In Council Bluffs, Iowa, the home of the Christiensen family was destroyed by fire at 2am, killing 5 children 11 years old and younger and critically burning their mother.[15]
A major fire in the wholesale district of Knoxville, Tennessee, killed fire captain William A. Maxey and John J. Dunn, a former fireman who was helping fight the blaze. The walls of a neighboring building collapsed and fell through the roof of the building where Maxey and Dunn were.[17][18]
An intercolonial express train on its way from Halifax, Nova Scotia to Montreal and Boston derailed near Hunter's Crossing, 5 miles (8.0km) west of Halifax, and fell into the Shuberdarie River, killing 2 people and seriously injuring 27.[39]
In Lexington, Kentucky, Nora Veal shot herself to death after viewing the body of her fiancé, Ellis Kinkeaid, who had taken his own life on February 1 because Veal had gone to the theater with another man.[40]
At a plantation in Doddsville, Mississippi, belonging to white planter James Eastland, Luther Holbert, an African American, allegedly shot and killed John Carr, also African American, and mortally wounded Eastland. Eastland, returning fire, shot and killed John Winters, an African American. When a posse arrived at the plantation another African American was shot and killed. Posses began searching for Holbert and his wife.[41][42][43][44]
The National Republican Editorial association endorsed Theodore Roosevelt in the 1904 United States presidential election. Meeting with the association's delegates in Washington, D.C., Roosevelt said, "In the proper sense of the term, no man is more essentially a public servant than the editor—the man who in the public press not merely gives the news, but exercises so great a control over the thought of our country."[76]
Several hundred men tracking Luther Holbert and his wife for the killing of James Eastland trapped them in a swamp near Greenwood, Mississippi. A posse shot and killed two African Americans, one of whom was mistaken for Holbert, in Yazoo County, Mississippi, near Belzoni.[82]
In Salem, Virginia, Taylor Fields, an African American man who had allegedly spoken about a recent assault on a woman and child in an offensive way, was seized from his home by a mob and publicly whipped with a rope around his neck. An African American preacher and two other African Americans had been driven out of Roanoke, Virginia, due to their comments about the same assault case.[82]
In the gallery of the Princess Theater in Middlesboro, Kentucky, Policeman John Burns and a bystander, railroad switchman John Sharp, were shot and killed during a minstrel show by John White, an African American ex-convict whom Burns had threatened to arrest for vagrancy. The shooting nearly caused a human crush in the theater.[82][83] White, who escaped, would be captured on February 10, and would be tried and acquitted on grounds of self-defense in January 1905.[83]
The Great Baltimore Fire in Baltimore, Maryland, destroyed over 1,500 buildings in 31 hours.[90][91][92] It would long be believed that no human deaths were caused directly by the fire,[92][93][94] but in the early 21st century a historian would discover evidence that at least one man was killed.[94][95]
In Anderson County, Tennessee, mine guards Judd Reeder and James Colton shot and killed 3 men and wounded 3 others in a group of union members who approached them at the train station, where the guards had gone to escort non-union miners to the mine. Reeder and Colton were arrested after returning to the mine, but another guard, Cal Burton, shot and killed Deputy Sheriff Robert Harmon of the Anderson County Sheriff's Department while Harmon was trying to keep order.[96][97]
In Doddsville, Mississippi, Luther Holbert and his wife, both African American, were lynched for the February 3 killings of James Eastland and John Carr. Holbert and his wife were gruesomely tortured before being burned at the stake adjacent to an African American church and in front of a crowd of about 1000 people. The entire sequence of events had resulted in the deaths of 8 people, all of whom except Eastland were African American.[42][44][98]
The steamer SS Tremont was destroyed by fire at its dock near Manhattan Bridge in New York City, killing one crewmember. The boat's cargo included two lions from a traveling show,[111][112] who charged at firefighters aboard the ship but were repelled by water from the firemen's hoses.[111]
Nanjim Ota, the Japanese commissioner to the Louisiana Purchase Exposition, received a cablegram from Kiyoura Keigo, Japan's Minister of Agriculture and Commerce, to the effect that the war would make no difference to the plans for the Japanese exhibit.[123]
