January 1913

Month of 1913
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January 9, 1913: Future U.S. President Richard Nixon (2nd from right) born in California
January 23, 1913: Ottoman Empire Navy Minister Nazim assassinated, Prime Minister Kamil overthrown in coup in Turkey
Dutch calendar for January 1913, designed by Theo van Hoytema

The following events occurred in January 1913:

January 1, 1913 (Wednesday)

January 2, 1913 (Thursday)

Australia's Kangaroo and Map stamp series
  • U.S. Representative William Wedemeyer of Michigan jumped overboard from the ocean liner Panama while returning to the United States, in an apparent suicide. Wedemeyer, who had been defeated in November 1912 in his bid for reelection, had accompanied U.S. President William Howard Taft in December on a visit to Panama as part of a 30-member congressional inspection party and was treated for depression in a Canal Zone hospital before sailing for home.[11]
  • Australia initiated its own postage service with the Kangaroo and Map stamp series, which featured a kangaroo standing on a map of Australia.[12]
  • The comic strip Bringing Up Father began an 87-year run. Created by George McManus, the strip about an Irish millionaire and his wife (Jiggs and Maggie) was a daily; it became a Sunday feature beginning April 14, 1918. After McManus died in 1954, the strip continued until May 28, 2000.[13][14][15]
  • Yiddish-language weekly newspaper, The Time, began publication in Saint Petersburg. It would be shut down by the government on the eve of World War I.[16]
  • Born: Anna Lee, English-born American film actress, best known for How Green Was My Valley, Two Rode Together and Fort Apache, and in the television soap opera General Hospital; as Joan Boniface Winnifrith, in Ightham, Kent, England (d. 2004)[citation needed]
  • Died: Léon Teisserenc de Bort, 57, French meteorologist, credited for identifying the stratosphere (b. 1855)[citation needed]

January 3, 1913 (Friday)

January 4, 1913 (Saturday)

January 5, 1913 (Sunday)

January 6, 1913 (Monday)

January 7, 1913 (Tuesday)

January 8, 1913 (Wednesday)

Caricature of Lt-Colonel Sir Robert William Inglis, published in Vanity Fair, January 8, 1913, as "Men of the Day" Number 2306

January 9, 1913 (Thursday)

  • The passenger cargo ship SS Rosecrans broke in two after crashing during a storm against rocks off of the coast of the U.S. state of Washington. Two members of the crew survived and another 35 drowned in the storm.[45]
  • Born:

January 10, 1913 (Friday)

January 11, 1913 (Saturday)

Kirstie's Cairn, Changue Forest The memorial reads "In memory of Christopher McTaggart, shepherd, who perished in snow storm near this spot, 11 January 1913, aged 19 years." The copyright on this image is owned by Oliver Dixon and is licensed for reuse under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 2.0 license.
  • Having recently proclaimed their independence from China, Tibet and Mongolia signed a mutual defense treaty that, under its terms, was "for all time."[52]
  • The Paris intra-urban transit system went entirely to electric streetcars, as the last horse-drawn streetcar made its final run on the city's rails.[53]
  • The county clerk for Ottawa County, Kansas, was accidentally locked inside the vault at the courthouse, and nobody in the office knew the combination except for him. Fortunately, former clerk John Bell, living in Salina, remembered the combination "after spending an hour searching his memory for the correct numerals."[This quote needs a citation] After 2+12 hours, when the vault was opened, "the liberated Baldwin fell to the floor unconscious" from lack of oxygen but survived.[54]
  • Born: Lona Cohen, American spy, who worked with husband Morris Cohen to share secrets of the Manhattan Project to the Soviet Union; as Leontine Theresa Petka, in Adams, Massachusetts, United States (d. 1992)[citation needed]

January 12, 1913 (Sunday)

January 13, 1913 (Monday)

January 14, 1913 (Tuesday)

January 15, 1913 (Wednesday)

January 16, 1913 (Thursday)

January 17, 1913 (Friday)

President-elect Raymond Poincaré

January 18, 1913 (Saturday)

  • The Ottoman Navy attempted to break the Greek naval blockade in the Dardanelles off Lemnos, Greece. Despite firing more rounds, Ottoman ships missed their targets more often than the Greeks, who in turn were able to score more hits. As a result, three Ottoman ships were damaged, 41 sailors were killed and another 105 were wounded. The Greeks sustained only one wounded casualty. The Ottoman fleet retreated to its base within the Dardanelles, from which it will not venture for the rest of the war.[85][86]
  • The British Antarctic Expedition was able to continue as the research ship Terra Nova finally broke through the ice outside of Antarctica's McMurdo Sound to pick up the Northern Party, the remaining members of the expedition. The group had set out to locate explorer the Southern Party that had been led by Robert Falcon Scott. Victor Campbell reported to the Terra Nova crew that Scott's party had reached the South Pole on January 17, 1912, but all died on the return journey.[87]
  • Born: George Unwin, British air force officer, noted fighter pilot during the Battle of Britain, commander of the No. 84 Squadron post-World War II, recipient of the Distinguished Service Order and Distinguished Flying Medal; in Barnsley, South Yorkshire, England (d. 2006)[citation needed]

