1911

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<<June 1911>>
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June 22, 1911: George V crowned King at Westminster Abbey
June 4, 1911: Il Vittoriano dedicated in Italy
June 28, 1911: A piece of Mars falls on Egypt
June 6, 1911: Colima Volcano erupts in Mexico

The following events occurred in June 1911:

June 1, 1911 (Thursday)

  • The Senate voted 48–20 to reopen the investigation of U.S. Senator William Lorimer of Illinois, after voting against his expulsion on March 1.
  • Chiang Kai-shek first reached national prominence when he delivered a stirring public lecture advocating a socialist government for China, which he would eventually govern.

June 2, 1911 (Friday)

  • The city of Fort Lauderdale, Florida, was incorporated.
  • Francisco I. Madero departed from El Paso, Texas on a Southern Pacific train at 1:30 am to make his journey back to Mexico City, to meet with interim President de la Barra. He stopped first at Spofford Junction, Texas, where he then crossed the border to board another train on June 2.
  • Born:Hsiao Hung, Chinese female novelist; in Hulan, Heilongjiang province (d. 1942).[citation needed]
  • Died: Axel Olof Freudenthal, 74, Swedish philologist and politician.[citation needed] Jose Domingo Brindis, 59, black violinist.[citation needed]

June 3, 1911 (Saturday)

  • L. Frank Baum filed for bankruptcy in U.S. District Court in Los Angeles after having incurred $12,600 in debts. He died in 1919 and never saw any more royalties from The Wizard of Oz, the publishing rights to which would remain with a trustee until 1932.
  • Born: Ellen Corby, American actress and winner of three Emmy awards for her portrayal of the grandmother on The Waltons; in Racine, Wisconsin (d. 1999).[citation needed] Paulette Goddard, American film actress; as Pauline Levy; in Queens, New York (d. 1990).[citation needed]
  • Died: Edward Der-Pault, who had overcome the handicap of losing both legs and became a high diver at amusement parks, was killed in Bayonne, New Jersey before a crowd of several hundred people. Jumping from a 50-foot (15 m) high ladder into a 6-foot (1.8 m) tank of water, Der-Pault had miscalculated the distance and struck the edge of the tank.

June 4, 1911 (Sunday)

June 5, 1911 (Monday)

June 6, 1911 (Tuesday)

June 7, 1911 (Wednesday)

June 8, 1911 (Thursday)

June 9, 1911 (Friday)

June 10, 1911 (Saturday)

  • The German battleship SMS Friedrich der Grosse was launched from Hamburg.
  • The American battleship fleet arrived at Kronstadt in Russia. (June 11)
  • At Rouen, France, the 1,000th anniversary of the arrival of the Normans was observed. The Kensington Runestone, purporting to be a record of the arrival of Norsemen in Minnesota in 1362, was loaned for the celebration by the Minnesota Historical Society.

June 11, 1911 (Sunday)

  • For the first time, the U.S. Senate approved an amendment to the U.S. Constitution to have its members elected directly by the people, rather than by state legislatures. The 64-24 approval of the proposed Seventeenth Amendment, which changed the requirement of Article I, Section 3, was on an altered version of what had passed the House of Representatives. Voting on the "Bristow Amendment" (proposed by Joseph L. Bristow of Kansas), which added the language that "Congress may at any time by law make or alter" the date upon which the states voted on U.S. Senators, had ended in a 44–44 tie, which was broken by U.S. Vice-president James S. Sherman.
  • The Chamizal dispute was resolved when the International Boundary Commission, consisting of representatives from the U.S., Mexico, and Canada, made its decision in a dispute over a 600-acre piece of land known as El Chamizal, which had been south of the Rio Grande in 1848, until the river's course was shifted by a major flood in 1864 and El Chamizal north of the border. The Commission ruled that 437 of the acres should be returned to Mexico. The U.S. refused to abide by the ruling. On October 28, 1967, the 1911 ruling was finally certified by a new treaty between the two nations, a concrete channel was constructed to prevent further shifting of the Rio Grande, the 5,000 American residents were moved out, and El Chamizal was returned to Mexico.
  • The Sixth Conference of the International Woman Suffrage Alliance opened in Stockholm, Sweden.
  • Born: Norman Malcolm, American philosopher; in Selden, Kansas (d. 1990).[citation needed]

June 12, 1911 (Monday)

  • By a margin of 64–24, the U.S. Senate passed the House resolution for a constitutional amendment to permit direct election of U.S. Senators. At the time, the state legislatures elected their representatives in the Senate. An amendment to the House bill, providing for federal supervision of Senate elections, was tied 44-44, and Vice-president Sherman broke the tie in favor of the Senate bill. The House finally accepted the amended version, 238–39, on May 12, 1912, sending the Seventeenth Amendment to the states for ratification. On April 8, 1913, Connecticut became the 36th of the 48 states to ratify the addition to the United States Constitution.
  • Sultan Mehmed V of Turkey offered terms of peace for the Albanians within the Ottoman Empire, granting amnesty to Albanian insurgents who surrendered their weapons, and lifting the ban on Albanian-language schools.
  • Born:Milovan Djilas, Yugoslavian and Montenegrin Marxist; in Mojkovac, Kingdom of Montenegro (d. 1995).[citation needed]

June 13, 1911 (Tuesday)

June 14, 1911 (Wednesday)

June 15, 1911 (Thursday)

June 16, 1911 (Friday)

June 17, 1911 (Saturday)

  • Arab rebels surprised Turkish troops in a battle at the port city of Gheesan (now Jizan, Saudi Arabia), and killed and wounded many of them. By mistake, the Turkish gunboat Sutebbe shelled its own troops. One estimate placed the number of Turkish dead at at least 1,000.
  • The Women's Coronation March saw the largest demonstration up to that time in favor of British women's suffrage. Forty thousand women marched in London from Thames Embankment to Albert Hall along the route of the coronation procession.
  • The University of Iceland (Haskoli Islands) was founded in Reykjavik with the consolidation of a theological college, a medical school and a law school. The largest higher education institute in the nation, the university has 12,000 students and 1,100 faculty members.

