1892
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1892 by topic |
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Humanities |
By country |
Other topics |
Lists of leaders |
Birth and death categories |
Establishments and disestablishments categories |
Works category |
Gregorian calendar | 1892 MDCCCXCII |
Ab urbe condita | 2645 |
Armenian calendar | 1341 ԹՎ ՌՅԽԱ |
Assyrian calendar | 6642 |
Baháʼí calendar | 48–49 |
Balinese saka calendar | 1813–1814 |
Bengali calendar | 1299 |
Berber calendar | 2842 |
British Regnal year | 55 Vict. 1 – 56 Vict. 1 |
Buddhist calendar | 2436 |
Burmese calendar | 1254 |
Byzantine calendar | 7400–7401 |
Chinese calendar | 辛卯年 (Metal Rabbit) 4589 or 4382 — to — 壬辰年 (Water Dragon) 4590 or 4383 |
Coptic calendar | 1608–1609 |
Discordian calendar | 3058 |
Ethiopian calendar | 1884–1885 |
Hebrew calendar | 5652–5653 |
Hindu calendars | |
- Vikram Samvat | 1948–1949 |
- Shaka Samvat | 1813–1814 |
- Kali Yuga | 4992–4993 |
Holocene calendar | 11892 |
Igbo calendar | 892–893 |
Iranian calendar | 1270–1271 |
Islamic calendar | 1309–1310 |
Japanese calendar | Meiji 25 (明治25年) |
Javanese calendar | 1821–1822 |
Julian calendar | Gregorian minus 12 days |
Korean calendar | 4225 |
Minguo calendar | 20 before ROC 民前20年 |
Nanakshahi calendar | 424 |
Thai solar calendar | 2434–2435 |
Tibetan calendar | 阴金兔年 (female Iron-Rabbit) 2018 or 1637 or 865 — to — 阳水龙年 (male Water-Dragon) 2019 or 1638 or 866 |
Wikimedia Commons has media related to 1892.
1892 (MDCCCXCII) was a leap year starting on Friday of the Gregorian calendar and a leap year starting on Wednesday of the Julian calendar, the 1892nd year of the Common Era (CE) and Anno Domini (AD) designations, the 892nd year of the 2nd millennium, the 92nd year of the 19th century, and the 3rd year of the 1890s decade. As of the start of 1892, the Gregorian calendar was 12 days ahead of the Julian calendar, which remained in localized use until 1923.
In Samoa, this was the only leap year spanned to 367 days as July 4 repeated. This means that the International Date Line was drawn from the east of the country to go west.
Events
January–March
- January 1 – Ellis Island begins processing immigrants to the United States.[1]
- February 27 – Rudolf Diesel applies for a patent, on his compression ignition engine (the Diesel engine).
- February 29 – St. Petersburg, Florida is incorporated as a town.
- March 1 – Theodoros Deligiannis ends his term as Prime Minister of Greece and Konstantinos Konstantopoulos takes office.
- March 6–8 – "Exclusive Agreement": Rulers of the Trucial States (Abu Dhabi, Dubai, Sharjah, Ajman, Ras al-Khaimah and Umm al-Quwain) sign an agreement, by which they become de facto British protectorates.
- March 11 – The first basketball game is played in public, between students and faculty at the Springfield YMCA before 200 spectators.[2] The final score is 5–1 in favor of the students, with the only goal for the faculty being scored by Amos Alonzo Stagg.[2]
- March 13 – Ernest Louis, a grandson of Queen Victoria, becomes Grand Duke of Hesse and the Rhine on the death of his father, Grand Duke Louis IV.
- March 15
- The Liverpool Football Club is founded in England by John Houlding, the owner of Anfield; Houlding decides to form his own team after Everton leaves Anfield, in an argument over rent.
- Jesse W. Reno patents the first escalator, installed at Coney Island.
- March 17 – The St. Patrick's Day Snowstorm besieges Tennessee with upwards of 26 inches of snow, establishing accumulation records that still stand.
- March 18 – Sir Frederick Stanley, Governor General of Canada, announces his intention to donate the Stanley Cup for ice hockey.
- March 20 – The first ever French rugby championship final takes place in Paris. Pierre de Coubertin referees the match, which Racing Club de France wins 4–3 over Stade Français.
- March 31 – The world's first fingerprinting bureau is formally opened by the Buenos Aires Chief of Police; it has been operating unofficially since the previous year.
