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November 1911

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The following events occurred in November 1911:

November 9, 1911: Kentucky monument to Lincoln's birthplace dedicated
November 5, 1911: Cal Rodgers completes first plane trip across the United States
November 9, 1911: Sultan Abdelhafid of Morocco accepts French protectorate rule
November 10, 1911: Andrew Carnegie charitable bequests pass $200 Million

November 1, 1911 (Wednesday) edit

  • The first aerial bombardment in history took place when Second Lieutenant Giulio Gavotti of the Italian Army threw three Cipelli hand grenades on Turkish troops at Tagiura in Libya, then flew his Etrich Taube monoplane to Ain and dropped an additional grenade.[1] Nobody was injured in these first bombings.[2]
  • Robert Falcon Scott and his party of 12 departed Cape Evans, at 77°38′ south on their quest to become the first persons to reach the South Pole.[3] Roald Amundsen of Norway had begun his trek to the Pole on October 19 and was already at the Ross Ice Shelf at 81° south.[4]
  • In the largest American fleet of warships ever assembled, more than 100 U.S. Navy ships sailed on the Hudson River off of New York City for review by Secretary of the Navy George von L. Meyer, led by the USS Connecticut. "This mobilization has demonstrated the preparedness of the American Navy for any emergency."[5][6] On the same day, most of the U.S. Navy's Pacific Ocean fleet sailed past Los Angeles, with 22 ships and 2 submarines, led by the USS Oregon.[7]
  • Pope Pius X issued the papal bull Divino afflatu, requiring that the new breviary be used in all Roman Catholic churches no later than October 23, 1917.[8]
  • Chinese Imperial troops were successful in recapturing Hankou for the benefit of the Manchu dynasty Emperor, but a contingent of troops from the Shanxi Province, brought along for assistance, mutinied at Shikiatan. The group massacred 1,000 Manchu civilians, including their own commander and the Governor, his family, and their own general.[9][10]
  • Born:

November 2, 1911 (Thursday) edit

  • U.S. President Taft received a 3,690 gun salute on "the greatest naval day this country has known in time of peace", as he reviewed most of the fleet of the U.S. Navy. The occasion was marred by the death of Seaman Gustav Frey, who fell overboard and drowned.[11]
  • Born:
  • Died: Kyrle Bellew, 61, celebrated English actor who was popular in the late 19th and early 20th century.

November 3, 1911 (Friday) edit

  • The Chevrolet Motor Company was incorporated by former General Motors Chairman William C. Durant, to begin manufacture of an inexpensive automobile that had been designed by race car driver Louis Chevrolet. The Chevrolet would prove so successful that Durant would be able to acquire sufficient GM stock to regain control of that company.[12]
  • Shanghai was taken over by rebels, led by Chen Qimei, without resistance.[13]
  • Prince Chun, the regent for his young son, the Emperor of China, issued an edict accepting the National Assembly's 19 basic points for a new Constitution. The reform, which would have permitted the Emperor to remain on the throne in a constitutional monarchy in a parliamentary government, came too late to prevent the foundation of a republic.[14]
  • Born: Vladimir Ussachevsky, Russian-American composer of electronic music; to Russian parents in the Hailar District of China (d. 1990)
  • Died:
    • Norman J. Colman, 84, the first person to ever serve as U.S. Secretary of Agriculture after the U.S. Agricultural Commission was elevated to cabinet status in 1889
    • Daniel Drawbaugh, 84, who claimed to have invented the telephone, pneumatic tools, hydraulic rams, folding lunchboxes, barrel faucets, self-measuring wrapping machines, coin separators, and a wireless burglar alarm.[15]

November 4, 1911 (Saturday) edit

  • The Agadir Crisis ended with the signing of Franco-German peace treaty at Berlin between German Foreign Minister Alfred von Kiderlen-Waechter and France's Ambassador to Germany, Jules Cambon, ending Germany's threat to go to war over Morocco.[16] Germany withdrew all claims to North Africa, with Morocco being partitioned between France (as a protectorate) and Spain (as the colony the Spanish Sahara). In return, France ceded to Germany 107,270 mi² of the French Congo, as part of Kamerun, and Germany ceded 6,450 mi² of German Kamerun to France as part of Chad. The territorial changes would last only seven years, and after Germany's defeat in World War One, German Kamerun would become French Cameroun and, decades later, the independent nation of Cameroon.[17]
  • Piloted by Melvin Vaniman, the dirigible balloon Akron (not to be confused with the 1930s airship USS Akron), was tested at Atlantic City in its first flight, but lost altitude and came down nine miles north at Grassy Bay.[18]
  • Born:

November 5, 1911 (Sunday) edit

  • Calbraith P. Rodgers arrived in Pasadena, California, landing his airplane, the Vin Fiz Flyer at 4:04 pm, to become the first person to fly across the United States. A crowd of 20,000 greeted him, with a large group breaking through police guards to mob him. Reportedly, "hundreds threw hats and caps into the air, and trampled them into the dirt when they fell".[19] He had started in New York City on September 17 and flown 3,220 miles, making 69 stops.[20] Rodgers, who had replaced 98% of the original wood, wire and fabric of the plane during the trip, and had sustained a dozen crashes, would be killed in another crash five months later, on April 3, 1912.[21]
  • Giovanni Giolitti, the Prime Minister of Italy, announced the royal decree annexing the Ottoman Empire provinces of Tripoli and Cyrenaica (both part of modern Libya) to the Kingdom of Italy. The decree would be confirmed by the Parliament on February 25, 1912.[22]
  • Born: Roy Rogers, American cowboy, singer and actor; as Leonard Slye in Cincinnati (d. 1998)
  • Died: Sir Hugh Gilzean-Reid, 75, who published the first halfpenny priced newspaper in Great Britain, the Middlesbrough Daily Gazette.

November 6, 1911 (Monday) edit

November 7, 1911 (Tuesday) edit

  • It was announced that Marie Curie had been awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry. In 1903, she had been co-winner, with Pierre Curie, for the Nobel Prize in Physics, making her the first person to win a second Nobel Prize, and the first of only two (the other one being Linus Pauling) to have won in two different categories.[26]
  • Yuan Shikai was named as the Prime Minister of the Chinese Empire.[27]
  • The legislature of the Fujian Province of China voted to declare its independence from the Empire, and joined the Republic of China four days later.[28]
  • General Wu Lu-cheng, the Governor-General of the Shaanxi Province, committed suicide after refusing instructions from the Emperor's court to surrender.[29]

November 8, 1911 (Wednesday) edit

  • Arthur Balfour resigned as leader of the Conservative Party and as Leader of the Opposition in the British House of Commons, after being blamed by the B.M.G. ("Balfour Must Go") campaign for not opposing the Parliament Bill.[30]
  • João Pinheiro Chagas resigned as Prime Minister of Portugal along with his entire cabinet.[31]
  • The legislature of the Anhui Province voted to secede from Imperial China.[32]
  • At his basement in St. Louis, inventor Anthony F. Wice tested his idea to generate heat by mixing compressed air and gasoline, after telling his son that he was on the verge of a breakthrough. An explosion killed him instantly.[33]
  • Born: Jacob B. Agus, Polish-born American rabbi; as Yakov Dov Agushewitz in Swislocz (now Svislach, Belarus) (d. 1986)

