1902

January

February

March

April

May

June

July

August

September

October

November

December

SuMoTuWeThFrSa
<<January 1902>>
01020304
05060708091011
12131415161718
19202122232425
262728293031
January 30, 1902: Scott's Discovery Expedition reaches the Great Ice Barrier in Antarctica
The Carnegie Institution
January 28, 1902: Andrew Carnegie endows the Carnegie Institution for Science

The following events occurred in January 1902:

January 1, 1902 (Wednesday)

January 2, 1902 (Thursday)

January 3, 1902 (Friday)

January 4, 1902 (Saturday)

January 5, 1902 (Sunday)

January 6, 1902 (Monday)

  • Nineteen people were killed in a collision between a British ship and a Spanish ship off of the coast of Portugal.
  • Died: Jan Gotlib Bloch (Ivan Stanislavovich Blokh), 67, Polish-Russian industrialist and political scientist who wrote about the future of warfare (b. 1836)

January 7, 1902 (Tuesday)

January 8, 1902 (Wednesday)

January 9, 1902 (Thursday)

January 10, 1902 (Friday)

January 11, 1902 (Saturday)

January 12, 1902 (Sunday)

January 13, 1902 (Monday)

January 14, 1902 (Tuesday)

January 15, 1902 (Wednesday)

January 16, 1902 (Thursday)

January 17, 1902 (Friday)

January 18, 1902 (Saturday)

January 19, 1902 (Sunday)

  • Four adjacent commercial buildings, along Jefferson Avenue near the intersection with Shelby Street in Detroit, and each four stories tall, collapsed without warning at 8:30 in the evening. "It was fortunate that the wreck occurred on Sunday," a correspondent noted, adding "Had it happened during business hours, the loss of life would have been appalling, as there were about 200 persons employed by the various firms."
  • Born: David Olère, Polish-French artist and Holocaust survivor known for his paintings and drawings recalling his experiences at the Auschwitz concentration camp, in Warsaw (d. 1985)
  • Died: Mother Joseph Pariseau, 78, Canadian Roman Catholic nun and missionary who founded a network of schools and clinics that serviced American settlers in the U.S. state of Washington during the 19th century (b. 1823). A statue of Mother Joseph stands in the National Statuary Hall in the United States Capitol as one of the state's two representative statues. Maria Cristina, 68, Infanta of Portugal and Spain (b. 1833)

January 20, 1902 (Monday)

January 21, 1902 (Tuesday)

January 22, 1902 (Wednesday)

January 23, 1902 (Thursday)

January 24, 1902 (Friday)

  • Twenty coal miners were killed, and 14 seriously injured, in an explosion at the Lost Creek Fuel Company Number 2 mine in Mahaska County, Iowa. Coal miners across the state went on strike in order to force the enactment of stricter safety laws.
  • King George of Greece survived an assassination attempt.
  • Born: Ephraim Avigdor Speiser, American archaeologist and biblical scholar, in Skalat, Galicia (now Ukraine) (d. 1965)

January 25, 1902 (Saturday)

January 26, 1902 (Sunday)

January 27, 1902 (Monday)

  • General Manie Maritz of the South African Republic and his party of soldiers were attacked by a group of coloured residents of Leliefontein, in the north of Britain's Cape Colony, to ask questions of the Methodist missionaries there. Martiz retreated, then came back the next day and carried out the Leliefontein massacre, summarily shooting or bludgeoning at least 30 members of the population in retaliation for the offense.
  • Born: Ed Gossett, U.S. congressman from Texas (d. 1990)

January 28, 1902 (Tuesday)

January 29, 1902 (Wednesday)

  • The birthday of William McKinley, the late U.S. President, was observed across the United States for the first time since his assassination in September. For several decades, McKinley's birthday, though not a holiday, would be observed as "Carnation Day" because the 25th U.S. President had traditionally worn a red carnation in his lapel. Although the tradition would fade after McKinley's 100th birthday in 1943, the event was informally observed as late as 2017.

January 30, 1902 (Thursday)

January 31, 1902 (Friday)