1878

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Millennium: 2nd millennium
Centuries:
  • 18th century
  • 19th century
  • 20th century
Decades:
Years:
  • 1875
  • 1876
  • 1877
  • 1878
  • 1879
  • 1880
  • 1881
1878 in various calendars
Gregorian calendar1878
MDCCCLXXVIII
Ab urbe condita2631
Armenian calendar1327
ԹՎ ՌՅԻԷ
Assyrian calendar6628
Bahá'í calendar34–35
Balinese saka calendar1799–1800
Bengali calendar1285
Berber calendar2828
British Regnal year41 Vict. 1 – 42 Vict. 1
Buddhist calendar2422
Burmese calendar1240
Byzantine calendar7386–7387
Chinese calendar丁丑(Fire Ox)
4574 or 4514
    — to —
戊寅年 (Earth Tiger)
4575 or 4515
Coptic calendar1594–1595
Discordian calendar3044
Ethiopian calendar1870–1871
Hebrew calendar5638–5639
Hindu calendars
 - Vikram Samvat1934–1935
 - Shaka Samvat1799–1800
 - Kali Yuga4978–4979
Holocene calendar11878
Igbo calendar878–879
Iranian calendar1256–1257
Islamic calendar1294–1296
Japanese calendarMeiji 11
(明治11年)
Javanese calendar1806–1807
Julian calendarGregorian minus 12 days
Korean calendar4211
Minguo calendar34 before ROC
民前34年
Nanakshahi calendar410
Thai solar calendar2420–2421
Tibetan calendar阴火牛年
(female Fire-Ox)
2004 or 1623 or 851
    — to —
阳土虎年
(male Earth-Tiger)
2005 or 1624 or 852

1878 (MDCCCLXXVIII) was a common year starting on Tuesday of the Gregorian calendar and a common year starting on Sunday of the Julian calendar, the 1878th year of the Common Era (CE) and Anno Domini (AD) designations, the 878th year of the 2nd millennium, the 78th year of the 19th century, and the 9th year of the 1870s decade. As of the start of 1878, the Gregorian calendar was 12 days ahead of the Julian calendar, which remained in localized use until 1923.

Events[]

January–March[]

January–September – Cleopatra's Needle erected in London.
  • January 5Russo-Turkish WarBattle of Shipka Pass IV: Russian and Bulgarian forces defeat the Ottoman Empire.
  • January 9Umberto I becomes King of Italy.
  • January 17Battle of Philippopolis: Russian troops defeat the Turks.
  • January 23Benjamin Disraeli orders the British fleet to the Dardanelles.
  • January 24 – Russian revolutionary Vera Zasulich shoots at Fyodor Trepov, Governor of Saint Petersburg.
  • January 28The Yale News becomes the first daily college newspaper in the United States.
  • January 31 – Turkey agrees to an armistice at Adrianople.
  • February 2 – Greece declares war on the Ottoman Empire[citation needed].
  • February 7Pope Pius IX dies, after a 31½ year reign (the longest definitely confirmed).
  • February 8 – The British fleet enters Turkish waters, and anchors off Istanbul; Russia threatens to occupy Istanbul, but does not carry out the threat.
  • February 18 – The Lincoln County War begins in Lincoln County, New Mexico.
  • February 19 – The phonograph is patented by Thomas Edison.
  • February 20Pope Leo XIII succeeds Pope Pius IX, as the 256th pope.
  • February 23 – Sadguru Shri Gajanan Maharaj appears at Shegaon, Dist: Buldhana, Maharashtra.
  • February 24 – Anti-Russian demonstrations occur in Hyde Park, London.
  • February 28Mississippi State University is created by the Mississippi Legislature (under the name The Agricultural and Mechanical College of the State of Mississippi).
October 31Eldkvarn burns in Stockholm.
  • March 17 – Rev. John Jasper first preaches his sermon "The Sun Do Move."[1]
  • March 24 – The British Royal Navy frigate HMS Eurydice (1843) capsizes in the English Channel; all but 2 of the 319 crew members are killed.
  • March 25 – Russia rejects a British proposal, to lay the San Stefano Treaty before a European congress.
  • March 27 – In anticipation of war with Russia, Disraeli mobilizes the reserves, and calls up Indian troops to Malta.
Europe after the Congress of Berlin in 1878 and the territorial and political rearrangement of the Balkan Peninsula.

