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{"datasets_id": 29, "wiki_id": "Q4547528", "sp": 22, "sc": 1553, "ep": 22, "ec": 2142} | 29 | Q4547528 | 22 | 1,553 | 22 | 2,142 | 115th Infantry Regiment (United States) | Second World War | was engaged in one of the war's forgotten chapters, "The Battle of Brest". The Battle for Brest was one of the fiercest battles fought during Operation Cobra, the Allied breakout of Normandy which began on 27 July 1944, during the Battle of Normandy during World War II.
Part of the Allied plan for the invasion of mainl... |
{"datasets_id": 29, "wiki_id": "Q4547528", "sp": 22, "sc": 2142, "ep": 22, "ec": 2769} | 29 | Q4547528 | 22 | 2,142 | 22 | 2,769 | 115th Infantry Regiment (United States) | Second World War | 1944 would need 26,000 tons of supplies each day). The main port the Allied forces hoped to seize and put into their service was Brest, in northwestern France.
Brest also served as a major German U-Boat base from 18 June 1940 until its surrender to U.S. forces during the Brittany Campaign.
Officers from the 115th Regim... |
{"datasets_id": 29, "wiki_id": "Q4547528", "sp": 22, "sc": 2769, "ep": 22, "ec": 3446} | 29 | Q4547528 | 22 | 2,769 | 22 | 3,446 | 115th Infantry Regiment (United States) | Second World War | Millholland; Major William Bratton.
Generalmajor Hans von der Mosel, Konteradmiral Otto Kähler and Generalmajor Hans Kroh surrender at Brest.
The 115th Infantry then started participation in the Rhineland Campaign on 15 September 1944, whereupon the 115th Infantry crossed from France to Belgium and the Netherlands both... |
{"datasets_id": 29, "wiki_id": "Q4547528", "sp": 22, "sc": 3446, "ep": 22, "ec": 4112} | 29 | Q4547528 | 22 | 3,446 | 22 | 4,112 | 115th Infantry Regiment (United States) | Second World War | Hostilities, which took place on 8 May 1945, but the campaign was not declared terminated until 11 May 1945.
The 115th Infantry was on occupation duty at Bremen, Germany on VE Day, and this continued through 1946. The regiment returned to the New York Port of Embarkation on 16 January 1946, and mustered out at Camp Kil... |
{"datasets_id": 29, "wiki_id": "Q4547528", "sp": 22, "sc": 4112, "ep": 26, "ec": 378} | 29 | Q4547528 | 22 | 4,112 | 26 | 378 | 115th Infantry Regiment (United States) | Second World War & Post-war to present | colors of the French Croix du Guerre with palms embroidered "St. Laurent-Sur-Mer," and, for the First Battalion, a streamer in the colors of the French Croix du Guerre with Silver Star embroidered "St. Lo." Post-war to present After the war the 29th Infantry Division came home; however, unlike the end of World War I, t... |
{"datasets_id": 29, "wiki_id": "Q4547528", "sp": 26, "sc": 378, "ep": 26, "ec": 1034} | 29 | Q4547528 | 26 | 378 | 26 | 1,034 | 115th Infantry Regiment (United States) | Post-war to present | other Maryland units were organized into the 58th Infantry Brigade, whose units were located entirely in Maryland.
In 1984 requirements changed again, prompting the reactivation of the 29th Infantry Division as a new, streamlined "Light" Infantry Division, ready to meet the demands of an ever-changing national defense,... |
{"datasets_id": 29, "wiki_id": "Q4547528", "sp": 26, "sc": 1034, "ep": 26, "ec": 1682} | 29 | Q4547528 | 26 | 1,034 | 26 | 1,682 | 115th Infantry Regiment (United States) | Post-war to present | Infantry.
In October 2001, in the aftermath of terrorist attacks on the continental United States, the battalions of the 115th were called to active federal service as part of Operation Noble Eagle. The 115th carried out critical security duties, protecting US federal installations from threats to the national security... |
{"datasets_id": 29, "wiki_id": "Q4547528", "sp": 26, "sc": 1682, "ep": 26, "ec": 2255} | 29 | Q4547528 | 26 | 1,682 | 26 | 2,255 | 115th Infantry Regiment (United States) | Post-war to present | called Saba Al boor north of Baghdad that had a population of between 50,000 and 65,000. Saba Al Boor's population was half Sunni and Shia. B Co 1/115th was the main effort for Task Force 2/70th Armor which is an active duty unit from Ft. Riley, Kansas. B Co conducted raids, counter IED ambushes, air assaults, cordon ... |
{"datasets_id": 29, "wiki_id": "Q4547528", "sp": 26, "sc": 2255, "ep": 26, "ec": 2845} | 29 | Q4547528 | 26 | 2,255 | 26 | 2,845 | 115th Infantry Regiment (United States) | Post-war to present | of Rawa, Hit, and al Taqaddum. During B Co's time conducting convoy security operations they were able to reduce the rate of losses from 11% of escorted equipment and supplies that was suffered by the unit previously conducting the mission to less than 2%.
In the beginning of 2006, the elements of the 115th were reorg... |
{"datasets_id": 29, "wiki_id": "Q4547528", "sp": 26, "sc": 2845, "ep": 26, "ec": 3050} | 29 | Q4547528 | 26 | 2,845 | 26 | 3,050 | 115th Infantry Regiment (United States) | Post-war to present | Regiment (Fifth Maryland).