November 9, 1911 (Thursday) edit

  • At Hodgenville, Kentucky, President Taft dedicated the granite temple surrounding a replica of Abraham Lincoln's log cabin. "Few men have come into public prominence who came absolutely from the soil as did Abraham Lincoln," said Taft. "With an illiterate and shiftless father and a mother who, though of education and force, died before he reached youth," said Taft, "his future was dark indeed."[34]
  • The Kwangtung Province became the latest to secede from China as the National Assembly at Canton (now Guangzhou) proclaimed a republic.[35]
  • Sultan Abdelhafid of Morocco announced that he would consent to the conditions of the Franco-German peace treaty, which provided for French protection and control of all of Morocco's foreign affairs.[10]
  • The first, and only, time a November palindrome day occurred in the 20th Century was on this date (11-9-1911). (Note that this is a seven-digit palindrome day which can also be interpreted as the full date number of January 19, 1911 if written as 1-19-1911 instead of 11-9-1911. The next one would occur on November 2, 2011 (11-02-2011).
  • Died: Howard Pyle, 76, American artist described as "the father of American magazine illustration" and "the most successful of American artists"

November 10, 1911 (Friday) edit

  • Manchu troops in Nanjing, following the command of their Tartar general, carried out what a reporter described as "a scene of fire, rapine, desolation and butchery unrecorded in modern history" attacking the Chinese residents there indiscriminately, murdering "the aged, the young, and babies in arms". Any rebel who had cut off his queue was beheaded; even the simple act of wearing white clothing (associated with the rebellion), or foreign clothing, was cause for murder.[36]
  • Andrew Carnegie donated $25,000,000 (equivalent to $500,000,000 in 2011) to the Carnegie Corporation to carry on his philanthropic work. His total bequests up until that time were counted as $208,233,000; of that, $50,935,000 had endowed "Carnegie libraries".[37]
  • King George V turned over British royal authority to a four-member Commission, empowered to act on his behalf during his absence. The group consisted of the King's cousin, Prince Arthur of Connaught (who, at 28, was the only adult male member of the British royal family in the U.K.); the Archbishop of Canterbury (Randall Davidson); the Lord Chancellor (Robert Reid, 1st Earl Loreburn); and the Lord President of the Council (John Morley). The King and his wife, Queen Mary departed Portsmouth the next day en route to India, where they were Emperor and Empress.[10][38]

November 11, 1911 (Saturday) edit

  • The Whirlpool Corporation, a worldwide manufacturer and marketer of home appliances, was founded by Emory Upton, his nephew Louis Upton, and investor Lowell Bassford in St. Joseph, Michigan as the Upton Machine Company. [39] The initial product made by the Uptons was an electric washing machine, and by 1945, the company would introduced its "Whirlpool" automatic washing machine. Upton Machine would change its name to Whirlpool Corporation on April 20, 1950.
  • Kaiser Wilhelm II rebuked his son, the Crown Prince for openly siding with the opposition to Germany's policy on Morocco, and transferred him to a job in Danzig.[6]
  • The German battleship SMS Kaiserin was launched at Kiel.[10]
  • A tornado struck Janesville, Wisconsin, killing 20 residents.[6][40]
  • The French film Zigomar premiered in Japan, and became an unexpected hit, particularly among kids who had never seen violence portrayed in a theatre production. Later, when Japanese producers would begin making their own Zigomar action thrillers, "scores of juvenile offenders were produced", and Japan's Home Ministry would respond with strict censorship.[41]
  • The temperature in Oklahoma City stood at 83 °F in the afternoon, until a cold front arrived, dropping the mercury dramatically to 17 °F in before midnight.[42]
  • In the last years of Austro-Hungarian rule, the city of Visoko (now part of the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina) was almost completely burned down by fire, which was started by accident.[43]
  • Born: Patric Knowles, British actor, as Reginald Lawrence Knowles in Horsforth (d. 1995)[44]

November 12, 1911 (Sunday) edit

November 13, 1911 (Monday) edit

November 14, 1911 (Tuesday) edit

  • Pinellas County, Florida was created from west Hillsborough County.[48]
  • The German government announced that the approval of the Reichstag would be necessary for any treaties changing boundaries of any part of the German Empire.[6]
  • Maurice Bienaime and Rene Rumpelmayer became the first persons to fly an airplane non-stop for 1,000 miles, covering 1,056 miles in 16 1/2 hours.[10]

November 15, 1911 (Wednesday) edit

November 16, 1911 (Thursday) edit

November 17, 1911 (Friday) edit

  • The Omega Psi Phi fraternity, first black fraternity at a historically black college, was founded by three Howard University undergraduates (Edgar Amos Love, Oscar James Cooper and Frank Coleman) and Professor Ernest Everett Just. As of its 100th anniversary, it had more than 700 chapters in nine nations.[54]
  • The United States Navy temporarily abandoned the use of fish names for submarine classification, renaming the Adder, Viper, Octopus and Narwhal class subs as A, B, C and D class, respectively. Names would be revived in 1931.[55]

November 18, 1911 (Saturday) edit

  • The Princeton Tigers, unbeaten with a record of 7-0-2, wrapped up their season at New Haven, Connecticut, defeating the 7-1-0 Yale Bulldogs by a score of 6-3. The Helms Athletic Foundation, which would be founded in 1936, would later declare, retroactively, that Princeton had been the best team of the 1911 college football season.[56]
  • Thirty miners at the Bottom Creek Coal and Coke Company died in an explosion at Vivian, West Virginia in McDowell County.[10]
  • Train robbers in France attacked three cars carrying $600,000 worth of gifts, breaking in through the roofs after the cars departed from Paris en route to Lyons. The theft was discovered when the train stopped at Mâcon.[57]

November 19, 1911 (Sunday) edit

November 20, 1911 (Monday) edit

November 21, 1911 (Tuesday) edit

November 22, 1911 (Wednesday) edit

  • Russian troops invaded Iran, with several hundred occupying Rasht, the largest port on the Persian side of the Caspian Sea. The conditions given for the troops' withdrawal included the dismissal of W. Morgan Shuster as the Persian Treasurer, and an agreement not to employ foreign advisers without the approval of Russia and Britain.[66]
  • Born: Ernie Caceres, American jazz musician; in Rockport, Texas (d. 1971)

November 23, 1911 (Thursday) edit

  • The collapse of a railway bridge in France, near Montreuil-Bellay, killed 30 people. The cars carried about 100 passengers who were on their way from Angers to Poitiers, and sank in the Thouet River. Some persons, who had escaped the cars before they sank, were swept away in the flood-swollen waters.[67]
  • As the Italo-Turkish War continued, Italy informed the other European powers that it would send its Navy into Turkish waters to create a blockade of the Dardanelles.[68]
  • Wu Tingfang, a leader of the Republican revolution in China, informed foreign diplomats in Nanjing an attack would be held off for three days, in order to give foreign residents a chance to evacuate before November 26.[69]
  • Died: Bernard Tancred, 47, South African cricketer, died after a short illness.

