1880 |
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The New York Daily Graphic prints the first halftone newspaper photograph, a practice which became popular by the early 1900s. Before this time, magazines and newspapers depended upon drawings to illustrate their articles. |
1881 |
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Booker T. Washington becomes the first president of Tuskegee Institute in Alabama. |
1882 |
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Widespread resentment against immigrant Chinese laborers results in the Chinese Exclusion Act, suspending Chinese immigration for ten years. |
1883 |
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United States Supreme Court rules the Civil Rights Act of 1875, which prohibited discrimination in public places, to be unconstitutional. |
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The United States and Canada substitute standardized time zones for local time to make it easier to coordinate railroad schedules. |
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Brooklyn Bridge, hailed as the eighth wonder of the world, opens. |
1884 |
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Mark Twain publishes The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. |
1885 |
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Washington monument is dedicated in the nation's capitol. |
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P.T. Barnum's famous circus elephant, Jumbo, is killed in a train collision. |
1886 |
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Statue of Liberty, a gift to the United States from France, is unveiled in New York City harbor. |
1887 |
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Edward Bellamy writes a best selling utopian novel, Looking Backward, 2000-1887, about a man who wakes up in an ideal society in the year 2000, where everyone is equal politically and economically. |
1888 |
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A box camera, the first Kodak, is introduced for use by amateur photographers. |
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The first issue of National Geographic magazine includes an account of the Great Blizzard that ravaged the eastern United States. |
1889 |
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50,000 settlers swarm into Oklahoma to homestead former Indian lands. |