July 1910

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The following events occurred in July 1910:

July 4, 1910: Black challenger Jack Johnson defeats White world heavyweight boxing champion James J. Jeffries in 15th round at Reno
July 19, 1910: Major league pitcher Cy Young wins 500th game

July 1, 1910 (Friday)

July 2, 1910 (Saturday)

binder clip
  • The patent application for the newly-invented binder clip was filed by Louis E. Baltzley of Washington, D.C., for a clip to bind multiple sheets of paper with "jaws for the reception of handles of spring metal comprising two arms having a tendency to spread laterally".[3] U.S. patent no. 1,139,627 was granted on May 18, 1915, giving Baltzley exclusive rights for the manufacture and distribution of the office product until 1932. Essentially unchanged in its design, the binder clip continues to be used worldwide.
  • U.S. President William Howard Taft first employed a new power authorized under the General Withdrawal Act of 1910, removing 8,495,731 acres (34,381.00 km2) of Alaskan lands from public use.[2][4]
  • Charles K. Hamilton, known for making the first round trip airplane flight between New York City and Philadelphia (accomplished on June 13), flew the first airplane in Connecticut. A historical marker would be erected in 1970 in New Britain, Connecticut.[5]
  • Born: Morris Cohen (a/k/a Peter Kroger), American Communist who became a spy for the Soviet Union; in New York. After helping pass American atomic secrets to the Soviets in the 1940s, he and his wife, Lona Cohen, were given the cover of Peter and Helen Kroger, and spied against Britain's Royal Navy in the 1950s. (d. 1995)
  • Died: Frederick James Furnivall, 85, co-creator of the Oxford English Dictionary

July 3, 1910 (Sunday)

  • At the second annual air show at
    Rheims, spectators watched the unprecedented sight of multiple (as many as 15) airplanes in the sky at the same time, "circling the track like a flight of great birds". The show was marred by the death of aviator Charles Wachter, whose Antoinette VII monoplane plunged from 500 feet (150 m) after the wings collapsed.[6]
  • Born: Esau Jenkins, African-American educator and founder of "citizenship school" movement to assist black voter registration; in Johns Island, South Carolina (d. 1972)

July 4, 1910 (Monday)

July 5, 1910 (Tuesday)

  • Cities across America prohibited the exhibition of films of the Johnson-Jeffries bout, after at least ten people had been killed in racial violence that followed the fight. Authorities implemented bans in Washington, Atlanta, Baltimore, St. Louis and Cincinnati. At Ogden, Utah, three white men cursed Johnson at a railway station and attempted to board his private train car, before being turned back by one of Johnson's trainers. In Washington, police arrested 236 people, mostly African-American.[11]
  • historically black university in Durham, North Carolina, near Duke University, held its first classes.[12]
  • Wilhelm Beckert, formerly Germany's Minister to
    Santiago after his conviction of the February 5, 1909 murder of a Chilean employee. Beckert, who had embezzled embassy funds and set fire to the building in hopes of covering up the crime, was tried in a Chilean court after the German government waived objections to his trial.[13]

July 6, 1910 (Wednesday)

July 7, 1910 (Thursday)

July 8, 1910 (Friday)

  • Marseilles. Savarkar reached the jurisdiction of France, but was recaptured by three men from the Morea, and taken back to British custody. "The Savarkar Case" became an international incident over the violation of France's sovereignty by the United Kingdom, and was taken to the International Court of Justice, which ruled that the British government was not required to return Savarkar to the French government.[21]
  • In what has been described as "the beginning of performance art",[22] Filippo Tommaso Marinetti dropped 800,000 leaflets from the Clock Tower in Venice with his manifesto "Against Traditional Venice".[23]
  • The New York American broke the story that a combination of Wall Street bankers would be working for the Princeton University's president, Woodrow Wilson, to be the Democratic Party nominee for president in 1912, with a trial run for Governor of New Jersey.[24]
  • Died: Alexander Burgener, 65, Swiss mountaineer, was killed in an avalanche