November 24, 1911 (Friday) edit

  • At the Hotel Gotham in Manhattan, Texas businessman Edward M. House had his first meeting with New Jersey Governor Woodrow Wilson, and began the process for a successful campaign to elect Wilson to the office of President of the United States in 1912[70]
  • After seven years, the secret articles of the Anglo-French declaration of 1904 (which concerned Egypt and Morocco) were published.[71]
  • A boiler explosion at the J. Bibby & Sons oil cake mills in Liverpool killed 27 people and injured 100.[72]
  • Born: Erik Bergman, Finnish classical music composer; in Nykarleby (d. 2006)

November 25, 1911 (Saturday) edit

November 26, 1911 (Sunday) edit

  • In an elaborate ceremony at the ancestral temple, the Regent for China's Emperor took an oath to uphold the 19 Articles of the new Chinese constitution, stating "Following the fall of the sacred dynasty I accept the advice of the national assembly. I swear to uphold the nineteen constitutional articles and organize a parliament, excluding the nobles from administrative posts. I and my descendants will adhere to it forever. Your heavenly spirits will see and understand." Bombardment of Nanjing began the same day.[74]
  • Six members of the family of Norbert Randall of Lafayette, Louisiana, were killed in their beds by an axe murderer, continuing a string of similar killings that had already claimed eleven people in January and five more in April. Police arrested an African-American woman, Clementine Bernabet, but would release her after nine more killings took place during her incarceration.[75]
  • Born: Gilbert F. White, American geographer described as "The Father of Floodplain Management"; in Chicago (d. 2006)
  • Died:

November 27, 1911 (Monday) edit

November 28, 1911 (Tuesday) edit

  • Renowned lawyer Clarence Darrow was accused of attempting to bribe a juror after a detective whom he had hired, Bert Franklin, was arrested in Los Angeles for offering a juror $4,000 to bring about a hung jury in the trial of the McNamara brothers for the bombing of the Los Angeles Times building. After Franklin testified that Darrow had ordered him to attempt bribery, Darrow was indicted on two separate charges. He would be acquitted in both trials.[78]
  • Born:

November 29, 1911 (Wednesday) edit

  • Russia delivered its ultimatum to Persia, giving the government 48 hours to either dismiss American businessman W. Morgan Shuster from his post as Persia's Treasurer General, or to see Tehran invaded.[79]

November 30, 1911 (Thursday) edit

References edit

  1. ^ Christopher Chant, Austro-Hungarian aces of World War I (Osprey Publishing, 2002) p39
  2. ^ Gerard J. De Groot, The Bomb: A Life (Harvard University Press, 2005) p2
  3. ^ Susan Solomon, The Coldest March: Scott's Fatal Antarctic Expedition (Yale University Press, 2002) p173
  4. ^ David Crane, Scott of the Antarctic: A Life of Courage and Tragedy (Random House, 2007)
  5. ^ "Our Greatest Fleet Reviewed by Meyer", New York Times, November 2, 1911
  6. ^ a b c d "Record of Current Events", The American Monthly Review of Reviews (December 1911), pp678-681
  7. ^ "Pacific Fleet Reviewed", New York Times, November 2, 1911
  8. ^ "Pius X", in The Catholic Encyclopedia (The Encyclopedia Press, 1922) p584
  9. ^ "Chinese Troops Kill Thousands", New York Times, November 3, 1911
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h i The Britannica Year-Book 1913: A Survey of the World's Progress Since the Completion in 1910 of the Encyclopædia Britannica (Encyclopædia Britannica, 1913) pp. xviii to xix
  11. ^ "Taft Reviews Mighty Fleet", New York Times, November 3, 1911
  12. ^ Ottilie M. Leland and Minnie Dubbs Millbrook, The Master of Precision: Henry M. Leland (Wayne State University Press, 1996) p117
  13. ^ "Rebels Take Shanghai", New York Times, November 4, 1911; Jonathan Fenby, Chiang Kai Shek: China's Generalissimo and the Nation He Lost (Da Capo Press, 2005) p31
  14. ^ "Curbs Chinese Ruler's Power", New York Times, November 4, 1911; Stanley K. Hornbeck, Contemporary Politics in the Far East (D. Appleton & Co., 1916, reprinted by Ayer Publishing, 1970) p38
  15. ^ "Daniel F. Drawbaugh Dead", New York Times, November 4, 1911
  16. ^ Frank E. Trout, Morocco's Saharan Frontiers (Librairie Droz, 1969) pp198-199
  17. ^ Ieuan Ll Griffiths, The African Inheritance (Routledge, 1995) p37
  18. ^ "Vaniman Confident Despite Mishaps", New York Times, November 6, 1911
  19. ^ "20,000 See Rodgers Land", New York Times, November 6, 1911
  20. ^ "Rodgers Ends Long Flight", New York Times, November 6, 1911
  21. ^ Carlos A. Schwantes, Going Places: Transportation Redefines the Twentieth-Century West (Indiana University Press, 2003) pp192-193
  22. ^ Waniss A. Otman and Erling Karlberg, The Libyan Economy: Economic Diversification and International Repositioning (Springer, 2007) p13
  23. ^ Mike Shamos, The New Illustrated Encyclopedia of Billiards (Globe Pequot, 2002) p107
  24. ^ "Inaugurate Madero in Mexican Capital", New York Times, November 6, 1911
  25. ^ James W. Hurst, Pancho Villa and Black Jack Pershing: the Punitive Expedition in Mexico (Greenwood Publishing Group, 2008)
  26. ^ "Awarded to Mme. Curie", New York Times, November 7, 1911
  27. ^ Michael Dillon, China: A Modern History (I.B.Tauris, 2010) p147
  28. ^ Ryan Dunch, Fuzhou Protestants and the Making of a Modern China, 1857-1927 (Yale University Press, 2001) p108
  29. ^ "Viceroy Dies by Own Hand", New York Times, November 9, 1911
  30. ^ Alfred F. Havighurst, Britain in Transition: The Twentieth Century (University of Chicago Press, 1985) p103; "Balfour Quits His Leadership", New York Times, November 9, 1911