Since 2003 the heritage of the regiment lives on along Route 15 through Maryland, where the Maryland Senate dedicated it as the 115th Infantry Regiment Memorial Highway. |
{"datasets_id": 30, "wiki_id": "Q2075023", "sp": 2, "sc": 0, "ep": 6, "ec": 551} | 30 | Q2075023 | 2 | 0 | 6 | 551 | 13 (Doors album) | Background | 13 (Doors album) Background 13 was a project instigated by Elektra Records, who wanted product from the band for the Christmas season, to which the band reluctantly agreed. Morrison even agreed to shave off his beard for the album cover's photo shoot, but the label opted for a younger photo of the singer, which they ha... |
{"datasets_id": 30, "wiki_id": "Q2075023", "sp": 6, "sc": 551, "ep": 10, "ec": 244} | 30 | Q2075023 | 6 | 551 | 10 | 244 | 13 (Doors album) | Background & Critical reception | larger than those of guitarist Robby Krieger, keyboardist Ray Manzarek, and drummer John Densmore, and Sugerman noted that, "Although Ray, Robby, and John had become accustomed to the attention directed towards their lead singer, it upset Jim." The album's back cover features the band posing with what is believed to be... |
{"datasets_id": 30, "wiki_id": "Q2075023", "sp": 10, "sc": 244, "ep": 10, "ec": 583} | 30 | Q2075023 | 10 | 244 | 10 | 583 | 13 (Doors album) | Critical reception | that "no magnum opuses" were included in the collection. "No 'The End', no 'When the Music's Over', no 'Soft Parade'... [it] would have been decidedly uncommercial to have them included here... Of course 'Five to One' isn't here; funny thing, outside of 'Unknown Soldier' none of the Doors' more controversial subject ma... |
{"datasets_id": 31, "wiki_id": "Q3597402", "sp": 2, "sc": 0, "ep": 6, "ec": 105} | 31 | Q3597402 | 2 | 0 | 6 | 105 | 13 Washington Square | Preservation | 13 Washington Square Preservation A copy of 13 Washington Square is housed at UCLA Film and Television Archive and the Library of Congress. |
{"datasets_id": 32, "wiki_id": "Q4550073", "sp": 2, "sc": 0, "ep": 6, "ec": 560} | 32 | Q4550073 | 2 | 0 | 6 | 560 | 14th Punjab Regiment | Early history | 14th Punjab Regiment Early history The 14th Punjab Regiment was formed in 1922 by amalgamation of the 19th, 20th, 21st, 22nd and 24th Punjabis, and the 40th Pathans. All six battalions were formed during the upheaval of the Indian Mutiny in 1857-58. The first five were raised by John Lawrence in the Punjab, while the 4... |
{"datasets_id": 32, "wiki_id": "Q4550073", "sp": 6, "sc": 560, "ep": 10, "ec": 123} | 32 | Q4550073 | 6 | 560 | 10 | 123 | 14th Punjab Regiment | Early history & Battle honours | India and took part in the Second Afghan War of 1878-80. The 20th Punjabis served in Egypt during the Anglo-Egyptian War of 1882. After the war, they were designated as the Duke of Cambridge's Own, when the duke became their honorary colonel. In 1900, they returned to China along with the 24th Punjabis to suppress the ... |
{"datasets_id": 32, "wiki_id": "Q4550073", "sp": 10, "sc": 123, "ep": 10, "ec": 833} | 32 | Q4550073 | 10 | 123 | 10 | 833 | 14th Punjab Regiment | Battle honours | Egypt 1882, Malakand, Punjab Frontier, Pekin 1900, China 1900,
Ypres 1915, St Julien, Aubers, France and Flanders 1915, Macedonia 1918, Suez Canal, Egypt 1915, Megiddo, Sharon, Nablus, Palestine 1918, Basra, Shaiba, Kut al Amara 1915, Ctesiphon, Defence of Kut al Amara, Kut al Amara 1917, Baghdad, Khan Baghdadi, Mesop... |
{"datasets_id": 32, "wiki_id": "Q4550073", "sp": 10, "sc": 833, "ep": 10, "ec": 1073} | 32 | Q4550073 | 10 | 833 | 10 | 1,073 | 14th Punjab Regiment | Battle honours | Imphal, Shenam Pass, Nungshigum, Bishenpur, Kanglatongbi, Kohima, Jessami, Naga Village, Mao Songsang, Monywa 1945, Kyaukse 1945, Nyaungu Bridgehead, Letse, Magwe, Rangoon Road, Pegu 1945, Sittang 1945, Burma 1942-45,
Kashmir 1948. |
{"datasets_id": 33, "wiki_id": "Q3597633", "sp": 2, "sc": 0, "ep": 6, "ec": 625} | 33 | Q3597633 | 2 | 0 | 6 | 625 | 1633 (novel) | Premise | 1633 (novel) Premise The series begins in the Modern era on May 31, 2000, during a small town wedding when the small West Virginia town of Grantville trades places in both time and geographic location with a nearly unpopulated countryside region within the Holy Roman Empire during the convulsions of the Thirty Years' W... |
{"datasets_id": 33, "wiki_id": "Q3597633", "sp": 6, "sc": 625, "ep": 6, "ec": 1298} | 33 | Q3597633 | 6 | 625 | 6 | 1,298 | 1633 (novel) | Premise | for those displaced as a result of the constant fighting, to branch out and grow as quickly as possible—to launch the American Revolution "150 years early", and found a "New United States". The Grantvillers undertake to defend south central Thuringia with the aid of a cavalry detachment from king Gustavus Adolphus of S... |
{"datasets_id": 33, "wiki_id": "Q3597633", "sp": 6, "sc": 1298, "ep": 10, "ec": 350} | 33 | Q3597633 | 6 | 1,298 | 10 | 350 | 1633 (novel) | Premise & Plot summary | and Grantville itself is attacked, teaching Stearns that he needs a protector to "buy time", even as the "up-timers" have determined that to retain as much technology as possible they need to "gear down" to a late nineteenth-century technology base while their modern equipment is still operable. Plot summary 1633 conti... |
{"datasets_id": 33, "wiki_id": "Q3597633", "sp": 10, "sc": 350, "ep": 10, "ec": 951} | 33 | Q3597633 | 10 | 350 | 10 | 951 | 1633 (novel) | Plot summary | foreign policy and forms an alliance aimed squarely at the NUS and Gustavus called the League of Ostend. Mike Stearns sends emissaries looking for allies, some of whom end up behind enemy lines as they already belong to the secret League of Ostend, which announces its presence in the Battle of Four Fleets. The Dutch Re... |
{"datasets_id": 33, "wiki_id": "Q3597633", "sp": 10, "sc": 951, "ep": 14, "ec": 198} | 33 | Q3597633 | 10 | 951 | 14 | 198 | 1633 (novel) | Plot summary & A mix of methodology | the future brought spies and emissaries, and a fair number of encyclopedias and history textbooks found their way into European courts. One theme of the series is of down-timer leaders trying to change, hasten or head off their histories while the acts of ordinary citizens going about their day-to-day affairs and of th... |
{"datasets_id": 33, "wiki_id": "Q3597633", "sp": 14, "sc": 198, "ep": 14, "ec": 817} | 33 | Q3597633 | 14 | 198 | 14 | 817 | 1633 (novel) | A mix of methodology | view short stories which build deep background and form a backdrop for the overarching story lines. Flint is on record of stating "history is messy" but is not the stuff of the linear narrative cleaned up, categorized and written into a history book—and that he wanted to capture some sense of how individual actions on ... |
{"datasets_id": 33, "wiki_id": "Q3597633", "sp": 14, "sc": 817, "ep": 14, "ec": 1380} | 33 | Q3597633 | 14 | 817 | 14 | 1,380 | 1633 (novel) | A mix of methodology | and development which play again later in the longer works. Much of writing in Ring of Fire (ROF) antedated this work, and events in this novel were correlated with the stories in that which in many cases, cover events and personalities referenced in this at the least, moreover, there is not a single story in the antho... |
{"datasets_id": 33, "wiki_id": "Q3597633", "sp": 14, "sc": 1380, "ep": 22, "ec": 561} | 33 | Q3597633 | 14 | 1,380 | 22 | 561 | 1633 (novel) | A mix of methodology & Characters in "1633" & Reception | Baltic War. Characters in "1633" List of 1632 characters (fictional) Reception Publishers Weekly gives a positive review and praised the authors, Flint "for at showing how the new converts can make even the 'old Americans' uncomfortable in their zeal to achieve the blessings of 'life, liberty, and the pursuit of happin... |
{"datasets_id": 33, "wiki_id": "Q3597633", "sp": 22, "sc": 561, "ep": 22, "ec": 1127} | 33 | Q3597633 | 22 | 561 | 22 | 1,127 | 1633 (novel) | Reception | wrote that the book is "cleanly written, with an enormous cast of interesting characters...with constant action and the hint of danger."
