July 1912

Month of 1912
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July 7, 1912: The Automat opens, introduces "fast food"
July 30, 1912: Emperor Meiji dies after 44 years of transforming Japan into a major world power.
July 7, 1912: Harry Houdini escapes handcuffs, leg irons, and an underwater coffin

The following events occurred in July 1912:

July 1, 1912 (Monday)

Harriet Quimby

July 2, 1912 (Tuesday)

Governor Woodrow Wilson
  • New Jersey Governor Woodrow Wilson received the Democratic Party nomination for President of the United States, after 46 ballots had been taken at the party convention. On the 45th ballot, with 730 votes needed to win, Wilson had 633, former House Speaker Champ Clark had 306, and Alabama Senator Oscar Underwood had 97. Underwood then withdrew his candidacy, putting the nomination within reach, and Clark followed suit. The final result was 990 votes for Wilson, 84 for Champ Clark, and 12 for Judson Harmon.[11] With the Republican Party split between the followers of U.S. President William Howard Taft and former U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt, the Democrats would win the U.S. presidency for the first time since 1892.[12]
  • The airship Akron exploded in mid-air near Atlantic City, New Jersey, killing the five crew members on board including pioneer aerial photographer Melvin Vaniman.[13]
  • Denmark established an army air corps to complement the naval air corps formed the previous year. The two units merged in 1950 to become the Royal Danish Air Force.[14]
  • Born: Bill Mitchell, American automobile designer, best known iconic vehicle designs for Chevrolet including the Bel Air, the Stingray, and the Camaro; in Cleveland, Ohio, United States (d. 1988)[citation needed]
  • Died: Tom Richardson, 41, English cricketer, fast bowler for the England cricket team from 1893 to 1898, died from a heart attack (b. 1870).[citation needed]

July 3, 1912 (Wednesday)

July 4, 1912 (Thursday)

The wreck of Lackawanna Train Number 9
48-star version of the United States flag
  • Forty-one people were killed and 50 injured in a railroad accident near Corning, New York. Train Number 9 of the Lackawanna Railroad had stopped at Gibson, a village near Corning, when at 5:06 am it was struck at 65 miles per hour (105 km/h) by a train of the United States Express, whose engineer had disregarded "three sets of conspicuous warning signals."[23][24]
  • The International Olympic Committee voted to hold the 1916 Summer Olympics in Berlin, rejecting a bid from Budapest. The Games of the Sixth Olympiad would be cancelled after the outbreak of World War I in 1914.[25]
  • The new 48-star American flag was first raised. Proclaimed as the symbol of the United States, it would continue to be used for forty-seven years, until July 4, 1959, when replaced by a 49-star banner. Until 2007, the 48-star flag had been the longest-lasting American flag in history.[26]
  • Heavyweight boxing champion Jack Johnson successfully defended his title against white challenger "Fireman Jim Flynn" in East Las Vegas, New Mexico. The bout was scheduled to go for as many as 45 rounds but was stopped by New Mexico state police, who entered the ring in the ninth round at the request of Governor McDonald.[27]
  • Lightweight boxing champ Ad Wolgast fought challenger "Mexican Joe Rivers" in Los Angeles. In the third round, the fighters knocked each other out with simultaneous blows. Referee Jack Welch lifted the arm of the prone Wolgast and declared him the winner and still champion.[28]
  • French cyclist Gabriel Poulain won a contest for human powered flight by remaining at least 10 centimetres (3.9 in) off the ground for 3.6 meters, slightly less than 12 feet.[29]
  • Died: Emil Stang, 78, Prime Minister of Norway (1889–1891 and 1893–1895)(b. 1834)[citation needed]

July 5, 1912 (Friday)

  • In the second fatal American railroad crash in two days, 26 people were killed and 29 injured when a freight train rear-ended a passenger train on the Ligonier Valley Railroad near the resort town of Wilpen, Pennsylvania.[30] Most of the victims were women and children, who were returning home after a day at the Wilpen Fair Grounds.[24]
  • The first International Radiotelegraph Convention was signed in London. It would be replaced in 1927 by the Radiotelegraph General Convention.[31]

