Thirty people were killed in an explosion at
Communipaw,
New Jersey. Employees of the Central Railroad of New Jersey had been unloading cases of black powder from the freighter Katherine W, when the accident happened at one minute past noon. The blast was felt 50 miles away, rocking office buildings and breaking windows in Manhattan, on the other side of the Hudson River. Eight officials of the railroad and the Du Pont Powder Company were indicted for the disaster.[1][2]
The Governor of the
Isfahan province of
Persia (now
Iran) was shot.[1] Mutemidi Khan and his nephew were murdered by a Russian national who had formerly been the chief of police in Isfahan.[3]
The crews of the two expeditions to the South Pole confronted each other at the
Bay of Whales, as Robert Falcon Scott's Terra Nova sailed alongside Roald Amundsen's ship Fram.[6] Word of Amundsen's arrival was sent back to Britain and then reported worldwide. When informed that the Norwegian explorer was racing him to the pole, Scott is said to have replied angrily, "By Jove, what a chance we have missed! We might have taken Amundsen and sent him back to his ship!"[7]
Captain Bellinger of the French Army set a new record for most persons to fly in an airplane, carrying seven passengers on a short flight at
Pau.[1]
Revolution broke out on the northern coast of
Haiti[1]
The
Honduras city of
Puerto Cortez was turned over to the control of American and British soldiers[1]
A group of 253 ice fishermen, who had set up a "fishing village" on an ice floe in the Bjorko Sound in Finland, were killed when a gale swept the settlement out into the Baltic Sea.[8]
George Grey, brother of the British Foreign Secretary, Sir
Edward Grey, was killed by a lion while hunting in Nairobi,[9]
February 4, 1911 (Saturday)
Persia's Minister of Finance, Sani al-Dowleh, was killed in
Tehran by two Armenian assassins who were Russian subjects. The Russian legation provided the men sanctuary, and refused to turn them over for prosecution by Persia.[10]
Died:
General
Piet Cronjé, 74, leader of the Boer resistance against Britain
Owen Kildare, 46, crusader against slum poverty in New York
February 5, 1911 (Sunday)
The revolution in
Haiti was suppressed after the leader, General Montreuil Guillaume, was captured by government troops and shot. General Millionard was executed two days later.[1]
William C. Beall, photographer for the Washington Daily News, who won a
Pulitzer Prize for his image Faith and Confidence; in Washington, D.C.
February 7, 1911 (Tuesday)
Seattle Mayor
Hiram C. Gill was put out of office by a
recall election and replaced by George Dilling. It was the first city election in which women were allowed to participate, and the female vote was believed to have contributed to the recall.[14]
The civil war in the
Honduras ended after President
Miguel R. Dávila and rebel leader General
Manuel Bonilla agreed to an armistice that included free elections to be supervised by American observers. Bonilla would be elected President on October 29.[1][15]
The U.S. House of Representatives approved the
Crumpacker Bill, increasing the number of U.S. Representatives, beginning in 1913, from 391 to 435, the number that it has had ever since. No state lost representatives, but 25 of the 46 states gained seats based on the 1910 census, and, pending statehood, Arizona and New Mexico were each given one representative.[18] In later years, the number of 435 seats remained the same, but the distribution changed after each census.
