Wednesday, February 23, 2000

February 23, 1900. The passing of Blessed Rafaela Ybarra Arambarri de Vilallonga.

Giving evidence, perhaps of a point raised elsewhere on this blogsite today, Rafaela Ybarra Arambarri de Vilallonga, a wealthy widower the founder of the Sisters of the Holy Guardian Angels and Holy Family Hospice, passed away at age 57.

She was the mother of seven, and dedicated much of her life to the poor children of Bilboa, Spain.  

Her beatification was celebrated on 30 September 1984.

Last edition:

Monday, February 20, 1900. Death of Chief Washakie

Sunday, February 20, 2000

Monday, February 20, 1900. Death of Chief Washakie

 


Chief Washakie died of advanced old age.

Washakie was born between 1798 and 1810.  He was a respected leader of the Shoshone throughout much of the 19th Century, and an ally of European Americans.  He contributed warriors to the Powder River Expedition in 1876.  He was responsible for the creation of the Wind River Reservation.  In 1880 he converted to Mormonism, and then in 1897 to the Episcopal faith.  He was married twice, once to a fellow Shoshone, and after her death, to a Crow woman.

He remains one of the most significant personalities in Wyoming's history.

Last edition:

Sunday, February 18, 1900. Bloody Sunday.

Friday, February 18, 2000

Sunday, February 18, 1900. Bloody Sunday.

British forces under Lord Kitchener charged Boer trenches at Paadeberg, sustaining 1,100 casualties of which 280 were deaths.  The day was thereafter called "Bloody Sunday".

The attack in which the Boers head their fire until the British were within 100 meters of their trenches, was a failure.


Last edition:

Thursday, February 15, 1900. Siege of Kimberley lifted.

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Monday, February 14, 2000

Wednesday, February 14, 1900. Invading the Orange Free State.

British troops invaded the Orange Free State.

Elon Musk is probably still mad about it.

Congress approved the restoration of the USS Constitution, which was barely seaworthy.

Last Edition:

Monday, February 12, 1900. Not Running for VP.

Saturday, February 12, 2000

Monday, February 12, 1900. Not Running for VP.

Governor of New York Theodore Roosevelt stated on this day:

In view of the continued statements in the press that I may be urged as a candidate for vice president and in view of the many letters that reach me advising me for and against such a course, it is proper for me to state definitely that under no circumstances could I or would I accept the nomination for the vice presidency.

Last edition:

Sunday, February 11, 1900. The Lenins take a journey.

Friday, February 11, 2000

Sunday, February 11, 1900. The Lenins take a journey.

Vladimir Lenin was released from exile to the Siberian village of Shushenskoye. Lenin and his wife Nadezhda Krupskaya travelled by horseback for 200 mi) to Ufa and arrived there on February 18.  She sometimes appears to be a real crab in photographs, which is perhaps why Lenin took Inessa Fyodorovna Armand as a mistress.

Krupskaya looking pissed off.  Maybe that's why Vlad took a mistress.

Lenin, a lawyer by trade, died in 1924 after his populist coup left Russia a freaking mess, which it still is. Krupskaya died in 1939.  They helped bring in a horror that the world has never recovered from.  Lenin, in retrospect, died well before he could really see what a horror he had made of things.

1,100 Spanish POWs from Philippine American War arrived to repatriation in Barcelona.

Last edition:

Saturday. February 10, 1900. Relocating to the Big Horn Basin.

Thursday, February 10, 2000

Saturday. February 10, 1900. Relocating to the Big Horn Basin.

The New York Times claimed that over 80,000 Utahans were preparing to move to the Big Horn Basin in Wyoming to take lands under the Desert Lands Act.

The Basin does have a large Mormon population, although 80,000 people did not move.  It also has a fairly sizable Catholic population.

Last edition:

Friday, February 9, 1900. The Davis Cup.

Wednesday, February 9, 2000

Friday, February 9, 1900. The Davis Cup.

President of the United States National Lawn Tennis Association Dwight F. Davis announced that he would donate a silver bowl to the nation that won the international tennis championship.

That's the Davis Cup.

American player Dwight Davis  in 1900 with the trophy he committed to build

Both of my parents were very good tennis players, I might add.  My mother was particularly good, and it ran in her family.  My grandmother's dying words were that "Billy "x" sure can play tennis", speaking of her husband.  She was nearly 100 years old at the time.

My daughter is also an excellent tennis player.

I'm not. It's one of my many failings in life.  I mean that sincerely. Not the most serious one, but one of them.
Eternal rest grant unto them, O Lord, and let perpetual light shine upon them. May their souls and the souls of all the faithful departed, through the mercy of God, rest in peace.
Many people, I'd note, grouse about their parents.  I miss mine every day, and wish that I measured up to them.  I do not.

The Hershey Bar, which I love, was introduced.


Suffragist, and abolitionist Eliza Seaman Leggett died.

Walter Page,  jazz multi-instrumentalist and bandleader, was born.

Last edition:

Tuesday, February 8, 2000

Thursday, February 8, 1900. Freak blizzards, Failed Boer attacks, Je me souviens, Okinawan legacy.

A freak blizzard, if any blizzard is a freak, broke out in the Midwest in which the unseasonably warm temperature in Chicago was 62 °F (17 °C) at 7:00 am, and fell to 10 °F (−12 °C) by 11:00 pm.  The drop in temperature stands as a record to this day.

The Boers attacked the British in Ladysmith, South Africa, but were turned back.

The the States of Jersey permitted the use of the English language in its parliamentary debates for the first time, which is a crying shame.

French had been the language that was used until that time, and in my view, still should be.


Fiddlin' Joe Martin was born January 8, 1900 in  Edwards, Mississippi.

Okinawan Toyama Kyuzo, from Kin Town, arrived in Hawaii.  He was the first of many from Okinawa.

Actress Dorothy I. Adams was born in Hannah, North Dakota.  She played Wilma Cameron's mother in the bittersweet The Best Years of Our Lives, one of the best movies of all time, and the best film about the tragic, and tragically flawed "Greatest Generation".  It's hard to believe that she was only 46 years old when the film was made, which interestingly links in, a bit, to a comment made must yesterday.

Last edition:

Wednesday, February 7, 1900. Plague comes to the United States.


Monday, February 7, 2000

Wednesday, February 7, 1900. Plague comes to the United States.

Empress Dowager Cixi of China issued an edict abolishing the teaching of the "new, depraved and erroneous subjects of the Western schools".

She was apparently a member of the Wyoming Freedom Caucus.

San Francisco lumber yard owners Wong Chut King became the first person in the US who is known to have fallen ill due to bubonic plague.

Last edition:

Tuesday, February 6, 1900. A judge becomes head of the Philippine Commission.

Sunday, February 6, 2000

Tuesday, February 6, 1900. A judge becomes head of the Philippine Commission.

Judge William Howard Taft of the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals was appointed head of the Philippine Commission by President McKinley.

John Redmond was chosen as chair of the United Irish League, a body advocating an Irish Free State.

The British government survived a vote of no confidence about by reversals in the Boer War.

Last edition:

Thursday, February 1, 1900. Kodak Brownie introduced.

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Tuesday, February 1, 2000

Thursday, February 1, 1900. Kodak Brownie introduced.

Kodak introduced the Brownie camera.  Priced at $1.00 ($33.47 in 2022 U.S. Dollars), it was affordable to the masses.


The camera was capable of surprisingly good photographs.

Last edition:

Monday, January 29, 1900. The American League organized.

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