:1874

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{{About year|1874}}

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Events

= January–March =

  • January 1 – New York City annexes The Bronx.
  • January 2Ignacio María González becomes head of state of the Dominican Republic for the first time.
  • January 3Third Carlist War: Battle of Caspe – Campaigning on the Ebro in Aragon for the Spanish Republican Government, Colonel Eulogio Despujol surprises a Carlist force under Manuel Marco de Bello at Caspe, northeast of Alcañiz. In a brilliant action the Carlists are routed, losing 200 prisoners and 80 horses, while Despujol is promoted to Brigadier and becomes Conde de Caspe.
  • January 20 – The Pangkor Treaty (also known as the Pangkor Engagement), by which the British extend their control over first the Sultanate of Perak, and later the other independent Malay States, is signed.
  • January 23Prince Alfred, Duke of Edinburgh, second son of Queen Victoria, marries Grand Duchess Maria Alexandrovna of Russia,{{cite book|last=Panton|first=James|title=Historical Dictionary of the British Monarchy |year=2011|publisher=Scarecrow Press|isbn=978-0-8108-7497-8|page=39 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=BiyyueBTpaMC&pg=PA39 |language=en}} only daughter of Tsar Alexander III of Russia, in the Grand Church of the Winter Palace in Saint Petersburg.
  • February 21 – The Oakland Daily Tribune publishes its first issue in California.
  • February 23Walter Clopton Wingfield patents in Britain a game called "sphairistike", more commonly called lawn tennis.
  • February 2425Third Carlist War: First Battle of Somorrostro – Determined to raise the siege of Bilbao by the Pretender Don Carlos VII, Republican commander Marshal Francisco Serrano sends General Domingo Moriones with a relief force of 14,000 men. Carlists, under General Nicolás Ollo, entrenched at Somorrostro outside Bilbao, drive back a courageous assault by General Fernando Primo de Rivera and then the entire Republican army. The republicans lose 1,200 men, and Moriones loses his nerve, demanding reinforcements and a replacement for himself. Moriones's men entrench and wait.
  • March 14Third Carlist War: Battle of Castellfollit de la Roca – Appointed to command the Spanish Republican army in the north, General Ramón Nouvilas attempts to relieve the Carlist siege of Olot in Girona. But at Castellfollit de la Roca, in one of the Government's worst defeats, Nouvilas is routed by Carlist General Francesc Savalls, and captured along with about 2,000 of his men. Olot capitulates two days later.
  • March 15France and Viet Nam sign the Second Treaty of Saigon, further recognizing the full sovereignty of France over Cochinchina.
  • March 18
  • Hawaii signs a treaty with the United States, granting exclusive trading rights.
  • The Dresden English Football Club is founded, the first association football club on the European mainland.
  • March 25 – The Republic of Ecuador is consecrated to the Sacred Heart of Jesus, carried out by President Gabriel García Moreno and supported, blessed and specified by Pope Pius IX.
  • March 2527Third Carlist War: Second Battle of Somorrostro – In a renewed attempt to raise the siege of Bilbao by Don Carlos VII, Republican commander Marshal Francisco Serrano himself arrives with 27,000 men and 70 cannons. However, in three days of fierce fighting, the Carlist General Joaquín Elío, with just 17,000 men, once again drives off the attack at nearby Somorrostro, and it is another six weeks before Serrano manages to relieve Bilbao.
  • March – The Young Men's Hebrew Association in Manhattan (which will still be operating 150 years later as the 92nd Street Y) is founded.

