Year 1901

DateTypeEvent
1901-05-09

 

        On this day in 1901 Australia’s Federal Parliament met for the first time.

In the 1890’s the six self-governing colonies of Australia would meet to decide how to form a new federal government. They decided how this new government would control Australia as a whole and how this would affect the individual states. Once they had a proposal it was voted on by the Australian people who voted for this new constitution. It was then sent to the British Parliament and Queen Victoria who agreed and signed the Australian Constitution Act 1901 which came into effect on the 1st of January 1901. On this day in 1901 the newly formed Australian Parliament met for the first time at the Victorian Parliament House in Melbourne where they continued to meet until 1927. It was not until 1909 that the new capital and site for Parliament was decided which was in southern New South Wales know known as Canberra. But due to World War I the building of the new parliament building (known as “old Parliament House”) was delayed and not completed until 1927.

 

1901-12-10

In 1901 the first Nobel Prizes were awarded on the anniversary of Alfred Nobel’s death

Alfred Nobel was a Swedish chemist, engineer, and inventor who was highly successful with more than 350 inventions, including dynamite.

Explosives had been used in mining for many years which intensified as the demand for coal etc grew due to the industrial age. Initially, gunpowder had been used and although it had success in warfare it caused many problems with mining, particularly the smoke it produced which would fill the mines. In the first half of the 19th century, chemists developed Nitrocellulose, a new smokeless powder that pound-for-pound was six times more explosive than gunpowder. This was later developed for mining by Swiss chemist Christian Friedrich Schonbein and known as ‘gun cotton’. One year later in 1847 Italian chemist developed a new explosive known as nitro-glycerine which was highly volatile and incredibly dangerous and unpredictable. Despite this, it was widely used in demolition and mining with many casualties.

Nobel came from a family of engineers with backgrounds in explosives and Nobel made it his goal to make nitro-glycerine safer. He did this by combining it with an absorbent substance making a safe product known as dynamite. Nobel’s invention saved many live but Nobel also invented many other explosives such as ballistite and gelignite. While gelignite was an even safer form of dynamite explosive, which ‘sweats’ the volatile nitro-glycerine, ballistite was used specifically for warfare.

On the 12th of April 1888 Alfred’s brother, Ludvig, died and prompted a mistake by a French newspaper who printed an obituary piece for Alfred entitled “The Merchant of Death is Dead”. Alfred was distraught by the article and fearful of how he would be remembered. On the 27th of November 1895, Nobel signed a new will which stated that upon his death his fortune would be used to award people who have contributed to the "greatest benefit on mankind" in fields of chemistryphysics peace, medicine and literature.

Alfred Nobel died on the 10th of November 1896 and a foundation was set up a few months later to administer his request. The first awards were held in 1901 and were very prestigious. Swiss businessman Henri Dunant, who set up the International Committee of the Red Cross, was one of the first Nobel Peace Prize recipients. At the same time, German physicist Wilhelm Röntgen received the Nobel Prize in physics for his discovery of X-rays. Dutch chemist Jacobus Henricus van Hoff received the first prize for Chemistry while Emil Adolf von Behring (German Physiologist) received the first prize for medicine for his work on diphtheria.

Other notable laureates include William Ramsay, Pierre and Marie Curie (Marie was awarded two), J. J. Thomson, Ernest Rutherford, Albert Einstein and many more.

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