The Lincoln Memorial Commission was created to find an ideal site for the proposed
Lincoln Memorial. On February 3, 1912, the west end of the Washington Mall would be picked, and the building would be dedicated on February 12, 1915.[23]
In
Grand Rapids, Michigan, former President Theodore Roosevelt came out in favor of direct voting for U.S. Senators and for the Presidency. Though not a declared candidate, members of the crowd reportedly shouted "Teddy for President in 1912".[24]
In a major turning point in the Mexican Revolution,
Francisco I. Madero crossed the
Rio Grande from
Texas and into
Mexico's
Chihuahua State to take command of rebel forces. Madero had departed the United States after a warrant was issued for his arrest for violating U.S. neutrality laws.[30]
The House of Representatives approved the controversial reciprocal trade agreement between the United States and Canada, by a 221-92 margin.[31]
Born:Willem J. Kolff, Dutch biophysicist who, in 1943, created the first machinery for
kidney dialysis, and later patented the first artificial heart; at
Leiden (d. 2009)
February 15, 1911 (Wednesday)
Jess Willard fought his first professional boxing bout, losing in the 10th round on a foul. Four years after the debacle in
Sapulpa, Oklahoma, however, he became the world heavyweight boxing champion when he knocked out
Jack Johnson, and held the title from 1915 to 1919 before losing to
Jack Dempsey.[32]
U.S. Patent 1,368,974 was granted for a medicine that purported to be a remedy for the treatment of
tuberculosis. Marketed as "Savrite", the ineffective but all natural compound was made up of
olive oil,
squill root,
almonds,
nettle and
red poppy petals.[33]
U.S. Representative
William Stiles Bennet (R-New York), a member of the
House Foreign Affairs Committee, introduced a resolution proposing that the
United States annex
Canada, after unsuccessfully opposing the reciprocal trade agreement.[34] Although the proposal had no chance of passage, it had the intended effect of upsetting people in Canada and the United Kingdom, and President Taft asked the committee to put it to a quick vote. The measure failed in committee, 9–1, with Bennet being the lone supporter.[35]
February 17, 1911 (Friday)
The basketball team of
St. John's College beat the
University of Rochester at home in New York City, 32–27, to finish the season unbeaten, at 14–0. The team, now St. John's University, won its games by an average of 20 points, with the exception of the Rochester win and a 25-23 squeaker over the powerful University of Pennsylvania on December 10. Although there was no national tournament at the time, the
Helms Athletic Foundation retroactively named St. John's as the national college basketball champion.[36]
The first air mail flight in history took place in
India, when French pilot Henri Pequet carried 6,500 letters from
Allahabad a distance of 8 miles, to the
Naini junction. The mail was then loaded on a train and taken to
Calcutta.[38]
Bill Miner, who had attained fame in the 19th century as a stagecoach robber, and then started a new career as a train robber upon his release from prison in 1901, committed his final holdup, taking $3,500 from a Southern Railroad Express train in Georgia. By then, Miner was 64 years old and "was barely able to hold his six-gun straight";.[39] On February 23, Pinkerton detectives would track him down to
Lumpkin County, where he was arrested by the county sheriff.[40] Miner would die in prison two years later.
The
Mark Twain Library, housing most of the works of Samuel Clemens, was opened in Redding, Connecticut. However, most of the collection would disappear over the years.[41]
In a burst of inspiration,
AustriancomposerArnold Schoenberg composed the first five of his famous "6 Little Piano Pieces" (
Sechs kleine Klavierstücke) in a single day, each of the pieces described as "miniatures... shorter and more concentrated than any others in the history of music".[42]
February 20, 1911 (Monday)
To fight the
bubonic plague epidemic in China, which had killed thousands of people, the imperial government ordered villages to burn their dead.[43]
Japan, represented by its Ambassador
Baron Uchida, and the
United States (by Secretary of State
Philander C. Knox) signed a Treaty of Commerce and Navigation at Washington. On July 26, 1939, the U.S. would give notice that it was exercising its rights to abrogate the treaty, and it expired six months later.[44]
The
Buffalo Germans, a
barnstorming professional team billed as "world's champions at basketball", lost their first game in three years, after winning 111 consecutive games against various opponents. The streak was snapped by the 31st National Guard team of Herkimer, New York, in a 19–14 win at
Utica.[46]
The vote on the first reading of the