Library Journal gave a positive review saying that the authors "take historic speculation to a new level in a tale that combines accurate historical research with bold leaps of the im... |
{"datasets_id": 34, "wiki_id": "Q144607", "sp": 2, "sc": 0, "ep": 10, "ec": 52} | 34 | Q144607 | 2 | 0 | 10 | 52 | 1842 Hynek | Orbit and classification & Physical characteristics | 1842 Hynek Orbit and classification Hynek is member of the Flora family. It orbits the Sun in the inner main-belt at a distance of 1.9–2.7 AU once every 3 years and 5 months (1,246 days). Its orbit has an eccentricity of 0.18 and an inclination of 5° with respect to the ecliptic.
First identified as 1928 DE at Heidelbe... |
{"datasets_id": 34, "wiki_id": "Q144607", "sp": 10, "sc": 52, "ep": 18, "ec": 343} | 34 | Q144607 | 10 | 52 | 18 | 343 | 1842 Hynek | Physical characteristics & Rotation period & Diameter and albedo | as a common S-type asteroid. Rotation period In July 2007, the so-far best rated rotational lightcurve of Hynek was obtained from photometric observations by French amateur astronomer Pierre Antonini. Lightcurve analysis gave a well-defined rotation period of 3.9410 hours with a brightness variation of 0.17 magnitude (... |
{"datasets_id": 34, "wiki_id": "Q144607", "sp": 18, "sc": 343, "ep": 22, "ec": 215} | 34 | Q144607 | 18 | 343 | 22 | 215 | 1842 Hynek | Diameter and albedo & Naming | calculates a diameter of 9.80 kilometers with an absolute magnitude of 12.41. Naming This minor planet was named after Hynek Kohoutek, the father of the discoverer, celebrating his 70th birthday. The official naming citation was published by the Minor Planet Center on 20 December 1974 (M.P.C. 3757). |
{"datasets_id": 35, "wiki_id": "Q16934623", "sp": 2, "sc": 0, "ep": 8, "ec": 106} | 35 | Q16934623 | 2 | 0 | 8 | 106 | 1863 Queensland colonial election | Key dates | 1863 Queensland colonial election Elections were held in the Australian state of Queensland between 30 May 1863 and 27 June 1863 to elect the members of the state's Legislative Assembly. Key dates Due to problems of distance and communications, it was not possible to hold the elections on a single day. |
{"datasets_id": 36, "wiki_id": "Q60526758", "sp": 2, "sc": 0, "ep": 4, "ec": 318} | 36 | Q60526758 | 2 | 0 | 4 | 318 | 1877 City of Wellington by-election | 1877 City of Wellington by-election The 1877 City of Wellington by-election was a by-election held in the multi-member City of Wellington electorate during the 6th New Zealand Parliament, on 27 March 1877.
The by-election was caused by the resignation of one of the two incumbent MPs, Edward Pearce, and led to his repla... | |
{"datasets_id": 37, "wiki_id": "Q2450933", "sp": 2, "sc": 0, "ep": 6, "ec": 668} | 37 | Q2450933 | 2 | 0 | 6 | 668 | 1888 Dutch general election | Background | 1888 Dutch general election Background This was the first election held after the constitutional revision of 1887, achieved by Minister of the Interior Jan Heemskerk, which had several effects on the parliamentary system. Firstly, this revision fixed the number of seats in the House of Representatives at 100. Secondly,... |
{"datasets_id": 37, "wiki_id": "Q2450933", "sp": 6, "sc": 668, "ep": 6, "ec": 1334} | 37 | Q2450933 | 6 | 668 | 6 | 1,334 | 1888 Dutch general election | Background | change greatly extended suffrage and allowed for gradual further extension by law.
The election was won by the confessional parties, leading to the first Coalition government, combining Anti-Revolutionaries and Catholics, led by Æneas, Baron Mackay, thus heralding a period of Antithesis as championed by Abraham Kuyper,... |
{"datasets_id": 38, "wiki_id": "Q699168", "sp": 2, "sc": 0, "ep": 10, "ec": 227} | 38 | Q699168 | 2 | 0 | 10 | 227 | 1888 United States presidential election | Candidates gallery & United Labor Party nomination | 1888 United States presidential election Candidates gallery The 5th Prohibition Party National Convention assembled in Tomlinson Hall in Indianapolis, Indiana. There were 1,029 delegates from all but three states.
Clinton B. Fisk was nominated for president unanimously. John A. Brooks was nominated for vice-president.
... |
{"datasets_id": 38, "wiki_id": "Q699168", "sp": 10, "sc": 227, "ep": 14, "ec": 273} | 38 | Q699168 | 10 | 227 | 14 | 273 | 1888 United States presidential election | United Labor Party nomination & Greenback Party | at the same time and city as the Union Labor Party. An effort to run a joint ticket failed.
The United Labor Party convention nominated Robert H. Cowdrey for president on the first ballot. W.H.T. Wakefield of Kansas was nominated for vice-president over Victor H. Wilder from New York by a margin of 50–12. Greenback Par... |
{"datasets_id": 38, "wiki_id": "Q699168", "sp": 14, "sc": 273, "ep": 14, "ec": 885} | 38 | Q699168 | 14 | 273 | 14 | 885 | 1888 United States presidential election | Greenback Party | seats by endorsing the Democratic nominee. In the election of 1886, only two dozen Greenback candidates ran for the House, apart from another six who ran on fusion tickets. Again, Weaver was the party's only victor. Much of the Greenback news in early 1888 took place in Michigan, where the party remained active.