At about 1pm, 23-year-old schoolteacher Eva Belle Moak was shot and mortally wounded in the barn of her home on Butte Creek, near Chico, California. She would die at 12:02p.m. the following day.[128][129][130]As of 1918[update] the murder would remain unsolved.[129]
The Emperor of Japan issued his country's formal declaration of war against Russia.[141]
The Russian commissioner general to the Louisiana Purchase Exposition received a telegram announcing that, due to the war, the band of the Russian Imperial Guard would not be sent to the exposition.[142]
At the Metropolitan Opera House in New York City, an electric battery blew out during a performance of Lucia di Lammermoor, producing flame and smoke and causing some alarm in the dress circle. Ushers quickly reassured the audience that there was no danger.[145]
In Oswego, New York, a fire which started at about 4 p.m. in the chemical room of the Corn Products company's starch factory would not be brought under control until 2:30a.m. on February 11. The fire destroyed one building and caused an estimated loss of $1,000,000. Two firefighters were seriously injured when they fell from a ladder; one of them, Truckman John Dougherty, fell 50 feet (15m) and later died at the hospital.[146][147][148]
Major patriotic celebrations took place in Tokyo. The windows of the Russian legation, overlooking a square where thousands of people celebrated, were darkened.[161]
Robert Milne MurrayFRSE FRCPE FRSSA, 48, Scottish surgeon and medical author, died of heart failure after surgery.[211]
February 15, 1904 (Monday)
A group of students including Huang Xing and Song Jiaoren established the revolutionary Huaxinghui (China Arise Society) in Changsha, Hunan, with Huang as its first president.[212]
Construction workers George Ripp, Joseph Mantell and Joseph Margo fell 11 stories to their deaths in Manhattan, New York City, when a brick wall buckled and caused the scaffolding on which they were working to fall. Another man was injured.[214]
In Croton, New York, an oil lamp exploded and started a fire that killed Mrs. Jacob Antonosoa and 5 of her children.[245]
In Youngstown, Ohio, schoolteacher Lottie Garwood and her 7-year-old daughter, Alva, were asphyxiated by leaking natural gas which had set their house on fire. The mother died unsuccessfully trying to rescue her daughter.[246]
The Wright brothers visited St. Louis to inspect the location where the World's Fair's aeronautical competition was slated to take place. The competition would later be canceled.[247]
The state convention of the so-called "Lily White" Republicans, which included not a single African American delegate, was called to order in New Orleans, Louisiana. The old-style Republican Party, which had lost the federal offices in Louisiana to the "Lily Whites", was expected to hold its own convention at a later date. The "Lily White" convention adopted a platform asserting white supremacy and endorsed Theodore Roosevelt in the presidential election.[248]
Mexico declared its neutrality in the Russo-Japanese War.[254]
Canadian journalist Benjamin Taylor A Bell fell 10 feet (3.0m) down an elevator shaft after walking through the wrong door in a store adjacent to the Canadian Mining Review offices. He would die of his injuries on March 1.[255]
In Arkansas, Glen Bays, an African American man, was burned at the stake by a mixed-race lynch mob for the murder of planter J. D. Stephens the previous day. On February 20, the Los Angeles Herald's report of Bays' death would appear immediately below a joke about duke-heiress marriages in America and immediately above an advertisement for Hood's Sarsaparilla.[260]
The town of Jackson, Utah, was destroyed in an explosion caused by a collision between a water train and a freight train carrying dynamite and giant powder. Over 20 people were killed.[261][262][263]
Havank (pseudonym of Hendrikus Frederikus van der Kallen), Dutch crime novelist and journalist; in Leeuwarden, Netherlands (d. 1964, heart attack)[265]
In Prague, a Russian Orthodox church held a service of intercession for Russia's success in the Russo-Japanese War. Several hundred Slav students demonstrated outside the church, but the police prevented them from protesting outside the United States consulate.[280][281]
At the Lackawanna Steel Company plant in West Seneca, New York, a gas leak followed by an explosion asphyxiated masons George Reynolds and M. S. Smith and burned power house worker Frank Prenatt to death. Several other workers were seriously injured.[282]
Argentina officially took control of the future Orcadas Base on Laurie Island.[200]
A 3 a.m. earthquake in San Francisco, California, caused no damage.[292]