  31. ^ "Portuguese Ministry Resigns", New York Times, November 9, 1911
  32. ^ Annping Chin, Four Sisters of Hofei: A History (Simon and Schuster, 2002) p19
  33. ^ "His Invention was Fatal", New York Times, November 9, 1911
  34. ^ "Lincoln Memorial Dedicated by Taft", New York Times, November 10, 1911
  35. ^ Edward J. M. Rhoads, China's Republican Revolution: The Case of Kwangtung, 1895-1913 (Harvard University Press, 1975) p234
  36. ^ "Manchus' Day of Massacre; Ruthlessly Slaughter Thousands in Nanking, Sparing Neither the Aged Nor Babes", New York Times, November 11, 1911
  37. ^ "Carnegie Gives $25,000,000 Fund", New York Times, November 11, 1911
  38. ^ "King George Sails for Great Durbar", New York Times, November 12, 1911
  39. ^ "Whirlpool Corporation Celebrates Its 100th Anniversary", news release from Whirlpool Corporation, November 11, 2011.
  40. ^ "23 Die in Cyclone in the Middle West", New York Times, November 12, 1911
  41. ^ Aaron Gerow and Abe Mark Nornes, In Praise of Film Studies: Essays in Honor of Makino Mamoru (Trafford Publishing, 2001) p59
  42. ^ Robert Henson, The Rough Guide to Weather (Penguin, 2007) p105
  43. ^ "Danas 117. godišnjica visočke jangije: Požar u kojem je izgorjela cijela čaršija". Avaz.ba (in Bosnian). Retrieved 2019-05-07.
  44. ^ Lentz, Harris M. (1995). Obituaries in the Performing Arts. McFarland & Company. ISBN 978-0-7864-0253-3.
  45. ^ "President Taft Ends His 15,000-mile Tour", New York Times, November 12, 1911; "None to Welcome Taft", New York Times, November 13, 1911
  46. ^ Larry L. Witherell, Rebel on the Right: Henry Page Croft and the Crisis of British Conservatism, 1903-1914 (University of Delaware Press, 1997); "Unionists Elect Bonar Law", New York Times, November 14, 1911
  47. ^ Kerry Segrave, Piracy in the Motion Picture Industry (McFarland, 2003) p48
  48. ^ Pinellas County Court Clerk
  49. ^ Yuan May Assume Office To-day, New York Times, November 16, 1911
  50. ^ "Tobacco Trust Plan Has Final Approval", New York Times, November 17, 1911
  51. ^ Jeffrey L. Cruikshank, Arthur W. Schultz, The Man who Sold America: The Amazing (but true!) Story of Albert D. Lasker and the Creation of the Advertising Century (Harvard Business Press, 2010) p248
  52. ^ "Earthquake in Germany", New York Times, November 17, 1911 "Earthquake Scares Swiss and Germans" (10:27 pm), New York Times, November 18, 1911
  53. ^ Jack Harpster, King of the Slots: William "Si" Redd (ABC-CLIO, 2010); "'Si' Redd, gaming legend, dies", Seattle Times, October 20, 2003
  54. ^ Omega Psi Phi website
  55. ^ Norman Friedman, U.S. Submarines through 1945: An Illustrated Design History (Naval Institute Press, 1995) p33
  56. ^ 2001 ESPN Information Please Sports Almanac, p152
  57. ^ "$600,000 India Mail Theft", New York Times, November 19, 1911
  58. ^ "Santo Domingan President Slain", New York Times, November 21, 1911
  59. ^ Michael R. Hall, Sugar and Power in the Dominican Republic: Eisenhower, Kennedy, and the Trujillos (Greenwood Publishing Group, 2000) p14
  60. ^ "First Wireless from Italy; Marconi Sends Greetings to The Times Across 4,000 Miles of Space", New York Times, November 20, 1911
  61. ^ "Virginia Barckley and Oncology Nursing", by Elizabeth Hanink, WorkingNurse.com
  62. ^ "Virginia Barckley" in American Nursing: A Biographical Dictionary (Springer, 2004), pp. 14-16
  63. ^ F. Arturo Rosales, Pobre Raza!: Violence, Justice, and Mobilization among México Lindo Immigrants, 1900-1936 (University of Texas Press, 1999) p12
  64. ^ Jens Malte Fischer and Stewart Spencer, Gustav Mahler (Yale University Press, 2011) p563
  65. ^ Gunter Faure and Teresa M. Mensing, The Transantarctic Mountains: Rocks, Ice, Meteorites and Water (Springer, 2010) p173
  66. ^ Janet Afary, The Iranian Constitutional Revolution, 1906-1911: Grassroots Democracy, Social Democracy, & the Origins of Feminism (Columbia University Press, 1996) p330
  67. ^ "30 Drowned in a Train", New York Times, November 24, 1911
  68. ^ "Italy to Blockade the Dardanelles", New York Times, November 23, 1911
  69. ^ Eiko Woodhouse, The Chinese Hsinhai revolution: G.E. Morrison and Anglo-Japanese relations, 1897-1920 (Routledge, 2004) p85
  70. ^ Jim Powell, Wilson's War: How Woodrow Wilson's Great Blunder Led to Hitler, Lenin, Stalin, and World War II (Random House, 2005) p79
  71. ^ "Anglo-French Secret Out", New York Times, November 25, 1911
  72. ^ "Explosion Kills 33", New York Times, November 25, 1911
  73. ^ Robert Ryal Miller, Mexico: A History (University of Oklahoma Press, 1989) p292; "Plan de Ayala", from John Womack, Zapata and the Mexican Revolution (Knopf, 1969) pp400-404
  74. ^ "Rebels Pour Shot into Chinese City", Milwaukee Sentinel, November 27, 1911, p1
  75. ^ Michael Newton, The Encyclopedia of Unsolved Crimes (Infobase Publishing, 2010) 263
  76. ^ "'Freedom of the Theatre' and 'Practical Censorship': Two Theater Riots in the Early Twentieth Century, by M. Alison Kibler, in OAH Magazine of History (April 2010)
  77. ^ "Riot in Theatre over an Irish Play", New York Times, November 28, 1911
  78. ^ Diana Klebanow and Franklin L. Jonas, People's Lawyers: Crusaders for Justice in American History (M.E. Sharpe, 2003) pp123-125; "Charges of Bribery in M'Namara Trial", New York Times, November 29, 1911
  79. ^ "Persia Inclined to Defy Russia", New York Times, November 30, 1911; Janet Afary, The Iranian Constitutional Revolution, 1906-1911: Grassroots Democracy, Social Democracy, and the Origins of Feminism (Columbia University Press, 1996) p204
  80. ^ "Jammed Bleachers Fall", Milwaukee Sentinel, December 1, 1911, p1
  81. ^ "Titanic's sister ship to become divers' paradise", The Telegraph (London), 20 May 2007