In ear... |
{"datasets_id": 38, "wiki_id": "Q699168", "sp": 14, "sc": 885, "ep": 18, "ec": 272} | 38 | Q699168 | 14 | 885 | 18 | 272 | 1888 United States presidential election | Greenback Party & American Party nomination | national committee, called a second session of the national convention. The second session of the national convention met in Cincinnati on September 12, 1888. Only seven delegates attended. Chairman Jones issued an address criticizing the two major parties, and the delegates made no nominations.
With the failure of the... |
{"datasets_id": 38, "wiki_id": "Q699168", "sp": 18, "sc": 272, "ep": 22, "ec": 99} | 38 | Q699168 | 18 | 272 | 22 | 99 | 1888 United States presidential election | American Party nomination & Equal Rights Party nomination | 65 from New York and 15 from California. Delegates from the other states bolted the convention when it appeared that New York and California intended to vote together on all matters and control the convention. By the time the presidential balloting began, there were only 64 delegates present.
The convention nominated J... |
{"datasets_id": 38, "wiki_id": "Q699168", "sp": 22, "sc": 99, "ep": 30, "ec": 35} | 38 | Q699168 | 22 | 99 | 30 | 35 | 1888 United States presidential election | Equal Rights Party nomination & Industrial Reform Party nomination & Issues | mail-in ballots were counted. The delegates cast 310 of their 350 ballots for the following ticket: Belva A. Lockwood for president and Alfred H. Love for vice-president.
Love was later replaced with Charles S. Wells NY. Industrial Reform Party nomination The Industrial Reform Party National Convention assembled in Gra... |
{"datasets_id": 38, "wiki_id": "Q699168", "sp": 30, "sc": 35, "ep": 30, "ec": 703} | 38 | Q699168 | 30 | 35 | 30 | 703 | 1888 United States presidential election | Issues | campaign when he proposed a dramatic reduction in tariffs in his annual message to Congress in December 1887. Cleveland contended that the tariff was unnecessarily high and that unnecessary taxation was unjust taxation. The Republicans responded that the high tariff would protect American industry from foreign competit... |
{"datasets_id": 38, "wiki_id": "Q699168", "sp": 30, "sc": 703, "ep": 30, "ec": 1374} | 38 | Q699168 | 30 | 703 | 30 | 1,374 | 1888 United States presidential election | Issues | areas (except woolens), and could not be undersold by the less efficient Europeans. Nevertheless, the tariff issue motivated both sides to a remarkable extent.
Besides the obvious economic dimensions, the tariff argument also possessed an ethnic dimension. At the time, the policy of free trade was most strongly promote... |
{"datasets_id": 38, "wiki_id": "Q699168", "sp": 30, "sc": 1374, "ep": 34, "ec": 236} | 38 | Q699168 | 30 | 1,374 | 34 | 236 | 1888 United States presidential election | Issues & Blocks of Five | fishing rights dispute.
Harrison was well-funded by party activists and mounted an energetic campaign by the standards of the day, giving many speeches from his front porch in Indianapolis that were covered by the newspapers. Cleveland adhered to the tradition of presidential candidates not campaigning, and forbade his... |
{"datasets_id": 38, "wiki_id": "Q699168", "sp": 34, "sc": 236, "ep": 34, "ec": 870} | 38 | Q699168 | 34 | 236 | 34 | 870 | 1888 United States presidential election | Blocks of Five | most intense in decades, with Indiana dead even. Although the National Committee had no business meddling in state politics, Dudley wrote a circular letter to Indiana's county chairmen, telling them to "divide the floaters into Blocks of Five, and put a trusted man with the necessary funds in charge of these five, and ... |
{"datasets_id": 38, "wiki_id": "Q699168", "sp": 34, "sc": 870, "ep": 38, "ec": 153} | 38 | Q699168 | 34 | 870 | 38 | 153 | 1888 United States presidential election | Blocks of Five & Murchison letter | believed his denials. A few thousand "floaters" did exist in Indiana—men who would sell their vote for $2. They always divided 50-50 (or perhaps, $5,000-$5,000) and had no visible impact on the vote. The attack on "blocks of five" with the suggestion that pious General Harrison was trying to buy the election did enlive... |
{"datasets_id": 38, "wiki_id": "Q699168", "sp": 38, "sc": 153, "ep": 38, "ec": 806} | 38 | Q699168 | 38 | 153 | 38 | 806 | 1888 United States presidential election | Murchison letter | name of "Charles F. Murchison," describing himself as a former Englishman who was now a California citizen and asked how he should vote in the upcoming presidential election. Sir Lionel wrote back and in the "Murchison letter" indiscreetly suggested that Cleveland was probably the best man from the British point of vie... |
{"datasets_id": 38, "wiki_id": "Q699168", "sp": 38, "sc": 806, "ep": 42, "ec": 286} | 38 | Q699168 | 38 | 806 | 42 | 286 | 1888 United States presidential election | Murchison letter & In popular culture | ambassador. In popular culture In 1968 the Michael P. Antoine Company produced the Walt Disney Company musical film The One and Only, Genuine, Original Family Band which centers around the election of 1888 and the annexing and subdividing of the Dakota Territory into states (which was a major issue of the election). |
{"datasets_id": 39, "wiki_id": "Q19545512", "sp": 2, "sc": 0, "ep": 4, "ec": 601} | 39 | Q19545512 | 2 | 0 | 4 | 601 | 1904 Italian general strike | 1904 Italian general strike In September 1904, the first general strike in Italy took place.
The strike was called by the Chambers of Labor in several cities in response to several killings of striking workers, culminating in the shooting of a miner in Buggerru, Sardinia. Participation was strongest in the north and th... | |
{"datasets_id": 39, "wiki_id": "Q19545512", "sp": 4, "sc": 601, "ep": 4, "ec": 615} | 39 | Q19545512 | 4 | 601 | 4 | 615 | 1904 Italian general strike | for Giolitti. | |
{"datasets_id": 40, "wiki_id": "Q1050434", "sp": 2, "sc": 0, "ep": 8, "ec": 70} | 40 | Q1050434 | 2 | 0 | 8 | 70 | 1907–08 Nemzeti Bajnokság I | Overview | 1907–08 Nemzeti Bajnokság I Statistics of Nemzeti Bajnokság I in the 1907/1908 season. Overview It was contested by 9 teams, and MTK Hungária FC won the championship. |
{"datasets_id": 41, "wiki_id": "Q5090244", "sp": 2, "sc": 0, "ep": 4, "ec": 211} | 41 | Q5090244 | 2 | 0 | 4 | 211 | 1911 Cheltenham by-election | 1911 Cheltenham by-election The Cheltenham by-election was a Parliamentary by-election. It returned one Member of Parliament to the House of Commons of the Parliament of the United Kingdom, elected by the first past the post voting system. | |
{"datasets_id": 42, "wiki_id": "Q4560385", "sp": 2, "sc": 0, "ep": 10, "ec": 234} | 42 | Q4560385 | 2 | 0 | 10 | 234 | 1917 Stanley Cup Finals | Paths to the Finals & Seattle Metropolitans 1917 Stanley Cup champions | 1917 Stanley Cup Finals Paths to the Finals Seattle won the PCHA title after finishing the 1916–17 regular season in first place with a 16–8 record. Meanwhile, Montreal advanced to the final series after narrowly defeating the Ottawa Senators, 7–6, in a two-game total-goals playoff series to end the 1916–17 NHA season.... |
{"datasets_id": 43, "wiki_id": "Q4561304", "sp": 2, "sc": 0, "ep": 6, "ec": 613} | 43 | Q4561304 | 2 | 0 | 6 | 613 | 1922–23 Northern Rugby Football League season | Season summary | 1922–23 Northern Rugby Football League season Season summary Pre-season the Northern Rugby Football Union decided to drop the 'Union' in favour of 'League' and the first annual conference of the League is held at Keswick.