April–June
- April – The Johnson County War breaks out between small farmers and large ranchers in Wyoming.
- April 15 – The General Electric Company is established through the merger of the Thomson-Houston Electric Company and the Edison General Electric Company.
- May 19 – Battle of Yemoja River: British troops defeat Ijebu infantry in modern-day Nigeria, using a maxim gun.
- May 20 – The last broad gauge train runs from Paddington on the Great Western Railway of England.
- May 22 – The British conquest of Ijebu Ode marks a major extension of colonial power into the Nigerian interior.
- May 24 – Prince George (later George V of the United Kingdom) becomes Duke of York.[3]
- June 5 – An oil fire in Oil City, Pennsylvania, United States, kills 130 people.
- June 6 - The Chicago "L" begins operation for the first time with the opening of the Chicago and South Side Rapid Transit Railroad.
- June 7 – Homer Plessy, a mixed-race man, is arrested for deliberately sitting in a whites-only railroad car in Louisiana, leading to the landmark United States Supreme Court decision Plessy v. Ferguson, which legitimized "separate but equal" racial segregation in the United States.
- June 11 – The Limelight Department, later one of the world's first film studios, is officially established in Melbourne, Australia.
- June 30 – The Homestead Strike begins in Homestead, Pennsylvania, culminating in a battle between striking workers and private security agents on July 6.
July–September
- July 4 – Samoa changes its time zone from 4 hours ahead Japan to being 3 hours behind California, such that it crosses the International Date Line, and Monday, July 4 occurs twice.
- July 4–18 – British general election: The Conservative and Liberal Unionist coalition government loses its majority in the House of Commons, eventually leading to Prime Minister Lord Salisbury's resignation on August 12.
- July 6
- Dr. José Rizal, Filipino writer, philosopher and political activist, is arrested by Spanish authorities in connection with La Liga Filipina.
- Homestead Strike: The arrival of a force of 300 Pinkerton detectives from New York and Chicago results in a fight in which about 10 men are killed.
- July 8 – The Great Fire of 1892 devastates the city of St. John's, Newfoundland.
- July 12 – A hidden lake bursts out of a glacier on the side of Mont Blanc, flooding the valley below and killing around 200 villagers and holidaymakers in Saint-Gervais-les-Bains.
- July 13 – The United International Bureau for the Protection of Intellectual Property (UIBPIP or BIRPI) is established in Bern, Switzerland.
- July 25 – The Community of the Resurrection, an Anglican religious community for men, is founded by Charles Gore and Walter Frere, initially in Oxford.
- August 4
- The father and stepmother of Lizzie Borden are found murdered in their Fall River, Massachusetts home; she will be acquitted of their murder.
- August 9 – Thomas Edison receives a patent for a two-way telegraph.
- August 15 – Valparaíso, Chile founds its first football team, Santiago Wanderers.
- August 18 – William Ewart Gladstone assumes the U.K. premiership, as head of the Liberal government, with Irish Nationalist Party support.
- September 8 – The Pledge of Allegiance is first recited in the United States.
- September 9 – Amalthea, the fifth moon of Jupiter, is discovered by Edward Emerson Barnard.
- September 15 – Sergei Witte replaces Ivan Vyshnegradsky, as Russian finance minister.
- September – Women are first admitted to Yale University's graduate school.
October–December
- October 1 – The University of Chicago holds its first classes.
- October 5
- The Dalton Gang, attempting to rob two banks in Coffeyville, Kansas, is shot by the townspeople; only Emmett Dalton, with 23 wounds, survives, to spend 14 years in prison.
- Master criminal Adam Worth is captured in Liège, Belgium, during an attempted robbery of a money delivery cart.
- October 12 – To mark the 400th anniversary Columbus Day holiday, the "Pledge of Allegiance" is first recited in unison by students in U.S. public schools.
- October 30 – The Historical American Exposition opens in Madrid.
- October 31 – The first collection of Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes stories from The Strand Magazine, The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes, is published in London.
- November 2 – The first football club in Bohemia, Slavia Praha is established, originally under name of Akademický cyklistický odbor Slavia (A.C.O.S.), focusing on cycling.
- November 8
- 1892 United States presidential election: Grover Cleveland is elected over Benjamin Harrison and James B. Weaver, to win the second of his non-consecutive terms.