= April–June =

  • April 15May 15 – A group of young painters, Société Anonyme Coopérative des Artistes, Peintres, Sculpteurs, Graveurs, gives their first exhibition, at the studio of the photographer Nadar in Paris. Louis Leroy's critical review of it published on 25 April gives rise to the term Impressionism for the movement, with reference to Claude Monet's Impression, Sunrise.
  • May 2Third Carlist War: The siege of Bilbao is lifted.
  • May 9 – The first commercial horse-drawn carriage debuts in the city of Bombay, plying two routes.
  • May 14 – First admission charge at a football game: Harvard beats University of McGill (Montreal) 3–0.
  • May 16 – The Mill River dam collapses in Massachusetts, killing 139 people.
  • May 22 – Verdi's Requiem is first performed at San Marco in Milan on 22 May 1874, the first anniversary of Manzoni's death.[http://www.giuseppeverdi.it/visInglese/page.asp?IDCategoria=3648&IDSezione=25716 Messa da Requiem] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131231000140/http://www.giuseppeverdi.it/visInglese/page.asp?IDCategoria=3648&IDSezione=25716 |date=2013-12-31 }}, on giuseppeverdi.it. Retrieved 29 December 2013
  • May 23 – Passenger ship British Admiral, on a voyage from Liverpool (England) to Melbourne (Australia), sinks after hitting rocks off King Island (Tasmania); only nine of the 88 passengers and crew are rescued.{{cite news|date=6 June 1874|title=Wreck of the ship British Admiral|url=https://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/70475115|work=Australian Town and Country Journal|location=Sydney, New South Wales|page=34|access-date=2019-12-31}}
  • May 27 – The first group of Dorsland Trekkers, a series of expeditions by Trekboere in search of political independence and better farming conditions, departs South Africa to settle in Angola, led by Gert Alberts.[https://www.geni.com/people/Kmdt-Gert-Andries-Jacobus-Alberts-b1c5d3e1/6000000013007521716 Geni: Kmdt. Gert Andries Jacobus Alberts, b1c5d3e1] (Accessed on 17 April 2017)
  • June 14Michel Domingue becomes head of state of Haiti.
  • June 22Andrew Taylor Still starts the movement for osteopathic medicine in the United States at Kirksville, Missouri.
  • June 2527Third Carlist War: Battle of Monte Muro – Carlist forces entrenched around Abárzuza, on the approach to Estella in Navarre, repel an attack by Isabelino/Liberal (supporters of Queen Isabella II) troops led by General Manuel Gutiérrez de la Concha, Marqués del Duero, who is killed on the third day of fighting.

= July–September =

  • July 1
  • The Universal Postal Union is established.
  • The Philadelphia Zoo opens, the first public zoo in the United States.
  • The Sholes and Glidden typewriter, with cylindrical platen and QWERTY keyboard, is first marketed in the United States.
  • The Bank of Spain emits the first peseta banknotes.{{cite journal | title = Standard Catalog of World Paper Money General Issues, 1368 - 1960| journal =Standard Catalog of World Paper Money. Vol. 2, General Issues| year =2008| page =1088| issn =1538-2001}}
  • July 14 – The Chicago Fire of 1874 burns down 47 acres of the city, destroying 812 buildings, killing 20, and resulting in the fire insurance industry demanding municipal reforms from Chicago's city council.
  • July 24
  • Mathew Evans and Henry Woodward patent the first incandescent lamp, with an electric light bulb.
  • Third Carlist War: Sack of Cuenca – After Carlist forces successfully defend Estella, Don Alfonso de Bourbon, brother of the Don Carlos VII, leads 14,000 Catalan Carlists south to attack Cuenca (136 km from Madrid), held by Republicans under Don Hilario Lozano. After two days the outnumbered garrison capitulates, but Don Alfonso permits a terrible slaughter. The city is sacked. Subsequently, another republican force defeats the disorderly Catalans, who flee back to the Ebro.
  • July 31Patrick Francis Healy, S.J., the first Black man to receive a PhD, is inaugurated as president of Georgetown University, the oldest Catholic University in America, and becomes the first Black person to head a predominantly White university.
  • August 11Third Carlist War: Battle of Oteiza – Two months after Government forces were repulsed from Carlist-held Estella, in Navarre, Republican General Domingo Moriones makes a fresh diversionary attack a few miles to the southeast at Oteiza. In heavy fighting Moriones secures a costly tactical victory over Carlist General Torcuato Mendíri, but the war continues another 18 months, before Estella finally falls.
  • September 9 – Captain Lyman's wagon train besieged by Indians in Hemphill County, Texas.
  • September 14Battle of Liberty Place: In New Orleans, former Confederate Army members of the White League temporarily drive Republican Governor William P. Kellogg from office, replacing him with former Democratic Governor John McEnery. U.S. Army troops restore Kellogg to office five days later."Chief Justice Edward Douglass White", by William H. Forman, Jr., in ABA Journal (March 1970) p261
  • September 28Texas–Indian wars: U.S. Army Colonel Ranald S. Mackenzie leads his force of 600 men on the successful raid of the last sanctuary of the Kiowa, Comanche and Cheyenne Indian tribes, a village inside the Palo Duro Canyon in Texas, and carries out their removal to the designated Indian reservations in Oklahoma.Frances H. Kennedy, American Indian Places: A Historical Guidebook (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2008) p168

= October–December =

= Date unknown =

Births

= January =

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= February =

= March =

= April =

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= May =

= June =

= July =

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= August =

= September =

= October =

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= November =

= December =

Deaths

= January–June =

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= July–December =

References

{{Reflist}}

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