1881

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Featured events in 1881
1881·Europe·Politics

Alexander II Assassinated

On a Sunday drive along a St. Petersburg canal, a bomb thrown by a young revolutionary named Rysakov wounded the tsar's Cossacks. Alexander II stepped out to help them; a second bomber, Grinevitsky, killed both of them. The Tsar Liberator died on the floor of the Winter Palace. Reaction, pogroms, and a new, harder autocracy followed.

March 13, 1881Industrial Age
1881·Africa·Religion

Mahdi's Revolt Begins

In Sudan, a Dongolawi Sufi named Muhammad Ahmad declared himself the Mahdi - the messianic figure expected by Muslims at the end of the age - and called for holy war against Egyptian and Turkish rule. Within three years his armies would hold most of Sudan; within four, Khartoum. The Mahdist state lasted until Omdurman, in 1898.

June 29, 1881Industrial Age
1881·North America·Politics

Garfield Shot

President James Garfield was shot by a disappointed office-seeker in a Washington railway station. The bullet lodged in his back and could not be found; Alexander Graham Bell tried a metal detector. Garfield lingered in agony for eleven weeks and died, probably of infection introduced by his doctors' unwashed fingers.

July 2, 1881Industrial Age
1881·Europe·Politics

First Russian Pogroms

After Alexander II's assassination, anti-Jewish riots swept through southern Russia: Jewish shops burned, synagogues desecrated, hundreds killed. The authorities did little to stop them. The pogroms began the mass Jewish exodus from the Russian Empire toward America and Palestine that would define the next forty years of Jewish history. Between 1881 and 1914 over two million Jews emigrated, transforming New York's Lower East Side and planting the seeds of Zionism.

April 27, 1881Industrial Age
1881·North America·Culture

Booker T. Washington at Tuskegee

A young African American educator opened a normal school in a rented shanty in rural Alabama with thirty students. He would build Tuskegee into a model of Black industrial education and, rightly or not, become the most powerful Black voice in America until Du Bois. The argument between the two men would shape twentieth-century civil rights.

1881Industrial Age
1881·North America·Culture

Gunfight at OK Corral

In Tombstone, Arizona, the Earp brothers and Doc Holliday exchanged about thirty seconds of gunfire with the Clanton-McLaury gang in a narrow lot behind the OK Corral. Three men died. The incident was small news at the time. Hollywood, decades later, would turn it into the defining set piece of the mythic American West.

October 26, 1881Industrial Age
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