February 1909

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February 17, 1909: Geronimo, Chief of the Apaches, dead at 79
February 22, 1909: The Great White Fleet completes its round the world tour.

The following events occurred in February 1909:

February 1, 1909 (Monday)

  • In Fort Wayne, Indiana, Dr. Herman G. Niermann died four days after having part of his digestive tract removed to prove a theory. Dr. Niermann had theorized that a portion of the tract "serves as the cesspool of poisons of the body and becomes the culture bed of certain diseases", and persuaded a surgeon to operate upon him on January 28. Peritonits set in and killed Dr. Niermann.[1]
  • Born: George Beverly Shea, gospel singer and songwriter, in Winchester, Ontario (d.2013)

February 2, 1909 (Tuesday)

  • Francisco I. Madero challenged Porfirio Diaz, Mexico's president since 1884, to allow a free presidential election. Madero, author of the bestseller La sucesión presidencial en 1910, sent a copy of the book to President Diaz and then "began the greatest practical lesson that anyone had ever attempted in the history of Mexico".[2] What followed was the Mexican Revolution of 1910; Madero toppled Diaz, but served only briefly until being assassinated himself.

February 3, 1909 (Wednesday)

  • A measure in California to forbid foreign ownership of land failed 48–28 in that state's House of Representatives.[3]
  • Born: Simone Weil, French philosopher, in Paris (d. 1943)

February 4, 1909 (Thursday)

  • Edgeworth David and his crew successfully rendezvoused with the ship Nimrod.
  • The California House of Representatives voted 46–28 to pass a school segregation bill to "establish separate schools for Indian children and for children of Mongolian or Japanese or Chinese descent" to block Asian-Americans from attending school with White students. Bills prohibiting Asian-Americans from serving on corporate boards or from living outside districts both failed. The segregation bill moved on to the State Senate.[4]

February 5, 1909 (Friday)

  • At a meeting of the American Chemical Society at the Chemists' Club at 108 W. 55th Street in New York, Dr. Leo Baekeland announced his synthesis of a new chemical, obybenzyl-methylenglycolanhydride, which he called Bakelite.[5] The polymer that Baekeland had created was "the first commercially useful artificial substance", and the first plastic.[6]
  • Clark County, Nevada, including Las Vegas, was created from the southern half of Lincoln County, by legislative action effective July 1, 1909[7]
  • Germany's legation (embassy) in Chile was destroyed by fire, and a charred body, thought to be that of Chancellor Wilhelm Beckert, was found in the ruins. After an investigation showed that a large amount of money had been embezzled, and that the corpse was not Beckert's, a manhunt for the diplomat began. Beckert was caught one week later in Chillán, and the victim turned out to be Exequiel Tapia, a Chilean porter employed at the legation. Germany turned its former diplomat to the Chilean justice system, court, and Beckert was executed on July 5, 1910.[8]

February 6, 1909 (Saturday)

  • The Great White Fleet passed Gibraltar from the Mediterranean Sea to the Atlantic Ocean.

February 7, 1909 (Sunday)

February 8, 1909 (Monday)

February 9, 1909 (Tuesday)

  • U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt signed into law a bill prohibiting the importation of opium into the United States. Importation would remain legal until April 1.[10]
  • Senator Philander C. Knox, President William Howard Taft's nominee for U.S. Secretary of State, was found to be constitutionally ineligible for the office because the salary for the post had been increased during his term. Article 1, Section 6, Paragraph 2 of the U.S. Constitution provided that "No Senator or Representative shall, during the term for which he was elected, be appointed to any civil office ... which shall have been created, or the emoluments whereof shall have been increased during such time.".[11] The problem was eventually solved by what would later be called the Saxbe fix (although it would not so named until 1973), by rolling back the salary for the position until March 3, 1911, when Knox's term would expire.
  • The Maldivian island of Minicoy was signed over by its ruler, Imbicchi Ali-Adi Raja Bibi, to the Dominion of India.
  • Born: Carmen Miranda, Portuguese-born actress and singer, in Marco de Canaveses (d. 1955); Dean Rusk, U.S. Secretary of State from 1961 to 1969, in Cherokee County, Georgia (d. 1994); and Harald Genzmer, German classical composer, in Bremen (d. 2007)

February 10, 1909 (Wednesday)

February 11, 1909 (Thursday)

February 12, 1909 (Friday)

February 13, 1909 (Saturday)

  • At a dinner in New York for his financial backers, Lee De Forest announced "I have succeeded in combining the wireless telegraph and telephone in one instrument ... Some day the news and even advertising will be sent out to the public over the wireless telephone." De Forest would on demonstrate the technology on January 12, 1910.[20]