Hull Kingston Rovers moved from their Craven Street ground to Craven Park at the eastern end of Ho... |
{"datasets_id": 43, "wiki_id": "Q4561304", "sp": 6, "sc": 613, "ep": 6, "ec": 961} | 43 | Q4561304 | 6 | 613 | 6 | 961 | 1922–23 Northern Rugby Football League season | Season summary | and were the first in that position not to contend a play-off final.
The Challenge Cup was won by Leeds when they defeated Hull F.C. 28-3 in the final.
Wigan won the Lancashire League, and Hull F.C. won the Yorkshire League. Wigan beat Leigh 20–2 to win the Lancashire Cup, and York beat Batley 5–0 to win the Yorkshire ... |
{"datasets_id": 44, "wiki_id": "Q4562083", "sp": 2, "sc": 0, "ep": 4, "ec": 145} | 44 | Q4562083 | 2 | 0 | 4 | 145 | 1927 National Challenge Cup | 1927 National Challenge Cup The 1927 National Challenge Cup was the annual open cup held by the United States Football Association now known as the Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup. | |
{"datasets_id": 45, "wiki_id": "Q10685534", "sp": 2, "sc": 0, "ep": 6, "ec": 277} | 45 | Q10685534 | 2 | 0 | 6 | 277 | 1932–33 Svenska mästerskapet (men's handball) | Champions | 1932–33 Svenska mästerskapet (men's handball) Champions International footballer Sven Rydell was a member of the winning team. The following players for Redbergslids IK received a winner's medal: K.G Andersson, "Daggy" Karlsson, Bengt Åberg, Torsten Andersson, Ingvald Carlsson, Tage Sjöberg, Sven Rydell, Sven Åblad and... |
{"datasets_id": 46, "wiki_id": "Q4502042", "sp": 2, "sc": 0, "ep": 6, "ec": 640} | 46 | Q4502042 | 2 | 0 | 6 | 640 | 1932 armed uprising in Mongolia | Background | 1932 armed uprising in Mongolia Background In late 1928, the government of the Mongolian People's Republic and the Mongolian People's Revolutionary Party had begun to implement the 'left policy' aimed at the quick introduction of socialism. Private trade and private transport were forbidden, at the same time Mongolia's... |
{"datasets_id": 46, "wiki_id": "Q4502042", "sp": 6, "sc": 640, "ep": 10, "ec": 216} | 46 | Q4502042 | 6 | 640 | 10 | 216 | 1932 armed uprising in Mongolia | Background & Outline of events | the newly founded collectives (Mongolian: khamtral) led to the loss of 7 million heads of livestock, or one third of the 1929 level. All this resulted not only in a steady stream across the border to Inner Mongolia and Xinjiang, but also to local uprisings—for example, the uprising at Tögsbuyant monastery of Uvs aimag,... |
{"datasets_id": 46, "wiki_id": "Q4502042", "sp": 10, "sc": 216, "ep": 10, "ec": 916} | 46 | Q4502042 | 10 | 216 | 10 | 916 | 1932 armed uprising in Mongolia | Outline of events | aimag, and spread quickly to neighbouring monasteries. The insurgents founded a high command under the name ‘’Ochirbatyn yaam’’ (Mongolian: Ochirbat’s ministry), and began arming the local lamas and lay people, burning down collective and sum centres, and killing opponents, especially targeting officials, party and you... |
{"datasets_id": 46, "wiki_id": "Q4502042", "sp": 10, "sc": 916, "ep": 10, "ec": 1560} | 46 | Q4502042 | 10 | 916 | 10 | 1,560 | 1932 armed uprising in Mongolia | Outline of events | on April 15/16th. Main powers of the rebels were defeated to July, and the government started to withdraw troops. In August, however, the rebellion resumed starting again from the south of Khövsgöl and the north of Arkhangai aimags. It is supposed that the Mongolian rebels have connection with similar uprising in Tuva.... |
{"datasets_id": 46, "wiki_id": "Q4502042", "sp": 10, "sc": 1560, "ep": 14, "ec": 186} | 46 | Q4502042 | 10 | 1,560 | 14 | 186 | 1932 armed uprising in Mongolia | Outline of events & Results | 95% of collective farms. The troops of rebels numbered from dozens to thousands men. They were armed mainly with flintlocks, rarely old rifles. Governmental troops were smaller, to few hundred men. They were armed much better. They had modern rifles, machine guns, grenades, mountain artillery, armored cars and planes... |
{"datasets_id": 46, "wiki_id": "Q4502042", "sp": 14, "sc": 186, "ep": 18, "ec": 40} | 46 | Q4502042 | 14 | 186 | 18 | 40 | 1932 armed uprising in Mongolia | Results & Aftermath | people are said to have participated on the side of the insurgents, and they are said to have killed more than 700 people between April and July 1932. According to a short-time chairman of the Defense Council, D. Ölziibat, 500 insurgents were killed in 16 battles, and 615 insurgents were condemned to death by drumhead ... |
{"datasets_id": 46, "wiki_id": "Q4502042", "sp": 18, "sc": 40, "ep": 18, "ec": 549} | 46 | Q4502042 | 18 | 40 | 18 | 549 | 1932 armed uprising in Mongolia | Aftermath | the MPRP by the "left course", the Bolsheviks' leadership ordered to stop the "left" reforms in Mongolia and to transfer to the "new course". As a result, anti-religious policies were eased after June 1932, and collectivization was called off. However, the Mongolian nobility had been destroyed, and the political modera... |
{"datasets_id": 47, "wiki_id": "Q4563373", "sp": 2, "sc": 0, "ep": 10, "ec": 465} | 47 | Q4563373 | 2 | 0 | 10 | 465 | 1934 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final | Route to the final & Summary | 1934 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final Route to the final Dublin easily defeated Kerry in the All-Ireland semi-final, held in 1934 in Tralee. Summary A crowd of 36,143 attended the match. Galway had a two-point win over Dublin, with goals by the Kerry-born Michael Ferriter (2) and Martin Kelly.
