Lava from
Mount Etna destroyed the Italian village of Cavahero, with fifty houses, but the inhabitants were all able to leave beforehand.[1]
Died: Robert W. Patterson, 59, editor of the Chicago Tribune
April 2, 1910 (Saturday)
Both Houses of the
Maryland State Legislature passed the Negro Disenfranchisement Bill, revoking the right of African-Americans to vote in state and local elections, on grounds that it had not voted to ratify the 15th Amendment to the United States Constitution.[2] Governor Crothers vetoed the bill on April 8.[3]
In Paris, Dr. Eugene Doyen announced that he had discovered a germ-destroying medicine, which he called mycolysine.[3] Dr. Doyen claimed that the balm would stop skin cancer.[4]
Aviator
Hubert Le Blon became the sixth person in history to die in an airplane accident, while flying in stormy weather at
San Sebastian, Spain.[5]
While in Rome, former U.S. President
Theodore Roosevelt announced that he would not meet with
Pope Leo XIII because of the Vatican's request that Roosevelt not meet first with local Methodists. In March, former Vice-President
Charles W. Fairbanks declined an audience for the same reason.[7]
April 4, 1910 (Monday)
Sri Aurobindo, formerly Aravinda Ghosh, arrived by ship in
Pondicherry, at that time a colony in French India. The former activist for the independence of India from the British renounced terrorism in favor of spiritualism, and spent the last forty years of his life writing philosophical works.[8]
Socialist
Emil Seidel was elected Mayor of Milwaukee, Wisconsin. He was the first Socialist Party member to be elected to lead a major American city.[9]
The Abernathy Boys, Bud, 10, and Temple, 6, set off on their second long-distance journey, by themselves, on horseback. In 1909, they had captured the nation's attention by riding from
Tillman County, Oklahoma, to
Santa Fe, New Mexico, and back. This time, they decided to visit New York City, a journey of about two months. A monument to the boys was unveiled in
Frederick, Oklahoma, in 2006.[10]
The Trans-Andean Tunnel opened, linking
Chile and
Argentina by rail.[3]
In an appeal of the verdict in the "
Brownsville Affair" A military court of inquiry affirmed the convictions of 167 members of the black 25th United States Regiment, on charges of complicity of the 1906 shooting of two white men in Brownsville, Texas, and the men were dishonorably discharged. It was not until 1972, after publication of John D. Weaver's book The Brownsville Raid, that Army reopened the investigation and concluded the men had been innocent.[12]
Turkish troops moved into
Albania, at that time a part of the
Ottoman Empire, to suppress a revolt over taxes.[3]
April 7, 1910 (Thursday)
SMS Moltke, the first
Moltke-class battlecruiser for the Imperial German Navy, was launched from
Hamburg. The new class of ships had 32 big guns and thicker armor.[13]
The British House of Commons voted 339–237 in favor of Prime Minister Asquith's legislative veto resolution.[3]
April 8, 1910 (Friday)
The "Digges Bill", which took away the right of blacks in Maryland to vote in state and local elections, was vetoed by Governor
Austin Crothers, not because it was racist, but because it was "impractical". Governor Crothers signed a bill permitting Maryland voters to decide on whether to approve the
Digges Amendment to the
Maryland Constitution.[14]
The Los Angeles Motordrome opened in
Playa Del Rey, California, housing the a mile long motor race track made of wood, permitting unprecedented speeds. The track, modeled after a
velodrome used for bicycle racing, was the first designed for the short lived sport of
board track racing, popular up until the 1930s.[15] Caleb Bragg raced one mile in 37.56 seconds, and
Barney Oldfield broke that record at 36.23 s. Other races ran from 2 to 100 miles.[16]
April 9, 1910 (Saturday)
As part of the process of
disestablishment in France, in which formerly state owned church properties were turned over to the general public, the shrine at
Lourdes and all of its property were turned over to the ownership of the local
commune, to be used for whatever purposes the residents wanted. The council of Lourdes voted unanimously to turn the shrine into a trusteeship, giving authority back to the bishop to use it as he saw fit.[17]
Fourteen construction workers at
Novice, Texas, were killed instantly when a mixup of signals caused a worker to set off a dynamite charge before the area had been cleared.[18]
BornAbraham A. Ribicoff, Connecticut politician; Governor, 1955–61; U.S. Senator 1963–81; in
New Britain (d. 1998);
Yevgeny Fyodorov, Soviet scientist (d. 1981); and
Paul Sweezy, American Marxist and founder of Monthly Review, in New York City (d. 2004)
April 11, 1910 (Monday)
Gifford Pinchot, who had been fired from his job as Chief Forester of the United States by President Taft,[19] conferred with former President Roosevelt while both men were at
Porto Maurizio in Italy.[3]
Duncan Campbell Scott, Canada's
Superintendent of Indian Affairs from 1913 to 1932, wrote a letter describing what he referred to as "the final solution of our Indian Problem", declining to address concerns about the higher death rate of Canada's aboriginal people in residential schools. Beginning in the 1920s, Scott oversaw changes in the law requiring all Indian children over the age of seven to be relocated to year-round boarding schools. The letter was first brought to light by Canadian activist
Kevin Annett in his book Hidden from History: The Canadian Holocaust (2001).[20] However, this quotation is not verifiable because Mr. Annett did not include sufficient information in the citation to locate the quotation.