"Parliament Bill", which would give the
House of Commons veto power over the
House of Lords, passed 351 to 227.[47] The third reading of the modified bill would later pass 362 to 241.[48]
The entire population of an unnamed village near
Harbin, China, was found to have been killed by the bubonic plague.[43]
The Governor of the
Chernihiv oblast Tchernigov province of
Little Russia (now
Ukraine) expelled 200 Jewish families and ordered them to depart, on foot, through heavy snow.[43]
Born:G. Mennen Williams, American politician who served as Governor of Michigan from 1949 to 1961, later the Chief Justice of the Michigan Supreme Court from 1983 to 1987; in
Detroit (d. 1987)
The U.S. Senate ratified the commercial treaty that had been signed earlier in the week with Japan.[43][50]
Pope Pius X declared that the
harem skirt, a new fashion out of
Paris, received his strong disapproval. The statement, published in the Osservatore Romano, also said that wearers of the skirt would be excluded from Catholic churches.[51]
February 25, 1911 (Saturday)
A group of tribal chiefs in
Morocco met at
Agourai, and agreed on the details for a planned assassination of Berber pasha
Thami El Glaoui and Grand Vizier
Muhammad al-Muqri, to take place at a gathering of the leaders on March 14.[52]
Victor Herbert's opera Natoma premiered at Philadelphia, then moved to New York's Metropolitan Opera House.[53]
In the only engagement of the
Mexican Revolution where he would command the troops,
Francisco I. Madero fought at the Battle of
Casas Grandes. His rebel forces were routed by the government troops, and Madero himself was almost killed, after which he stayed away from the front.[54]
February 26, 1911 (Sunday)
In what has been described as "the last massacre of Indians in the United States",[55] a group of
Nevada state police fought with
"Shoshone Mike", who had killed four ranchers in
Washoe County. "It was probably the first time in many years that bows and arrows have figured in any Indian fight", the New York Times noted.[56] One of the white men died, while eight of twelve Shoshones, some of whom were children, were killed in the fight at Rabbit Creek, near
Winnemucca.[57] Remains believed to be those of the group were kept in a museum for years, then returned to the Shoshone tribe for burial in 1992.[58]
February 27, 1911 (Monday)
The first electric starter for an automobile was unveiled, as inventor
Charles F. Kettering, started the engine of a Cadillac in a few seconds, an alternative to the crank that had been used to start engines. The innovation, which depended on a 65-pound battery, was installed on 12,000 Cadillac automobiles in its first year, and Kettering would receive U.S. Patent #1,150,523 on August 17, 1915. "A few hours later, elated Cadillac engineers decided that since their cars were going to have a storgage battery and a generator, why not operate the ignition and headlights electrically also?"[59][60]
In a surprise action, President Taft nominated William H. Lewis, an African-American from Massachusetts, to be
United States Assistant Attorney General. The U.S. Senate was near the end of its term, and did not take up the matter, and Lewis was sworn in while Congress was out of session.[62]
A proposed
Seventeenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, providing for U.S. Senators to be elected by popular vote rather than by the state legislatures, was favored, 54 to 33 favor in the U.S. Senate, but fell five votes short of the necessary 2/3rds majority required by Article V of the
United States Constitution. The amendment would eventually be sent to the states in 1912 and ratified the following year.[63]
Seventeen men were killed in a mine fire near
Tonopah, Nevada, including rescuer "Big Bill" Murphy.[64]
^
abcdefghi"Record of Current Events", The American Monthly Review of Reviews (March 1911), pp287–290
^"EXPLODING DYNAMITE KILLS AT LEAST 24; HUNDREDS INJURED; ALL NEW YORK SHAKEN", New York Times, February 2, 1911, p1
^"Governor of Ispahan Shot", New York Times, February 2, 1911, p1
^"New Super-Dreadnought", New York Times, February 2, 1911
^
abcdefghijJoseph Nathan Kane, The American Counties (4th Ed.), (The Scarecrow Press, 1983), p480
^Beau Riffenburgh, Encyclopedia of the Antarctic (Volume 1) (CRC Press, 2007), p676
^Colin Evans, Great Feuds in History: Ten of the Liveliest Disputes Ever (John Wiley and Sons, 2001) p118
^"Village Swept to Sea", Milwaukee Sentinel, February 6, 1911, p1
^"Grey Killed by Lion", Milwaukee Sentinel, February 5, 1911, p1
^"Persian Minister Slain in TeheranNew York Times, February 5, 1911, p1
^"Missouri Capitol Burned by Lightning", Milwaukee Sentinel, February 6, 1911, p1
^"Ten Men Perish as Nitro Lets Go", Milwaukee Sentinel, February 7, 1911, p1
