1911 in the United States
1911 in the United States | |
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Years: | 1908 1909 1910 – 1911 – 1912 1913 1914 |
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46 stars (1908–12) | |
Timeline of United States history
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Events from the year 1911 in the United States.
Incumbents
Federal Government
- President: William Howard Taft (R-Ohio)
- Vice President: James S. Sherman (R-New York)
- Chief Justice: Edward Douglass White (Louisiana)
- Speaker of the House of Representatives: Joseph Gurney Cannon (R-Illinois) (until March 4), Champ Clark (D-Missouri) (starting April 4)
- Congress: 61st (until March 4), 62nd (starting March 4)
Events
January–March
- January 5 - The Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity is founded at Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana.
- January 18 – Eugene Burton Ely lands on the deck of the USS Pennsylvania stationed in San Francisco Bay, marking the first time an aircraft lands on a ship.
- January 30 – The destroyer USS Terry makes the first airplane rescue at sea, saving the life of John McCurdy 10 miles from Havana, Cuba.
- January - The Masses socialist magazine begins publication.
- March – The first installment of a serialized version of Frederick Winslow Taylor's monograph, The Principles of Scientific Management, appears in The American Magazine. The complete series runs in the March, April, and May issues, giving a boost to the efficiency movement.[1]
- March 10 – The Kansas legislature approves House Bill Number 906, effectively the first blue sky law in the United States, culminating an effort by Joseph Norman Dolley, Kansas' banking commissioner.
- March 25 – The Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire in New York City kills 146.
- March 29 – The United States Army formally adopts the M1911 pistol as its standard sidearm, thus giving the gun its 1911 designation.
April–June
- April 13 – Mexican Revolution: Rebels take Agua Prieta on the Sonora–Arizona border; government troops take the town back April 17 when the rebel leader "Red" López is drunk.
- April 17 – Southern Methodist University is chartered.
- April 27 – Following the resignation and death of William P. Frye, a compromise is reached to rotate the office of President pro tempore of the United States Senate.
- April 30 – Sparks from a burning hayshed ignite the Great Fire of 1911, destroying much of downtown Bangor, Maine.
- May 15 – The United States Supreme Court declares Standard Oil to be an "unreasonable" monopoly under the Sherman Antitrust Act and orders the company to be dissolved.
- May 23 – The main branch of the New York Public Library is officially opened.
- May 30 – The first Indianapolis 500-mile auto race is run. The winner is Ray Harroun in the Marmon 'Wasp.'
- June 5 – Charles F. Kettering files US patent 1,150,523, for an electric Engine Starting Device.
- June 15 – IBM is incorporated as the Computing-Tabulating-Recording Company in New York.
- June 16 – A 772-gram stony meteorite strikes earth in Columbia County, Wisconsin, near the village of Kilbourn, damaging a barn.
- July 24 – Hiram Bingham rediscovers Machu Picchu.
July–September
- August 8 – Public Law 62-5 sets the number of representatives in the United States House of Representatives at 435 (the law takes effect in 1913).
- September 11 – Middle Tennessee State University is founded in Murfreesboro, Tennessee, as Middle Tennessee Normal School.
- September 25 – Groundbreaking for Fenway Park in Boston, Massachusetts, begins.
- September 30 – Austin Dam breaks, wiping out the town of Austin, Pennsylvania, and continuing downstream about 8 miles into the village of Costello.
October–December
- October 7 – Outlaw Elmer McCurdy and "associates" are chased after trying to rob a train in Oklahoma. McCurdy on the run is eventually hunted down and shot by authorities. His body is never claimed and later is chemically petrified. Afterwards his remains serve as sideshow attractions in carnivals until 1976 when they are diagnosed by forensic experts to be McCurdy. McCurdy's body is finally buried in 1976 after a 65-year Odyssey to the grave.
- October 24 – Orville Wright remains in the air 9 minutes and 45 seconds in a glider at Kill Devil Hills, North Carolina, setting a new world record that stands for 10 years.[2]
- October 28 – The Rosicrucian Fellowship's international headquarters opens at Mount Ecclesia, Oceanside, California (preceded by its formal constitution on August 8, 1909, at Seattle, Washington).
- November 3 – Chevrolet officially enters the automobile market to compete with the Ford Model T.
- November 11
- The Great Blue Norther of 11/11/11: A record cold snap hits the United States Midwest; many cities break record highs and lows on the same day.
- The Upton Machine Company, now Whirlpool Corporation, was founded in St Joseph, MI.
- November 17 – The Omega Psi Phi fraternity is founded at Howard University.
- December 24 – The Lackawanna Cutoff, the first of two major cutoffs built by the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad, opens just 3 years after it was built.
- Undated
- Southern Methodist University is founded in Dallas, Texas.