- An anarchist bomb kills six in a police station in Avenue de l'Opéra, Paris.
- The four-day New Orleans General Strike begins.
- November 17 – French troops occupy Abomey, capital of the kingdom of Dahomey.
- November 24 – The Hotel Zinzendorf catches fire in the city of Winston-Salem, North Carolina; 45 people die.
- December 5 – John Thompson becomes Canada's fourth prime minister.
- December 17 – First issue of Vogue is published in the United States.
- December 18 – The Nutcracker ballet, with music by Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky, is premiered at the Imperial Mariinsky Theatre in Saint Petersburg, Russia.
- December 22 – The Newcastle East End F.C. is renamed Newcastle United F.C., following the demise of the Newcastle West End F.C. and East End's move to St James' Park, formerly West End's home, in the north east of England.
Date unknown
- Diplomat Henry Galway secures a treaty by which Ovonramwen, Oba of Benin, ostensibly accepts British protection for his kingdom.[4]
- A cholera outbreak occurs in Hamburg, Germany.
- A 50-year-old tortoise called Timothy, previously serving as a naval mascot, is brought to the estate of Powderham Castle in England, where she lives until her death in 2004.
- Viruses are first described by Russian biologist Dmitri Ivanovsky.
Births
Births |
---|
January · February · March · April · May · June · July · August · September · October · November · December · Date unknown |
January
- January 1
- Artur Rodziński, Polish conductor (d. 1958)
- Manuel Roxas, 5th President of the Philippines (d. 1948)
- January 3 – J. R. R. Tolkien, English professor and writer (d. 1973)[5]
- January 12 – Mikhail Kirponos, Soviet general (d. 1941)
- January 14
- Martin Niemöller, German theologian and prisoner in the Nazi Holocaust (d. 1984)
- Hal Roach, American film, television producer (d. 1992)
- January 15 – Rex Ingram, Irish film director (d. 1950)
- January 18 – Oliver Hardy, American comedian, actor (d. 1957)
- January 19 – Ólafur Thors, Icelandic politician, 5-times prime minister (d. 1964)
- January 22 – Marcel Dassault, French aircraft industrialist (d. 1986)
- January 25 – Takeo Takagi, Japanese admiral (d. 1944)
- January 28
- Ernst Lubitsch, German-born film director (d. 1947)
- Fyodor Raskolnikov, Soviet revolutionary, writer, journalist, naval commander and diplomat (d. 1939)
- January 31 – Eddie Cantor, American actor, singer (d. 1964)
February
- February 3 – Juan Negrín, Spanish physician, politician and 67th Prime Minister of Spain (d. 1956)
- February 6 – William P. Murphy, American physician, recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine (d. 1987)
- February 9 – Peggy Wood, American actress (d. 1978)
- February 10 – Alan Hale Sr., American actor (d. 1950)
- February 13 – Robert H. Jackson, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, chief prosecutor at the Nuremberg Trials (d. 1954)
- February 14 – Radola Gajda, Czech commander and politician (d. 1948)
- February 15 – James Forrestal, first United States Secretary of Defense (d. 1949)
- February 18 – Wendell Willkie, U.S. Republican presidential candidate (d. 1944)
- February 21 – Harry Stack Sullivan, American psychiatrist, psychoanalyst (d. 1949)
- February 22 – Edna St. Vincent Millay, American writer (d. 1950)
- February 23 – Kathleen Harrison, English actress (d. 1995)
- February 27 – William Demarest, American actor (d. 1983)
- February 29 – Augusta Savage, American sculptor (d. 1962)
March
- March 1
- Ryūnosuke Akutagawa, Japanese writer (d. 1927)
- Mercedes de Acosta, American poet, playwright, costume designer, and socialite (d. 1968)
- March 8 – Mississippi John Hurt (some sources give his year of birth as 1893), American country blues singer, guitarist (d. 1966)
- March 9
- David Garnett, English novelist and writer (d. 1981)