April–June[]

  • April 16 – The Senate of the Grand Duchy of Finland issued a declaration establishing a city of Kotka on the southern part islands from the old Kymi parish.[2]
  • April 20 – The Stawell Gift is run for the first time in Australia.
  • May 2 – The Washburn "A" Mill in Minneapolis explodes, killing 18.
  • May 15 – The Tokyo Stock Exchange is established.
  • May 25Gilbert and Sullivan's comic opera H.M.S. Pinafore debuts in London at the Opera Comique, with a first run of 571 performances.
  • June 1
    • The General Postal Union is renamed the Universal Postal Union (UPU).
    • British clipper Loch Ard is wrecked off the Shipwreck Coast of Victoria (Australia) with the loss of 52 lives and only 2 survivors.[3]
  • June 4Cyprus Convention: The Ottoman Empire cedes Cyprus to the United Kingdom, but retains the nominal title.
  • June 10 – The League of Prizren is officially founded "to struggle in arms to defend the wholeness of the territories of Albania".
  • June 13July 13 – The Congress of Berlin convenes to discuss the Ottoman Empire.
  • June 15Eadweard Muybridge produces the sequence of stop-motion still photographs Sallie Gardner at a Gallop in California (a predecessor of silent film), demonstrating that all four feet of a galloping horse are off the ground at the same time.
  • June 20 – The U.S. Coastal Survey is renamed the U.S. Coast and Geodetic Survey.
  • June 22Adolf Erik Nordenskiöld leaves Karlskrona on a voyage that will make him the first man to navigate the Northern Sea Route, a shipping lane from the Atlantic Ocean to the Pacific Ocean, along the Siberian coast.

July–September[]

  • July 4 – A match race between champion thoroughbred racehorses Ten Broeck and Mollie McCarty draws more than 30,000 fans to Louisville, and inspires the folk song, "Molly and Tenbrooks".
  • July 13 – The Treaty of Berlin makes Serbia, Montenegro and Romania completely independent, confirms the autonomy of Bulgaria, makes Cyprus a British possession, and allows Austria-Hungary to garrison the Bosnia Vilayet.
  • August 9 – The Wallingford Tornado of 1878, the deadliest tornado in Connecticut history, destroys the town of Wallingford, killing 34 people and injuring more than 70.
  • August 26Uyedineniya Island is discovered in the Kara Sea, by Norwegian explorer Captain Edvard Holm Johannesen.
  • September 3 – Over 640 die, when the crowded pleasure boat Princess Alice collides with the Bywell Castle, in the River Thames.
  • September 12Cleopatra's Needle is erected in London, having arrived in England on January 21.
  • September 20The Hindu, an Indian newspaper, is founded.

October–December[]

  • October 1Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University (Virginia Tech) opens as Virginia Agricultural and Mechanical College, in the United States.
  • October 14 – The world's first recorded floodlit football fixture is played at Bramall Lane, in Sheffield, England.
  • October 17John A. Macdonald returns to office, as Prime Minister of Canada.
  • October 31 – A fire destroys the Eldkvarn gristmill mill in Stockholm, Sweden.
  • November 17 – The first assassination attempt is made against Umberto I of Italy by anarchist Giovanni Passannante, armed with a dagger. The King survives with a slight wound in one arm. Prime minister Benedetto Cairoli blocks the aggressor, receiving a leg injury.
  • November 21 – The Second Anglo-Afghan War commences, when the British attack Ali Masjid in the Khyber Pass.
  • November 26 – American-born artist James McNeill Whistler's libel case against English critic John Ruskin, over a review of the painting Nocturne in Black and Gold – The Falling Rocket, (in which Whistler is described as "flinging a pot of paint in the public's face"),[4] is decided in the High Court of Justice in London. Whistler wins a farthing in nominal damages and only half of the costs, leading to his bankruptcy, and alienates patrons.[5]
  • December 7 – The United States territory of New Mexico is linked to the rest of the nation by railroad for the first time, as the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway inaugurates a newly completed line through the Raton Pass.[6]
  • December 18 – French passenger steamer Byzantin founders in the Dardanelles during a gale after collision with British SS Rinaldo, killing around 210 people with only 14 crew of the Byzantin saved.[7][8][9]
  • December 25Stella Maris Church, Sliema on Malta becomes a parish, seceding from the Parish of St. Helen's in Birkirkara.