February 14, 1909 (Sunday)

  • In Acapulco, Mexico, more than 250 persons were killed in a fire at the Flores Theatre. An estimated 1,000 persons were watching an exhibition of "moving pictures" when a film caught fire and the blaze spread to some bunting. With three narrow exits from the theatre, hundreds were either trampled or burned to death.[21]

February 15, 1909 (Monday)

  • The U.S. House of Representatives unanimously passed a bill for statehood for the territories of Arizona and New Mexico.[22] The Senate Territories Committee tabled the bill on February 27 after Minnesota's Senator Knute Nelson charged that New Mexican officials were corrupt.[23] The two states would be admitted in 1912.
  • On the same day, the Arizona Territorial Legislature, which had recently changed from Republican control to Democratic Party control, voted to abolish the eight-year old Arizona Rangers, a law enforcement body modeled after the Texas Rangers. Since the creation of the Rangers on March 13, 1901, 107 men had served as Rangers.[24]
  • Park County, Wyoming, was created.[25]
  • Born: Miep Gies, Austrian-born Dutch humanitarian, who helped hide Anne Frank and preserved her diary, in Vienna (d. 2010)

February 16, 1909 (Tuesday)

February 17, 1909 (Wednesday)

  • Geronimo, Chiricahua Apache war chief who led the Apaches for twenty years in wars against white invaders of the Southwest United States, died of pneumonia at Fort Sill, Oklahoma.[26] Six days earlier, the man born as Goyaałé, had gone to Lawton, got drunk, fell off of his horse into a creek, and was not found until hours later, by which time illness had set in.[27]

February 18, 1909 (Thursday)

  • U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt convened at the White House the first North American Conservation Conference, with delegates from the United States, Canada, and Mexico meeting at the East Room of the White House to discuss the conservation of the natural resources of the continent.[28]
  • Born: Wallace Stegner, American author, in Lake Mills, Iowa (d. 1993)

February 19, 1909 (Friday)

February 20, 1909 (Saturday)

February 21, 1909 (Sunday)

  • Rioting broke out in Omaha, Nebraska, as a mob of 3,000 men and boys smashed buildings in the Greek section of town, centred at 26th and Q Streets. Italians and Rumanians. After a Greek resident had killed an Omaha policeman on Friday, a local attorney reportedly told a gathered crowd, "The blood of an American is on the hands of those Greeks, and some method should be adopted to avenge his death and rid the city of this class of persons." [32]
  • President Roosevelt's nephew, Stewart Douglas Robinson, was killed after falling from the sixth floor of a dormitory room at Harvard University's Hampden Hall. Robinson, 19, was a sophomore at Harvard.[33]
  • Born: Hans Erni, Swiss painter and sculptor, in Lucerne (still living in 2011)

February 22, 1909 (Monday)

  • With the USS Connecticut as the flagship, the Great White Fleet finished its round the world voyage. At 11:00 in the morning, the sixteen battleships and their escorts arrived at Hampton Roads, Virginia, where the fleet had departed more than a year earlier on December 16, 1907. President Roosevelt almost fell when his foot slipped while climbing up to a barbette on the USS Mayflower to address the Navy men as "the first battle fleet that has ever circumnavigated the globe".[34]
  • Born: Edmund Berkeley, American computer scientist, in New York City (d. 1988)

February 23, 1909 (Tuesday)

February 24, 1909 (Wednesday)

February 25, 1909 (Thursday)

  • Adventurer Hubert Latham accepted the challenge of flying the Antoinette IV, France's most advanced airplane to that time, to be the first person to fly a heavier-than-air machine across the English Channel. The future of the Antoinette Company (led by Leon Levavasseur and Jules Gastambide) would turn upon the airplane's success in competition, and though Latham made the attempt, it was Louis Blériot who would be the first to cross the channel, on July 27.[37]
  • Curry County, New Mexico, was established and named for George Curry, who was Territorial Governor at the time.[38]

February 26, 1909 (Friday)

February 27, 1909 (Saturday)

  • After more than 40 years of silence, William H. Flood gave an interview to the New York Times about the night that Lincoln was assassinated. Flood had been the first person to render aid to Lincoln after the shooting. "I always thought he was a bit 'cracked'", Flood said of John Wilkes Booth, "and I was sure of it as I saw him that night, looking pale and crazy like." [43]

February 28, 1909 (Sunday)

