave a [[List of ballooning events|balloon demonstration]] at [[Lakeview Park]].
* [[June 12]]: Charles Swinney gave a [[List of ballooning events|balloon demonstration]] at [[Lakeview Park]].
* Summer: [[Lakeview Park|Lakeview Theatre]] featured a lavish performance of Gilbert & Sullivan's ''H. M. S. Pinafor'' staged on a replica ship floating in the lake, which was surrounded by electric lights.
* [[September 26]]: A traveling medicine salesman ascended by [[List of ballooning events|hot air balloon]] from a vacant lot at [[1st Avenue North]] and [[19th Street North|19th Street]]. A spectator had his leg caught in the rope and was carried aloft, but was uninjured.
* [[September 26]]: A traveling medicine salesman ascended by [[List of ballooning events|hot air balloon]] from a vacant lot at [[1st Avenue North]] and [[19th Street North|19th Street]]. A spectator had his leg caught in the rope and was carried aloft, but was uninjured.
* The [[Alabama Mineral Exposition Building]] was demolished.
* The [[Alabama Mineral Exposition Building]] was demolished.
* The [[Alabama Water Company]] began using [[Hawkins Spring]] as a municipal water supply for [[Bessemer]].
* The [[Birmingham Public Library]] re-opened under the auspices of the [[Birmingham Board of Education]], using a large room in the [[Enslen Building]].
* The [[Birmingham Public Library]] re-opened under the auspices of the [[Birmingham Board of Education]], using a large room in the [[Enslen Building]].
* [[Carbon Hill]] in [[Walker County]] was incorporated.
* [[Cory Chappell]] authored a version of the [[Noccalula]] legend published in ''[[The Souvenir]]''.
* [[Gateway|Mercy Home]] was founded by the Women’s Christian Temperance Union.
* [[Gateway|Mercy Home]] was founded by the Women’s Christian Temperance Union.
* [[Hudgins' fountain]] was moved to [[Linn Park|Capitol Park]].
* [[Hudgins' fountain]] was moved to [[Linn Park|Capitol Park]].
* The [[North Alabama Good Roads Association]] was founded.
* The [[No. 1 South Bessemer streetcar line]] was electrified.
* The [[No. 1 South Bessemer streetcar line]] was electrified.
* [[Woodlawn]] was incorporated.
* [[Woodlawn]] was incorporated.
Line 20: Line 27:
* The ''[[Birmingham Labor Advocate]]'' switched from daily to weekly publication.
* The ''[[Birmingham Labor Advocate]]'' switched from daily to weekly publication.
* The original [[Golden Rule Bar-B-Q]] opened in what is now [[Irondale]].
* The original [[Golden Rule Bar-B-Q]] opened in what is now [[Irondale]].
=== Government ===
* [[A. O. Lane]] became president of the [[Birmingham Board of Education]] for a second time.


===Religion===
===Religion===
* [[March 15]]: [[Trinity Methodist Church (Southside)]] held their first service in their new chapel.
* [[May 3]]: [[Greater Shiloh Baptist Church|Shiloh Baptist Church]] was organized by pastor [[Thomas Walker]].
* [[October 18]]: [[South Highland Presbyterian Church]] was incorporated.
* [[October 18]]: [[South Highland Presbyterian Church]] was incorporated.
* Birmingham's first [[Knesseth Israel Congregation|Orthodox Jewish congregation]] organized.
* Birmingham's first [[Knesseth Israel Congregation|Orthodox Jewish congregation]] organized.
* [[Edgar Glenn]] succeeded [[John Robertson]] as pastor of Trinity Methodist Church (Southside).
* [[Isaac Hochstadter]] succeeded acting president [[Aaron Stern]] as president of [[Temple Emanu-El]].
* [[Isaac Hochstadter]] succeeded acting president [[Aaron Stern]] as president of [[Temple Emanu-El]].
* [[W. R. Kirk]] succeeded [[J. E. McCann]] as pastor of [[Avondale United Methodist Church]].
* [[Thornton Whaling]] became pastor of South Highland Presbyterian Church.
* [[Thornton Whaling]] became pastor of South Highland Presbyterian Church.
* [[J. White]] succeeded [[Thomas Walker]] as pastor of [[Sixth Avenue Baptist Church]].