The winning... |
{"datasets_id": 47, "wiki_id": "Q4563373", "sp": 10, "sc": 465, "ep": 14, "ec": 540} | 47 | Q4563373 | 10 | 465 | 14 | 540 | 1934 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final | Summary & Post-match | first time the Sam Maguire Cup went west since it was first presented to the winning team in 1928. Post-match The winning team went to New York to play some games for the Americans there.
A photograph exists showing the 1934 All-Ireland football title winning team aboard the ship on their way across the Atlantic to Ame... |
{"datasets_id": 47, "wiki_id": "Q4563373", "sp": 14, "sc": 540, "ep": 14, "ec": 682} | 47 | Q4563373 | 14 | 540 | 14 | 682 | 1934 All-Ireland Senior Football Championship Final | Post-match | Mitchell, Hugo Carey, Pat McDonnell, Tommy Hughes, trainer Tom Molloy, Fr Eugene McLoughlin, and various others whose identities are unknown. |
{"datasets_id": 48, "wiki_id": "Q4563888", "sp": 2, "sc": 0, "ep": 8, "ec": 11} | 48 | Q4563888 | 2 | 0 | 8 | 11 | 1936 VFL season | Premiership season & Grand final | 1936 VFL season Premiership season In 1936, the VFL competition consisted of twelve teams of 18 on-the-field players each, plus one substitute player, known as the 19th man. A player could be substituted for any reason; however, once substituted, a player could not return to the field of play under any circumstances.
T... |
{"datasets_id": 48, "wiki_id": "Q4563888", "sp": 10, "sc": 0, "ep": 10, "ec": 163} | 48 | Q4563888 | 10 | 0 | 10 | 163 | 1936 VFL season | Grand final | Collingwood defeated South Melbourne 11.23 (89) to 10.18 (78), in front of a crowd of 74,091 people. (For an explanation of scoring see Australian rules football). |
{"datasets_id": 49, "wiki_id": "Q146179", "sp": 2, "sc": 0, "ep": 10, "ec": 14} | 49 | Q146179 | 2 | 0 | 10 | 14 | 1938 Lausanna | Orbit and classification & Rotation period | 1938 Lausanna Orbit and classification Lausanna is a S-type asteroid and member of the Flora family, one of the largest collisional populations of stony asteroids in the main-belt. It orbits the Sun in the inner main-belt at a distance of 1.9–2.6 AU once every 3 years and 4 months (1,222 days). Its orbit has an eccentr... |
{"datasets_id": 49, "wiki_id": "Q146179", "sp": 10, "sc": 14, "ep": 14, "ec": 250} | 49 | Q146179 | 10 | 14 | 14 | 250 | 1938 Lausanna | Rotation period & Diameter and albedo | two rotational lightcurves of Lausanna were obtained from photometric observations by American astronomer Brian Skiff and by Johan Warell at Lindby Observatory (K60) in Sweden. Lightcurve analysis gave an identical rotation period of 2.748 hours with a brightness amplitude of 0.13 and 0.12 magnitude, respectively (U=3-... |
{"datasets_id": 49, "wiki_id": "Q146179", "sp": 14, "sc": 250, "ep": 18, "ec": 413} | 49 | Q146179 | 14 | 250 | 18 | 413 | 1938 Lausanna | Diameter and albedo & Naming | The Collaborative Asteroid Lightcurve Link assumes an albedo of 0.24 – derived from 8 Flora, the largest member and namesake of its family – and calculates a diameter of 7.82 kilometers based on an absolute magnitude of 12.7. Naming This minor planet was named for the Swiss city of Lausanne, located in the French-speak... |
{"datasets_id": 49, "wiki_id": "Q146179", "sp": 18, "sc": 413, "ep": 18, "ec": 571} | 49 | Q146179 | 18 | 413 | 18 | 571 | 1938 Lausanna | Naming | sequentially numbered, thematically named minor planets. The official naming citation was published by the Minor Planet Center on 1 April 1978 (M.P.C. 4358). |
{"datasets_id": 50, "wiki_id": "Q3693012", "sp": 2, "sc": 0, "ep": 14, "ec": 104} | 50 | Q3693012 | 2 | 0 | 14 | 104 | 1940 Norwegian Football Cup | Third round & Fourth round & Quarter-finals | 1940 Norwegian Football Cup Third round Rollon - Aalesund 0-2
Brann - Årstad 1-0
Djerv - Drafn 2-3
Fredrikstad - Nydalen 8-1
Freidig - Kvik (Trondheim) 3-7
Frigg - Lisleby 7-1
Gimsøy - Mjøndalen 1-2
Gjøvik/Lyn - Gjøa 3-2
Start - Grane (Arendal) 1-0
Moss - Skiens-Grane 3-1
Kvik (Halden) - Lyn 1-6
Lillestrøm - Pors 2-0
N... |
{"datasets_id": 50, "wiki_id": "Q3693012", "sp": 14, "sc": 104, "ep": 18, "ec": 52} | 50 | Q3693012 | 14 | 104 | 18 | 52 | 1940 Norwegian Football Cup | Quarter-finals & Semi-finals | - Sarpsborg 1-6/1-3
Rematch
Lyn - Moss 1-2 Semi-finals Sarpsborg - Fredrikstad 0-1
Skeid - Moss 6-3 |
{"datasets_id": 51, "wiki_id": "Q207404", "sp": 2, "sc": 0, "ep": 6, "ec": 612} | 51 | Q207404 | 2 | 0 | 6 | 612 | 1940 South Carolina hurricane | Meteorological history | 1940 South Carolina hurricane Meteorological history Morning weather charts detected a "slight" disturbance between St. Martin and St. Thomas on August 5. Around 18:00 UTC that day, a tropical depression developed about 30 mi (48 km) west-northwest of Anegada in the British Virgin Islands.