november, 1911, 1911, january, february, march, april, june, july, august, september, october, november, december, 1112, 1819, 2526, following, events, occurred, november, 1911, kentucky, monument, lincoln, birthplace, dedicatednovember, 1911, rodgers, complet. 1911 January February March April May June July August September October November December lt lt November 1911 gt gt Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa0 1 0 2 0 3 0 40 5 0 6 0 7 0 8 0 9 10 1112 13 14 15 16 17 1819 20 21 22 23 24 2526 27 28 29 30 The following events occurred in November 1911 November 9 1911 Kentucky monument to Lincoln s birthplace dedicatedNovember 5 1911 Cal Rodgers completes first plane trip across the United StatesNovember 9 1911 Sultan Abdelhafid of Morocco accepts French protectorate ruleNovember 10 1911 Andrew Carnegie charitable bequests pass 200 Million Contents 1 November 1 1911 Wednesday 2 November 2 1911 Thursday 3 November 3 1911 Friday 4 November 4 1911 Saturday 5 November 5 1911 Sunday 6 November 6 1911 Monday 7 November 7 1911 Tuesday 8 November 8 1911 Wednesday 9 November 9 1911 Thursday 10 November 10 1911 Friday 11 November 11 1911 Saturday 12 November 12 1911 Sunday 13 November 13 1911 Monday 14 November 14 1911 Tuesday 15 November 15 1911 Wednesday 16 November 16 1911 Thursday 17 November 17 1911 Friday 18 November 18 1911 Saturday 19 November 19 1911 Sunday 20 November 20 1911 Monday 21 November 21 1911 Tuesday 22 November 22 1911 Wednesday 23 November 23 1911 Thursday 24 November 24 1911 Friday 25 November 25 1911 Saturday 26 November 26 1911 Sunday 27 November 27 1911 Monday 28 November 28 1911 Tuesday 29 November 29 1911 Wednesday 30 November 30 1911 Thursday 31 ReferencesNovember 1 1911 Wednesday editThe first aerial bombardment in history took place when Second Lieutenant Giulio Gavotti of the Italian Army threw three Cipelli hand grenades on Turkish troops at Tagiura in Libya then flew his Etrich Taube monoplane to Ain and dropped an additional grenade 1 Nobody was injured in these first bombings 2 Robert Falcon Scott and his party of 12 departed Cape Evans at 77 38 south on their quest to become the first persons to reach the South Pole 3 Roald Amundsen of Norway had begun his trek to the Pole on October 19 and was already at the Ross Ice Shelf at 81 south 4 In the largest American fleet of warships ever assembled more than 100 U S Navy ships sailed on the Hudson River off of New York City for review by Secretary of the Navy George von L Meyer led by the USS Connecticut This mobilization has demonstrated the preparedness of the American Navy for any emergency 5 6 On the same day most of the U S Navy s Pacific Ocean fleet sailed past Los Angeles with 22 ships and 2 submarines led by the USS Oregon 7 Pope Pius X issued the papal bull Divino afflatu requiring that the new breviary be used in all Roman Catholic churches no later than October 23 1917 8 Chinese Imperial troops were successful in recapturing Hankou for the benefit of the Manchu dynasty Emperor but a contingent of troops from the Shanxi Province brought along for assistance mutinied at Shikiatan The group massacred 1 000 Manchu civilians including their own commander and the Governor his family and their own general 9 10 Born Sidney Wood American tennis player Wimbledon champion 1931 in Black Rock Connecticut d 2009 Henri Troyat Russian born French novelist as Lev Aslanovich Tarasov in Moscow d 2007 Slade Cutter U S Navy officer and World War II hero in Oswego Illinois d 2005 November 2 1911 Thursday editU S President Taft received a 3 690 gun salute on the greatest naval day this country has known in time of peace as he reviewed most of the fleet of the U S Navy The occasion was marred by the death of Seaman Gustav Frey who fell overboard and drowned 11 Born Odysseas Elytis Greek poet who won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1979 as Odysseas Alepoudellis in Heraklion d 1996 Carlos Bulosan Philippine born American novelist in Binalonan Died Kyrle Bellew 61 celebrated English actor who was popular in the late 19th and early 20th century November 3 1911 Friday editThe Chevrolet Motor Company was incorporated by former General Motors Chairman William C Durant to begin manufacture of an inexpensive automobile that had been designed by race car driver Louis Chevrolet The Chevrolet would prove so successful that Durant would be able to acquire sufficient GM stock to regain control of that company 12 Shanghai was taken over by rebels led by Chen Qimei without resistance 13 Prince Chun the regent for his young son the Emperor of China issued an edict accepting the National Assembly s 19 basic points for a new Constitution The reform which would have permitted the Emperor to remain on the throne in a constitutional monarchy in a parliamentary government came too late to prevent the foundation of a republic 14 Born Vladimir Ussachevsky Russian American composer of electronic music to Russian parents in the Hailar District of China d 1990 Died Norman J Colman 84 the first person to ever serve as U S Secretary of Agriculture after the U S Agricultural Commission was elevated to cabinet status in 1889 Daniel Drawbaugh 84 who claimed to have invented the telephone pneumatic tools hydraulic rams folding lunchboxes barrel faucets self measuring wrapping machines coin separators and a wireless burglar alarm 15 November 4 1911 Saturday editThe Agadir Crisis ended with the signing of Franco German peace treaty at Berlin between German Foreign Minister Alfred von Kiderlen Waechter and France s Ambassador to Germany Jules Cambon ending Germany s threat to go to war over Morocco 16 Germany withdrew all claims to North Africa with Morocco being partitioned between France as a protectorate and Spain as the colony the Spanish Sahara In return France ceded to Germany 107 270 mi of the French Congo as part of Kamerun and Germany ceded 6 450 mi of German Kamerun to France as part of Chad The territorial changes would last only seven years and after Germany s defeat in World War One German Kamerun would become French Cameroun and decades later the independent nation of Cameroon 17 Piloted by Melvin Vaniman the dirigible balloon Akron not to be confused with the 1930s airship USS Akron was tested at Atlantic City in its first flight but lost altitude and came down nine miles north at Grassy Bay 18 Born Charles Assale Prime Minister of Cameroon 1960 61 and of East Cameroon 1961 65 in Ebolowa d 1999 Dixie Lee Crosby American actress and first wife of Bing Crosby as Wilma Winifred Wyatt in Harriman Tennessee d 1952 November 5 1911 Sunday editCalbraith P Rodgers arrived in Pasadena California landing his airplane the Vin Fiz Flyer at 4 04 pm to become the first person to fly across the United States A crowd of 20 000 greeted him with a large group breaking through police guards to mob him Reportedly hundreds threw hats and caps into the air and trampled them into the dirt when they fell 19 He had started in New York City on September 17 and flown 3 220 miles making 69 stops 20 Rodgers who had replaced 98 of the original wood wire and fabric of the plane during the trip and had sustained a dozen crashes would be killed in another crash five months later on April 3 1912 21 Giovanni Giolitti the Prime Minister of Italy announced the royal decree annexing the Ottoman Empire provinces of Tripoli and Cyrenaica both part of modern Libya to the Kingdom of Italy The decree would be confirmed by the Parliament on February 25 1912 22 Born Roy Rogers American cowboy singer and actor as Leonard Slye in Cincinnati d 1998 Died Sir Hugh Gilzean Reid 75 who published the first halfpenny priced newspaper in Great Britain the Middlesbrough Daily Gazette November 6 1911 Monday editThe first straight pool tournament using the rules for 14 1 continuous pocket billiards was held with Alfredo De Oro winning The game adapted from the 1888 game of continuous pool on the suggestion of champion Jerome Keogh scored points by the cumulative number of balls sunk 23 Francisco I Madero was sworn into office as President of Mexico 24 He left many of the officers of the defeated federales in command and his attempts at reform would lead to more rebellion Emiliano Zapata would declare his own revolution three weeks later Madero and Vice President Jose Maria Pino Suarez would both