William H. Taft began the tradition of the President of the United States throwing the ceremonial "
first pitch" to open the professional baseball season. The President and Mrs. Taft attended the
Washington Senators' opening day game against the
Philadelphia Athletics, and Taft threw the ball from the stands to Senators' pitcher
Walter Johnson. The Senators won, 3–0.[22]
The
1910 United States Census was taken as more than 70,000 workers began the enumeration process.[24] The final tally was 92,228,496.[25]
Japan's "Submarine No. 6" sank in
Hiroshima Bay, with a loss of her entire crew of 14, after an outside vent was left open during a dive. For more than two hours, the sailors labored to raise the sub before being overcome by carbon monoxide, events that were described by the commander, Lieutenant
Tsutomu Sakuma in a letter that he wrote to the Emperor as death approached, urging him to "study the submarine until it is a perfect machine, absolutely reliable. We can then die without regret."[26][27]
Rosa Blazek gave birth to a son, Franzl, at the General Hospital in
Prague, in the only recorded case of a pregnancy and childbirth for a
conjoined twin. Rosa and her sister Josepha were 31 when Rosa became pregnant. Both died in 1922 shortly after moving to the United States.[30][31][32]
The German balloon Delitzch was destroyed after being struck by a lightning bolt at
Eisenach, killing the four-man crew on board.[3]
Born:Ivan Goff, Australian screenwriter; in
Perth (d. 1999)
April 18, 1910 (Monday)
The
National American Woman Suffrage Association (NAWSA) presented to Congress a petition with 500,000 signatures in favor of granting American women the right to vote. After arriving in a procession of 45 cars (one for each of the United States) at the U.S. Capitol, the suffragists separated the petitions for delivery to their Senators and Representatives, who in turn presented the petitions to the Speaker of the House and to the Vice-President.[33]
April 19, 1910 (Tuesday)
Paul Ehrlich announced his discovery of "
606" (also nicknamed the "
magic bullet"), the first medicine that could cure
syphilis, in an address at the 1910 gathering of the Congress for Internal Medicine at
Wiesbaden.[34]
April 20, 1910 (Wednesday)
Halley's Comet reached
perihelion, making its closest approach to the Sun since 1835, and was visible to the
naked eye for the first time since its return to the solar system. Some viewers on the island of
Curaçao had been able to discern the comet in pre-dawn hours on the 19th.[35] The comet remained visible through the rest of May as it traveled away from the solar system, not to return until 1986.
French aviator
Roger Sommer became the first person to carry five persons on an airplane, when he brought four passengers along for a five-minute flight at
Charleville.[36]
Samuel J. Scott, a 15-year-old boy working in
Belfast on the construction of the
RMS Titanic, fell from a ladder and died of a fractured skull. He was the first of eight people who died on the Titanic prior to its wreck two years later in April 1912.[39]
Samuel Langhorne Clemens, beloved to millions of readers for his writings under the pen name
Mark Twain, died at the age of 74 at his home in
Redding, Connecticut. Twain, who had
angina pectoris, went into a coma at 3:00 pm and was dead by 6:30. Appropriately, his last words were handwritten rather than spoken, a note to his daughter Clara: "Give me my glasses".[40]
Parliamentary elections were held in France, resulting in a slight increase in the ruling party majority.