The storm moved moving west-n... |
{"datasets_id": 51, "wiki_id": "Q207404", "sp": 6, "sc": 612, "ep": 6, "ec": 1193} | 51 | Q207404 | 6 | 612 | 6 | 1,193 | 1940 South Carolina hurricane | Meteorological history | hurricane force. In the afternoon of August 11, the hurricane made landfall near Beaufort, South Carolina where it moved inland and turned just northeast of Savannah, Georgia between 5 and 6 p.m. on the same day. Savannah's wind peaked at 73 miles per hour (117 km/h) and the pressure fell to 28.78 inches of mercury (9... |
{"datasets_id": 51, "wiki_id": "Q207404", "sp": 6, "sc": 1193, "ep": 10, "ec": 528} | 51 | Q207404 | 6 | 1,193 | 10 | 528 | 1940 South Carolina hurricane | Meteorological history & Preparations and impact | evolving into an extratropical cyclone on the evening of August 14. Preparations and impact From August 7 and 9, small craft were advised to exercise caution over the eastern Bahamas and western subtropical Atlantic Ocean as the system approached the region. By 9:30 a.m. on August 10, small craft warnings were in effe... |
{"datasets_id": 51, "wiki_id": "Q207404", "sp": 10, "sc": 528, "ep": 10, "ec": 1137} | 51 | Q207404 | 10 | 528 | 10 | 1,137 | 1940 South Carolina hurricane | Preparations and impact | Hurricane warnings were in effect from Savannah northward to Wilmington. All coastal warnings were dropped by August 12.
A storm tide of 13 feet (4.0 m) was measured along the coast of South Carolina. The cyclone inflicted $1.5 million in damage in Charleston, South Carolina, while Savannah, Georgia received $1 mill... |
{"datasets_id": 51, "wiki_id": "Q207404", "sp": 10, "sc": 1137, "ep": 10, "ec": 1782} | 51 | Q207404 | 10 | 1,137 | 10 | 1,782 | 1940 South Carolina hurricane | Preparations and impact | period. The highest reported rainfall amount in Georgia was recorded was 13.68 inches (347 mm) one mile east of Louisville while the highest amount in South Carolina was reported from Charleston, where 12.66 inches (322 mm) fell. On the coastal areas where the hurricane hit, there was a considerable loss of life. Earl... |
{"datasets_id": 51, "wiki_id": "Q207404", "sp": 10, "sc": 1782, "ep": 10, "ec": 2409} | 51 | Q207404 | 10 | 1,782 | 10 | 2,409 | 1940 South Carolina hurricane | Preparations and impact | floods. The floods inundated much of Tennessee, the Carolinas and northern Georgia. Rainfall amounts across western North Carolina exceeded 15 inches (380 mm), with the highest amount recorded at Idlewild, where 20.65 inches (525 mm) fell. Landslides were common in the mountains of western North Carolina, where it is c... |
{"datasets_id": 51, "wiki_id": "Q207404", "sp": 10, "sc": 2409, "ep": 10, "ec": 2995} | 51 | Q207404 | 10 | 2,409 | 10 | 2,995 | 1940 South Carolina hurricane | Preparations and impact | perished during the Deep Gap Debris Flow in Watauga County, North Carolina alone. Major portions of the county were cut off for two weeks. Debris flows and flooding cut off U.S. Highway 421 in 21 places through a six-mile stretch of roadway between Deep Gap and Maple Springs in Wilkes County, North Carolina. Floodin... |
{"datasets_id": 51, "wiki_id": "Q207404", "sp": 10, "sc": 2995, "ep": 10, "ec": 3635} | 51 | Q207404 | 10 | 2,995 | 10 | 3,635 | 1940 South Carolina hurricane | Preparations and impact | Deluges flooded locations across southern and western sections of the Old Dominion. Hampton Roads measured 4.76 inches (121 mm) of rainfall. The highest rainfall amount statewide was recorded at Copper Hill, where 17.03 inches (433 mm) fell. Emporia, on the Meherrin River, recorded a flood of record on August 17 when... |
{"datasets_id": 51, "wiki_id": "Q207404", "sp": 10, "sc": 3635, "ep": 10, "ec": 3750} | 51 | Q207404 | 10 | 3,635 | 10 | 3,750 | 1940 South Carolina hurricane | Preparations and impact | 13 involving the oil screw F.B. Scarbrough 5 miles (8.0 km) above Coles Point may have been caused by this system. |
{"datasets_id": 52, "wiki_id": "Q1144112", "sp": 2, "sc": 0, "ep": 4, "ec": 226} | 52 | Q1144112 | 2 | 0 | 4 | 226 | 1947–48 Soviet League season | 1947–48 Soviet League season The 1947–48 Soviet Championship League season was the second season of the Soviet Championship League, the top level of ice hockey in the Soviet Union. 10 teams participated in the league, and CDKA Moscow won the championship. | |
{"datasets_id": 53, "wiki_id": "Q16155976", "sp": 2, "sc": 0, "ep": 4, "ec": 584} | 53 | Q16155976 | 2 | 0 | 4 | 584 | 1947 New York City smallpox outbreak | 1947 New York City smallpox outbreak The 1947 New York City smallpox outbreak occurred in March, 1947 and was declared ended on April 24, 1947. The outbreak marked two milestones for America. First, it was the largest mass vaccination effort ever conducted for smallpox in America, and second, it marked the last outbrea... | |
{"datasets_id": 53, "wiki_id": "Q16155976", "sp": 4, "sc": 584, "ep": 8, "ec": 426} | 53 | Q16155976 | 4 | 584 | 8 | 426 | 1947 New York City smallpox outbreak | Background | weeks. The rapid response was credited with limiting the outbreak to 12 people, 10 of whom recovered, while 2 died. Background On February 24, 1947, Eugene Le Bar, a 47-year-old rug merchant from Maine, and his wife, boarded a bus in Mexico City, where the couple had been vacationing, for the return trip to New York Ci... |
{"datasets_id": 53, "wiki_id": "Q16155976", "sp": 8, "sc": 426, "ep": 8, "ec": 1109} | 53 | Q16155976 | 8 | 426 | 8 | 1,109 | 1947 New York City smallpox outbreak | Background | Bar had developed a fever and pronounced rash. He was admitted to Bellevue Hospital, but because of the rash was transferred three days later to Willard Parker Hospital, a communicable disease hospital also in Manhattan.