References

  1. "Doctor Martyr to a Theory", New York Times, February 2, 1909, p1
  2. Enrique Krauze, Mexico: Biography of Power (HarperCollins, 1998), p253
  3. "Bill Against Aliens Lost in California", New York Times, February 4, 1909, p1
  4. "Passes Bill to Bar Japanese Students", New York Times, February 5, 1909, p1
  5. "New Chemical Substance", New York Times, February 6, 1909, p4
  6. "Bakelite", Encyclopedia of New Jersey (Rutgers University Press, 2004), p50
  7. Joseph Nathan Kane, The American Counties (4th Ed.), (The Scarecrow Press, 1983), p479
  8. Alfonso Calderon, Memorial del Viejo Santiago (Editorial Andres Bello) p135; Alfred Ganachilly, The Whispering Dead (A.A. Knopf, 1920)
  9. "Maxim's Gun Proves That It's Noiseless", New York Times, February 9, 1909, p1
  10. "Fighting the Opium Ring", by Eugene B. Block, The Overland Monthly (July 1911), p184
  11. "Knox Seems Barred From the Cabinet", New York Times, February 10, 1909, p1
  12. "Bill to Save Place of Knox in Cabinet", New York Times, February 11, 1909, p1
  13. "Way Clear For Knox to Enter Cabinet", New York Times, February 15, 1909, p1
  14. "California Kills Anti-Japanese Bill", New York Times, February 11, 1909, p1
  15. "Taft's Swift Dash Up to New Orleans", New York Times, February 12, 1909, p1
  16. "Country Pays Lincoln Tribute", New York Times, February 13, 1909, p1
  17. The American Review of Reviews, March 1909, p293
  18. "NAACP Timeline". National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. Archived from the original on 2010-06-17.
  19. "SS Penguin wrecked in Cook Strait". nzhistory.net.nz. 2013. Archived from the original on 6 January 2015. Retrieved 31 January 2013.
  20. "De Forest Tells of a New Wireless", New York Times, February 14, 1909, p1
  21. "300 Burn to Death in Mexican Theatre", New York Times, February 16, 1909, p1
  22. "Statehood Passes House", New York Times, February 15, 1909, p2
  23. "Scandal Halts Statehood Bill", New York Times, February 28, 1909, p2
  24. "Arizona Rangers", in The Encyclopedia of Lawmen, Outlaws, and Gunfighters, by Leon Claire Metz (Infobase Publishing, 2014) pp 8-9
  25. Joseph Nathan Kane, The American Counties (4th Ed.), (The Scarecrow Press, 1983), p480
  26. "Old Apache Chief Geronimo is Dead", New York Times, February 18, 1909, p7
  27. Brenda Haugen, Geronimo: Apache Warrior (Compass Point Books, 2006), pp93–94
  28. Theodore Roosevelt, Theodore Roosevelt: An Autobiography pp420–421
  29. Kathlyn L. Reed and Sharon Nelson Sanderson, Concepts of Occupational Therapy (Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, 1999), pp21–22
  30. http://www.cscs.umich.edu/~crshalizi/T4PM/futurist-manifesto.html
  31. Clarence M. Burton, ed., The City of Detroit, Michigan, 1701–1922 (S. J. Clarke Publishing company, 1922), p583
  32. "South Omaha Mob Wars on Greeks", New York Times, February 22, 1909, p1
  33. "President's Nephew Killed at Harvard", New York Times, February 22, 1909, p1
  34. "Brilliant End of World Cruise", New York Times, February 23, 1909, pp1–2
  35. Gérard Chaliand and Arnaud Blin, The History of Terrorism: From Antiquity to Al Qaeda (University of California Press, 2007), pp177–78
  36. Elihu Root, Addresses on International Subjects (Adamant Media Corporation, 2001), p175
  37. Henry Serrano Villard, Contact! The Story of the Early Aviators: The Story of the Early Aviators (Courier Dover Publications, 2002), pp64–65
  38. Joseph Nathan Kane, The American Counties (4th Ed.), (The Scarecrow Press, 1983), pp101, 479
  39. Luke McKernan, Something More than a Mere Picture Show (Birbeck College, 2003), pp131–132 Archived 2008-10-06 at the Wayback Machine
  40. p109
  41. William Miller, The Ottoman Empire, 1801–1913 pp482–83
  42. Joseph Nathan Kane, The American Counties (4th Ed.), (The Scarecrow Press, 1983), pp479–480
  43. "First To Aid Lincoln, Breaks Long Silence", New York Times, February 28, 1909, pp1-2
  44. Jack Williams, The Complete Idiot's Guide to the Arctic and Antarctic (Alpha Books, 2003), p118
  45. Holly Hartman, Girlwonder: Every Girl's Guide to the Fantastic Feats, Cool Qualities, and Remarkable Abilities of Women and Girls (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2003), pp48–49
  46. "Roosevelt Visits Austrian Embassy", New York Times, March 1, 1909, p1
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