^Bob Colacello, Ronnie and Nancy: Their Path to the White House, 1911 to 1980 (Hachette Digital, 2004)
^"Women's Votes Oust Mayor of Seattle", Milwaukee Sentinel, February 8, 1911, p1
^"Honduran Civil War of 1909-11", in Dictionary of Wars by George C. Kohn (Infobase Publishing, 2006) p253; "Honduran Factions Agree to Armistice" New York Times, February 9, 1911, p1
^Janet Afary, The Iranian Constitutional Revolution, 1906-1911 (Columbia University Press, 1996) p310
^Persia Crawford Campbell, Chinese Coolie Emigration to Countries Within the British Empire (P.S. King and Son, 1923, reprinted BiblioBazaar, 2009) p25
^Kolleen M. Guy, "When Champagne Became French: Wine and the Making of a National Identity" (JHU Press, 2003) p166
^"To Put up French Clock" New York Times, February 11, 1911, p1
^Brent Ashabranner and Jennifer Ashabranner, No Better Hope: What the Lincoln Memorial Means to America (Twenty-First Century Books, 2001) p. 29
^"Roosevelt Favors Direct Vote Change-- Besides Popular Election of Senators He Would Abolish Electoral College", Milwaukee Sentinel, February 12, 1911, p1
^Christopher Chant, A Century of Triumph: The History of Aviation (Simon and Schuster, 2002) p110
^"Miner, Bill", in Encyclopedia of Western Lawmen & Outlaws, by Jay Robert Nash (Rowman & Littlefield, 1989) p235
^"Declare Train Robber in Custody is Bill Miner, Most Famous Bandit", Vancouver Daily World, February 27, 1911, p1
^"Mark Twain Library", in R. Kent Rasmussen, Critical Companion to Mark Twain: A Literary Reference to His Life and Work (Infobase Publishing, 2007)
^Charles Rosen, Arnold Schoenberg (University of Chicago Press, 1996) p52
^
abcde"Record of Current Events", The American Monthly Review of Reviews (April 1911), pp416–419
^Ralph E. Schaffer, Toward Pearl Harbor: The Diplomatic Exchange between Japan and the United States, 1899-1941 (Markus Weiner Publishers, 1991) p79
^Mary H. Wagner, Gustav Mahler and the New York Philharmonic Tour America (Scarecrow Press, 2006) p159
^"World's Champion Loses",Reno Evening Gazette, February 23, 1911, p3; "Baloe, Fran J.", in Basketball: A Biographical Dictionary, David L. Porter, ed.(Greenwood Publishing Group, 2005) p29
^
"Veto Bill Is Passed", Milwaukee Sentinel, February 17, 1911, p1
^British Social Politics (Ayer Publishing, 1972) p434
Thirty people were killed in an explosion at
Communipaw,
New Jersey. Employees of the Central Railroad of New Jersey had been unloading cases of black powder from the freighter Katherine W, when the accident happened at one minute past noon. The blast was felt 50 miles away, rocking office buildings and breaking windows in Manhattan, on the other side of the Hudson River. Eight officials of the railroad and the Du Pont Powder Company were indicted for the disaster.[1][2]
The Governor of the
Isfahan province of
Persia (now
Iran) was shot.[1] Mutemidi Khan and his nephew were murdered by a Russian national who had formerly been the chief of police in Isfahan.[3]
The crews of the two expeditions to the South Pole confronted each other at the
Bay of Whales, as Robert Falcon Scott's Terra Nova sailed alongside Roald Amundsen's ship Fram.[6] Word of Amundsen's arrival was sent back to Britain and then reported worldwide. When informed that the Norwegian explorer was racing him to the pole, Scott is said to have replied angrily, "By Jove, what a chance we have missed! We might have taken Amundsen and sent him back to his ship!"[7]
Captain Bellinger of the French Army set a new record for most persons to fly in an airplane, carrying seven passengers on a short flight at
Pau.[1]
Revolution broke out on the northern coast of
Haiti[1]
The
Honduras city of
Puerto Cortez was turned over to the control of American and British soldiers[1]
A group of 253 ice fishermen, who had set up a "fishing village" on an ice floe in the Bjorko Sound in Finland, were killed when a gale swept the settlement out into the Baltic Sea.[8]
George Grey, brother of the British Foreign Secretary, Sir
Edward Grey, was killed by a lion while hunting in Nairobi,[9]
February 4, 1911 (Saturday)
Persia's Minister of Finance, Sani al-Dowleh, was killed in
Tehran by two Armenian assassins who were Russian subjects. The Russian legation provided the men sanctuary, and refused to turn them over for prosecution by Persia.[10]
Died:
General
Piet Cronjé, 74, leader of the Boer resistance against Britain
Owen Kildare, 46, crusader against slum poverty in New York
February 5, 1911 (Sunday)
The revolution in
Haiti was suppressed after the leader, General Montreuil Guillaume, was captured by government troops and shot. General Millionard was executed two days later.[1]
William C. Beall, photographer for the Washington Daily News, who won a
Pulitzer Prize for his image Faith and Confidence; in Washington, D.C.
