July 1913

Month of 1913
1913
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The following events occurred in July 1913:

July 11 and July 12, 1913: Romania and Turkey invade Bulgaria, which was already fighting the Second Balkan War with Greece and Serbia
July 4, 1913: Bulgarians defeated at Battle of Kilkis
July 23, 1913: Bankruptcy auction brings end to Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show
the ruins of Kilkis

July 1, 1913 (Tuesday)

July 2, 1913 (Wednesday)

Con artist David Lamar
  • Wall Street con man David Lamar testified before a United States Senate subcommittee that he had frequently impersonated Congressmen during telephone conversations in order to gain an advantage.[19][20] The United States Department of Justice reluctantly concluded that there was no federal law under which Lamar could be prosecuted.[21] Although federal law made it a felony "to impersonate an officer of the United States," the Supreme Court of the United States had ruled that members of Congress were "not officers of the United States, but of the particular States from which they come."[22]
  • Upon recommendation of the city Board of Health, the city of Cincinnati seized control of eight ice plants whose workers had gone on strike during the hot summer.[23] The strike settled four days later.[24]
  • The Crocker Land Expedition, on the ship Diana, departed from New York City toward the North Pole for a three-year exploration project.[25]
  • French aviator Marcel Brindejonc des Moulinais set a new distance record for an airplane, flying 3,100 miles from Paris to Saint Petersburg.[26]
  • The Catholic League was established to reconcile Protestant and Catholic faiths in England.[27]

July 3, 1913 (Thursday)

July 4, 1913 (Friday)

Tennis player Tony Wilding

July 5, 1913 (Saturday)

July 6, 1913 (Sunday)

July 7, 1913 (Monday)

July 8, 1913 (Tuesday)

Pearl Curran, channeler of Patience Worth
  • Andrew Fisher retained his leadership of the Australian Labor Party during the party's leadership vote, defeating challengers William Higgs and Billy Hughes.[41]
  • Trainmen and conductors of most of the railroads in the eastern United States voted 72,473 to 4,210 in favor of going on strike for higher wages, tying up the nation's commerce and travel.[42]
  • The Welsh Disestablishment Bill passed its third reading in the House of Commons and was sent to the House of Lords for consideration.[5]
  • British yacht Vivid ran aground and wrecked at the island of Colonsay off the coast of Scotland while en route from Glasgow to Stornoway on her maiden voyage as a civilian training ship.[43]
  • Pearl Curran, a St. Louis housewife who was experimenting with an Ouija board, began reporting the communications of "Patience Worth," whom Curran said had been an Englishwoman who had lived in Dorset more than 200 years earlier, during the 17th century, and had been killed by Indians after crossing the ocean to America. For the next 24 years, until her death in 1937, Mrs. Curran would publish novels and poems attributed to her communications with Patience Worth.[44]
  • Born:
  • Died: Louis Hémon, 32, French novelist who moved to Canada, was killed after being struck by a train in Chapleau, Ontario. His novel Maria Chapdelaine was published after his death, and brought him posthumous fame. (b. 1880)[citation needed]

July 9, 1913 (Wednesday)

July 10, 1913 (Thursday)

A cooler July day at Furnace Creek in 2005
  • Romania declares war on Bulgaria.[citation needed]
  • This afternoon, the United States Weather Bureau recorded the highest ever ambient air temperature of 134 °F (56.7 °C) at Greenland Ranch (modern-day Furnace Creek) in Death Valley.[45] The record's validity was later challenged, and in 2020 a temperature of 54.4 °C (129.9 °F) was recorded at the same location, making it the world's highest verified air temperature, subject to confirmation.[46]
  • Born: Salvador Espriu, Spanish poet, known for poetry collections including La pell de brau and D'una vella i encerclada terra; as Salvador Espriu i Castelló, in Santa Coloma de Farners, Spain (d. 1985)[citation needed]
  • Died: Hayashi Tadasu, 63, Foreign Minister of Japan from 1906 to 1912 (b. 1850)[citation needed]

July 11, 1913 (Friday)

July 12, 1913 (Saturday)

July 13, 1913 (Sunday)

A photograph from Roger Casement's report

July 14, 1913 (Monday)

