1904: Difference between revisions

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* The first barber shop opened in the space still in use as the [[Hippodrome]] barber shop in [[Woodlawn]].
* The first barber shop opened in the space still in use as the [[Hippodrome]] barber shop in [[Woodlawn]].
* The [[Woodlawn Library]] was established by the [[Women's Club of Woodlawn]] at [[Woodlawn City Hall]].
* The [[Woodlawn Library]] was established by the [[Women's Club of Woodlawn]] at [[Woodlawn City Hall]].
* [[Birmingham City Physician]] [[Charles Whelan, Jr]] enforced a new city ordinance requiring smallpox vaccination.
* [[Birmingham City Physician]] [[Charles Whelan Jr]] enforced a new city ordinance requiring smallpox vaccination.


===Business===
===Business===
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* [[Bibb Graves]] retired from the [[Alabama House of Representatives]] to unsuccessfully challenge incumbent [[Ariosto Wiley]] to represent the [[Second Congressional District of Alabama]].
* [[Bibb Graves]] retired from the [[Alabama House of Representatives]] to unsuccessfully challenge incumbent [[Ariosto Wiley]] to represent the [[Second Congressional District of Alabama]].
* [[D. F. Sugg]] defeated incumbent [[Charles Camp]] in the election for chief of the [[Ensley Police Department]].
* [[D. F. Sugg]] defeated incumbent [[Charles Camp]] in the election for chief of the [[Ensley Police Department]].
* Birmingham City Physician [[Charles Whelan, Jr]] appointed twelve doctors to carry out a city ordinance requiring smallpox vaccinations.
* Birmingham City Physician [[Charles Whelan Jr]] appointed twelve doctors to carry out a city ordinance requiring smallpox vaccinations.


===Religion===
===Religion===
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===Deaths===
===Deaths===
<!-- [[Image:William Walker Jr 1904.jpg|right|thumb|150px|William Walker, Jr]] -->
<!-- [[Image:William Walker Jr 1904.jpg|right|thumb|150px|William Walker Jr]] -->
* [[January 24]]: [[Mitchell A. Porter]], attorney
* [[January 24]]: [[Mitchell A. Porter]], attorney
* [[February 1]]: [[Flora Turner]], wife of architect [[Joseph Turner]]
* [[February 1]]: [[Flora Turner]], wife of architect [[Joseph Turner]]

Revision as of 15:27, 10 September 2015

Stereograph of Vulcan at the World's Fair

1904 was the 33rd year after the founding of the city of Birmingham.

Events

Business

Motlow Bros letterhead.jpg

Education

Government

Religion

James Coyle

Sports

Mike Donahue

Individuals

Births

Arthur Shores
Albert Boutwell

Marriages

Deaths

Works

Portrait of Lady Helen Vincent, Viscountess d'Abernon

Buildings

Country Club of Birmingham clubhouse

Gallery

Context

1904 was a leap year. A January fire destroyed 1,500 buildings in Baltimore, Maryland. The Russo-Japanese War broke out in February. Longacre Square in New York City became Times Square in April. Cy Young threw the modern game's first perfect game in May, the same month that FIFA was established. St Louis, Missouri hosted the Games of the 3rd Olympiad. Teddy Roosevelt defeated Alton Parker to serve a first full term as President.

Ivan Pavlov won the 1904 Nobel Prize in Medicine. Puccini's Madame Butterfly debuted in Milan and Mahler's Symphony No. 5 premiered in Cologne. The New York Giants won the National League pennant, but declined to participate in a second-ever World Series against the Boston Americans.

Notable 1904 births include those of actors Ray Bolger, Peter Lorre and Cary Grant; choreographer George Balanchine; gangster Pretty Boy Floyd; musicians Count Basie, Jimmy Dorsey, Glenn Miller and Fats Waller; authors Theodore Seuss Geisel and Joseph Campbell; artists Salvador Dalí and Willem de Kooning, physicist Robert Oppenheimer; and Chinese leader Deng Xiaopeng.

Deaths in 1904 included those of Queen Isabella II of Spain; composer Antonín Dvořák; photographer Eadweard Muybridge; authors Anton Chekhov, Kate Chopin and Lafcadio Hearn; and sculptor Frédéric Bartholdi.

1900s
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Births - Deaths - Establishments - Events - Works