Date unknown[]

  • U.S. arbitration rejects Argentine claims to Paraguay's part of the Chaco region.
  • Otto von Bismarck abandons his Kulturkampf, and forces through legislation outlawing the Social Democrats.
  • The 10-year Nauruan Tribal War breaks out.
  • Yellow fever in the Mississippi Valley kills over 13,000.
  • Foundation of:
    • Nainital Cantonment.
    • The Buchan School, Isle of Man.
    • The Johns Hopkins University Press, America's oldest university press.
    • Geiger (corporation), formed as Geiger Brothers.
    • The following English Association football clubs:
      • Everton Football Club, formed as St Domingo.
      • Grimsby Town F.C., formed as Grimsby Pelham.
      • Ipswich Town Football Club, formed as amateur club Ipswich A.F.C. They will not turn professional until 1936.
      • Newton Heath Lancashire and Yorkshire Railway Football Club, the team that will become Manchester United.
      • West Bromwich Albion F.C..
  • Leo Tolstoy's novel Anna Karenina is published complete in book form in Moscow.
  • Lester Allan Pelton produces the first operational Pelton wheel.
  • The last confirmed Cape lion dies.[10]
  • E. Remington and Sons, in the United States, introduce their No. 2 typewriter, the first with a shift key, enabling production of lower as well as upper case characters.
  • In Strasbourg, Alsace-Lorraine, the much studied stele of the Roman legionary Caius Largennius is discovered.
  • Kawasaki Tsukiji Shipyard, as predecessor of Kawasaki Heavy Industries, a motorbike, helicopters, rolling stock and shipbuilding in Japan, was founded.[11]

Births[]

January–March[]

Carl Sandburg
Theodoros Pangalos
Gordon Coates
  • January 4
    • A. E. Coppard, English short story writer and poet (d. 1957)
    • Augustus John, Welsh-born painter (d. 1961)
  • January 6Carl Sandburg, American poet and historian (d. 1967)
  • January 9John B. Watson, American psychologist (d. 1958)
  • January 11Theodoros Pangalos, Greek general, politician and President of Greece (d. 1952)
  • January 12Ferenc Molnár, Hungarian-born author (d. 1952)
  • January 16Harry Carey, American actor (d. 1947)
  • January 20Finlay Currie, Scottish actor (d. 1968)
  • January 22Constance Collier, English stage, screen actress (d. 1955)
  • January 23Rutland Boughton, English composer (d. 1960)
  • January 25Ernst Alexanderson, Swedish-born television pioneer (d. 1975)
  • February 1Milan Hodža, Slovak politician, champion of regional integration in Europe (d. 1944)
  • February 2Alfréd Hajós, Hungarian swimmer, architect (d. 1955)
  • February 3Gordon Coates, 21st Prime Minister of New Zealand (d. 1943)
  • February 5André Citroën, French automobile manufacturer (d. 1935)
  • February 8Martin Buber, Austrian philosopher (d. 1965)
  • February 14Kōki Hirota, 21st Prime Minister of Japan (d. 1948)
  • February 16
    • Giacomo "James" Colosimo, Italian-born American gangster (d. 1920)
    • Selim Palmgren, Finnish composer (d. 1951)
  • February 18Kate Gordon, American psychologist (d. 1963)
  • February 21 – The Mother (Mirra Alfassa), multi-origined spiritual leader and founder of Auroville, India (d. 1973)
  • February 26Emmy Destinn, Czech soprano (d. 1930)
  • February 28Pierre Fatou, French mathematician (d. 1929)
  • March 4
    • Egbert Van Alstyne, American songwriter, pianist (d. 1951)
    • Peter D. Ouspensky, Russian philosopher (d. 1947)
    • Arishima Takeo, Japanese novelist, short-story writer and essayist (d. 1923)
  • March 5P. D. Ouspensky, Russian mathematician (d. 1947)
  • March 7Boris Kustodiev, Soviet painter and designer (d. 1927)
  • March 16
    • Reza Shah Pahlavi, Shah of Iran (d. 1944)
    • Clemens August Graf von Galen, German Catholic cardinal (d. 1946)
  • March 20Heinrich XXIV, Prince Reuss of Greiz (d. 1927)
  • March 22Michel Théato, Luxembourg athlete (d. 1919)
  • March 26Henry Gullett, Australian politician (d. 1940)
  • March 31Jack Johnson, American boxer (d. 1946)