Aristide Briand remained as Prime Minister.[41][42]
The 200 African-American residents of
Coleman, Texas, mostly employees of the Santa Fe Railroad and their families, were forced to leave town permanently by the White population.[43]
Wellington Smith, 68, the millionaire president of Smith Paper Company, was killed in a freak accident when a folding bed collapsed upon him while he was sleeping.[47]
April 27, 1910 (Wednesday)
A herd of nine elephants rampaged through
Danville, Illinois, after escaping from a train bringing a circus to town. Several people were injured, one seriously, and 100 houses were damaged.[48]
Juan Vincente Gomez was unanimously elected
President of Venezuela by that nation's Congress. Gomez, who had staged a coup the previous November, had resigned on April 19 pending the election. For eight days, Constantin Guererro served as Acting President.[6]
Born:
Chiang Ching-kuo, Prime Minister of Republic of China (Taiwan) 1972–1978, President 1978–1988; in
Fenghua,
Zhejiang Province (d. 1988)
Jim Zyntell, American football player and last, alphabetically, among all NFL players; in
Boston (d. 1992)
April 28, 1910 (Thursday)
The
House of Lords approved the 1909 "
People's Budget" for the United Kingdom, without demurrer, passing the same into law. The Lords had rejected the budget the previous
November 30, leading to a governmental crisis and reforms in their power.[49]
Louis Paulhan won a £10,000 prize from the Daily Mail by becoming the first person to fly an airplane from London to
Manchester.
Graham White, who was making his second attempt at the prize, took off at the same time as Paulhan.[50]
The city of San Francisco began a fund-raising campaign for the
1915 World's Fair.[51]
The town of
Richland, Washington, was incorporated. For its first 30 years, it had only a few hundred residents until the United States government built up residences for employees of the
Hanford Nuclear Reservation.
The Vice-Governor of the
Belgian Congo ordered the introduction of the "
medical passport", mandatory for all black African subjects, ostensibly to combat the spread of
sleeping sickness. Formerly, a document (feuille de route) was required only for persons travelling outside their home area. The medical passport was mandatory for all residents, to be presented upon request to any colonial official, an idea picked up by other colonies.[53]
In the battle of
Kačanik Pass, Turkish troops defeated Albanian rebels.[41]
^"Speed Records Established", Atlanta Constitution, April 9, 1910, p 2
^Owen Chadwick, A History of the Popes, 1830–1914 (Oxford University Press, 2003), p 400
^"14 Men Killed By Explosion of Dynamite", Atlanta Constitution, April 11, 1910, p 1
^"No title". The Daily Telegraph. Vol. XXX, no. 49. Tasmania, Australia. 26 February 1910. p. 4. Retrieved 4 January 2023 – via National Library of Australia.
^"President Taft Throws First Ball Over Plate", Atlanta Constitution, April 15, 1910, p 13; John Sayle Watterson, The Games Presidents Play: Sports and the Presidency (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2006) p 84
^LaSala, Francine (2005). Carny Folk: The World's Weirdest Sideshow Acts.
Citadel Press. pp. 42–46.
^"Anatomical Mystery". The Northern Champion. Vol. 9, no. 934. New South Wales, Australia. 8 April 1922. p. 6. Retrieved 5 January 2023 – via National Library of Australia.