At the White House in Washington, D.C., officers of the United States Secret Service arrested Edward Reiger, a man who had repeatedly written eccentric letters to U.S. President Roosevelt. Reiger was found to be carrying a loaded revolver and a box of cartridges. His letters to Roosevelt had asserted that people's names should correspond to their professions (e.g., carpenters should be named Carpenter), and that the present manner of naming people had caused a war among the flies.[293]
In Chicago, Illinois, 3 people died in a fire that partially destroyed the Alhambra theater hotel.[294]
The cod-fishingschoonerMary and Ida dragged her anchor during a gale and was wrecked at Unga Island off the south coast of the Alaska Peninsula. All 8 crewmembers survived due to the efforts of fishermen from the nearby codfish station, who lowered themselves over a cliff to reach a line from the schooner.[314][315]
The upper 4 stories of the 16-story Schiller Building in Chicago, which contained the Garrick Theater, were damaged by fire. The building was located a short distance west of the Iroquois Theater, which had burned on December 30, 1903.[326]
Superintendent Frank C. Hostetter of the Louisiana Purchase Exposition post office was arrested and confessed to having opened, detained and embezzled mail matter in order to obtain inside information on the fair's concessions and exhibits for his own gain or that of friends.[328]
The architect of the Russian building at the Louisiana Purchase Exposition received a cablegram directing him to proceed with construction.[329]
In Waukegan, Illinois, an explosion that destroyed the Warner Sugar Refining Company's starch mill killed 3 workers, injured 18 and caused $250,000 in damage.[330]
Five men were killed by a cave-in on the 6th floor of the 1,000-foot (300m) level at the Minnie Healy mine in Butte, Montana. The men were working to strengthen the walls, which were known to be in danger of collapse.[344]
Ten crewmembers and 4 passengers died due to a fire aboard the steamer Queen, sailing from San Francisco to ports in Puget Sound. 3 pantrymen died in their bunks; 10 other deaths occurred when 3 lifeboats capsized, and one passenger, an 80-year-old woman, died from exposure.[360][361][362]
Sherlock Holmes with an unusual weapon in "The Adventure of Black Peter"
Two railroad engineers were killed and 7 people injured in a collision between two trains at Luzon station in Point Richmond, California. Alvin Taylor, an African American porter who was also serving as brakeman, was blamed for the accident and was arrested the following day.[364][365] Samuel Pratt, a traveling companion of one of the injured passengers, stated, "When we had got out of the wrecked cars and learned the cause of the trouble there was a great deal of indignation shown for the colored porter and I think if he had been found by those that were searching for him he would have been hanged."[366]
James K. Vardaman, the white supremacist Governor of Mississippi, rescued Albert Baldwin, an African American man, from being lynched in Batesville, Mississippi. Baldwin had been arrested the previous day for the murder of a railroad engineer named Fogarty in Tutwiler, Mississippi, and claimed self-defense. With a mob threatening to burn Baldwin at the stake, the Sheriff of Panola County telegraphed for Governor Vardaman's assistance, and Vardaman arrived in Batesville by special train at about daybreak, in time to take Baldwin into custody, despite a collision with a freight train on the way. The collision was considered suspicious because the engine driver of Vardaman's train was not well-disposed to Baldwin's cause.[378][379]
The post office in Humphrey, Arkansas, was destroyed with dynamite in protest of the appointment of an African American postmaster.[394]
Newspapers published a letter from Booker T. Washington to the Birmingham Age-Herald, in which the African American leader stated, "Within the last fortnight three members of my race have been burned at the stake; of these one was a woman. Not one of the three was charged with any crime even remotely connected with the abuse of a white woman. In every case murder was the sole accusation. All of these burnings took place in broad daylight, and two of them occurred on Sunday afternoon in sight of a Christian church. These barbarous scenes are more disgraceful and degrading to the people who inflict punishment than to those who receive it. If the law is disregarded when a negro is concerned, it will soon be disregarded when a white man is concerned."[395][396]
↑ "TWO FIREMEN KILLED BY FALLING WALLS". The San Diego Union and Daily Bee. 3 February 1904. Page 2, column 3. Retrieved 2 January 2022– via California Digital Newspaper Collection.