== Individuals ==
== Individuals ==
* [[March 6]]: [[William Wier]] was elected Captain of the [[Birmingham Police Department]].
* [[November 3]]: [[Andrew Beard]] was granted a patent for a rotary engine.
* [[Sylvester Daly]] and [[David Fox]] ended the year securely in control of the [[City Democratic Party Executive Committee]].
* [[Carrie Hill]] moved to Birmingham with her parents and siblings.
* [[John Hearst Miller]] accepted the position of Birmingham City Recorder.
* [[Joseph Zoettl]] was enfeebled by heart palpitations and a Europe-wide flu epidemic.
[[Image:Octavus Roy Cohen in 1922.jpg|right|thumb|150px|Octavus Roy Cohen]]
[[Image:Octavus Roy Cohen in 1922.jpg|right|thumb|150px|Octavus Roy Cohen]]
===Births===
===Births===
* [[June 10]]: [[Frank Hartley Anderson]], architect and artist
* [[June 10]]: [[Frank Hartley Anderson]], architect and artist
Line 36: Line 57:
* [[November 24]]: [[Ben Gross]], radio critic
* [[November 24]]: [[Ben Gross]], radio critic
* [[Jenks Gillem]], college football coach
* [[Jenks Gillem]], college football coach
* [[Alexander McLaughlin]]
* [[Jimmy Morgan]], [[Mayor of Birmingham|President of the Birmingham City Commission]]
* [[Jimmy Morgan]], [[Mayor of Birmingham|President of the Birmingham City Commission]]


=== Graduations ===
=== Graduations ===
* [[June 26]]: [[William Leslie Welton]] from high school in Lynn, Massachusetts.
* [[June 26]]: [[William Leslie Welton]] from high school in Lynn, Massachusetts.
* [[Charles Glenn]] with a bachelor of science.


===Marriages===
===Marriages===
* [[February 9]]: Attorney [[Robert Thach]] to the former Stella Bringier of New Orleans.
* [[May 5]]: [[Nathaniel Barrett]] to the former [[Annie Pearl Troup]].
* [[May 5]]: [[Nathaniel Barrett]] to the former [[Annie Pearl Troup]].
* [[July 15]]: Peddler [[Louis Pizitz]] to the former [[Minnie Pizitz|Minnie Smolian]].
* ''[[Birmingham Age-Herald]]'' business manager [[Henry Gray]] to the former [[Bessie Gray|Bessie Martin]].


===Deaths===
===Deaths===
* [[March 9]]: [[Josiah Morris]], co-founder of Birmingham
* [[March 9]]: [[Josiah Morris]], co-founder of Birmingham
* [[Mary Anderson Parker]], first wife of [[A. H. Parker]]
* [[Mary Anderson Parker]], first wife of [[A. H. Parker]]
:''See also [[1891 Pratt No. 1 Mine explosion]]''.


==Works==
==Works==

Revision as of 11:39, 23 April 2012

1891 was the 20th year after the founding of the City of Birmingham.

Events

Hudgins' fountain in Capitol Park. Photo by O. V. Hunt courtesy Samford University Library Special Collections

Business

Government

Religion

Individuals

Octavus Roy Cohen

Births

Graduations

Marriages

Deaths

See also 1891 Pratt No. 1 Mine explosion.

Works

1890 architects' rendering of First Methodist

Buildings

Context

In 1891, The Chilean Civil War was fought. The first working escalator ("inclined elevator") is invented. The Wrigley Company was founded in Chicago. The London-Paris telephone system was opened. The Music Hall in New York (now known as Carnegie Hall) had its grand opening. The first public demonstration of a prototype Kinetoscope was given at Thomas Edison's lab. Stanford University in California opened. Asteroid 323 Brucia became the first asteroid discovered using photography. James Naismith invented basketball. Nikola Tesla invented the Tesla coil.

Notable books published in 1891 included The White Company by Arthur Conan Doyle, Tess of the d'Urbervilles by Thomas Hardy, L'Argent by Émile Zola. Notable music released included "Ta-ra-ra-boom-de-ay" by Henry J. Sayers, "The Laughing Song" by George W. Johnson, and Fantasy Pieces for Oboe and Piano by Carl Nielsen.

Notable births in 1891 included physicist Walther Bothe, Chief Justice Earl Warren, composer Cole Porter, wrestler Man Mountain Dean, and writer Henry Miller. Notable deaths included Union General William Tecumseh Sherman, painter Georges Seurat, showman P. T. Barnum, poet and essayist James Russell Lowell, inventor Pierre Lallement, and novelist Herman Melville.

1890s
<< 1890 1891 1892 1893 1894 1895 1896 1897 1898 1899 >>
Births - Deaths - Establishments - Events - Works