October 1902


The following events occurred in October 1902:

October 1, 1902 (Wednesday)

October 2, 1902 (Thursday)

October 3, 1902 (Friday)

  • U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt convened a conference of representatives of government, labor, and management, in a bid to end the long-running anthracite workers' strike. The United Mine Workers declined President Roosevelt's request that the striking miners return to work while the U.S. Congress acted on their demands.

October 4, 1902 (Saturday)

  • The Central American Court of Compulsory Arbitration was created in San Jose, Costa Rica. Of the five Central American nations, Guatemala declined to participate and the court agreement was binding only upon Costa Rica, El Salvador, the Honduras and Nicaragua.

October 5, 1902 (Sunday)

October 6, 1902 (Monday)

  • The laying down of the first telegraphic cable between Canada and Australia was completed, with the connection of a cable in length between Vancouver and Australia's Fanning Island.
  • An earthquake of magnitude 7.2 struck the Hindu Kush region of Afghanistan.

October 7, 1902 (Tuesday)

  • Representatives of France and the Kingdom of Siam signed a convention to settle the disputed boundary between Siam and French Indochina.
  • The British Miners' Federation voted to send money to striking coal mine workers in the U.S. state of Pennsylvania.

October 8, 1902 (Wednesday)

  • Russia formally transferred part of its Russian Manchuria territory back to China, with the restoration to the Chinese of land south of the Liau River.

October 9, 1902 (Thursday)

  • In Altona, Manitoba in Canada, Henry Toews, a teacher at the Mennonite School, shot one or more colleagues and three children before wounding himself; he would survive another three months but would die before a trial could be arranged. Only one of his victims, Anna Kehler, died as a result of the shooting.
  • The Supreme Court of Nebraska ruled that mandatory prayer, Bible reading and hymn singing in public schools was prohibited by the state constitution.
  • The first season of the Primera Fuerza season|Primera Fuerza] football competition begins in Mexico.

October 10, 1902 (Friday)

  • The U.S. Navy refused to allow the government of Colombia to send soldiers across the Isthmus of Panama.
  • The Japanese steamer Yoshina Maru was abandoned after catching fire in the Van Diemen Strait. The ship drifted ashore at Kagoshima, Japan.

October 11, 1902 (Saturday)

October 12, 1902 (Sunday)

  • On Mindanao in the Philippine Islands, the Sultan of Bacolod rejected the offer of U.S. Navy Commander Sumner.

October 13, 1902 (Monday)

October 14, 1902 (Tuesday)

  • John O' Donnell, one of the Irish members of parliament for the House of Commons of the United Kingdom, was convicted of intimidation and incitement of a boycott, and sentenced by the Crimes Act Court to six months imprisonment.

October 15, 1902 (Wednesday)

  • Following discussions with the United Mine Workers and with representatives of major coal operators in Pennsylvania, U.S. President Roosevelt appointed six people to a special commission to investigate working conditions.

October 16, 1902 (Thursday)

October 17, 1902 (Friday)

October 18, 1902 (Saturday)

October 19, 1902 (Sunday)

  • Died: Jim Younger, 54, American outlaw who committed crimes with Jesse James as part of the James–Younger Gang, committed suicide a year after his parole.

October 20, 1902 (Monday)

October 21, 1902 (Tuesday)

October 22, 1902 (Wednesday)

October 23, 1902 (Thursday)

October 24, 1902 (Friday)

October 25, 1902 (Saturday)

October 26, 1902 (Sunday)

October 27, 1902 (Monday)

  • China recalled its Minister to the United States, Wu Ting Fang, to serve in a different capacity.

October 28, 1902 (Tuesday)

  • The British freighter ship SS Ventnor sank two days after striking a reef while sailing from Wellington Harbour in New Zealand on a voyage to Hong Kong. While the crew evacuated the ship before it sank, one of the four lifeboats capsized, killing all 13 people aboard. The ship went down with its cargo, including the bodies of 499 Chinese gold miners whose remains were being taken back to China.

October 29, 1902 (Wednesday)

October 30, 1902 (Thursday)

  • The U.S. government's newly-appointed Anthracite Coal Strike Commission began its inspection of working conditions in coal mines.

October 31, 1902 (Friday)