1900: Difference between revisions

From Cvillepedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search
mNo edit summary
mNo edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Event Year|1899|1901}}
{{Event Year|1899|1901}}
In 1900, the average U.S. newborn could expect to live to 47.3 years of age. In [[2010]], they could expect more than 30 additional years of life, with a life expectancy at birth of 78.7 years.<ref>https://demography.cpc.unc.edu/2014/06/16/mortality-and-cause-of-death-1900-v-2010/, Mortality and Cause of Death, 1900 v. 2010, Posted on June 16, 2014 by Rebecca Tippett, Carolina Population Center at UNC-Chapel Hill</ref>


==Events==  
==Events==  

Revision as of 19:23, 8 June 2019

← 1899 Janus.jpg This article is about the year 1900
Please help improve this article by conforming to date guidelines and by adding citations to reliable sources.
1901 →

In 1900, the average U.S. newborn could expect to live to 47.3 years of age. In 2010, they could expect more than 30 additional years of life, with a life expectancy at birth of 78.7 years.[1]

Events

The population of the City of Charlottesville in 1900, according to that year's census, was 6,449. According to the same census, the population of Albemarle County in 1900 was 28,473.

Elections

  • May 24 – The 1900 election was for municipal officers in the city, in the county the vote was on the Convention, there being no officers. The majority in Albemarle County and Charlottesille voted for the Constitutional Convention.[2] Virginia voters approved a proposed Constitutional Convention by state referendum. (An elected body of one hundred delegates, including eleven Republican and one Independent, convened in Richmond on June 12, 1901, and debated for almost a year, until June 26, 1902).
  • November 6 – United States presidential election. Bryan carried the city (66.15%, 731 votes) and the county (67.72%, 2,411 votes). Virginia voted for the Democratic candidate, former U.S. Representative William J. Bryan over the Republican candidate, incumbent President William McKinley.

Deaths

Images

Notes

References

  1. https://demography.cpc.unc.edu/2014/06/16/mortality-and-cause-of-death-1900-v-2010/, Mortality and Cause of Death, 1900 v. 2010, Posted on June 16, 2014 by Rebecca Tippett, Carolina Population Center at UNC-Chapel Hill
  2. https://search.lib.virginia.edu/catalog/uva-lib:2077542/view#openLayer/uva-lib:2077543/2216.5/1625.5/3/1/0

External links