^"Blacks Driven By Angry Mob", Atlanta Constitution, April 25, 1910, p 1
^"Gov. Hughes Given High Court Place", Indianapolis Star, April 26, 1910, p 1
^Mother'sDayShrine.com; "Mother's Day: Governor Designates Sunday, May 8, For Its Observance", The Messenger (Beckley, West Virginia), April 29, 1910, p 3
^"Bjornson Dead; The Lyric Poet", Atlanta Constitution, April 28, 1910, p 1
^"Folding Bed Kills", Washington Post, April 28, 1910, p 1
^"Elephants Raid City", Washington Post, April 28, 1910, p 1
Lava from
Mount Etna destroyed the Italian village of Cavahero, with fifty houses, but the inhabitants were all able to leave beforehand.[1]
Died: Robert W. Patterson, 59, editor of the Chicago Tribune
April 2, 1910 (Saturday)
Both Houses of the
Maryland State Legislature passed the Negro Disenfranchisement Bill, revoking the right of African-Americans to vote in state and local elections, on grounds that it had not voted to ratify the 15th Amendment to the United States Constitution.[2] Governor Crothers vetoed the bill on April 8.[3]
In Paris, Dr. Eugene Doyen announced that he had discovered a germ-destroying medicine, which he called mycolysine.[3] Dr. Doyen claimed that the balm would stop skin cancer.[4]
Aviator
Hubert Le Blon became the sixth person in history to die in an airplane accident, while flying in stormy weather at
San Sebastian, Spain.[5]
While in Rome, former U.S. President
Theodore Roosevelt announced that he would not meet with
Pope Leo XIII because of the Vatican's request that Roosevelt not meet first with local Methodists. In March, former Vice-President
Charles W. Fairbanks declined an audience for the same reason.[7]
April 4, 1910 (Monday)
Sri Aurobindo, formerly Aravinda Ghosh, arrived by ship in
Pondicherry, at that time a colony in French India. The former activist for the independence of India from the British renounced terrorism in favor of spiritualism, and spent the last forty years of his life writing philosophical works.[8]
Socialist
Emil Seidel was elected Mayor of Milwaukee, Wisconsin. He was the first Socialist Party member to be elected to lead a major American city.[9]
The Abernathy Boys, Bud, 10, and Temple, 6, set off on their second long-distance journey, by themselves, on horseback. In 1909, they had captured the nation's attention by riding from
Tillman County, Oklahoma, to
Santa Fe, New Mexico, and back. This time, they decided to visit New York City, a journey of about two months. A monument to the boys was unveiled in
Frederick, Oklahoma, in 2006.[10]
The Trans-Andean Tunnel opened, linking
Chile and
Argentina by rail.[3]
In an appeal of the verdict in the "
Brownsville Affair" A military court of inquiry affirmed the convictions of 167 members of the black 25th United States Regiment, on charges of complicity of the 1906 shooting of two white men in Brownsville, Texas, and the men were dishonorably discharged. It was not until 1972, after publication of John D. Weaver's book The Brownsville Raid, that Army reopened the investigation and concluded the men had been innocent.[12]
Turkish troops moved into
Albania, at that time a part of the
Ottoman Empire, to suppress a revolt over taxes.[3]
April 7, 1910 (Thursday)
SMS Moltke, the first
Moltke-class battlecruiser for the Imperial German Navy, was launched from
Hamburg. The new class of ships had 32 big guns and thicker armor.[13]
The British House of Commons voted 339–237 in favor of Prime Minister Asquith's legislative veto resolution.[3]
April 8, 1910 (Friday)
The "Digges Bill", which took away the right of blacks in Maryland to vote in state and local elections, was vetoed by Governor
Austin Crothers, not because it was racist, but because it was "impractical". Governor Crothers signed a bill permitting Maryland voters to decide on whether to approve the
Digges Amendment to the
Maryland Constitution.[14]
The Los Angeles Motordrome opened in
Playa Del Rey, California, housing the a mile long motor race track made of wood, permitting unprecedented speeds. The track, modeled after a
velodrome used for bicycle racing, was the first designed for the short lived sport of
board track racing, popular up until the 1930s.[15] Caleb Bragg raced one mile in 37.56 seconds, and
Barney Oldfield broke that record at 36.23 s. Other races ran from 2 to 100 miles.[16]
April 9, 1910 (Saturday)
As part of the process of
disestablishment in France, in which formerly state owned church properties were turned over to the general public, the shrine at
Lourdes and all of its property were turned over to the ownership of the local
commune, to be used for whatever purposes the residents wanted. The council of Lourdes voted unanimously to turn the shrine into a trusteeship, giving authority back to the bishop to use it as he saw fit.[17]
Fourteen construction workers at
Novice, Texas, were killed instantly when a mixup of signals caused a worker to set off a dynamite charge before the area had been cleared.[18]
BornAbraham A. Ribicoff, Connecticut politician; Governor, 1955–61; U.S. Senator 1963–81; in
New Britain (d. 1998);
Yevgeny Fyodorov, Soviet scientist (d. 1981); and
Paul Sweezy, American Marxist and founder of Monthly Review, in New York City (d. 2004)
April 11, 1910 (Monday)
Gifford Pinchot, who had been fired from his job as Chief Forester of the United States by President Taft,[19] conferred with former President Roosevelt while both men were at
Porto Maurizio in Italy.[3]
Duncan Campbell Scott, Canada's
Superintendent of Indian Affairs from 1913 to 1932, wrote a letter describing what he referred to as "the final solution of our Indian Problem", declining to address concerns about the higher death rate of Canada's aboriginal people in residential schools. Beginning in the 1920s, Scott oversaw changes in the law requiring all Indian children over the age of seven to be relocated to year-round boarding schools. The letter was first brought to light by Canadian activist
Kevin Annett in his book Hidden from History: The Canadian Holocaust (2001).[20] However, this quotation is not verifiable because Mr. Annett did not include sufficient information in the citation to locate the quotation.