January 19, 1913 (Sunday)

January 20, 1913 (Monday)

January 21, 1913 (Tuesday)

  • Canadian Member of Parliament W.F. MacLean of South York made the first proposal for a central Canadian bank, in a speech on the floor of the House of Commons.[99]
  • Died:

January 22, 1913 (Wednesday)

Jim Thorpe at the New York Polo Grounds in 1913
  • The Ottoman Grand Council voted to surrender Edirne (Adrianople) to the Balkan Allies and to accept the other demands for peace, including ceding its Aegean islands.[100]
  • The battleship Rio de Janeiro was launched by Armstrong Whitworth in Newcastle upon Tyne, England for service in the Brazilian Navy. It was sold to the Ottoman Empire by December of that year and renamed Sultan Osman I. It was seized by the Royal Navy at the start of World War I and renamed HMS Agincourt where it served out the way before being decommissioned in 1921.[101]
  • The Gazette of Worcester, Massachusetts, published a story that cost Jim Thorpe his Olympic medals. One of the sportswriters for the Gazette had played minor league baseball in the Eastern Carolina League for the Fayetteville Highlanders and was aware that Thorpe had played in the league in the 1909 and 1910 seasons. The Gazette editor had spent eight days verifying the fact before breaking the news that Thorpe had played professional ball for Fayetteville and for the Rocky Mount Railroaders.[102] The headline was "Thorpe With Professional Baseball Team Says Clancy", and quoted Charley Clancy, who had tipped off reporter Roy Johnson.[103]
  • Helen Miller Gould, America's "Queen Philanthropist", married Finley J. Shepard.[104]
  • Born:

January 23, 1913 (Thursday)

January 24, 1913 (Friday)

January 25, 1913 (Saturday)

January 26, 1913 (Sunday)

January 27, 1913 (Monday)

The old "Liberty Head nickel"
The new "Buffalo nickel"
  • Arizona's four electoral votes for Woodrow Wilson in the 1912 U.S. presidential election had not been received at the U.S. Vice President's office as the 6:00 pm deadline set by the Electoral College expired.[121] Wilfred T. Webb, an Arizona legislator, had departed Phoenix on January 17 but had stopped in St. Louis, Missouri, rather than proceeding directly to the nation's capital. Webb arrived the next afternoon at 4:00 pm and told reporters, "I took my time about getting to Washington, because I was under the impression that I had until February 1 in which to deliver our four electoral votes."[122]
  • The British Cabinet voted to remove the women's suffrage bill from consideration in the House of Commons.[123]
  • The first new American five-cent pieces, known as "buffalo nickels," were manufactured at the Philadelphia Mint.[124]

January 28, 1913 (Tuesday)

January 29, 1913 (Wednesday)

January 30, 1913 (Thursday)

January 31, 1913 (Friday)

References

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  61. ^ "435 Electors for Woodrow Wilson" (PDF). New York Times. January 14, 1913.
  62. ^ Peter Cottrell, The Anglo-Irish War: The Troubles of 1913-1922 (Osprey Publishing, 2006) p. 23
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  64. ^ "Pioneer Air Mail First Flights 1913", Aerodacious.com
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  71. ^ "Greek Ship Sunk". Milwaukee Journal. January 16, 1913. p. 1.
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  73. ^ Keith Laybourn, Modern Britain Since 1906: A Reader (I.B.Tauris, 1999) p. 17
  74. ^ "Home Rule Is Voted". Washington Post. January 17, 1913. p. 1.
  75. ^ Alan O'Day, Irish Home Rule, 1867-1921 (Manchester University Press, 1998) p. 254
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  89. ^ "Big Rabbit, Who Shot Mexican, to Be Tried". Oakland Tribune. June 1, 1913. p. 26.
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  91. ^ "Opera Ballet Goes on Strike". Baltimore Sun. January 20, 1913. p. 5.
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  93. ^ "President Formally Accepts Kent Chair". New York Times. January 21, 1913.
  94. ^ "Briand to Become Premier of France". New York Times. January 19, 1913.
  95. ^ "Final Word Given". Milwaukee Journal. January 20, 1913. p. 1.
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  123. ^ "Cabinet Kills Suffrage Bill". Milwaukee Journal. January 27, 1913. p. 1.
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Sources

  • Cinema News and Property Gazette. Vol. II. London. 1913.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) scan p. 413
  • "Record of Current Events", The American Monthly Review of Reviews (June 1912), pp. 289–292