July 6, 1912 (Saturday)

July 7, 1912 (Sunday)

Postcard of a woman getting coffee at Horn & Hardart Automat on Broadway, New York City
  • A dynamite explosion in Rancagua, Chile, killed 38 people.[1]
  • A riot broke out during a strike among lumber mill workers in Grabow, Louisiana, resulting in four deaths, fifty injuries, and a total 58 strikers arrested.[36]
  • The first Automat in New York City, providing fast food to customers in a self-service format, was opened by Horn & Hardart at 1557 Broadway in Times Square. Similar to a vending machine, the service featured foods prepared in a kitchen and then placed in windowed slots, which a diner could access by placing coins into a machine. The service had existed in Philadelphia since 1902.[37]
  • Magician and escape artist Harry Houdini performed his most dangerous stunt up to that time. In addition to his familiar act of having to escape being locked up in handcuffs and leg irons, Houdini was placed in a wooden box that was weighted down, nailed shut, and then thrown off of the tugboat Catherine Moran into the East River at New York City. A minute after the coffin sank, Houdini surfaced before hundreds of spectators, including reporters and photographers.[38][39]
  • Born: Gérard Lecointe, French army officer, final commander of colonial forces in French Algeria, recipitient of the Legion of Honour and National Order of Merit; in Poitiers, France (d. 2009)[citation needed]
  • Died: William Howard Durham, 39, American theologian, advocate of the Finished Work in Pentecostalism, from pneumonia (b. 1873).[40]

July 8, 1912 (Monday)

July 9, 1912 (Tuesday)

July 10, 1912 (Wednesday)

July 11, 1912 (Thursday)

July 12, 1912 (Friday)

July 13, 1912 (Saturday)

  • The United States Senate voted 55–28 to remove William Lorimer from his post as U.S. Senator from Illinois, after determining that his election by the Illinois Senate had been secured by corruption.[56] Lorimer would earn what a U.S. Senate historian[who?] called "the dubious distinction of being the last senator to be deprived of office for corrupting a state legislature."[57]
  • Dr. Théodore Tuffier, a surgeon in France, performed the first successful surgery for aortic stenosis on a human patient, an unidentified man from Belgium. The operation went so well that the man was able to return home twelve days later, and was still doing well eight years later. The next procedure to treat narrowing of the aortic valve did not take place again until 36 years later.[58]
  • The weekly newspaper Al-Hilal, published by Indian Muslim activist Abul Kalam Azad to persuade Urdu-speaking Muslims to join in the move to gain independence from the United Kingdom, made its first appearance.[59]

July 14, 1912 (Sunday)

July 14, 1912: Ken McArthur at the entrance to Stockholm Olympic Stadium.

July 15, 1912 (Monday)

Lázaro in his final race
  • Died: Francisco Lázaro, 24, Portuguese Olympic athlete, died one day after collapsing from hyperthermia while running in the marathon at the Olympics in Stockholm, becoming the first casualty of the modern Olympic games. Lazaro had covered large portions of his body with grease to prevent sunburn, but overheated and was unable to perspire, creating a fatal electrolyte imbalance. He fell after running 30 kilometres (19 mi) of the 42.195 kilometres (26.219 mi) race, as his body temperature climbed to 41 °C (106 °F).[67] (b. 1888)

July 16, 1912 (Tuesday)

July 17, 1912 (Wednesday)

July 18, 1912 (Thursday)

July 19, 1912 (Friday)

  • In the Italo-Turkish War, Turkish defenders sank two Italian torpedo boats with cannon fire after a fleet of eight Italian boats attempted to block the entrance to the Dardanelles.[74]
  • Albanian rebels agreed to a truce with Ottoman troops, after the Ottoman government agreed to send a commission of Parliament to investigate grievances in the Ottoman province.[1]
  • A large meteorite streaked over the town of Holbrook, Arizona, at 6:30 pm local time, and then exploded, showering an area six miles eastward with more than 15,000 pieces. Based on the fragments recovered, the meteor was estimated to weigh more than 400 pounds.[75][76]

July 20, 1912 (Saturday)