February 7, 1911 (Tuesday)
Seattle Mayor
Hiram C. Gill was put out of office by a
recall election and replaced by George Dilling. It was the first city election in which women were allowed to participate, and the female vote was believed to have contributed to the recall.[14]
The civil war in the
Honduras ended after President
Miguel R. Dávila and rebel leader General
Manuel Bonilla agreed to an armistice that included free elections to be supervised by American observers. Bonilla would be elected President on October 29.[1][15]
The U.S. House of Representatives approved the
Crumpacker Bill, increasing the number of U.S. Representatives, beginning in 1913, from 391 to 435, the number that it has had ever since. No state lost representatives, but 25 of the 46 states gained seats based on the 1910 census, and, pending statehood, Arizona and New Mexico were each given one representative.[18] In later years, the number of 435 seats remained the same, but the distribution changed after each census.
The Lincoln Memorial Commission was created to find an ideal site for the proposed
Lincoln Memorial. On February 3, 1912, the west end of the Washington Mall would be picked, and the building would be dedicated on February 12, 1915.[23]
In
Grand Rapids, Michigan, former President Theodore Roosevelt came out in favor of direct voting for U.S. Senators and for the Presidency. Though not a declared candidate, members of the crowd reportedly shouted "Teddy for President in 1912".[24]
In a major turning point in the Mexican Revolution,
Francisco I. Madero crossed the
Rio Grande from
Texas and into
Mexico's
Chihuahua State to take command of rebel forces. Madero had departed the United States after a warrant was issued for his arrest for violating U.S. neutrality laws.[30]
The House of Representatives approved the controversial reciprocal trade agreement between the United States and Canada, by a 221-92 margin.[31]
Born:Willem J. Kolff, Dutch biophysicist who, in 1943, created the first machinery for
kidney dialysis, and later patented the first artificial heart; at
Leiden (d. 2009)
February 15, 1911 (Wednesday)
Jess Willard fought his first professional boxing bout, losing in the 10th round on a foul. Four years after the debacle in
Sapulpa, Oklahoma, however, he became the world heavyweight boxing champion when he knocked out
Jack Johnson, and held the title from 1915 to 1919 before losing to
Jack Dempsey.[32]
U.S. Patent 1,368,974 was granted for a medicine that purported to be a remedy for the treatment of
tuberculosis. Marketed as "Savrite", the ineffective but all natural compound was made up of
olive oil,
squill root,
almonds,
nettle and
red poppy petals.[33]
U.S. Representative
William Stiles Bennet (R-New York), a member of the
House Foreign Affairs Committee, introduced a resolution proposing that the
United States annex
Canada, after unsuccessfully opposing the reciprocal trade agreement.[34] Although the proposal had no chance of passage, it had the intended effect of upsetting people in Canada and the United Kingdom, and President Taft asked the committee to put it to a quick vote. The measure failed in committee, 9–1, with Bennet being the lone supporter.[35]
February 17, 1911 (Friday)
The basketball team of
St. John's College beat the
University of Rochester at home in New York City, 32–27, to finish the season unbeaten, at 14–0. The team, now St. John's University, won its games by an average of 20 points, with the exception of the Rochester win and a 25-23 squeaker over the powerful University of Pennsylvania on December 10. Although there was no national tournament at the time, the
Helms Athletic Foundation retroactively named St. John's as the national college basketball champion.[36]
The first air mail flight in history took place in
India, when French pilot Henri Pequet carried 6,500 letters from
Allahabad a distance of 8 miles, to the
Naini junction. The mail was then loaded on a train and taken to
Calcutta.[38]
Bill Miner, who had attained fame in the 19th century as a stagecoach robber, and then started a new career as a train robber upon his release from prison in 1901, committed his final holdup, taking $3,500 from a Southern Railroad Express train in Georgia. By then, Miner was 64 years old and "was barely able to hold his six-gun straight";.[39] On February 23, Pinkerton detectives would track him down to
Lumpkin County, where he was arrested by the county sheriff.[40] Miner would die in prison two years later.