- Mátyás Rákosi, 43rd prime minister of Hungary (d. 1971)
- Vita Sackville-West, English writer and gardener (d. 1962)
- March 10
- Arthur Honegger, French-born Swiss composer (d. 1955)
- Gregory La Cava, American director, producer and writer (d. 1952)
- Eva Turner, English operatic soprano (d. 1990)
- March 15 – Charles Nungesser, French aviator, World War I fighter ace (d. 1927)
- March 16 – César Vallejo, Peruvian poet (d. 1938)
- March 25 – Andy Clyde, Scottish-born screen actor (d. 1967)
- March 27 – Ferde Grofé, American pianist, composer (d. 1972)
- March 28
- Corneille Heymans, Belgian physiologist, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 1968)
- Tom Maguire, Irish republican (d. 1993)
- March 30
- Stefan Banach, Polish mathematician (d. 1945)
- Erhard Milch, German field marshal, Luftwaffe officer (d. 1972)
- Sanzō Nosaka, Japanese Communist Party chairman and leader of JPEL (d. 1993)
- March 31 – Stanisław Maczek, Polish general (d. 1994)
April
- April 6
- Donald Wills Douglas Sr., American industrialist (d. 1981)
- Lowell Thomas, American journalist (d. 1981)
- April 7 – Julius Hirsch, German footballer (d. 1945)[6]
- April 8 – Mary Pickford, Canadian actress, studio founder (d. 1979)
- April 12
- Johnny Dodds, American jazz clarinettist (d. 1940)
- Henry Darger, American outsider artist and writer (d. 1973)
- April 13
- Sir Arthur Harris, British World War II Royal Air Force commander (d. 1984)
- Sir Robert Watson-Watt, Scottish inventor of radar (d. 1973)
- April 16 – Dora Richter, German transgender woman and the first known person to undergo complete male-to-female gender-affirming surgery (d. 1966)[7]
- April 19 – Germaine Tailleferre, French composer (d. 1983)
- April 26 – Richard L. Conolly, American admiral (d. 1962)
- April 27 – Raizō Tanaka, Japanese admiral (d. 1969)
- April 28 – Joseph Dunninger, American mentalist (d. 1975)
May
- May 2 – Manfred von Richthofen (the "Red Baron"), German World War I fighter pilot (d. 1918)
- May 3
- George Paget Thomson, English physicist, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 1975)
- Jacob Viner, Canadian economist (d. 1970)
- May 7
- Archibald MacLeish, American poet (d. 1982)
- Josip Broz Tito, President of Yugoslavia (d. 1980)
- May 9 – Zita of Bourbon-Parma, Empress of Austria-Hungary (d. 1989)
- May 11 – Margaret Rutherford, English actress (d. 1972)
- May 12 – Fritz Kortner, Austrian-born director (d. 1970)
- May 15 – Shigeyoshi Miwa, Japanese admiral (d. 1959)
- May 16 – Manton S. Eddy, American general (d. 1962)
- May 18 – Ezio Pinza, Italian bass (d. 1957)
- May 23 – Pichichi, Spanish footballer (d. 1922)
- May 26 – Maxwell Bodenheim, American poet and novelist (k. 1954)
- May 30 – Fernando Amorsolo, Filipino painter (d. 1972)
- May 31 – Gregor Strasser, German Nazi politician (d. 1934)
June
- June 1 – Amānullāh Khān, ruler of Afghanistan (d. 1960)
- June 8 – Nikolai Polikarpov, Soviet aeronautical engineer, aircraft designer (d. 1944)
- June 13 – Basil Rathbone, British actor (d. 1967)[8]
- June 21
- Reinhold Niebuhr, American theologian (d. 1971)
- Hilding Rosenberg, Swedish composer (d. 1985)
- June 22 – Robert Ritter von Greim, German field marshal (d. 1945)
- June 23 – Mieczysław Horszowski, Polish pianist (d. 1993)
- June 25
- Katherine Kennicott Davis, American composer (d. 1980)
- Shirō Ishii, Japanese microbiologist, lieutenant general of Unit 731 (d. 1959)
- June 26 – Pearl S. Buck, American writer, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 1973)
- June 28
- Clifford Campbell, Jamaican educator, politician (d. 1991)
- E. H. Carr, English historian, diplomat, journalist and international relations theorist (d. 1982)
- June 30 – Oswald Pohl, German S.S. officer (d. 1951)
July
- July 1 – James M. Cain, American author and journalist (d. 1977)