↑ "Валерий Чкалов – человек и герой"[Valery Chkalov – a man and a hero]. Исторический журнал "Гатчина сквозь столетия" (in Russian). Retrieved 25 December 2021.
↑ "DEATHS OF THE DAY Sir Edward Nicholas". Los Angeles Herald. Vol.XXXI, no.127. 3 February 1904. Page 3, column 4. Retrieved 8 January 2022– via California Digital Newspaper Collection.
↑ "DEATHS OF THE DAY Walter W. Woolnough". Los Angeles Herald. Vol.XXXI, no.127. 3 February 1904. Page 3, column 4. Retrieved 8 January 2022– via California Digital Newspaper Collection.
↑ "DEATHS OF THE DAY Robert Ellin". Los Angeles Herald. Vol.XXXI, no.131. 7 February 1904. Page 2, column 3. Retrieved 10 January 2022– via California Digital Newspaper Collection.
↑ "OBITUARY". The Builder. Vol.LXXXVI, no.3185. 20 February 1904. p.202. Retrieved 10 January 2022– via Google Books.
↑ "Newton Talbot Dead: Treasurer of Tufts College and formerly a Boston Alderman and Street Commissioner – Nearly 90 Years Old". The Boston Daily Globe. February 4, 1904.
↑ "Hon. Newton Talbot". The Tufts College Graduate. Vol.II, no.1. April 1904. pp.7–12. Retrieved 20 February 2022– via Google Books.
↑ "MAY ELIMINATE THE NEGRO VOTE". Los Angeles Herald. Vol.XXXI, no.129. 5 February 1904. Page 3, column 7. Retrieved 10 January 2022– via California Digital Newspaper Collection.
↑ Ufarkin, Nikolai Vasilyevich; Kargapoltsev, Sergey. "Герой Советского Союза Горанов Волкан Семёнович"[Hero of the Soviet Union Goranov Volkan Semyonovich]. www.warheroes.ru (in Russian). Patriotic Internet project "Heroes of the Country". Retrieved 3 February 2022.
↑ Steeman, Albert. "SAM LEAVITT". Internet Encyclopedia of Cinematographers. Rotterdam, Netherlands: Albert Steeman Productions. Archived from the original on 25 September 2023. Retrieved 4 January 2022.
↑ "DEATHS OF THE DAY William B. Powell". Los Angeles Herald. Vol.XXXI, no.133. 9 February 1904. Page 3, column 5. Retrieved 11 January 2022– via California Digital Newspaper Collection.
↑ "DEATHS OF THE DAY Henry W. Oliver". Los Angeles Herald. Vol.XXXI, no.133. 9 February 1904. Page 3, column 5. Retrieved 11 January 2022– via California Digital Newspaper Collection.
↑ "RUSSIAN VESSELS ARE DESTROYED AT CHEMULPO". Los Angeles Herald. Vol.XXXI, no.134. 10 February 1904. Page 1, columns 1–2. Retrieved 11 January 2022– via California Digital Newspaper Collection.
↑ "SOO LINE TRAINS COLLIDE HEAD-ON. DISASTROUS WRECK ON THE C.P.R. MAIN LINE AT SAND POINT NEAR ARNPRIOR – FIFTEEN TRAIN HANDS AND SEVEN PASSENGERS KILLED – ENGINEER JACKSON, TWO EXPRESS MESSENGERS AND THE NEWS AGENT ON THE DEATH LIST". Winnipeg Free Press. Manitoba. 10 February 1904., cited in Beitler, Stu. "Sand Point, ON Train Collision, Feb 1904". GenDisasters.com. Archived from the original on 11 January 2022. Retrieved 29 June 2024.