The
Mark Twain Library, housing most of the works of Samuel Clemens, was opened in Redding, Connecticut. However, most of the collection would disappear over the years.[41]
In a burst of inspiration,
AustriancomposerArnold Schoenberg composed the first five of his famous "6 Little Piano Pieces" (
Sechs kleine Klavierstücke) in a single day, each of the pieces described as "miniatures... shorter and more concentrated than any others in the history of music".[42]
February 20, 1911 (Monday)
To fight the
bubonic plague epidemic in China, which had killed thousands of people, the imperial government ordered villages to burn their dead.[43]
Japan, represented by its Ambassador
Baron Uchida, and the
United States (by Secretary of State
Philander C. Knox) signed a Treaty of Commerce and Navigation at Washington. On July 26, 1939, the U.S. would give notice that it was exercising its rights to abrogate the treaty, and it expired six months later.[44]
The
Buffalo Germans, a
barnstorming professional team billed as "world's champions at basketball", lost their first game in three years, after winning 111 consecutive games against various opponents. The streak was snapped by the 31st National Guard team of Herkimer, New York, in a 19–14 win at
Utica.[46]
The vote on the first reading of the
"Parliament Bill", which would give the
House of Commons veto power over the
House of Lords, passed 351 to 227.[47] The third reading of the modified bill would later pass 362 to 241.[48]
The entire population of an unnamed village near
Harbin, China, was found to have been killed by the bubonic plague.[43]
The Governor of the
Chernihiv oblast Tchernigov province of
Little Russia (now
Ukraine) expelled 200 Jewish families and ordered them to depart, on foot, through heavy snow.[43]
Born:G. Mennen Williams, American politician who served as Governor of Michigan from 1949 to 1961, later the Chief Justice of the Michigan Supreme Court from 1983 to 1987; in
Detroit (d. 1987)
The U.S. Senate ratified the commercial treaty that had been signed earlier in the week with Japan.[43][50]
Pope Pius X declared that the
harem skirt, a new fashion out of
Paris, received his strong disapproval. The statement, published in the Osservatore Romano, also said that wearers of the skirt would be excluded from Catholic churches.[51]
February 25, 1911 (Saturday)
A group of tribal chiefs in
Morocco met at
Agourai, and agreed on the details for a planned assassination of Berber pasha
Thami El Glaoui and Grand Vizier
Muhammad al-Muqri, to take place at a gathering of the leaders on March 14.[52]
Victor Herbert's opera Natoma premiered at Philadelphia, then moved to New York's Metropolitan Opera House.[53]
In the only engagement of the
Mexican Revolution where he would command the troops,
Francisco I. Madero fought at the Battle of
Casas Grandes. His rebel forces were routed by the government troops, and Madero himself was almost killed, after which he stayed away from the front.[54]
February 26, 1911 (Sunday)
In what has been described as "the last massacre of Indians in the United States",[55] a group of
Nevada state police fought with
"Shoshone Mike", who had killed four ranchers in
Washoe County. "It was probably the first time in many years that bows and arrows have figured in any Indian fight", the New York Times noted.[56] One of the white men died, while eight of twelve Shoshones, some of whom were children, were killed in the fight at Rabbit Creek, near
Winnemucca.[57] Remains believed to be those of the group were kept in a museum for years, then returned to the Shoshone tribe for burial in 1992.[58]
February 27, 1911 (Monday)
The first electric starter for an automobile was unveiled, as inventor
Charles F. Kettering, started the engine of a Cadillac in a few seconds, an alternative to the crank that had been used to start engines. The innovation, which depended on a 65-pound battery, was installed on 12,000 Cadillac automobiles in its first year, and Kettering would receive U.S. Patent #1,150,523 on August 17, 1915. "A few hours later, elated Cadillac engineers decided that since their cars were going to have a storgage battery and a generator, why not operate the ignition and headlights electrically also?"[59][60]