be assassinated on February 22 1913 25 Born Leonhard Goppelt German born Biblical interpreter in Munich d 1973 November 7 1911 Tuesday editIt was announced that Marie Curie had been awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry In 1903 she had been co winner with Pierre Curie for the Nobel Prize in Physics making her the first person to win a second Nobel Prize and the first of only two the other one being Linus Pauling to have won in two different categories 26 Yuan Shikai was named as the Prime Minister of the Chinese Empire 27 The legislature of the Fujian Province of China voted to declare its independence from the Empire and joined the Republic of China four days later 28 General Wu Lu cheng the Governor General of the Shaanxi Province committed suicide after refusing instructions from the Emperor s court to surrender 29 November 8 1911 Wednesday editArthur Balfour resigned as leader of the Conservative Party and as Leader of the Opposition in the British House of Commons after being blamed by the B M G Balfour Must Go campaign for not opposing the Parliament Bill 30 Joao Pinheiro Chagas resigned as Prime Minister of Portugal along with his entire cabinet 31 The legislature of the Anhui Province voted to secede from Imperial China 32 At his basement in St Louis inventor Anthony F Wice tested his idea to generate heat by mixing compressed air and gasoline after telling his son that he was on the verge of a breakthrough An explosion killed him instantly 33 Born Jacob B Agus Polish born American rabbi as Yakov Dov Agushewitz in Swislocz now Svislach Belarus d 1986 November 9 1911 Thursday editAt Hodgenville Kentucky President Taft dedicated the granite temple surrounding a replica of Abraham Lincoln s log cabin Few men have come into public prominence who came absolutely from the soil as did Abraham Lincoln said Taft With an illiterate and shiftless father and a mother who though of education and force died before he reached youth said Taft his future was dark indeed 34 The Kwangtung Province became the latest to secede from China as the National Assembly at Canton now Guangzhou proclaimed a republic 35 Sultan Abdelhafid of Morocco announced that he would consent to the conditions of the Franco German peace treaty which provided for French protection and control of all of Morocco s foreign affairs 10 The first and only time a November palindrome day occurred in the 20th Century was on this date 11 9 1911 Note that this is a seven digit palindrome day which can also be interpreted as the full date number of January 19 1911 if written as 1 19 1911 instead of 11 9 1911 The next one would occur on November 2 2011 11 02 2011 Died Howard Pyle 76 American artist described as the father of American magazine illustration and the most successful of American artists November 10 1911 Friday editManchu troops in Nanjing following the command of their Tartar general carried out what a reporter described as a scene of fire rapine desolation and butchery unrecorded in modern history attacking the Chinese residents there indiscriminately murdering the aged the young and babies in arms Any rebel who had cut off his queue was beheaded even the simple act of wearing white clothing associated with the rebellion or foreign clothing was cause for murder 36 Andrew Carnegie donated 25 000 000 equivalent to 500 000 000 in 2011 to the Carnegie Corporation to carry on his philanthropic work His total bequests up until that time were counted as 208 233 000 of that 50 935 000 had endowed Carnegie libraries 37 King George V turned over British royal authority to a four member Commission empowered to act on his behalf during his absence The group consisted of the King s cousin Prince Arthur of Connaught who at 28 was the only adult male member of the British royal family in the U K the Archbishop of Canterbury Randall Davidson the Lord Chancellor Robert Reid 1st Earl Loreburn and the Lord President of the Council John Morley The King and his wife Queen Mary departed Portsmouth the next day en route to India where they were Emperor and Empress 10 38 November 11 1911 Saturday editThe Whirlpool Corporation a worldwide manufacturer and marketer of home appliances was founded by Emory Upton his nephew Louis Upton and investor Lowell Bassford in St Joseph Michigan as the Upton Machine Company 39 The initial product made by the Uptons was an electric washing machine and by 1945 the company would introduced its Whirlpool automatic washing machine Upton Machine would change its name to Whirlpool Corporation on April 20 1950 Kaiser Wilhelm II rebuked his son the Crown Prince for openly siding with the opposition to Germany s policy on Morocco and transferred him to a job in Danzig 6 The German battleship SMS Kaiserin was launched at Kiel 10 A tornado struck Janesville Wisconsin killing 20 residents 6 40 The French film Zigomar premiered in Japan and became an unexpected hit particularly among kids who had never seen violence portrayed in a theatre production Later when Japanese producers would begin making their own Zigomar action thrillers scores of juvenile offenders were produced and Japan s Home Ministry would respond with strict censorship 41 The temperature in Oklahoma City stood at 83 F in the afternoon until a cold front arrived dropping the mercury dramatically to 17 F in before midnight 42 In the last years of Austro Hungarian rule the city of Visoko now part of the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina was almost completely burned down by fire which was started by accident 43 Born Patric Knowles British actor as Reginald Lawrence Knowles in Horsforth d 1995 44 November 12 1911 Sunday editPresident Taft returned to the White House after having been away from the nation s capital for a record 87 consecutive days 45 Born Chad Varah British Anglican priest and humanitarian founder in 1953 of The Samaritans and the first suicide hotline in Barton upon Humber Lincolnshire d 2007 Buck Clayton American jazz trumpet player in Parsons Kansas d 1991 November 13 1911 Monday editThe British Conservative Party selected Bonar Law as their new leader and Leader of the Opposition a compromise choice after both Austen Chamberlain and Walter Long were both rejected 46 The U S Supreme Court ruled that motion pictures could not be adapted from books and plays without consent of the original authors upholding an appellate court decision in Kalem Company v Harper amp Brothers arising from the Kalem Studios 1907 production of Ben Hur 47 Born John Jordan Buck O Neil Negro American League baseball player and manager for the Kansas City Monarchs and later the first black coach in Major League Baseball in Carrabelle Florida d 2006 Died Nehemiah D Sperry 84 former U S Congressman for Connecticut 1895 1911 who was known as the Father of Rural Free Delivery November 14 1911 Tuesday editPinellas County Florida was created from west Hillsborough County 48 The German government announced that the approval of the Reichstag would be necessary for any treaties changing boundaries of any part of the German Empire 6 Maurice Bienaime and Rene Rumpelmayer became the first persons to fly an airplane non stop for 1 000 miles covering 1 056 miles in 16 1 2 hours 10 November 15 1911 Wednesday editYuan Shikai accepted the nomination to become Prime Minister of China and set up a cabinet the next day 49 November 16 1911 Thursday editThe American Tobacco Company was reorganized with approval of the U S Circuit Court of Appeals in New York 50 The corporation which had held 92 of the market share of U S tobacco sales was split into four smaller entities Lorillard Tobacco Company 15 share Kool R J Reynolds Tobacco Company 20 maker of Camel cigarettes Liggett amp Myers 28 Chesterfield L amp M and a smaller American Tobacco 38 Lucky Strike New competition would come in 1919 from Philip Morris Inc most famous for Marlboro cigarettes 51 An earthquake struck Switzerland and Germany at 10 27 pm local time 52 Augusto de Vasconcelos became the new Prime Minister of Portugal 10 Born William Si Redd American casino games developer described as King of Video Poker a son of sharecroppers who became a multimillionaire in gaming near Union Mississippi d 2003 53 November 17 1911 Friday editThe Omega Psi Phi fraternity first black fraternity at a historically black college was