- July 4 – A. G. Gaston, American businessman (d. 1996)
- July 6 – Willy Coppens, Belgian World War I flying ace (d. 1986)
- July 8
- Richard Aldington, English poet (d. 1962)
- Dean O'Banion, American gangster (d. 1924)
- July 9 – Cromwell Dixon, American pioneer aviator (d. 1911)
- July 11
- Trafford Leigh-Mallory, British aviator and Royal Air Force Air Chief Marshal (d. 1944)
- Thomas Mitchell, American actor (d. 1962)
- July 12 – Bruno Schulz, Polish writer and painter (d. 1942)
- July 15
- Walter Benjamin, German philosopher and cultural critic (suicide 1940)
- Milena Rudnytska, Ukrainian educator, women's activist, politician and writer (d. 1979)
- July 16 – Michel Coiffard, French World War I fighter ace (d. 1918)
- July 21 – Lenore Ulric, American actress (d. 1970)
- July 22 – Arthur Seyss-Inquart, Austrian Nazi politician (d. 1946)
- July 23 – Haile Selassie I, Ethiopian emperor (d. 1975)
- July 29 – William Powell, American actor (d. 1984)
August
- August 2 – Jack L. Warner, Canadian film producer (d. 1978)
- August 6 – Hoot Gibson, American actor, film director (d. 1962)
- August 11
- Władysław Anders, Polish general, politician (d. 1970)
- Hugh MacDiarmid, Scottish poet (d. 1978)
- August 12 – Alfred Lunt, American actor, stage director (d. 1977)
- August 15
- Louis de Broglie, French physicist, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 1987)
- Walther Nehring, German general (d. 1983)
- August 17 – Tamon Yamaguchi, Japanese admiral (d. 1942)
- August 25 – Gabriel Guérin, French World War I fighter ace (d. 1918)
- August 26 – Elizebeth Smith Friedman, American cryptographer (d. 1980)
September
- September 4 – Darius Milhaud, French composer (d. 1974)
- September 5 – Joseph Szigeti, Hungarian violinist (d. 1973)
- September 6 – Edward Victor Appleton, English physicist, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 1965)
- September 9 – Tsuru Aoki, Japanese American actress (d. 1961)
- September 10 – Arthur Compton, American physicist, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 1962)
- September 11 – Pinto Colvig, American vaudeville actor, radio actor, newspaper cartoonist, prolific movie voice actor and circus performer (original voice of Goofy) (d. 1967)
- September 12 – Alfred A. Knopf Sr., American publisher (d. 1984)
- September 20 – Patricia Collinge, Irish-American actress (d. 1974)
October
- October 2 – Ilie Crețulescu, Romanian general (d. 1971)
- October 4
- Engelbert Dollfuss, Austrian statesman, chancellor (d. 1934)
- Luis Trenker, South Tyrolean film producer, director, writer, actor, architect and alpinist (d. 1990)
- October 8 – Marina Tsvetaeva, Russian poet (d. 1941)
- October 9 – Ivo Andrić, Serbo-Croatian writer, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 1975)
- October 14 – Andrei Yeremenko, Soviet military leader, Marshal of the Soviet Union (d. 1970)
- October 17 – R. K. Shanmukham Chetty, Indian jurist, economist (d. 1953)
- October 23 – Gummo Marx, American actor, comedian (d. 1977)
- October 27 – Graciliano Ramos, Brazilian writer (d. 1953)
- October 29 – Stanisław Ostrowski, President of Poland (d. 1982)
- October 30 – Charles Atlas, Italian-American strongman, sideshow performer (d. 1972)
- October 31 – Alexander Alekhine, Russian chess champion (d. 1946)
November
- November 2 – Alice Brady, American actress (d. 1939)
- November 5 – J. B. S. Haldane, British geneticist (d. 1964)
- November 9 – Erich Auerbach, German philologist (d. 1957)
- November 12 – Guo Moruo, Chinese author, poet (d. 1978)
- November 16
- Richard Hale, American singer, actor (d. 1981)
- Tazio Nuvolari, Italian racing driver (d. 1953)
- November 20
- James Collip, Canadian biochemist (d. 1965)
- November 22 – Emma Tillman, American supercentenarian, briefly the world's oldest living person and last surviving person born in 1892 (d. 2007)