President Gerald Ford (then Leslie Lynch King) as a young child

July 15, 1913 (Tuesday)

British Prime Minister H.H. Asquith

July 16, 1913 (Wednesday)

July 17, 1913 (Thursday)

July 18, 1913 (Friday)

July 19, 1913 (Saturday)

July 20, 1913 (Sunday)

July 21, 1913 (Monday)

  • Turkish forces for the Ottoman Empire, led by Enver Pasha, recaptured the city of Adrianople from Bulgaria, four months after the Bulgarians had successfully invaded the historic city on March 26, 1913.[83] The city, which had been ceded to Bulgaria less than two months earlier by the Treaty of London, would formally be relinquished back to the Ottoman Empire by the Treaty of Constantinople on September 29.[84]
  • China's President Yuan Shikai declared martial law nationwide as the southern provinces continued their rebellion.[85] On the same day, former President Sun Yat-sen released a statement to the media, calling for Yuan's resignation.[86]
  • British suffragette Nellie Hall threw a brick through the window of the automobile of Prime Minister H. H. Asquith, while he was being chauffeured during a visit to Birmingham.[87]
  • Born: Catherine Storr, British children's writer, author of Marianne Dreams; as Catherine Cole, in Kensington, England (d. 2001)[citation needed]

July 22, 1913 (Tuesday)

July 23, 1913 (Wednesday)

July 24, 1913 (Thursday)

July 25, 1913 (Friday)

  • Austria-Hungary warned Serbia and Greece not to humiliate Bulgaria in a peace settlement.[96]
  • The Washington Senators and the St. Louis Browns (now the Minnesota Twins and Baltimore Orioles, respectively) played to an 8-8 tie after their game went 15 innings until ended because of darkness. Walter Johnson set a record for a relief pitcher, throwing 15 strikeouts.[citation needed] Carl Weilman of the Browns became the first player to strike out six times in one game, in every single one of his times at bat.[citation needed] Walter Johnson's record would be broken 88 years later, by Randy Johnson on July 19, 2001.[citation needed]

July 26, 1913 (Saturday)

July 27, 1913 (Sunday)

Modest swimming attire in the 1910s
Dr. Rosalie M. Ladova in the 1910s
  • In an action that made headlines around the world, Dr. Rosalie M. Ladova, a prominent Chicago physician, made an unsuccessful attempt to challenge the American social mores of the time, when she discarded the "bathing skirt" that female swimmers were required to wear in addition to the bloomers that covered their legs. Police arrested Dr. Ladova at the beach at Jackson Park on Lake Michigan and charged her with obscenity.[100] After seeing the newspaper photographs the next day of Dr. Cordova's blouse and bloomers swimwear, Chicago Mayor Carter Harrison Jr. declared that "No woman should think of wearing that kind of costume" at a beach, and directed the city police to "gently but firmly insist upon the lady putting on proper costumes."[101] The "skin-tight" bathing suit had long been accepted in Britain for both men and women.[102] After Dr. Ladova's daring experiment, almost eight years would pass before the taboo was discarded in the United States, with Mayor Robert Crissye of the city of Somers Point, New Jersey, inviting women "to bathe on his city's beaches barelegged and in a one-piece suit," in the style of Australian swimmer Annette Kellermann.[103]
  • The association football club Chaco For Ever was established in Resistencia, Chaco, Argentina.[104]
  • The town of San Javier, Uruguay was established.[105]

July 28, 1913 (Monday)

July 29, 1913 (Tuesday)

July 30, 1913 (Wednesday)

July 31, 1913 (Thursday)

  • In the largest demonstration for women's suffrage in the United States up to that time, a motorcade of sixty automobiles traveled from Hyattsville, Maryland to the United States Capitol to present the United States Senate with petitions bearing 200,000 signatures of persons favoring an amendment to the U.S. Constitution to allow women to vote.[117] On May 9, 1915, petitions with 500,000 signatures would be presented, and on October 27, 1917, one million.[118]
  • The Second Opium Conference was convened, at The Hague, in order to take up the matter of the remaining 12 of 46 nations that had not signed. The Conference would end after eight days.[119]
  • The Royal Meteorological Institute was established in Brussels.[citation needed]

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