September 1912

Month of 1912
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September 28, 1912: Thousands sign the Ulster Covenant
September 22, 1912: Edwin Armstrong makes first successful test of the revolutionary regnerative circuit
September 21, 1912: Houdini unveils most dangerous act yet

The following events occurred in September 1912:

September 1, 1912 (Sunday)

Fisher: "A road across the United States!"

September 2, 1912 (Monday)

September 3, 1912 (Tuesday)

September 4, 1912 (Wednesday)

September 5, 1912 (Thursday)

September 6, 1912 (Friday)

  • The uprising of Moroccan pretender Ahmed al-Hiba was ended in a battle at Sidi Bou Othmane, as his force of 10,000 troops was decimated by 5,000 French troops led by Colonel Charles Mangin. The poorly armed Moroccan tribesmen, promised by al-Hiba "that French bullets would turn into water and French shells into watermelons",[This quote needs a citation] charged at Mangin's troops, who were aligned in a square formation with artillery at the center. Within two hours, 2,000 of al-Hiba's troops were dead and thousands more wounded; French losses were four dead and 23 wounded.[18]
  • Royal Flying Corps members Captain Patrick Hamilton and Lieutenant Athole Wyness Stuart were killed in a crash near Willian, Hertfordshire while flying a Deperdussin monoplane.[19]
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Smokey Joe Wood and Walter Johnson
  • In what has been described as "the most anticipated and hyped sporting event"[20] up to that time, the two best pitchers in the American League, Smoky Joe Wood of the Boston Red Sox and Walter Johnson of the Washington Senators, faced off against each other before an overflow crowd at Fenway Park. Wood was on a winning streak of 13 consecutive games, while Johnson had set a record of 16 straight wins the previous month. In a pitcher's duel, the two each threw five scoreless innings, until Johnson allowed a run to score in the sixth, the margin for a 1-0 victory for Wood and the Red Sox. Wood would go on to win two more games to tie, but not break, Johnson's record.[21]

September 7, 1912 (Saturday)

September 8, 1912 (Sunday)

September 9, 1912 (Monday)

  • Marko Trifković resigned as Prime Minister of Serbia, along with his cabinet.[9]
  • In Athens, mass demonstrations demanded the liberation of all Greeks from Ottoman rule.[1]
  • Sleety Mae Crow, an 18-year old white woman in Forsyth County, Georgia, was raped and murdered. Suspicions fell to 16-year black teen Ernest Knox, who allegedly confessed under suspected torture following his arrest. Three other black young men associated with him and arrested. A lynch mob stormed the county jail where one of the prisoners was killed, but Knox had already been moved for safety.[32]
  • Flying a Deperdussin Monocoque monoplane, Jules Védrines won his fourth Gordon Bennett Trophy race at a speed of 169.7 km/h (105.4 mph).[33]
  • A new comet was discovered by Australian astronomer Walter Frederick Gale.[9]
  • Screen legend siblings Lillian Gish and Dorothy Gish made their screen debut together in the film short An Unseen Enemy, beginning their successful collaboration with filmmaker D. W. Griffith.[34]

September 10, 1912 (Tuesday)

September 11, 1912 (Wednesday)

September 12, 1912 (Thursday)

Prime Minister Raymond Poincaré

September 13, 1912 (Friday)

  • The government of Santo Domingo (now the Dominican Republic) was threatened by revolution, prompting the United States to send aid.[9]
  • The funeral of the Emperor Meiji was held at Tokyo, after which the body was taken on its journey to Motoyama, Japan.[45] Following the Emperor's funeral, former General Nogi Maresuke, 62, committed ritual suicide with his 52-year old wife Nogi Shizuku. Maresuke had requested Emperor Meiji twice when he was alive for the monarch's permission to allow him to commit suicide and restore honor to his family after he lost too many men in the Battle of Port Arthur that opened the Russo-Japanese War.[46][47]
  • Born: Reta Shaw, American actress, best known for her supporting role in the 1960s supernatural television series The Ghost & Mrs. Muir; in South Paris, Maine, United States (d. 1982)[citation needed]
  • Died: Joseph Furphy, 68, Australian writer, author of novels Such Is Life and Rigby's Romance (b. 1843)[citation needed]

September 14, 1912 (Saturday)

  • Montenegro entered into an alliance with Serbia.[48]
  • Groundbreaking was held for the Trans-Australian Railway, with Governor-General Lord Denman turning the first spade of earth at Port Augusta, South Australia.[9] The railroad, which stretches to Kalgoorlie, Western Australia would be completed on October 17, 1917.[49]
  • Rioting at a soccer football match at Belfast injured 100 people.[50]
  • Cattle baron John Beal Sneed shot and killed Albert Boyce, Jr. in Amarillo, Texas, on suspicion he orchestrated the murder of Sneed's father back in Georgetown, Texas, before surrendering to authorities. Sneed had shot Boyce's father dead in Fort Worth, Texas, at the start over year over an affair between Boyce and Sneed's wife, Lenora. Despite authorities concerned that the bloody feud, which by now has claimed seven lives, would yield more violence, potential combatants dispersed within the town. Sneed was able to successfully defend both murders as justifiable and was acquitted for a second time.[51][52]
  • Died: Howard W. Gill, 30, American pilot, died from injuries sustained from a crash when he struck another plane taking off just as he was going in for a landing at Cicero Field in Chicago.[53]