December
- December 4 – Francisco Franco, Spanish dictator (d. 1975)[9]
- December 5 – Cyril Ring, American film actor (d. 1967)
- December 6 – Osbert Sitwell, English writer (d. 1969)
- December 7 – Max Ehrlich, German actor, screenwriter and humor writer (d. 1944 in Auschwitz concentration camp)
- December 8 – Bert Hinkler, Australian aviator (d. 1933)
- December 11 – Arnold Majewski, Finnish military hero of Polish descent (d. 1942)[10]
- December 12
- Edward Almond, American general (d. 1979)
- Herman Potočnik, Slovenian rocket engineer (d. 1929)
- December 15 – J. Paul Getty, American industrialist (d. 1976)
- December 21 – Rebecca West, English author, journalist, literary critic and travel writer (d. 1983)
- December 24 – Ruth Chatterton, American actress, novelist and aviator (d. 1961)
- December 26 – Don Barclay, American actor (d. 1975)
- December 29 – Emory Parnell, American actor (d. 1979)
- December 31 – Stanley Price, American film, television actor (d. 1955)
Date unknown
- Ahmad Daouk, two-time prime minister of Lebanon (d. 1979)
- Abdallah Khalil, third Prime Minister of Sudan (d. 1970)
Deaths
January–June
- January 2 – Sir George Biddell Airy, English astronomer royal (b. 1801)
- January 7 – Tewfik Pasha, Khedive of Egypt and the Sudan (b. 1852)
- January 7 – Maria Cederschiold, Swedish deaconess (b. 1815)
- January 8 – Christopher Raymond Perry Rodgers, American admiral (b. 1819)
- January 12 – William Reeves, Irish antiquarian (b. 1815)
- January 14 – Prince Albert Victor, Duke of Clarence and Avondale, second in line for the throne of the United Kingdom (b. 1864)
- January 21 – John Couch Adams, English astronomer (b. 1819)
- January 31 – Charles Spurgeon, English preacher (b. 1834)
- February 2 – Darinka Petrovic, princess consort of Montenegro (b. 1838)
- February 5 – Emilie Flygare-Carlén, Swedish novelist (b. 1807)
- February 7 – Andrew Bryson, American admiral (b. 1822)
- February 25 – Charlotte Norberg, Swedish ballerina (b. 1824)
- February 27 – Louis Vuitton, French fashion designer (b. 1821)
- March 5 – Edmond Jurien de La Gravière, French admiral, naval historian and biographer (b. 1812)
- March 13 – Louis IV, Grand Duke of Hesse (b. 1837)
- March 16 – Samuel F. Miller, American politician (b. 1827)
- March 26 – Walt Whitman, American poet (b. 1819)
- March 28 – Emily Lucas Blackall, American author and philanthropist (b. 1832)
- April 4 – José María Castro Madriz, President of Costa Rica (b. 1818)
- April 12 – Ogarita Booth Henderson, American stage actress, daughter of John Wilkes Booth (b. 1859)
- April 17 – Alexander Mackenzie, 2nd Prime Minister of Canada (b. 1822)
- April 19 – Fr. Thomas Pelham Dale SSC, Anglo-Catholic clergyman prosecuted for Ritualist practices in the 1870s (b. 1821)
- April 21 – Emelie Tracy Y. Swett, American author (b. 1863)
- April 22 – Édouard Lalo, French composer (b. 1823)
- April 25 – William Backhouse Astor Jr., American businessman (b. 1830)
- April 26 – Sir Provo William Parry Wallis, British admiral, naval hero (b. 1791)
- May 5 – August Wilhelm von Hofmann, German chemist (b. 1818)
- May 8 – Gábor Baross, Hungarian statesman (b. 1848)
- May 22 – Alexander Campbell, Canadian politician (b. 1822)
- May 29 – Bahá'u'lláh, Persian founder of the Bahá'í Faith (b. 1817)
- May 30 – Mary H. Gray Clarke, American correspondent (b. 1835)
- June 8
- Dimitrie Brătianu, 15th prime minister of Romania (b. 1818)[11]
- Robert Ford, American assassin of Jesse James (b. 1862)
- June 9
- William Grant Stairs, Canadian explorer (b. 1863)
- Yoshitoshi, Japanese artist (b. 1839)
- June 28 – Sir Harry Atkinson, 10th Premier of New Zealand (b. 1831)
July–December
- July 18 – Rose Terry Cooke, American author (b. 1827)
- July 30 – Count Joseph Alexander Hübner, Austrian diplomat (b. 1811)