↑ "FIFTEEN WERE KILLED. LIST OF THE VICTIMS OF YESTERDAY'S COLLISION BETWEEN TWO TRAINS IN ONTARIO". Winnipeg Free Press. Manitoba. 11 February 1904., cited in Beitler, Stu. "Sand Point, ON Train Collision, Feb 1904". GenDisasters.com. Archived from the original on 11 January 2022. Retrieved 29 June 2024.
↑ "Eva Moak Succumbs". Los Angeles Herald. Vol.XXXI, no.135. 11 February 1904. Page 3, column 2. Retrieved 11 January 2022– via California Digital Newspaper Collection.
1 2 Mansfield, George C. (1918). History of Butte County, California. Los Angeles, California: Historic Record Company. p.384. Retrieved 8 January 2022– via Google Books.
↑ Vulich, Nick (2022). "Who Killed the Promiscuous Eva Moak?". Gruesome California: Murder, Madness, and the Macabre in The Golden State. pp.65–71. ISBN979-8716893665.
↑ "DEATHS OF THE DAY Mrs. Mary Abbott". Los Angeles Herald. Vol.XXXI, no.134. 10 February 1904. Page 9, column 1. Retrieved 11 January 2022– via California Digital Newspaper Collection.
↑ "Mary Abbott". Olympedia. OlyMADMen. Retrieved 5 January 2022.
↑ "TEXT OF JAPANESE EMPEROR'S DECLARATION". Los Angeles Herald. Vol.XXXI, no.136. 12 February 1904. Page 2, columns 2–3. Retrieved 12 January 2022– via California Digital Newspaper Collection.
↑ "One Fireman Killed". Los Angeles Herald. Vol.XXXI, no.136. 12 February 1904. p. 5, col. 3. Retrieved 12 January 2022– via California Digital Newspaper Collection.
↑ Rae, Ian D. (2007). "Boas, Walter Moritz (1904–1982)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. Vol.17. National Centre of Biography, Australian National University. Retrieved 4 February 2022.
↑ Chant, Colin (1996). "Mikhailovsky, Nikolai Konstantinovich". In Brown, Stuart; Collinson, Diané; Wilkinson, Robert (eds.). Biographical Dictionary of Twentieth-Century Philosophers. London and New York: Routledge Reference. p.535. ISBN0-415-06043-5. Retrieved 25 December 2021– via Google Books.
↑ "DEATHS OF THE DAY John A. Roche". Los Angeles Herald. Vol.XXXI, no.135. 11 February 1904. Page 4, column 4. Retrieved 11 January 2022– via California Digital Newspaper Collection.
↑ Ribeiro, Flávia (1 December 2006). "Zé Carioca era paulista"[Zé Carioca was a Paulista]. Aventuras na História. Guia do Estudante (in Portuguese). Archived from the original on 24 December 2014. Retrieved 25 December 2021.
↑ "ONLY SIX MEN OF THE BOYARIN'S CREW ARE LOST". San Francisco Call. Vol.95, no.122. 31 March 1904. Page 5, column 7. Retrieved 10 February 2022– via California Digital Newspaper Collection.
↑ Linvald, Steffen (25 August 2006). "År 1905". Københavns hvornår skete det[Copenhagen when did it happen] (in Danish). Selskabet for Københavns Historie. Archived from the original on 4 February 2016. Retrieved 26 December 2021.
↑ "DAUGHTER BORN TO PRINCESS SOPHIA". Los Angeles Herald. Vol.XXXI, no.138. 14 February 1904. Page 6, column 4. Retrieved 12 January 2022– via California Digital Newspaper Collection.
↑ Molland, Einar; Bloch-Hoell, Nils Egede; Elstad, Hallgeir (18 June 2020). "Johan Christian Heuch". In Bolstad, Erik (ed.). Store norske leksikon (in Norwegian). Retrieved 4 January 2022– via snl.no.
↑ "Emile METZ". Biographie nationale du pays de Luxembourg: Fascicule 12[National biography of the country of Luxembourg: Fascicule 12] (in French). 1963. p.383. Retrieved 25 December 2021– via Bibliothèque nationale de Luxembourg Luxembourgensia online.