September 15, 1912 (Sunday)

  • In fighting between French forces and Moorish tribesmen at Sidi Kacem in Morocco, nine French soldiers were killed and 30 wounded.[9]
  • Ten recruits and a gunner's mate at the United States Navy training school at Chicago were drowned in the capsizing of a launch at Lake Michigan.[54]
  • John Flammang Schrank, a bartender from New York City, began working on his plan to assassinate former U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt, after having a dream that the late U.S. President William McKinley had pointed to Roosevelt and said, "This is my murderer, avenge my death."[This quote needs a citation] Schrank would catch up with Roosevelt, who was campaigning for a new term as President, on October 14.[55]
  • On the 91st anniversary of its independence, El Salvador adopted the flag that it uses today, restoring the blue and white tricolor flag that it had abandoned in 1865.[56]

September 16, 1912 (Monday)

September 17, 1912 (Tuesday)

September 18, 1912 (Wednesday)

  • Representatives of the four-nation banking consortium informed China's finance minister Zhou Xuexi, that the railway loan was subject to four conditions, including repayment through a new tax on salt, bank consortium approval of any financial reforms, and appointment of technicians from the four nations.[68]

September 19, 1912 (Thursday)

1912 version of Australian coat of arms
1908 version of Australian coat of arms

September 20, 1912 (Friday)

September 21, 1912 (Saturday)

September 22, 1912 (Sunday)

Edwin H. Armstrong

September 23, 1912 (Monday)

September 24, 1912 (Tuesday)

September 25, 1912 (Wednesday)

  • In Nicaragua, General Luis Mena and 700 rebels surrendered when confronted by a 2,700 member force of U.S. Marines and U.S. Navy Bluejackets.[90]
  • British and French cruisers landed marines to protect foreigners on the island of Samos.[9]
  • The first radio transmissions from Antarctica were made, as a station on Macquarie Island was set up by five men from the Australasian Antarctic Expedition.[91]
  • The cornerstone of the new Students' Building was laid at Vassar College in Poughkeepsie, New York.[92]

September 26, 1912 (Thursday)

September 27, 1912 (Friday)

  • Leslie King began to abuse his new bride, Dorothy King, while the couple were on their honeymoon at the Multnomah Hotel in Portland, Oregon. The incident was the first of many recited in Mrs. King's divorce petition, found by historians later, after the couple's child had grown up to become U.S. President Gerald Ford.[97]
  • Born: Tauno Marttinen, Finnish composer; in Helsinki, Finland (d. 2008)[citation needed]

September 28, 1912 (Saturday)

Ulster Covenant
  • Japanese steamship Kiche Maru sank in a typhoon off Japan with over 1,000 dead. While casualties were second to the Titanic sinking in April, it was overshadowed as hundreds of other ships were lost during the storm.[98]
  • Signing of the Ulster Covenant, a protest by adult citizens of the province in northern Ireland against a proposal to give Ireland self-government apart from the United Kingdom, was completed. Over a period of six days, beginning on September 23, the Covenant was signed by 237,368 men, while a companion document, the Ulster Declaration, was signed by 234,046 women,[99] virtually the entire adult Protestant population of Ulster.[100]
  • In protest over the National Insurance Act, a majority of British doctors resigned their contracts with medical clubs.[9]
  • The French dreadnought Paris, with twelve 12-inch guns and 26 smaller cannons and described as "the most formidable ship in the French Navy", was launched at Touloun, France.[101]
  • At Seoul, 106 Koreans were sentenced on charges of conspiracy against Count Terauchi, with terms of 5 to 10 years. The most prominent of the convicts, former Korean cabinet minister Baron Yun Chi Ho, got a ten-year sentence. Nine other prisoners were released.[102]
  • Corporal Frank S. Scott of the United States Army became the first enlisted service member to lose his life in an airplane accident. He and Lt. Lewis C. Rockwell perished in the crash of a Wright aircraft at College Park, Maryland.[103]
  • The Essendon Bombers defeated the South Melbourne Swans 5.17 (47) to 4.9 (33) in the 15th Victoria Football League Grand Final in Melbourne.[104]
  • American ragtime composer W. C. Handy self-published "The Memphis Blues" as an instrumental. Lyrics were later added when it was sold to George "Honey Boy" Evans as a minstrel piece.[105]

September 29, 1912 (Sunday)

September 30, 1912 (Monday)

September 30, 1912: Columbia School of Journalism opens

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