June 1916

Month in 1916
1916
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The flag of the Arab Revolt in the Martyrs' Memorial, Amman, Jordan.
Field Marshal Herbert Kitchener perishes when the battle cruiser HMS Hampshire strikes a mine and sinks off Scotland.

The following events occurred in June 1916:

June 1, 1916 (Thursday)

French soldiers resting in between German attacks at Fort Vaux during the Battle of Verdun.
  • Battle of Jutland – The British Royal Navy Grand Fleet overcame massive losses in the opening of the battle to rout the Imperial German Navy High Seas Fleet in the North Sea during the night, forcing them to retreat back to home port. Although the British lost more ships, the Germans lost key ships that compromised their naval advantage. The result was tactically inconclusive but allowed the Royal Navy to retain dominance of the North Sea.[1] British casualties were 6,094 and German casualties were 2,551.[2]
    • German cruiser SMS Wiesbaden, sunk by a British barrage with 589 men lost including German poet Johann Kinau, better known by his pseudonym Gorch Fock.[3]
    • German battleship SMS Pommern was shelled and sunk by British barrage with all 839 crew killed.[4]
    • German cruiser SMS Frauenlob was torpedoed by HMS Southampton and sank, taking 320 men down with her.[5]
  • The German Navy scuttled cruisers SMS Lützow, SMS Elbing and SMS Rostock as all three were too badly damaged to bring back to port, adding to the 63,300 tons sunk by the Royal Navy.[6][7]
    • British cruiser HMS Warrior was so badly damaged, it was scuttled.[8] The Royal Navy also lost destroyers HMS Turbulent (90 crew dead),[9] HMS Ardent (78 crew dead),[10] HMS Fortune (67 crew dead),[11] and HMS Sparrowhawk (6 crew dead) which added to the total 113,300 tons sunk by the German navy.[12]
  • Battle of Verdun – A German force of 10,000 troops began their assault on Fort Vaux in northeastern France.[13]
  • The United States Marine Corps took control of key port cities of Puerto Plata and Monti Cristi in the Dominican Republic to enforce a blockade on the country.[14]
  • The United States Senate confirmed the nomination of Louis Brandeis as an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States by a vote of 47 to 22.[15]
  • Born: Rick Fletcher, American comic strip artist, best known for his work on the Dick Tracy comic strip, in Burlington, Iowa (d. 1983)
  • Died: Charles J. Knapp, American banker, indicted in the failure of the Binghamton Trust Company in 1909 (b. 1845); Mason Scott, English rugby player, played half back for the England national rugby union team from 1887 to 1890 and for the Barbarian club (b. 1865); John K. Stewart, American inventor, co-founder of Stewart-Warner and other companies (b. 1870)

June 2, 1916 (Friday)

General Victor Williams

June 3, 1916 (Saturday)

June 4, 1916 (Sunday)

June 5, 1916 (Monday)

June 5, 1916: One of the last photographs taken of Lord Kitchener.
HMS Hampshire

June 6, 1916 (Tuesday)

June 7, 1916 (Wednesday)

June 8, 1916 (Thursday)

June 9, 1916 (Friday)

June 10, 1916 (Saturday)

The battlefield after the end of the Battle of Asiago.

June 11, 1916 (Sunday)

June 12, 1916 (Monday)

June 13, 1916 (Tuesday)

  • Battle of Mont Sorrel – Canadian and British troops surprised German defenses following a morning barrage, forcing them to fall back to their original lines within an hour. Around 200 German soldiers were taken prisoner.[28][67]
  • The village of Spirit River, Alberta was established.[68]

June 14, 1916 (Wednesday)

June 15, 1916 (Thursday)

June 16, 1916 (Friday)

June 17, 1916 (Saturday)

June 18, 1916 (Sunday)

Max Immelmann, German war ace

June 19, 1916 (Monday)

June 20, 1916 (Tuesday)

June 21, 1916 (Wednesday)

June 22, 1916 (Thursday)

June 23, 1916 (Friday)

June 24, 1916 (Saturday)

Victor Chapman, American airman
  • Battle of Verdun – The joint British-French artillery barrage the German defense positions.[89]
  • The British military court found 16 British conscientious objectors guilty for insubordination and sentenced to be shot, but the sentence was immediately commuted to ten years in penal servitude. They were transferred back to England to serve their terms in military prison located at Richmond Castle, where they became known as the Richmond Sixteen. All were eventually released in 1919.[63]
  • While flying en route to see a wounded comrade, French-American flight ace Victor Chapman was attacked and shot down over Douaumont by German fighter pilot Kurt Wintgens, becoming the first American airman to die in World War I.[90][91]
  • Australian soldier William Jackson was awarded the Victoria Cross for his actions in a raid near Armentières, France. Jackson had captured one German prisoner and rescued several wounded comrades in no man's land before he was hit by a shell burst that blew his right arm off. Despite the loss of a limb, Jackson refused to return to the rear after receiving a tourniquet and returned repeatedly to no man's land to search for more wounded comrades until all members of his unit were accounted for. Jackson did not learn of his commendation until he returned to Australia on September 8, five days before his 19th birthday.[92]
  • A publicity launch for the Wolf Cub section of Scouting was introduced at the Boy Scouts Association's Imperial Headquarters in Buckingham Palace Road, Westminster, England.[93]
  • The Ninth Avenue, 50th Street, 55th Street and Fort Hamilton Parkway elevated train stations opened in New York City.[94][95]
  • Born: William B. Saxbe, American politician, 70th United States Attorney General, U.S. Senator from Ohio from 1969 to 1974, in Mechanicsburg, Ohio (d. 2010)
  • Born: John Ciardi, American poet, author of How Does a Poem Mean?, in Boston (d. 1986); Roohangiz Saminejad, Iranian actress, known for her film roles in Lor Girl and Shirin and Farhad, in Bam, Iran (d. 1997)

June 25, 1916 (Sunday)

June 26, 1916 (Monday)

June 27, 1916 (Tuesday)

June 28, 1916 (Wednesday)

June 29, 1916 (Thursday)

June 30, 1916 (Friday)

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