founded by three Howard University undergraduates Edgar Amos Love Oscar James Cooper and Frank Coleman and Professor Ernest Everett Just As of its 100th anniversary it had more than 700 chapters in nine nations 54 The United States Navy temporarily abandoned the use of fish names for submarine classification renaming the Adder Viper Octopus and Narwhal class subs as A B C and D class respectively Names would be revived in 1931 55 November 18 1911 Saturday editThe Princeton Tigers unbeaten with a record of 7 0 2 wrapped up their season at New Haven Connecticut defeating the 7 1 0 Yale Bulldogs by a score of 6 3 The Helms Athletic Foundation which would be founded in 1936 would later declare retroactively that Princeton had been the best team of the 1911 college football season 56 Thirty miners at the Bottom Creek Coal and Coke Company died in an explosion at Vivian West Virginia in McDowell County 10 Train robbers in France attacked three cars carrying 600 000 worth of gifts breaking in through the roofs after the cars departed from Paris en route to Lyons The theft was discovered when the train stopped at Macon 57 November 19 1911 Sunday editRamon Caceres the President of the Dominican Republic was assassinated in Santo Domingo Caceres was attacked by assailants while riding in his coach on a public road 58 His murder was plotted by Luis Tejera a Jimenista who supported former President Juan Isidro Jimenes Pereyra while Caceres had been a Horacista and follower of former President Horacio Vasquez Caceres was succeeded by another Horacista Eladio Victoria Increasing instability would lead to U S troops occupying the Dominican Republic in 1916 59 Guglielmo Marconi demonstrated an advance in wireless radio transmission telegraphing a greeting to the New York Times between two Marconi stations located 4 000 miles apart Marconi s signal went from the newest station in Italy at Coltano near Pisa was sent to a receiver at Glace Bay Nova Scotia The previous record had been 2 250 miles The Marconigram read My best greetings transmitted by wireless telegraph from Italy to America G Marconi Pisa 5 47 P M 60 Born William Attaway African American novelist and songwriter in Greenville Mississippi d 1986 Virginia Barckley pioneering nurse in oncology 61 62 in Burlington New Jersey d 1993 November 20 1911 Monday editTexas Governor Oscar Colquitt ordered all Mexican rebels in Texas to leave within 48 hours and deployed the Texas Rangers to the border to enforce the order 63 Gustav Mahler s symphony Das Lied von der Erde was given its first performance six months after the composer s death Conductor Bruno Walter led the orchestra in the performance at Munich 64 The Japanese Antarctic Expedition set off from Sydney and Dr Mawson s expedition set off from Adelaide 10 Born David Seymour Polish war photographer nicknamed Chim as Dawid Szymin in Warsaw killed 1956 Jean Shiley American athlete who won the 1932 Olympic gold medal for the women s high jump against Babe Didrikson in Harrisburg Pennsylvania d 1998 November 21 1911 Tuesday editAfter four days of working their way up the Axel Heiberg Glacier Roald Amundsen and his party were able to reach the plateau of the Transantarctic Mountains Amundsen named that part of the range between the Ross Ice Shelf and the plateau after the reigning Queen Consort of Norway christening them the Queen Maud Mountains 65 November 22 1911 Wednesday editRussian troops invaded Iran with several hundred occupying Rasht the largest port on the Persian side of the Caspian Sea The conditions given for the troops withdrawal included the dismissal of W Morgan Shuster as the Persian Treasurer and an agreement not to employ foreign advisers without the approval of Russia and Britain 66 Born Ernie Caceres American jazz musician in Rockport Texas d 1971 November 23 1911 Thursday editThe collapse of a railway bridge in France near Montreuil Bellay killed 30 people The cars carried about 100 passengers who were on their way from Angers to Poitiers and sank in the Thouet River Some persons who had escaped the cars before they sank were swept away in the flood swollen waters 67 As the Italo Turkish War continued Italy informed the other European powers that it would send its Navy into Turkish waters to create a blockade of the Dardanelles 68 Wu Tingfang a leader of the Republican revolution in China informed foreign diplomats in Nanjing an attack would be held off for three days in order to give foreign residents a chance to evacuate before November 26 69 Died Bernard Tancred 47 South African cricketer died after a short illness November 24 1911 Friday editAt the Hotel Gotham in Manhattan Texas businessman Edward M House had his first meeting with New Jersey Governor Woodrow Wilson and began the process for a successful campaign to elect Wilson to the office of President of the United States in 1912 70 After seven years the secret articles of the Anglo French declaration of 1904 which concerned Egypt and Morocco were published 71 A boiler explosion at the J Bibby amp Sons oil cake mills in Liverpool killed 27 people and injured 100 72 Born Erik Bergman Finnish classical music composer in Nykarleby d 2006 November 25 1911 Saturday editEmiliano Zapata proclaimed the Plan de Ayala blaming revolutionary turned President Francisco I Madero for failing to redistribute land to Mexico s peasants 73 Born Roelof Frankot Dutch painter in Meppel d 1984 November 26 1911 Sunday editIn an elaborate ceremony at the ancestral temple the Regent for China s Emperor took an oath to uphold the 19 Articles of the new Chinese constitution stating Following the fall of the sacred dynasty I accept the advice of the national assembly I swear to uphold the nineteen constitutional articles and organize a parliament excluding the nobles from administrative posts I and my descendants will adhere to it forever Your heavenly spirits will see and understand Bombardment of Nanjing began the same day 74 Six members of the family of Norbert Randall of Lafayette Louisiana were killed in their beds by an axe murderer continuing a string of similar killings that had already claimed eleven people in January and five more in April Police arrested an African American woman Clementine Bernabet but would release her after nine more killings took place during her incarceration 75 Born Gilbert F White American geographer described as The Father of Floodplain Management in Chicago d 2006 Died Komura Jutarō 56 Foreign Minister of Japan 1901 to 1906 died of tuberculosis Paul Lafargue 69 French philosopher who wrote The Right to Be Lazy along with his wife died in a double suicideNovember 27 1911 Monday editHurling rotten fruit and vegetables Irish born Americans protested what they perceived as insulting stereotypes of Irish people shouting insults and throwing produce at the actors during the New York City opening of John Millington Synge s production of The Playboy of the Western World 76 77 Spanish commanders in the Sahara agreed to terms with 65 Rif chiefs 10 Born David Merrick stage name for David Lee Margulois American theater producer and four time Tony Award winner known for Hello Dolly in St Louis d 2000 Fe del Mundo Filipino pediatrician and National Scientist of the Philippines in Intramuros Manila d 2011 November 28 1911 Tuesday editRenowned lawyer Clarence Darrow was accused of attempting to bribe a juror after a detective whom he had hired Bert Franklin was arrested in Los Angeles for offering a juror 4 000 to bring about a hung jury in the trial of the McNamara brothers for the bombing of the Los Angeles Times building After Franklin testified that Darrow had ordered him to attempt bribery Darrow was indicted on two separate charges He would be acquitted in both trials 78 Born Vaclav Renc Czech poet dramatist and translator in Wodochod now Vodochody Austro Hungarian Empire d 1973 Tawfiq Yusuf Awwad Lebanese novelist in Bhersaf d 1989 November 29 1911 Wednesday editRussia delivered its ultimatum to Persia giving the government 48 hours to either dismiss American businessman W Morgan Shuster from his post as Persia s Treasurer General or to see Tehran invaded 79 November 30 1911 Thursday editIn the annual Thanksgiving Day college football game at Jackson between Mississippi and Mississippi State at that time Mississippi A amp M fifty people were