April–June[]

Lionel Barrymore
Roy Atwell
Gustav Stresemann
  • April 1C. Ganesha Iyer, Ceylon Tamil Philologist (d. 1958)
  • April 4Stylianos Lykoudis, Greek admiral (d. 1958)
  • April 6
  • April 24 ��� Jean Crotti, Swiss artist (d. 1958)
  • April 28
    • Lionel Barrymore, American actor (d. 1954)
    • Willem Mengelberg, Dutch conductor (d. 1951)
  • April 30Władysław Witwicki, Polish psychologist, philosopher, translator, historian (of philosophy and art) and artist (d. 1948)
  • May 2Roy Atwell, American actor, comedian and composer (d. 1962)
  • May 3Jean Chiappe, French civil servant (d. 1940)
  • May 10Gustav Stresemann, Chancellor of Germany, recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize (d. 1929)
  • May 13Julia Dean, American stage and film actress (d. 1952)
  • May 16Taylor Holmes, American actor (d. 1959)
  • May 21Glenn H. Curtiss, American aviation pioneer (d. 1930)
  • May 22The Great Gama, Punjabi wrestler (d. 1960)
  • May 25Bill Robinson, African-American tap dancer (d. 1949)
  • May 27Anna Cervin, Swedish artist (d. 1972)
  • May 28Paul Pelliot, French sinologist (d. 1945)
  • June 1John Masefield, English poet, novelist (d. 1967)
  • June 3Barney Oldfield, American automobile racer, pioneer (d. 1946)
  • June 5Pancho Villa, Mexican revolutionary (d. 1923)
  • June 10William Skelly, American oil magnate (d. 1957)
  • June 12James Oliver Curwood, American writer, conservationist (d. 1927)
  • June 20Will Mastin, American vaudevillian (d. 1975)
  • June 22John Burton Cleland, Australian naturalist, microbiologist, mycologist and ornithologist (d. 1971)
  • June 27He Xiangning, Chinese revolutionary, feminist, politician, painter and poet (d. 1972)

July–September[]

  • July 1Gino Meneghetti, Italian thief (d. 1976)
  • July 3George M. Cohan, American singer, dancer, composer, actor and writer (d. 1942)
  • July 8 - Jimmy Quinn, Scottish footballer (d. 1945)
  • July 10Otto Freundlich, German painter, sculptor (d. 1943)
  • July 12
    • Claude C. Bloch, American admiral (d. 1967)
    • Peeter Põld, Estonian pedagogical scientist, politician (d. 1930)
  • July 16Andreas Hermes, German agricultural scientist, politician (d. 1964)
  • July 17Mabel Van Buren, American actress (d. 1947)
  • July 20Denis Eden, English painter (d. 1949)
  • July 24Edward Plunkett, Baron Dunsany, Irish author (d. 1957)
  • August 1
  • August 2Princess Ingeborg of Denmark, Princess of Sweden (d. 1958)
  • August 4Ernest Lundeen, American lawyer, politician (d. 1940)
  • August 9Eileen Gray, Irish architect, furniture designer (d. 1976)
  • August 10Alfred Döblin, German writer (d. 1957)
  • August 13Harold Clarke Goddard, American professor, Shakespearean scholar (d. 1950)
  • August 19Manuel L. Quezon, 2nd President of the Philippines (d. 1944)
  • August 20Maria Assunta Pallotta, Italian Roman Catholic religious professed and blessed (d. 1905)
  • August 27Pyotr Nikolayevich Wrangel, Russian general, anti-Bolshevik leader (d. 1928)
  • August 28George Whipple, American scientist, recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine (d. 1976)
  • August 31Frank Jarvis, American athlete (d. 1933)
  • September 2Werner von Blomberg, German field marshal (d. 1946)
  • September 5Robert von Lieben, Austrian physicist (d. 1913)
  • September 9Sergio Osmena, 4th President of the Philippines (d. 1961)
  • September 13Matilde Moisant, American pilot (d. 1964)
  • September 14Ion Farris, American politician, former Speaker of the Florida House of Representatives (d. 1934)
  • September 18
    • Robert Brooke-Popham, British air chief marshal (d. 1953)
    • James O. Richardson, American admiral (d. 1974)
  • September 20Upton Sinclair, American writer (d. 1968)
  • September 22Shigeru Yoshida, Prime Minister of Japan (d. 1967)
  • September 24C. F. Ramuz, Swiss writer (d. 1947)
  • September 28Jirō Tamon, Japanese general (d. 1934)