Ongoing
- Progressive Era (1890s–1920s)
- Lochner era (c. 1897–c. 1937)
Births
- February 6 – Ronald Reagan, actor, 33rd Governor of California from 1967 to 1975 and 40th President of the United States from 1981 to 1989 (died 2004)
- March 25 – Jack Ruby, shot and killed Lee Harvey Oswald (the man who (according to four government investigations)[3] assassinated President John F. Kennedy) (died 1967)
- April 8 – Melvin Calvin, chemist, winner of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1961 (died 1997)
- May 11 – Doodles Weaver, actor and singer (died 1983)
- May 27 – Hubert Humphrey, 38th Vice President of the United States from 1965 till 1969 and U.S. Senator from Minnesota from 1949 to 1964 and from 1971 to 1978 (died 1978)
- June 13 – Luis Walter Alvarez, physicist, winner of the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1968 (died 1988)
- June 25 – William Howard Stein, chemist, winner of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1972 (died 1980)
- July 4 – Frederick Seitz, solid-state physicist (died 2008)
- June 27 – Robert Russell Williams, Jr., in Syracuse, New York, commanding officer of USS Finback (SS-230, which rescues on 2 September 1944 then-Lt. George H. W. Bush, USN after he bales out of his Avenger torpedo bomber seven miles south of Chichi Jima in the Pacific Ocean)
- August 9 – William A. Fowler, physicist, winner of the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1983 (died 1995)
- September 21 – Clair Engle, U.S. Senator from California from 1959 to 1964 (died 1964)
- September 23 – Jane Hadley Barkley, wife of Alben W. Barkley, Second Lady of the United States (died 1964)
- September 30 – Ruth Gruber, journalist (died 2016)
Deaths
- January 7 – William Hall Sherwood, pianist and music educator (born 1854)
- January 9 – Edwin Arthur Jones, choral composer (born 1853)
- January 23 – David Graham Phillips, journalist and novelist, murdered (born 1867)
- February 1 – Charles Stillman Sperry, admiral (born 1847)
- February 7 – Hannah Whitall Smith, Quaker author (born 1832)
- February 22 – Frances Harper, African American abolitionist, poet and author (born 1825)
- March 4 – Ellen Maria Colfax, wife of Schuyler Colfax, Second Lady of the United States (born 1836)
- March 18 – David Moffat, financier (born 1839)
- April 13 – William Keith, landscape painter (born 1838 in Scotland)
- April 14
- George Cary Eggleston, memoirist (born 1839)
- Addie Joss, baseball player (born 1880)
- Denman Thompson, actor and playwright (born 1833)
- May 5
- James A. Bland, African American musician and songwriter (born 1854)
- Halsey Ives, art teacher and curator (born 1847)
- May 9 – Thomas Wentworth Higginson, writer, abolitionist and advocate of women's suffrage (born 1823)
- May 21 – Williamina Fleming, astronomer (born 1857 in Scotland)
- May 30 – Milton Bradley, game pioneer and businessman (born 1836)
- June 9 – Carrie Nation, temperance activist (born 1846)
- July 2 – Clement A. Evans, Confederate general (born 1833)
- July 24 – Thomas J. Latham, lawyer and businessman (born 1831)
- August 1 – Samuel Arza Davenport, politician (born 1843)
- August 7 – Elizabeth Chase Allen, author, journalist and poet (born 1832)
- August 8 – William P. Frye, U.S. Senator (born 1830)
- August 11 – Verner Clarges, silent film actor (born 1846)
- September 9 – Francis March, lexicographer and philologist (born 1825)
- October 2 – Winfield Scott Schley, admiral (born 1839)
- October 7 – Elmer McCurdy, robber, killed in shootout (born 1880)
- October 14 – John Marshall Harlan, U.S. Supreme Court Justice (born 1833)
- October 17 – Abram Williams, U.S. Senator from California from 1886 to 1887 (born 1832)
- October 19 – Eugene Ely, aviation pioneer (born 1886)
- October 24 – Ida Lewis, lighthouse keeper (born 1842)
- October 29 – Joseph Pulitzer, newspaper publisher and journalist (born 1847 in Hungary)
- October 31 – John Joseph Montgomery, glider pioneer (born 1858)
- November 15 – Philip Gengembre Hubert, architect (born 1830 in France)
- December 21 – Benjamin F. Jonas, U.S. Senator from Louisiana from 1879 to 1885 (born 1834)
- December 20 – Rose Eytinge, actress (born 1835)
- December 25 – Arthur F. Griffith, calculating prodigy (born 1880)
See also
References
- ↑ The Principles of Scientific Management available online.
- ↑ Orville Wright, Diary Entry, October 1911
- ↑ These were investigations by: the Federal Bureau of Investigation (1963), the Warren Commission (1964), the House Select Committee on Assassinations (1979), and the Dallas Police Department.
External links
- Media related to 1911 in the United States at Wikimedia Commons
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