In a surprise action, President Taft nominated William H. Lewis, an African-American from Massachusetts, to be
United States Assistant Attorney General. The U.S. Senate was near the end of its term, and did not take up the matter, and Lewis was sworn in while Congress was out of session.[62]
A proposed
Seventeenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, providing for U.S. Senators to be elected by popular vote rather than by the state legislatures, was favored, 54 to 33 favor in the U.S. Senate, but fell five votes short of the necessary 2/3rds majority required by Article V of the
United States Constitution. The amendment would eventually be sent to the states in 1912 and ratified the following year.[63]
Seventeen men were killed in a mine fire near
Tonopah, Nevada, including rescuer "Big Bill" Murphy.[64]
^
abcdefghi"Record of Current Events", The American Monthly Review of Reviews (March 1911), pp287–290
^"EXPLODING DYNAMITE KILLS AT LEAST 24; HUNDREDS INJURED; ALL NEW YORK SHAKEN", New York Times, February 2, 1911, p1
^"Governor of Ispahan Shot", New York Times, February 2, 1911, p1
^"New Super-Dreadnought", New York Times, February 2, 1911
^
abcdefghijJoseph Nathan Kane, The American Counties (4th Ed.), (The Scarecrow Press, 1983), p480
^Beau Riffenburgh, Encyclopedia of the Antarctic (Volume 1) (CRC Press, 2007), p676
^Colin Evans, Great Feuds in History: Ten of the Liveliest Disputes Ever (John Wiley and Sons, 2001) p118
^"Village Swept to Sea", Milwaukee Sentinel, February 6, 1911, p1
^"Grey Killed by Lion", Milwaukee Sentinel, February 5, 1911, p1
^"Persian Minister Slain in TeheranNew York Times, February 5, 1911, p1
^"Missouri Capitol Burned by Lightning", Milwaukee Sentinel, February 6, 1911, p1
^"Ten Men Perish as Nitro Lets Go", Milwaukee Sentinel, February 7, 1911, p1
^Bob Colacello, Ronnie and Nancy: Their Path to the White House, 1911 to 1980 (Hachette Digital, 2004)
^"Women's Votes Oust Mayor of Seattle", Milwaukee Sentinel, February 8, 1911, p1
^"Honduran Civil War of 1909-11", in Dictionary of Wars by George C. Kohn (Infobase Publishing, 2006) p253; "Honduran Factions Agree to Armistice" New York Times, February 9, 1911, p1
^Janet Afary, The Iranian Constitutional Revolution, 1906-1911 (Columbia University Press, 1996) p310
^Persia Crawford Campbell, Chinese Coolie Emigration to Countries Within the British Empire (P.S. King and Son, 1923, reprinted BiblioBazaar, 2009) p25
^Kolleen M. Guy, "When Champagne Became French: Wine and the Making of a National Identity" (JHU Press, 2003) p166
^"To Put up French Clock" New York Times, February 11, 1911, p1
^Brent Ashabranner and Jennifer Ashabranner, No Better Hope: What the Lincoln Memorial Means to America (Twenty-First Century Books, 2001) p. 29
^"Roosevelt Favors Direct Vote Change-- Besides Popular Election of Senators He Would Abolish Electoral College", Milwaukee Sentinel, February 12, 1911, p1
^Christopher Chant, A Century of Triumph: The History of Aviation (Simon and Schuster, 2002) p110
^"Miner, Bill", in Encyclopedia of Western Lawmen & Outlaws, by Jay Robert Nash (Rowman & Littlefield, 1989) p235
^"Declare Train Robber in Custody is Bill Miner, Most Famous Bandit", Vancouver Daily World, February 27, 1911, p1
^"Mark Twain Library", in R. Kent Rasmussen, Critical Companion to Mark Twain: A Literary Reference to His Life and Work (Infobase Publishing, 2007)
^Charles Rosen, Arnold Schoenberg (University of Chicago Press, 1996) p52
^
abcde"Record of Current Events", The American Monthly Review of Reviews (April 1911), pp416–419
^Ralph E. Schaffer, Toward Pearl Harbor: The Diplomatic Exchange between Japan and the United States, 1899-1941 (Markus Weiner Publishers, 1991) p79
^Mary H. Wagner, Gustav Mahler and the New York Philharmonic Tour America (Scarecrow Press, 2006) p159
^"World's Champion Loses",Reno Evening Gazette, February 23, 1911, p3; "Baloe, Fran J.", in Basketball: A Biographical Dictionary, David L. Porter, ed.(Greenwood Publishing Group, 2005) p29
^
"Veto Bill Is Passed", Milwaukee Sentinel, February 17, 1911, p1
^British Social Politics (Ayer Publishing, 1972) p434