October–December[]

Joseph Stalin
  • October 1Othmar Spann, Austrian philosopher, economist (d. 1950)
  • October 2Richard Spikes, African-American inventor (d. 1963)
  • October 9Robert Warwick, American stage, screen actor (d. 1964)
  • October 12Karl Buresch, 9th Chancellor of Austria (d. 1936)
  • October 15Paul Reynaud, Prime Minister of France (d. 1966)
  • October 16Maxie Long, American athlete (d. 1959)
  • October 17Louise Dresser, American actress (d. 1965)
  • October 29Alexander von Falkenhausen, German general (d. 1966)
  • October 30Arthur Scherbius, German electrical engineer, mathematician, cryptanalyst and inventor (d. 1929)
  • October 31Roberta Lawson, Indigenous American (Lenape) activist and musician (d. 1940)
  • November 1Carlos Saavedra Lamas, Argentine politician, recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize (d. 1959)
  • November 8Dorothea Bate, British archaeologist and pioneer of archaeozoology (d. 1951)
  • November 14
    • Inigo Campioni, Italian admiral (d. 1944)
    • Julie Manet, French painter (d. 1966)
    • Leopold Staff, Polish poet (d. 1957)
  • November 17Grace Abbott, American social worker, activist (d. 1939)
  • November 23
    • Ernest Joseph King, Commander in Chief, United States Fleet and Chief of Naval Operations (COMINCH-CNO) during World War II (d. 1956)
    • Frank Pick, British transport administrator, designer (d. 1941)
  • November 27William Orpen, Irish artist (d. 1931)
  • December 1Nathaniel Baldwin, American inventor, supporter of the early Mormon fundamentalist movement (d. 1961)
  • December 10C. Rajagopalachari, Indian politician, freedom fighter (d. 1972)
  • December 18Joseph Stalin, leader of the Soviet Union (d. 1953)
  • December 22Myer Prinstein, Polish-American athlete (d. 1925)
  • December 25
    • Louis Chevrolet, Swiss-born race driver, automobile builder (d. 1941)
    • Joseph Schenck, Russian-born American film executive (d. 1961)
  • December 28Nikolai Bryukhanov, Soviet statesman, political figure who served as People's Commissar of Finances (d. 1938)
  • December 31
    • Elizabeth Arden, Canadian-born beautician, cosmetics entrepreneur (d. 1966)
    • Horacio Quiroga, Argentine writer (d. 1937)

Deaths[]

January–June[]