William H. Taft began the tradition of the President of the United States throwing the ceremonial "
first pitch" to open the professional baseball season. The President and Mrs. Taft attended the
Washington Senators' opening day game against the
Philadelphia Athletics, and Taft threw the ball from the stands to Senators' pitcher
Walter Johnson. The Senators won, 3–0.[22]
The
1910 United States Census was taken as more than 70,000 workers began the enumeration process.[24] The final tally was 92,228,496.[25]
Japan's "Submarine No. 6" sank in
Hiroshima Bay, with a loss of her entire crew of 14, after an outside vent was left open during a dive. For more than two hours, the sailors labored to raise the sub before being overcome by carbon monoxide, events that were described by the commander, Lieutenant
Tsutomu Sakuma in a letter that he wrote to the Emperor as death approached, urging him to "study the submarine until it is a perfect machine, absolutely reliable. We can then die without regret."[26][27]
Rosa Blazek gave birth to a son, Franzl, at the General Hospital in
Prague, in the only recorded case of a pregnancy and childbirth for a
conjoined twin. Rosa and her sister Josepha were 31 when Rosa became pregnant. Both died in 1922 shortly after moving to the United States.[30][31][32]
The German balloon Delitzch was destroyed after being struck by a lightning bolt at
Eisenach, killing the four-man crew on board.[3]
Born:Ivan Goff, Australian screenwriter; in
Perth (d. 1999)
April 18, 1910 (Monday)
The
National American Woman Suffrage Association (NAWSA) presented to Congress a petition with 500,000 signatures in favor of granting American women the right to vote. After arriving in a procession of 45 cars (one for each of the United States) at the U.S. Capitol, the suffragists separated the petitions for delivery to their Senators and Representatives, who in turn presented the petitions to the Speaker of the House and to the Vice-President.[33]
April 19, 1910 (Tuesday)
Paul Ehrlich announced his discovery of "
606" (also nicknamed the "
magic bullet"), the first medicine that could cure
syphilis, in an address at the 1910 gathering of the Congress for Internal Medicine at
Wiesbaden.[34]
April 20, 1910 (Wednesday)
Halley's Comet reached
perihelion, making its closest approach to the Sun since 1835, and was visible to the
naked eye for the first time since its return to the solar system. Some viewers on the island of
Curaçao had been able to discern the comet in pre-dawn hours on the 19th.[35] The comet remained visible through the rest of May as it traveled away from the solar system, not to return until 1986.
French aviator
Roger Sommer became the first person to carry five persons on an airplane, when he brought four passengers along for a five-minute flight at
Charleville.[36]
Samuel J. Scott, a 15-year-old boy working in
Belfast on the construction of the
RMS Titanic, fell from a ladder and died of a fractured skull. He was the first of eight people who died on the Titanic prior to its wreck two years later in April 1912.[39]
Samuel Langhorne Clemens, beloved to millions of readers for his writings under the pen name
Mark Twain, died at the age of 74 at his home in
Redding, Connecticut. Twain, who had
angina pectoris, went into a coma at 3:00 pm and was dead by 6:30. Appropriately, his last words were handwritten rather than spoken, a note to his daughter Clara: "Give me my glasses".[40]
Parliamentary elections were held in France, resulting in a slight increase in the ruling party majority.