1 2 Cisneros, Andrés; Escudé, Carlos; etal. (2000). "Orcadas del Sur"[South Orkney]. Historia General de las Relaciones Exteriores de la República Argentina (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 4 May 2012. Retrieved 1 January 2022.
↑ Wang, Ke-wen; CRSN Staff, eds. (1998). "China Arise Society (Huaxinghui)". Modern China: An Encyclopedia of History, Culture, and Nationalism. Garland reference library of the humanities. Vol.1519. Routledge. p.197. ISBN0-8153-0720-9. Retrieved 26 December 2021– via Google Books.
↑ "Duke of Norfolk Weds". Los Angeles Herald. Vol.XXXI, no.140. 16 February 1904. Page 3, column 2. Retrieved 12 January 2022– via California Digital Newspaper Collection.
↑ "DEATHS OF THE DAY Dr. Schweinitz". Los Angeles Herald. Vol.XXXI, no.140. 16 February 1904. Page 4, column 3. Retrieved 12 January 2022– via California Digital Newspaper Collection.
↑ "Panama Constitution Promulgated". Los Angeles Herald. Vol.XXXI, no.141. 17 February 1904. Page 4, column 4. Retrieved 12 January 2022– via California Digital Newspaper Collection.
↑ "TWENTY-FIVE PERISH IN DYNAMITE EXPLOSION CARLOAD OF THAT EXCEEDINGLY ACTIVE MATERIAL IS SET OFF BY COLLISION BETWEEN TRAINS. STATION IN UTAH IS THEATER Of the Forty-Six Persons Who Were at the Place Named at the Time of the Disaster Only Nine Escaped—Conductor Killed Was Formerly Resident of Beaver Dam In This State—Great Destruction Caused by the Accident—Shock Is Felt Miles Away". The Daily Northwestern. Oshkosh, Wisconsin. Associated Press. 20 February 1904., cited in Horton, Linda. "Jackson, UT Train Wreck & Explosion Destroys Town, Feb 1904 – Twenty-Five Killed". GenDisasters. Archived from the original on 3 January 2022. Retrieved 30 June 2024.
↑ Madden, F. B., ed. (1904). "Alice Sudduth Byerly". Memoirs. Journal and Records of the Eighty-first Session of the Illinois Annual Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church, Held at Springfield, Illinois, Commencing September 7 and Ending September 12, 1904. 81. Springfield, Illinois: The Illinois State Register: 111–112. Retrieved 26 December 2021– via Google Books.
↑ "PORTO RICAN ASSEMBLY DEMANDS STATEHOOD". Los Angeles Herald. Vol.XXXI, no.145. 21 February 1904. Page 3, column 1. Retrieved 12 January 2022– via California Digital Newspaper Collection.
↑ "MAD RACE OF BLAZING CAR. DRAMATIC INCIDENT OCCURS ON A LINE OF PITTSBURG TRACTION COMPANY. Explosion of the Motors Sets the Vehicle on Fire, the Brakes Are Loosened and the Car Charges Down a Hill With Flames Bursting From It". The Daily Northwestern. Oshkosh, Wisconsin. Associated Press. 20 February 1904., cited in Taugher, Tim. "Pittsburgh, PA Street Car Fire, Feb 1904". GenDisasters.com. Archived from the original on 26 January 2022. Retrieved 30 June 2024.
↑ "Three Die in Explosion". Los Angeles Herald. Vol.XXXI, no.145. 21 February 1904. Page 5, column 4. Retrieved 14 January 2022– via California Digital Newspaper Collection.
↑ "Heinrich Hergert". National Football Teams. Benjamin Strack-Zimmermann. Retrieved 5 January 2022.
↑ Dewilde, Jan. "Preud'homme, Armand". Translated by Sneppe, Jo. Studiecentrum Vlaamse Muziek. Retrieved 30 June 2024.
↑ "SHE SERVED AS A DRUMMER BOY Los Angeles Centurian's Daughter Dead". Los Angeles Herald. Vol.XXXI, no.147. 23 February 1904. Page 11, column 1. Retrieved 12 February 2022– via California Digital Newspaper Collection. This article gives the date of Kamoo's death as February 22, 1904.