King Victor Emmanuel II of Italy
Pope Pius IX
Anna Sewell
  • January 5Alfonso Ferrero La Marmora, 6th Prime Minister of Italy (b. 1804)
  • January 8Nikolay Nekrasov, Russian poet (b. 1821)
  • January 9 – King Victor Emmanuel II of Italy (b. 1820)
  • January 18Antoine César Becquerel, French scientist (b. 1788)
  • February 7Pope Pius IX (b. 1792)[12]
  • February 11Gideon Welles, American politician (b. 1802)
  • February 18John Tunstall, American rancher, merchant, first man killed in the Lincoln County War (b. 1853)
  • February 19Charles-François Daubigny, French painter (b. 1817)
  • February 26Angelo Secchi, Italian astronomer (b. 1818)
  • March 8Archduke Franz Karl of Austria (b. 1802)
  • March 20Julius von Mayer, German physician, physicist and one of the founders of thermodynamics (b. 1814)
  • March 27Sir George Gilbert Scott, British architect (b. 1811)
  • April 4Richard M. Brewer, American gunslinger, cowboy (b. 1850)
  • April 5Buckshot Roberts, American buffalo hunter who killed Richard M. Brewer (shot) (b. 1831)
  • April 8Henrietta Treffz, Austrian soprano, first wife of Johann Strauss II (b. 1818)
  • April 11Robert Wentworth Little, British occultist (b. 1840)
  • April 12William M. Tweed, American politician (b. 1823)
  • April 25Anna Sewell, English author (b. 1820)
  • May 11Pierre Philippe Denfert-Rochereau, French military officer and politician (b. 1823)
  • May 12Anselme Payen, French chemist (b. 1795)
  • May 13Joseph Henry, American scientist (b. 1797)
  • May 14Ōkubo Toshimichi, Japanese samurai, later leader of the Meiji restoration (b. 1830)
  • May 28John Russell, 1st Earl Russell, Prime Minister of the United Kingdom (b. 1792)
  • June 5Ernst von Bibra, German scientist (b. 1806)
  • June 6
  • June 12
  • June 27Sidney Breese, U.S. senator from Illinois, father of the Illinois Central Railroad (b. 1800)

July–December[]

Saint Mariam Baouardy
  • July 1Catherine Winkworth, English translator of hymns (b. 1827)
  • July 17Aleardo Aleardi, Italian poet (b. 1812)
  • July 23Carl Freiherr von Rokitansky, Bohemian pathologist, philosopher and politician (b. 1804)
  • August 13Henry James Montague, English-born actor (b. 1844)
  • August 16Richard Upjohn, English-American architect (b. 1802)
  • August 26Mariam Baouardy, Syrian Discalced Carmelite and Melkite Greek Catholic nun and saint, canonized (b. 1846)
  • August 30James Geiss, English businessman (b. 1820)
  • September 7Mehmed Ali Pasha, Prussian-born Ottoman military leader (b. 1827)
  • October 4Dora Hand, dance hall singer, actress (b.1844)
  • October 20Hiram Paulding, American admiral (b. 1797)
  • November 20William Thomas, Welsh poet (b. 1832)
  • November 28Orson Hyde, American religious leader (b. 1805)
  • December 10Henry Wells, American businessman (b. 1805)
  • December 14Princess Alice of the United Kingdom (b. 1843)
  • December 18W H Payne, actor and mime artist (b. 1804)
  • December 23 - Frederick Aiken, American lawyer, journalist, and soldier (b. 1832)
  • December 25Henry K. Hoff, American admiral (b. 1809)

References[]

  1. ^ New York Daily Herald, 24 Mar 1878, p.8.
  2. ^ Kotkan synty ja kasvu (in Finnish)
  3. ^ "The Loch Ard Lost". The Argus (9972). Melbourne. June 3, 1878. p. 5. Retrieved March 9, 2017 – via National Library of Australia.
  4. ^ Ruskin, John (1877-07-02). Fors Clavigera.
  5. ^ Whistler, J. McNeill (1890). The Gentle Art of Making Enemies.
  6. ^ Borneman, Walter R. (2010). Rival Rails: The Race to Build America's Greatest Transcontinental Railroad. Random House Digital. p. 168.
  7. ^ "The Collision in the Dardanelles". The Cornishman (25). January 2, 1878. p. 7.
  8. ^ Allen, Tony. "SS Byzantin (+1878)". Wrecksite. Retrieved May 17, 2021.
  9. ^ Marshall, Logan (1912). Sinking of the Titanic and Great Disasters of the Sea.
  10. ^ "V muzeu Emila Holuba se ukrýval kapský lev". Novinky.cz (in Czech). May 22, 2009. Retrieved August 26, 2011.
  11. ^ "History | Kawasaki Heavy Industries, Ltd". global.kawasaki.com. Retrieved May 3, 2021.
  12. ^ Patriarca, Silvana (2012). The Risorgimento revisited : nationalism and culture in nineteenth-century Italy. Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire New York: Palgrave Macmillan. p. 188. ISBN 9780230362758.

Further reading[]

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