July 9, 1910 (Saturday)

  • Walter Brookins became the first person to fly an airplane to an altitude of more than one mile (1.6 km). After taking off from Atlantic City, Brookins reached an altitude of 6,175 feet (1,882 m) at 6:17 p.m., the mark being verified by triangulation from ground observers. The previous record, also set by Brookins, had been 4,939 feet (1,505 m).[25]

July 10, 1910 (Sunday)

July 11, 1910 (Monday)

July 12, 1910 (Tuesday)

July 13, 1910 (Wednesday)

July 14, 1910 (Thursday)

July 15, 1910 (Friday)

Dr. Alzheimer

July 16, 1910 (Saturday)

July 17, 1910 (Sunday)

  • Japan notified the European nations that commercial treaties, limiting tariffs, would all expire within one year of the announcement.[41]

July 18, 1910 (Monday)

July 19, 1910 (Tuesday)

July 20, 1910 (Wednesday)

July 21, 1910 (Thursday)

July 22, 1910 (Friday)

  • Cri de Paris reported that da Vinci's painting La Giaconda, more popularly known as "the Mona Lisa", had been stolen from the Louvre a month earlier, with a copy being substituted for the original.[47] Although the incident was a false alarm, the painting would be stolen in 1911, and not returned until 1913.
  • Dr. Hawley Harvey Crippen, sought by Scotland Yard for the murder of his wife Belle, was recognized by the captain of the ship SS Montrose. Captain Henry George Kendall telegraphed the headquarters of the White Star Line, which in turn notified Inspector Walter Dew.[48]
  • The city of Tracy, California, was incorporated.

July 23, 1910 (Saturday)

  • The Japanese steamer Tetsurei foundered near
    Jindo Island off of Korea, with a loss of 210 of its 250 passengers.[49]
  • The city of Milan was battered by a tornado that killed more than 60 people and caused millions of dollars of damage to the Italian city.[45]

July 24, 1910 (Sunday)

Paul Bunyan and Babe
  • Author James MacGillivray brought the legend of Paul Bunyan into national prominence, adapting various lumber camp tales into stories for children as part of a series in the Detroit News-Tribune. Later writers, particularly W.B. Laughead and Esther Shepherd, added to the American mythology of the gigantic lumberjack and his large blue ox, Babe, and Paul Bunyan would be celebrated in the works of Robert Frost, Carl Sandburg, W.H. Auden and others.[50]
  • Mayor A.H. Bousman of Ridgeway, Virginia, was killed after a bomb was thrown into his yard. Bousman, whose legs were blown off by the explosion, died half an hour later.[51]

July 25, 1910 (Monday)

  • A sudden downpour at the Hungarian town of Diósd caused flash flooding of the Danube River, drowning at least 25 people.[52]

July 26, 1910 (Tuesday)

  • Prices on the New York Stock Exchange dropped dramatically, with 110 of 146 issues hitting record lows for 1910.[53]
  • Mirza Hasan Ashtiani Mostowfi ol-Mamalek was appointed as Prime Minister of Persia for the first time, and began a campaign against the power of the Mujahideen rebels.[54] Mostowfi would serve on multiple occasions between 1910 and 1927.
  • The comic strip characters of Krazy Kat and "Ignatz Mouse" first did battle, as a companion feature to George Herriman's strip The Dingbat Family. The cat and the brick-throwing mouse would become so popular that Krazy Kat would be syndicated as its own strip.[55]

July 27, 1910 (Wednesday)

July 28, 1910 (Thursday)

July 29, 1910 (Friday)

  • As Spain's King Alfonso and Prime Minister Canalejas severed relations with the Vatican, Carlist Pretender to the Spanish throne, Don Jaime, sent a message to his followers saying that "I think the day is not far distant when my followers must rally to our flag, and I will lead the battle."[60]
  • Rioting broke out in Palestine, Texas, with at least 18 African-Americans killed.[61]

July 30, 1910 (Saturday)