On admission to Willard Parker, the differential diagnosis was drug reaction (since Le Bar had repo... |
{"datasets_id": 53, "wiki_id": "Q16155976", "sp": 8, "sc": 1109, "ep": 12, "ec": 381} | 53 | Q16155976 | 8 | 1,109 | 12 | 381 | 1947 New York City smallpox outbreak | Background & Epidemiology | Following further tests, Le Bar was diagnosed with having a drug reaction to the headache powders and aspirin he'd taken earlier. Despite supportive care, Le Bar's condition worsened and he died on March 10. Epidemiology Two patients on the same floor at Willard Parker Hospital with Le Bar were discharged soon after Le... |
{"datasets_id": 53, "wiki_id": "Q16155976", "sp": 12, "sc": 381, "ep": 12, "ec": 1000} | 53 | Q16155976 | 12 | 381 | 12 | 1,000 | 1947 New York City smallpox outbreak | Epidemiology | Bar had. Biopsies done on lesion from both patients showed Guarnieri bodies, establishing the diagnosis of smallpox. As soon as the diagnosis was made, all the patients and staff of Willard Parker Hospital were vaccinated for smallpox, while the New York City Department of Health and the U.S. Public Health Service were... |
{"datasets_id": 53, "wiki_id": "Q16155976", "sp": 12, "sc": 1000, "ep": 12, "ec": 1581} | 53 | Q16155976 | 12 | 1,000 | 12 | 1,581 | 1947 New York City smallpox outbreak | Epidemiology | the index patient. The next concern for the health department was tracking down Le Bar's contacts, including everybody who stayed at the hotel at the same time he did.
The immediate contacts at the hotel included guests still there and those who had checked out starting on the day Le Bar checked in. Guests who were sti... |
{"datasets_id": 53, "wiki_id": "Q16155976", "sp": 12, "sc": 1581, "ep": 12, "ec": 2214} | 53 | Q16155976 | 12 | 1,581 | 12 | 2,214 | 1947 New York City smallpox outbreak | Epidemiology | left at stops in seven states. The U.S. Public Health Service determined that passengers had final destinations in 29 states. Warnings were sent to the public health authorities in all 29 states, and all passengers were tracked down and advised to be inoculated as soon as possible. No cases were ultimately reported in ... |
{"datasets_id": 53, "wiki_id": "Q16155976", "sp": 12, "sc": 2214, "ep": 12, "ec": 2843} | 53 | Q16155976 | 12 | 2,214 | 12 | 2,843 | 1947 New York City smallpox outbreak | Epidemiology | with Le Bar had occurred at Bellevue because Acosta was already a patient at Willard Parker when Le Bar was admitted to Bellevue. However, during the time between Acosta's discharge from and readmission to Willard Parker, he had returned to work at Bellevue. Three male patients he had prepped and transported to surgery... |
{"datasets_id": 53, "wiki_id": "Q16155976", "sp": 12, "sc": 2843, "ep": 12, "ec": 3459} | 53 | Q16155976 | 12 | 2,843 | 12 | 3,459 | 1947 New York City smallpox outbreak | Epidemiology | whooping cough at Willard Parker Hospital was discharged on March 10, the day Eugene Le Bar died. He was transferred to Cardinal Hayes Convalescent Home for Children, a Catholic nursing facility in Millbrook, New York. He subsequently developed a rash and fever. It was later determined that he had smallpox and was the ... |
{"datasets_id": 53, "wiki_id": "Q16155976", "sp": 12, "sc": 3459, "ep": 16, "ec": 208} | 53 | Q16155976 | 12 | 3,459 | 16 | 208 | 1947 New York City smallpox outbreak | Epidemiology & Vaccination campaign | on March 17. In addition, Carmen Acosta—Ishmael Acosta's wife—was admitted to Willard Parker Hospital on April 6 with a rash and fever, and was diagnosed with smallpox a day later. She died on April 12.
Eugene Le Bar's wife was contacted in Maine where she had returned after her husband's death. She had been vaccinated... |
{"datasets_id": 53, "wiki_id": "Q16155976", "sp": 16, "sc": 208, "ep": 16, "ec": 885} | 53 | Q16155976 | 16 | 208 | 16 | 885 | 1947 New York City smallpox outbreak | Vaccination campaign | time, the New York City Health Department had 250,000 individual doses of vaccine and 400,000 doses in bulk. O'Dwyer called an emergency meeting with the heads of the seven American pharmaceutical companies involved in vaccine production and asked them for a commitment to provide 6 million doses of vaccine. The pharmac... |
{"datasets_id": 53, "wiki_id": "Q16155976", "sp": 16, "sc": 885, "ep": 20, "ec": 29} | 53 | Q16155976 | 16 | 885 | 20 | 29 | 1947 New York City smallpox outbreak | Vaccination campaign & Morbidity and mortality of the disease | Department, off-duty police and firefighters, and the disbanded, but vast, World War II Air Raid Warden networks located in all of New York's coastal towns, went door-to-door to urge residents to get vaccinated. A radio and print ad campaign called, "Be sure, be safe, get vaccinated!" advertised the vaccination clinic ... |
{"datasets_id": 53, "wiki_id": "Q16155976", "sp": 20, "sc": 29, "ep": 24, "ec": 266} | 53 | Q16155976 | 20 | 29 | 24 | 266 | 1947 New York City smallpox outbreak | Morbidity and mortality of the disease & Morbidity and mortality of the vaccine | confirmed—9 in Manhattan and 3 in Millbrook. Seven were adults and 5 were children, the latter group all age 5 and under. The oldest patient was the 62-year-old nun. The youngest patient was the 22-month-old baby girl.
Two patients—Eugene Le Bar, age 47, and Carmen Acosta, age 25—died. Morbidity and mortality of the va... |
{"datasets_id": 53, "wiki_id": "Q16155976", "sp": 24, "sc": 266, "ep": 24, "ec": 904} | 53 | Q16155976 | 24 | 266 | 24 | 904 | 1947 New York City smallpox outbreak | Morbidity and mortality of the vaccine | Commissioner of Health Weinstein, he stated that they had other diseases of the central nervous system and none had encephalitis. Three deaths were clearly related to other complications of the vaccine—a 66-year-old man who developed sepsis from an infected vaccination site, and two infants with eczema who developed ge... |
{"datasets_id": 53, "wiki_id": "Q16155976", "sp": 24, "sc": 904, "ep": 28, "ec": 194} | 53 | Q16155976 | 24 | 904 | 28 | 194 | 1947 New York City smallpox outbreak | Morbidity and mortality of the vaccine & Postscripts | of New Providence, N.J., who died May 7, a week after receiving her vaccination. According to the Center for Disease Control, the rate for post-vaccination encephalitis following the smallpox vaccine is 3 to 12 per million, and the fatality rate is about 1 in a million. (Since this was the largest vaccination campaign ... |
{"datasets_id": 53, "wiki_id": "Q16155976", "sp": 28, "sc": 194, "ep": 28, "ec": 767} | 53 | Q16155976 | 28 | 194 | 28 | 767 | 1947 New York City smallpox outbreak | Postscripts | New York City area at that same time—a merchant seaman who had temporarily lived with relatives in Manhattan from March 4 to 15, and R.C. Smith, man who lived in Trenton, N.J. and died nearby in Camden, N.J., on April 17, 1947. Neither had any known contact with Le Bar or any of the cases traced to him.
New York Yankee... |
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