June 18, 1911 (Sunday)

  • The Detroit Tigers broke the record for greatest comeback in a baseball game, after trailing the Chicago White Sox by twelve runs. Down 13–1, the Tigers won 16–15. The feat has been duplicated only twice, on June 15, 1925 (the Athletics beat the Indians 17-15 after being down 14–2), and on August 5, 2001 (the Indians won 15-14 after trailing the Mariners 12-0 and 14–2).
  • As the water level from inside the wreckage of the battleship USS Maine was lowered, the first human remains from the 1898 explosion were found. Sixty-eight of the men on the Maine were not recovered out of 252 killed.
  • Died: James Proctor Knott, 80, former Governor of Kentucky, for whom Knott County, Kentucky was named.

June 19, 1911 (Monday)

  • The first Constituent Assembly of the Republic of Portugal, with 192 deputies, convened. The first order of business was to vote for permanent banishment of the former royal family of Braganza. The United States recognized the new republic the same day.
  • The General Motors Export Company was organized as the auto manufacturer made plans to begin selling GM vehicles overseas.

June 20, 1911 (Tuesday)

  • The first trolleybus service was inaugurated in the United Kingdom, with the cities of Leeds and Bradford being the first to use the electric buses that drew power from overhead wires.
  • Actress Sarah Bernhardt, on a visit to the United States, became the first woman to be admitted for a reception at New York's all-male Players Club, breaking a tradition dating back to the social club's founding by Edwin Booth in 1888. Legend has it that "The Divine Miss Sarah" was trapped in the club's elevator for an hour while being escorted to see the apartment that Booth had occupied prior to his death in 1893.

June 21, 1911 (Wednesday)

June 22, 1911 (Thursday)

June 23, 1911 (Friday)

  • Prime Minister of France Ernest Monis, recovering from injuries sustained on May 21, lost a vote of confidence in the Chamber of Deputies, 243-224, and he and the entire cabinet resigned. The resolution was brought by Deputy Andre Hesse, three days after the Minister of War, General François Goiran, remarked that there was no provision for a Commander in Chief of French forces in time of war.
  • Led by Luigj Gurakuqi, Albanian nationalists gathered in the village of Gerche in Montenegro and drafted the "Gerche Memorandum," later reprinted in Libri i Kuq (The Red Book). Demands were made in for Albanian autonomy within the Ottoman Empire, the teaching of the Albanian language in schools, and representation in the Turkish parliament by Albanian deputies.
  • Born: Eddie Miller, American jazz musician; in New Orleans (d. 1991).[citation needed]

June 24, 1911 (Saturday)

June 25, 1911 (Sunday)

  • As Sultan Mehmed V continued his tour of the Ottoman Empire's European territories, he was greeted by thousands of loyal subjects in Greece as he paid his respects at the tomb of Sultan Murad II at Salonika (now Thessaloniki).[citation needed]
  • Born:William H. Stein, American chemist and 1972 Nobel Prize laureate; in New York City (d. 1980).[citation needed]

June 26, 1911 (Monday)

  • A group of 40 wealthy travelers, riding in twelve Premier automobiles, began a transcontinental journey, departing from Ohio Avenue in Atlantic City, New Jersey for a 4,617 mile journey to Los Angeles. The "Premier Trip", which concluded in L.A. 45 days later, was followed by American newspaper readers and is said to have "inspired hundreds, and then thousands, of ordinary families to make the cross-country journey by automobile", as well as promoting the creation of a coast-to-coast highway.
  • Baron Von Bienerth, the Chancellor of the Empire of Austria resigned after the Christian Socialists lost their majority in Parliament in 2 rounds of voting.
  • Born: Mildred "Babe" Didrikson, American Olympic athlete and golfer; in Port Arthur, Texas (d. 1956).[citation needed] Fredrick "Freddie" Calland Williams, British co-inventor of the Williams-Kilborn tube, used for memory in early computer systems; in Romiley, Cheshire (d. 1977).[citation needed]

June 27, 1911 (Tuesday)

June 28, 1911 (Wednesday)

  • The Nakhla meteorite fell in Egypt at about 9:00 am, near the city of El-Nakhla outside of Alexandria, with 10 kilograms (22 pounds) of mass breaking into forty pieces. The Nakhla meteorite was later determined to be one of 36 Martian meteorites originating from the planet Mars. In 2006, it was suggested by a team led by David McKay that the Nakhla meteorite, as well as an Antarctic one examined in 1996, showed signs of microbe alteration, evidence of life having once existed on Mars. One of the pieces of the Nakhla meteorite was said to have killed a dog, but as one author notes, "there is no real evidence for this having actually happened."
  • Wisconsin became the first U.S. state to enact a state income tax, when the state Senate approved the House bill by a margin of 15–14. Governor Francis E. McGovern signed the bill into law on July 13.

June 29, 1911 (Thursday)

June 30, 1911 (Friday)