September 1902


The following events occurred in September 1902:

September 1, 1902 (Monday)

September 2, 1902 (Tuesday)

September 3, 1902 (Wednesday)

September 4, 1902 (Thursday)

September 5, 1902 (Friday)

September 6, 1902 (Saturday)

September 7, 1902 (Sunday)

September 8, 1902 (Monday)

  • The Yacolt Burn, a forest fire that killed 65 people over five days in the U.S. states of Oregon and Washington, began near Eagle Creek on the Oregon side of the Columbia River that separates the two states. The immediate cause of the blaze was traced to a group of boys who had been attempting to burn a nest of hornets.
  • In the town of Candela, Italy five people were killed and ten injured when 400 peasants involved in a wage dispute blocked local roads. Violence erupted and troops fired at the strikers.

September 9, 1902 (Tuesday)

September 10, 1902 (Wednesday)

  • Russian officials in the Primorye region a portion of Manchuria that had been annexed by the Russians in 1860, began the expulsion of all foreigners from the area, other than the indigenous Chinese residents.
  • John Malarkey became the first, and only baseball pitcher to earn a win, not by holding the opposing team to a lesser score, but by hitting the game-winning home run. Pitching in the National League for the Boston Beaneaters, Malarkey had held the St. Louis Cardinals to three runs and the score was tied, 3 to 3, as Malarkey came up to bat in the bottom of the 11th inning. Hitting the only home run of his career, Malarkey earned a win to finish his won-lost record at 8-10.

September 11, 1902 (Thursday)

September 12, 1902 (Friday)

  • The Yacolt Burn forest fire was brought under control.
  • Norwegian painter Edvard Munch underwent surgery at the National Hospital in Christiana for an injured left hand and refused general anesthesia so that he could witness the entire experience in order to capture it later in art. Munch requested, and received local anesthesia in the form of a dose of cocaine "thereby enabling him to follow the operation, albeit in severe pain", and later used the memories of the experience to paint a self-portrait, På operasjonsbordet Born: Juscelino Kubitschek, President of Brazil 1956 to 1961; in Diamantina, Minas Gerais

September 13, 1902 (Saturday)

September 14, 1902 (Sunday)

September 15, 1902 (Monday)

September 16, 1902 (Tuesday)

September 17, 1902 (Wednesday)

  • Opera singer Nellie Melba arrived in Brisbane at the start of her first Australian tour, having spent the previous 16 years in Europe.

September 18, 1902 (Thursday)

September 19, 1902 (Friday)

  • A stampede killed 115 people, nearly all African-American, at the Shiloh Baptist Church in Birmingham, Alabama, during a speech by Booker T. Washington. Believing that the building had caught fire, the crowd panicked and charged toward the lone exit. The victims were either trampled to death or smothered.
  • Captain Otto Sverdrup and the Norwegian Arctic Expedition returned to Norway on the steamer Fram, four years after having departed. Though the Fram did not attempt to reach the North Pole, it charted the area west of Canada's Ellesmere Island and discovered three new islands, which were claimed for Norway but would be awarded to Canada and became the Sverdrup Islands.
  • In voting by the electors selected on September 5 for elections to Denmark's parliament, the ruling Højre Party of Prime Minister Johan Deuntzer lost 13 of the 19 seats it had held, but and lost it 42-seat majority. After voting completed, the Højre Party held only 29 seats and two opposition parties combined for 31, and Deuntzer had to form a coalition government.Died: Masaoka Shiki, 34, Japanese haiku poet, died from tuberculosis

September 20, 1902 (Saturday)

September 21, 1902 (Sunday)

The rest would agree to return in February, 1903.Born: Luis Cernuda, Spanish poet; in Seville

September 22, 1902 (Monday)

September 23, 1902 (Tuesday)

September 24, 1902 (Wednesday)

September 25, 1902 (Thursday)

September 26, 1902 (Friday)

September 27, 1902 (Saturday)

September 28, 1902 (Sunday)

  • The 1,800 streetcar workers in New Orleans in the U.S. state of Louisiana went on strike to make a demand for to be limited to an eight-hour day and an increase in their wages to 25 cents an hour.Died:
  • * John Marks Moore, 49, American politician and attorney

September 29, 1902 (Monday)

September 30, 1902 (Tuesday)