- August 4 – Ernestine Rose, Polish-born feminist (b. 1810)
- August 13 – Charles Lafontaine, Swiss mesmerist (b. 1803)
- August 23 – Deodoro da Fonseca, 1st president of Brazil (b. 1827)
- September 6 – Betty Bentley Beaumont, British merchant (b. 1828)
- September 7 – John Greenleaf Whittier, American poet, abolitionist (b. 1807)
- September 8 – Louisa Jane Hall, American literary critic (b. 1802)[12]
- September 11 – Clarissa Caldwell Lathrop, American social reformer (b. 1847)
- September 12 – John Cummings Howell, United States Navy admiral (b. 1819)
- October 2 – Ernest Renan, French philosopher, philologist, historian and writer (b. 1823)
- October 5 – Bob Dalton, American Wild Western outlaw (b. 1869)[13]
- October 6
- Alfred, Lord Tennyson, English poet laureate (b. 1809)
- Jean-Antoine Villemin, French physician (b. 1827)
- October 23
- Abdyl Frashëri, Albanian politician (b. 1839)
- Emin Pasha, Ottoman-German doctor, Governor of Equatoria (b. 1840)
- October 24 – Mir-Fatah-Agha, Persian Shiite cleric
- October 25 – Caroline Harrison, First Lady of the United States (b. 1832)
- November 15 – Thomas Neill Cream, Scottish-Canadian serial killer (b. 1850)
- December – Eudora Stone Bumstead, American poet (b. 1860)[14]
- December 1 – Mary Allen West, American superintendent of schools (b. 1837)[15]
- December 2 – Jay Gould, American financier (b. 1836)
- December 6 – Werner von Siemens, German inventor, industrialist (b. 1816)
- December 11 – Nancy Edberg, Swedish pioneer of women's swimming (b. 1832)
- December 14 – Sir Adams Archibald, Canadian lawyer and politician (b. 1814)
- December 18
- John M. Lloyd, American bricklayer and police officer (b. 1835)
- Sir Richard Owen, English paleontologist (b. 1804)
References
Wikimedia Commons has media related to 1892.
- ^ Harlan D. Unrau (1984). Ellis Island, Statue of Liberty National Monument, New York-New Jersey. U.S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service. p. 208.
- ^ a b "Basket Football Game". Springfield Republican. Springfield, Massachusetts. March 12, 1892. Retrieved June 9, 2014.
- ^ Fryde, E. B. (1996). Handbook of British chronology. Cambridge England: New York Cambridge University Press. p. 48. ISBN 9780521563505.
- ^ Igbafe, Philip A. (1970). "The fall of Benin: A Reassessment". The Journal of African History. XI (3): 385–400. doi:10.1017/S0021853700010215. JSTOR 180345. S2CID 154621156.
- ^ Carpenter, Humphrey (1979). The Inklings: C. S. Lewis, J. R. R. Tolkien, Charles Williams and Their Friends. Boston: Houghton Mifflin. p. 14. ISBN 978-0-395-27628-0.
- ^ Wallace, Sam (January 25, 2020). "The imperishable story of Julius Hirsch: the great goalscorer murdered at Auschwitz who adorns Stamford Bridge mural". The Telegraph. Archived from the original on January 12, 2022 – via www.telegraph.co.uk.
- ^ "Was wurde aus Dora?" [What became of Dora?]. Tagesschau (in German). May 29, 2023.
- ^ Redmond, Christopher (1993). A Sherlock Holmes handbook. Toronto Oxford: Simon & Pierre. p. 167. ISBN 9781554880577.
- ^ "Francisco Franco | Biography, Nickname, Beliefs, & Facts | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved May 19, 2022.
- ^ Castrén, Klaus: Majewski-suku Suomessa Archived June 24, 2021, at the Wayback Machine, GENOS - journal of the Finnish genealogy society, issue #70/1999. Accessed on 24 June 2021.
- ^ Hitchins, Keith (1994). Rumania, 1866-1947. Oxford: Clarendon Press. p. 110. ISBN 9780198221265.
- ^ Samuel Atkins Eliot (1910). Heralds of a Liberal Faith. American Unitarian Association. p. 151.
- ^ "The Dalton Brothers – Lawmen & Outlaws – Legends of America". www.legendsofamerica.com.
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- ^ Beckenham Abstainers' Union (1895). The Abstainers' Advocate, Volumes 6–11. p. 182.