injured when a set of bleachers collapsed throwing 1 000 spectators to the ground Mississippi Lt Governor Luther Manship and Secretary of State J N Power were hurt slightly in the tumble 80 The keel for the biggest White Star Line ship ever HMHS Britannic was laid down in Belfast The ship would be launched on February 26 1914 and soon called into World War One service sinking on November 21 1916 after striking a mine 81 Born Tamura Taijiro Japanese novelist in Yokkaichi Mie Prefecture d 1983 References edit Christopher Chant Austro Hungarian aces of World War I Osprey Publishing 2002 p39 Gerard J De Groot The Bomb A Life Harvard University Press 2005 p2 Susan Solomon The Coldest March Scott s Fatal Antarctic Expedition Yale University Press 2002 p173 David Crane Scott of the Antarctic A Life of Courage and Tragedy Random House 2007 Our Greatest Fleet Reviewed by Meyer New York Times November 2 1911 a b c d Record of Current Events The American Monthly Review of Reviews December 1911 pp678 681 Pacific Fleet Reviewed New York Times November 2 1911 Pius X in The Catholic Encyclopedia The Encyclopedia Press 1922 p584 Chinese Troops Kill Thousands New York Times November 3 1911 a b c d e f g h i The Britannica Year Book 1913 A Survey of the World s Progress Since the Completion in 1910 of the Encyclopaedia Britannica Encyclopaedia Britannica 1913 pp xviii to xix Taft Reviews Mighty Fleet New York Times November 3 1911 Ottilie M Leland and Minnie Dubbs Millbrook The Master of Precision Henry M Leland Wayne State University Press 1996 p117 Rebels Take Shanghai New York Times November 4 1911 Jonathan Fenby Chiang Kai Shek China s Generalissimo and the Nation He Lost Da Capo Press 2005 p31 Curbs Chinese Ruler s Power New York Times November 4 1911 Stanley K Hornbeck Contemporary Politics in the Far East D Appleton amp Co 1916 reprinted by Ayer Publishing 1970 p38 Daniel F Drawbaugh Dead New York Times November 4 1911 Frank E Trout Morocco s Saharan Frontiers Librairie Droz 1969 pp198 199 Ieuan Ll Griffiths The African Inheritance Routledge 1995 p37 Vaniman Confident Despite Mishaps New York Times November 6 1911 20 000 See Rodgers Land New York Times November 6 1911 Rodgers Ends Long Flight New York Times November 6 1911 Carlos A Schwantes Going Places Transportation Redefines the Twentieth Century West Indiana University Press 2003 pp192 193 Waniss A Otman and Erling Karlberg The Libyan Economy Economic Diversification and International Repositioning Springer 2007 p13 Mike Shamos The New Illustrated Encyclopedia of Billiards Globe Pequot 2002 p107 Inaugurate Madero in Mexican Capital New York Times November 6 1911 James W Hurst Pancho Villa and Black Jack Pershing the Punitive Expedition in Mexico Greenwood Publishing Group 2008 Awarded to Mme Curie New York Times November 7 1911 Michael Dillon China A Modern History I B Tauris 2010 p147 Ryan Dunch Fuzhou Protestants and the Making of a Modern China 1857 1927 Yale University Press 2001 p108 Viceroy Dies by Own Hand New York Times November 9 1911 Alfred F Havighurst Britain in Transition The Twentieth Century University of Chicago Press 1985 p103 Balfour Quits His Leadership New York Times November 9 1911 Portuguese Ministry Resigns New York Times November 9 1911 Annping Chin Four Sisters of Hofei A History Simon and Schuster 2002 p19 His Invention was Fatal New York Times November 9 1911 Lincoln Memorial Dedicated by Taft New York Times November 10 1911 Edward J M Rhoads China s Republican Revolution The Case of Kwangtung 1895 1913 Harvard University Press 1975 p234 Manchus Day of Massacre Ruthlessly Slaughter Thousands in Nanking Sparing Neither the Aged Nor Babes New York Times November 11 1911 Carnegie Gives 25 000 000 Fund New York Times November 11 1911 King George Sails for Great Durbar New York Times November 12 1911 Whirlpool Corporation Celebrates Its 100th Anniversary news release from Whirlpool Corporation November 11 2011 23 Die in Cyclone in the Middle West New York Times November 12 1911 Aaron Gerow and Abe Mark Nornes In Praise of Film Studies Essays in Honor of Makino Mamoru Trafford Publishing 2001 p59 Robert Henson The Rough Guide to Weather Penguin 2007 p105 Danas 117 godisnjica visocke jangije Pozar u kojem je izgorjela cijela carsija Avaz ba in Bosnian Retrieved 2019 05 07 Lentz Harris M 1995 Obituaries in the Performing Arts McFarland amp Company ISBN 978 0 7864 0253 3 President Taft Ends His 15 000 mile Tour New York Times November 12 1911 None to Welcome Taft New York Times November 13 1911 Larry L Witherell Rebel on the Right Henry Page Croft and the Crisis of British Conservatism 1903 1914 University of Delaware Press 1997 Unionists Elect Bonar Law New York Times November 14 1911 Kerry Segrave Piracy in the Motion Picture Industry McFarland 2003 p48 Pinellas County Court Clerk Yuan May Assume Office To day New York Times November 16 1911 Tobacco Trust Plan Has Final Approval New York Times November 17 1911 Jeffrey L Cruikshank Arthur W Schultz The Man who Sold America The Amazing but true Story of Albert D Lasker and the Creation of the Advertising Century Harvard Business Press 2010 p248 Earthquake in Germany New York Times November 17 1911 Earthquake Scares Swiss and Germans 10 27 pm New York Times November 18 1911 Jack Harpster King of the Slots William Si Redd ABC CLIO 2010 Si Redd gaming legend dies Seattle Times October 20 2003 Omega Psi Phi website Norman Friedman U S Submarines through 1945 An Illustrated Design History Naval Institute Press 1995 p33 2001 ESPN Information Please Sports Almanac p152 600 000 India Mail Theft New York Times November 19 1911 Santo Domingan President Slain New York Times November 21 1911 Michael R Hall Sugar and Power in the Dominican Republic Eisenhower Kennedy and the Trujillos Greenwood Publishing Group 2000 p14 First Wireless from Italy Marconi Sends Greetings to The Times Across 4 000 Miles of Space New York Times November 20 1911 Virginia Barckley and Oncology Nursing by Elizabeth Hanink WorkingNurse com Virginia Barckley in American Nursing A Biographical Dictionary Springer 2004 pp 14 16 F Arturo Rosales Pobre Raza Violence Justice and Mobilization among Mexico Lindo Immigrants 1900 1936 University of Texas Press 1999 p12 Jens Malte Fischer and Stewart Spencer Gustav Mahler Yale University Press 2011 p563 Gunter Faure and Teresa M Mensing The Transantarctic Mountains Rocks Ice Meteorites and Water Springer 2010 p173 Janet Afary The Iranian Constitutional Revolution 1906 1911 Grassroots Democracy Social Democracy amp the Origins of Feminism Columbia University Press 1996 p330 30 Drowned in a Train New York Times November 24 1911 Italy to Blockade the Dardanelles New York Times November 23 1911 Eiko Woodhouse The Chinese Hsinhai revolution G E Morrison and Anglo Japanese relations 1897 1920 Routledge 2004 p85 Jim Powell Wilson s War How Woodrow Wilson s Great Blunder Led to Hitler Lenin Stalin and World War II Random House 2005 p79 Anglo French Secret Out New York Times November 25 1911 Explosion Kills 33 New York Times November 25 1911 Robert Ryal Miller Mexico A History University of Oklahoma Press 1989 p292 Plan de Ayala from John Womack Zapata and the Mexican Revolution Knopf 1969 pp400 404 Rebels Pour Shot into Chinese City Milwaukee Sentinel November 27 1911 p1 Michael Newton The Encyclopedia of Unsolved Crimes Infobase Publishing 2010 263 Freedom of the Theatre and Practical Censorship Two Theater Riots in the Early Twentieth Century by M Alison Kibler in OAH Magazine of History April 2010 Riot in Theatre over an Irish Play New York Times November 28 1911 Diana Klebanow and Franklin L Jonas People s Lawyers Crusaders for Justice in American History M E Sharpe 2003 pp123 125 Charges of Bribery in M Namara Trial New York Times November 29 1911 Persia Inclined to Defy Russia New York Times November 30 1911 Janet Afary The Iranian Constitutional Revolution 1906 1911 Grassroots Democracy Social Democracy and the Origins of Feminism Columbia University Press 1996 p204 Jammed Bleachers Fall Milwaukee Sentinel December 1 1911 p1 Titanic s sister ship to become divers paradise The Telegraph London 20 May 2007 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title November 1911 amp oldid 1187469991, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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