Aristide Briand remained as Prime Minister.[41][42]
The 200 African-American residents of
Coleman, Texas, mostly employees of the Santa Fe Railroad and their families, were forced to leave town permanently by the White population.[43]
Wellington Smith, 68, the millionaire president of Smith Paper Company, was killed in a freak accident when a folding bed collapsed upon him while he was sleeping.[47]
April 27, 1910 (Wednesday)
A herd of nine elephants rampaged through
Danville, Illinois, after escaping from a train bringing a circus to town. Several people were injured, one seriously, and 100 houses were damaged.[48]
Juan Vincente Gomez was unanimously elected
President of Venezuela by that nation's Congress. Gomez, who had staged a coup the previous November, had resigned on April 19 pending the election. For eight days, Constantin Guererro served as Acting President.[6]
Born:
Chiang Ching-kuo, Prime Minister of Republic of China (Taiwan) 1972–1978, President 1978–1988; in
Fenghua,
Zhejiang Province (d. 1988)
Jim Zyntell, American football player and last, alphabetically, among all NFL players; in
Boston (d. 1992)
April 28, 1910 (Thursday)
The
House of Lords approved the 1909 "
People's Budget" for the United Kingdom, without demurrer, passing the same into law. The Lords had rejected the budget the previous
November 30, leading to a governmental crisis and reforms in their power.[49]
Louis Paulhan won a £10,000 prize from the Daily Mail by becoming the first person to fly an airplane from London to
Manchester.
Graham White, who was making his second attempt at the prize, took off at the same time as Paulhan.[50]
The city of San Francisco began a fund-raising campaign for the
1915 World's Fair.[51]
The town of
Richland, Washington, was incorporated. For its first 30 years, it had only a few hundred residents until the United States government built up residences for employees of the
Hanford Nuclear Reservation.
The Vice-Governor of the
Belgian Congo ordered the introduction of the "
medical passport", mandatory for all black African subjects, ostensibly to combat the spread of
sleeping sickness. Formerly, a document (feuille de route) was required only for persons travelling outside their home area. The medical passport was mandatory for all residents, to be presented upon request to any colonial official, an idea picked up by other colonies.[53]
In the battle of
Kačanik Pass, Turkish troops defeated Albanian rebels.[41]
^"Speed Records Established", Atlanta Constitution, April 9, 1910, p 2
^Owen Chadwick, A History of the Popes, 1830–1914 (Oxford University Press, 2003), p 400
^"14 Men Killed By Explosion of Dynamite", Atlanta Constitution, April 11, 1910, p 1
^"No title". The Daily Telegraph. Vol. XXX, no. 49. Tasmania, Australia. 26 February 1910. p. 4. Retrieved 4 January 2023 – via National Library of Australia.
^"President Taft Throws First Ball Over Plate", Atlanta Constitution, April 15, 1910, p 13; John Sayle Watterson, The Games Presidents Play: Sports and the Presidency (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2006) p 84
^LaSala, Francine (2005). Carny Folk: The World's Weirdest Sideshow Acts.
Citadel Press. pp. 42–46.
^"Anatomical Mystery". The Northern Champion. Vol. 9, no. 934. New South Wales, Australia. 8 April 1922. p. 6. Retrieved 5 January 2023 – via National Library of Australia.
^"Blacks Driven By Angry Mob", Atlanta Constitution, April 25, 1910, p 1
^"Gov. Hughes Given High Court Place", Indianapolis Star, April 26, 1910, p 1
^Mother'sDayShrine.com; "Mother's Day: Governor Designates Sunday, May 8, For Its Observance", The Messenger (Beckley, West Virginia), April 29, 1910, p 3
^"Bjornson Dead; The Lyric Poet", Atlanta Constitution, April 28, 1910, p 1
^"Folding Bed Kills", Washington Post, April 28, 1910, p 1
^"Elephants Raid City", Washington Post, April 28, 1910, p 1