The Bristol Boxkite
  • The Bristol Boxkite, the first British manufactured airplane (Bristol Aeroplane Company), made its first flight. Through mergers, the company was consolidated into what is now BAE Systems.[62]
  • Isidore Bloom, a 7-year-old boy, fell from the roof of his five-story apartment in New York City but survived by falling on clotheslines. Four lines snapped, but Isidore managed to catch and hold on to the fifth.[63]

July 31, 1910 (Sunday)

  • After arriving in Canada as a passenger on the SS Montrose, Dr. Hawley Harvey Crippen was arrested by Inspector Walter Dew of Scotland Yard for the murder of his wife, Belle. Crippen, an American citizen, had made the mistake of taking a ship to Canada, where Dew had jurisdiction as a British officer, rather than to the United States.[64] Crippen would be executed, in England, four months later.
  • Split Rock Lighthouse was first lit. Located in Minnesota at Lake Superior, the lighthouse remained in service until 1969, and is now part of a state park of the same name. It is one of the most photographed lighthouses in the world.[65]
  • Died:

References

  1. ^ "BallparkTour.com". Archived from the original on 2009-06-21. Retrieved 2010-01-08.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n "Record of Current Events", The American Monthly Review of Reviews (August 1910), pp162–165
  3. ^ U.S. patent no. 1,139,627
  4. ^ "Taft Preserves Land Under the New Law". The New York Times. July 4, 1910. p. 1.
  5. ^ "Charles K. Hamilton". The Historical Marker Database.
  6. ^ "Aviator Killed at Rheims", New York Times, July 4, 1910, p1
  7. ^ "Johnson Wins In 15 Rounds; Jeffries Weak", New York Times, July 5, 1910, p1
  8. ^ Ed Cray, et al., American Datelines: Major News Stories from Colonial Times to the Present (University of Illinois Press, 2003), p129
  9. ^ Peter N. Stearns, ed., The Encyclopedia of World History (Houghton Mifflin, 2001) p574
  10. ^ "Fourth's Dead, 24; The Injured, 1,294", New York Times, July 5, 1910, p8
  11. ^ "Bar Fight Pictures to Avoid Race Riots"; "Roughs Attack Johnson"; "236 Arrests in Washington", The New York Times, July 6, 1910, p3
  12. ^ "NCCU website". Archived from the original on 2010-12-29. Retrieved 2010-01-08.
  13. ^ "Diplomat Shot for Murder". The New York Times. July 6, 1910. p. 4.
  14. ^ "Bleached Flour Put Under Ban", Atlanta Constitution, July 7, 1910, p1; Jensen Anderson, Empty Harvest: Understanding the Link between Our Food, Our Immunity and Our Planet (Penguin Putnam, 1990), p126
  15. ^ Joseph Nathan Kane, The American Counties (4th Ed.), (The Scarecrow Press, 1983), p480
  16. ^ Orbach, Barak Y. "THE JOHNSON-JEFFRIES FIGHT AND CENSORSHIP OF BLACK SUPREMACY" (PDF). New York University Journal of Law & Liberty. 5 (270). Archived (PDF) from the original on 2021-01-26.
  17. .
  18. ^ "Taft Withdraws Big Coal Tracts". The New York Times. July 8, 1910. p. 2.
  19. ^ "Guide to Cuyuna Minnesota".
  20. ^ trpc.org[permanent dead link]
  21. ^ Bhawan Singh Rana, Veer Vinayak Damodar Savarkar: An Immortal Revolutionary of India (Diamond Books, 2004) pp29–31
  22. ^ "Performance Art Festival" Archived 2012-08-14 at the Wayback Machine, October 2–15, 1978, Brussels, p166
  23. ^ Günter Berghaus, ed., F.T. Marinetti: Critical Writings (Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, 2006) p166