↑ Crane, Charles A. (23 March 1904). "Kamoo". OBITUARIES. Zion's Herald. Vol.LXXXII, no.12. Boston. Page 382, column 2. Retrieved 12 February 2022– via Internet Archive.
↑ "Earthquake in the North". Los Angeles Herald. Vol.XXXI, no.147. 23 February 1904. Page 5, column 4. Retrieved 13 January 2022– via California Digital Newspaper Collection.
↑ Dufeil, Yves; Le Bel, Franck; Terraillon, Marc (17 April 2008). "AIGRETTE"(PDF). Navires de la Grande Guerre (in French). Archived from the original(PDF) on 16 March 2016. Retrieved 26 December 2021.
↑ "CANAL TREATY RATIFIED". Los Angeles Herald. Vol.XXXI, no.148. 24 February 1904. Page 6, column 1. Retrieved 13 January 2022– via California Digital Newspaper Collection.
↑ "3. Biographie I". FRIEDERIKE KEMPNER "POESIE IST LEBEN..." (in German). Archived from the original on 9 April 2005. Retrieved 3 January 2022.
↑ "Necrology". Yearbook and List of Active Members of the National Educational Association 1903–1904. Winona, Minnesota: National Educational Association. 1903. pp.97–98. Retrieved 11 February 2022– via Google Books.
↑ "Chinese Burned to Death". Los Angeles Herald. Vol.XXXI, no.149. 25 February 1904. Page 4, column 1. Retrieved 14 January 2022– via California Digital Newspaper Collection.
↑ Isherwood, Justin (19 May 1992). "James Paris Lee, no mere gunsmith". Stevens Point Journal. Archived from the original on 5 January 2022. Retrieved 5 January 2022– via Portage County Historical Society.
↑ "Baseball Coach Injured". Los Angeles Herald. Vol.XXXI, no.150. 26 February 1904. Page 9, column 4. Retrieved 14 January 2022– via California Digital Newspaper Collection.
↑ "Blame the Great Western – Railroad Held Responsible for Wreck at Dyersville, IA., Which Killed Four Men". Decatur Herald. Decatur, Illinois. 25 March 1904., cited in Whitmer, Pam. "Dyersville, IA Train Wreck, Feb 1904". GenDisasters.com. Archived from the original on 20 January 2022. Retrieved 30 June 2024.
↑ "Mad Mullah's Forces Killed". San Francisco Call. Vol.95, no.102. 11 March 1904. Page 1, column 1. Retrieved 27 January 2022– via California Digital Newspaper Collection.
↑ "DEATHS OF THE DAY Prince Henry". Los Angeles Herald. Vol.XXXI, no.151. 27 February 1904. Page 3, column 1. Retrieved 14 January 2022– via California Digital Newspaper Collection.
"PASSENGERS AND CREW FIGHT THE FIRE". San Francisco Call. Vol.97, no.91. 29 February 1904. p.1. Retrieved 11 January 2022– via California Digital Newspaper Collection.
"LIST OF THOSE WHO PERISHED THROUGH FIRE". San Francisco Call. Vol.97, no.91. 29 February 1904. Page 1, column 1. Retrieved 11 January 2022– via California Digital Newspaper Collection.
"Passenger Gives Due Praise to Crew of Vessel". San Francisco Call. Vol.97, no.91. 29 February 1904. Page 1, column 1. Retrieved 11 January 2022– via California Digital Newspaper Collection.
"TREMENDOUS SEAS CAPSIZE THE BOAT AND NINE DROWN". San Francisco Call. Vol.97, no.91. 29 February 1904. Page 2, columns 1–7. Retrieved 11 January 2022– via California Digital Newspaper Collection.
↑ "Theodore Roosevelt – Key Events". Miller Center of Public Affairs. Rector and Visitors of the University of Virginia. 7 October 2016. Retrieved 14 January 2022.
↑ "COLORED MAN'S PROTEST". San Francisco Call. Vol.97, no.91. 29 February 1904. Page 7, column 4. Retrieved 11 January 2022– via California Digital Newspaper Collection.
This page is based on this Wikipedia article Text is available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.