July 21, 1912 (Sunday)

July 22, 1912 (Monday)

July 23, 1912 (Tuesday)

  • The first automatic telephone exchange in the United Kingdom, replacing human operators on switchboards, was inaugurated in London by the General Post Office with a system capable of handling 1,500 lines.[83]

July 24, 1912 (Wednesday)

  • An earthquake measuring 7.0 in magnitude rocked the Piura region in Peru, killing 101 people.[84]
  • The First International Congress on Eugenics convened in London, with 400 delegates from twelve nations.[85] Major Leonard Darwin, one of the sons of Charles Darwin, presided over the Congress, and told delegates that "The unfit amongst men are now no longer necessarily killed off by hunger and disease, but are cherished with care, thus being enabled to reproduce their kind, however bad that may be... the effect likely to be produced by our charity on future generations is, to say the least, but weakness and folly."[86]
  • The United States Senate approved creation of a territorial legislature for Alaska, a single chamber of 16 members.[1] The bill would be signed into law on August 24.[87]
  • Died: Emma Cons, 74, British activist, early promoter of women's suffrage, theater manager of The Old Vic in London (b. 1838)[citation needed]

July 25, 1912 (Thursday)

Grand Duchess Marie-Adelaide

July 26, 1912 (Friday)

July 27, 1912 (Saturday)

  • Evacuation of American women and children from the four Mormon colonies in Mexico at Chihuahua state, was ordered by senior Mormon official, Junius Romney. In all, there were 4,000 Americans in twelve colonies.[52]
  • Bonar Law, conservative Leader of the Opposition in the Parliament of the United Kingdom, declared in a speech that, "We regard the Government as a revolutionary committee which has seized by fraud upon domestic power... We shall use any means to deprive them of the power which they have usurped and to compel them to face the people they have deceived."[94]
  • The Turkish cabinet announced that it would investigate the grievances of its citizens in Northern Albania and that armed force would not be used against them.[1]
  • Elise Sem became the first female barrister in Norway.[95]
  • Born:

July 28, 1912 (Sunday)

  • A pier on Germany's largest island, Rügen, collapsed under the weight of 1,000 people who were waiting for the arrival of the cruise ship Kronprinz Wilhelm. One hundred people went down into the Baltic Sea, and at least 14 drowned. The accident led to the creation of the German Life Saving Association.[96]
  • The Turkish Parliamentary Commission of Enquiry arrived in Pristina to investigate Albanian complaints.[1]
  • Belgian cyclist Odile Defraye won the 10th Tour de France.[97]
  • Born: George Cisar, American actor, best known for his television roles including the 1950s sitcom Dennis the Menace; in Cicero, Illinois, United States (d. 1979)[citation needed]
  • Died: Henry Sutton, 56, Australian engineer, known for his development of wireless telegraphy (b. 1855)[citation needed]

July 29, 1912 (Monday)

July 30, 1912 (Tuesday)

  • The Emperor Meiji, also called Mutsuhito, died at 12:43 am after a 44-year reign as Emperor of Japan, during which the nation rose from isolationism to become a world power. Crown Prince Yoshihito of Japan was proclaimed as the Emperor Taishō after the death of his father.[100] In Japanese history, the event marked the end of the Meiji era and the beginning of the Taishō era.
  • The report of the British Court of Inquiry on the sinking of the Titanic, signed by the Chairman Lord Mersey, was presented to British Parliament after hearing testimony from 97 witnesses over 38 days. The Court concluded that the cause of the disaster "was due to collision with an iceberg, brought about by the excessive speed at which the ship was being navigated."[101] On the same day, the first of the 710 Titanic survivors died, 21-month-old Mary Nakid, of meningitis. Millvina Dean, 16 months younger, would be the last survivor, dying on May 31, 2009.[102]
  • The ministry of the Ottoman Grand Vizier Ahmed Muhtar Pasha survived a vote of confidence by a margin of 113–95.[1]
  • Died: Juan Gualberto González, 61, President of Paraguay from 1890 to 1894 (b. 1851)[citation needed]

July 31, 1912 (Wednesday)

References

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