  24. ^ "Woodrow Wilson in 1912", Washington Post, July 8, 1910, p1
  25. ^ Goes Up 6,175 Feet in Wright Biplane
  26. ^ "Power of poem immortalizes Cubs trio", mlb.com June 25, 2008]
  27. ^ "Millions of Cones Seized". Washington Post. July 12, 1910. p. 1.
  28. Olympedia
    . OlyMADMen. Retrieved 6 March 2022.
  29. ^ "Rain wreaks havoc in Mumbai". Tribune of India. June 27, 2005.
  30. ^ a b Tribune of India, May 16, 2004; "Killed in His Aero", Washington Post, July 13, 1910, p1
  31. ^ "Think She Is Slain". Washington Post. July 14, 1910. p. 1.
  32. ^ "Air Wreck Kills 5". The Washington Post. July 14, 1910. p. 1.
  33. Gale Publishing
    . 2008. p. 1589.
  34. ^ Konrad Maurer and Ulrike Maurer, Alzheimer: The Life of the Physician and the Career of a Disease (Columbia University Press, 2003) p175
  35. ^ "Paderewski Gives Statue", Washington Post, July 16, 1910, p1
  36. ^ "Polonus Philatelic Society". Archived from the original on 2011-07-27. Retrieved 2010-01-08.
  37. ^ "Restrepo Elected President", Washington Post, July 17, 1910, p1
  38. ^ "Monorail Car Falls On Its First Trip", New York Times, July 17, 1910, p1
  39. ^ "Son pays homage to aviation achievement", transcript from The 7:30 Report, July 8, 2007
  40. ^ "Andrews County History", County of Andrews website
  41. ^ Ayako Hotta-Lister, The Japan-British Exhibition of 1910: Gateway to the Island Empire of the East (Routledge, 1999) p170
  42. ^ "Cy Young Wins 500th Victory", New York Times, July 20, 1910, p10
  43. ^ BaseballAlmanac.com
  44. ^ "City of Zeppelins – Friedrichshafen"
  45. ^ a b c d e "Record of Current Events", The American Monthly Review of Reviews (September 1910), pp289–292
  46. ^ "Big Gun's Blast Kills Eleven", Washington Post, July 22, 1910, p1
  47. ^ "'Mona Lisa' Stolen", Washington Post, July 23, 1910, p1.
  48. ^ "Crime and Investigation website". Archived from the original on 2011-07-18. Retrieved 2010-01-08.
  49. ^ "Crew Sinks With Ship", Washington Post, July 25, 1910, p1
  50. ^ "Bunyan, Paul", in Merriam-Webster's Encyclopedia of Literature (Merriam-Webster, 1995), p186
  51. ^ "Slain With a Bomb", Washington Post, July 26, 1910, p1
  52. ^ "Cloudburst Fatal to Twenty-Five", Washington Post, July 27, 1910
  53. ^ "Stocks Go Crashing", Washington Post, July 27, 1910, p1
  54. ^ Mark J. Mullenbach, TPI-Intrastate Disputes Project[permanent dead link]
  55. ^ M. Thomas Inge, Comics as Culture (University Press of Mississippi, 1990), p45
  56. ^ Michael Paris, Winged Warfare: The Literature and Theory of Aerial warfare in Britain, 1859–1917 (Manchester University Press, 1992), pp71–72, quoting Daily Mail, 28 July 1910
  57. ^ "Harding Is Named", Washington Post, July 28, 1910, p1
  58. ^ Official Guide to Lilburn GA
  59. ^ "The Pollock Pines Epic"
  60. ^ "Breaks With Pope". Washington Post. July 30, 1910. p. 1.
  61. ^ "Many Die In Riots". Washington Post. July 31, 1910. p. 1.
  62. ^ "Science and Society"
  63. ^ "Sheets Flap and Towels Hang Out", New York Times, May 29, 2009; "Five-Story Fall Didn't Feaze Him", New York Times, July 31, 1910, p1
  64. ^ "The Arrest - Dr Hawley Harvey Crippen on Crime and Investigation Network". Archived from the original on 2011-07-18.
  65. ^ "Split Rock Lighthouse Virtual Tour". Archived from the original on 2011-07-14. Retrieved 2010-01-08.