August 1912

Summary

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The following events occurred in August 1912:

August 7, 1912: Victor Hess (center) discovers cosmic rays
August 17, 1912: Legendary lawyer Clarence Darrow acquitted of criminal charges
August 12, 1912: Yusuf becomes new Sultan of Morocco as brother flees
August 8, 1912: Haiti's President Leconte killed in accidental explosion


August 1, 1912 (Thursday) edit

 
Alfred Cunningham USMC

August 2, 1912 (Friday) edit

August 3, 1912 (Saturday) edit

  • An attack by soldiers of Montenegro against a Turkish border post killed 30 Turks and 12 Montenegrins.[4]
  • "Baby Seals Blues" was published in the form of sheet music; according to historian Rudi Blesh, the song by Arthur "Baby" Seales was the first blues song to use the word "blues" in its title, with "Dallas Blues" appearing the next month on September 28, while other sources describe "Dallas Blues" as having been introduced in March 1912.[13]

August 4, 1912 (Sunday) edit

August 5, 1912 (Monday) edit

August 6, 1912 (Tuesday) edit

August 7, 1912 (Wednesday) edit

August 8, 1912 (Thursday) edit

  • A mine explosion in the village of Gerthe, in the Westphalia region of Germany, killed 103 men at the Lothringen Coal Company.[29]
  • Friederich Krupp AG, the Krupp family armaments company, celebrated its centennial with the Kaiser giving the address. Accompanying the Kaiser to the ceremony at Essen were the Chancellor and many of his cabinet, and Prince Henry.[30]
 
Pope Pius X

August 9, 1912 (Friday) edit

August 10, 1912 (Saturday) edit

August 11, 1912 (Sunday) edit

  • An attack by Zapatista rebels on a train near Mexico City killed 35 soldiers and 20 civilians.[4]
 
Ty Cobb
  • Major league baseball star Ty Cobb was in Detroit when he was jumped by three hoodlums while on his way to catch a train to Syracuse, New York, to appear for the Detroit Tigers in an exhibition game against the minor league Syracuse Stars, and cut on the back by a knife.[42] He played the next day while wearing "a blood-soaked, makeshift bandage", and would later tell biographer Al Stump that he had beaten one of his attackers to death.[43] However, lawyer and baseball fan Doug Roberts researched coroner records and press reports, and found no record of a body being found with head trauma during the summer of 1912, nor of mention in the Detroit newspapers, although Cobb was treated for an 0.5-inch (13 mm) long knife wound.[44]
  • Born:

August 12, 1912 (Monday) edit

August 13, 1912 (Tuesday) edit

August 14, 1912 (Wednesday) edit

August 15, 1912 (Thursday) edit

August 16, 1912 (Friday) edit

August 17, 1912 (Saturday) edit

August 18, 1912 (Sunday) edit

August 19, 1912 (Monday) edit

August 20, 1912 (Tuesday) edit

August 21, 1912 (Wednesday) edit

August 22, 1912 (Thursday) edit

August 23, 1912 (Friday) edit

  • Bandar Abbas in Persia (now Iran) was attacked by rebels.[4]
  • Sir Hugh Clifford was appointed Governor of the Gold Coast (now Ghana).[4]
  • The Pure Food and Drug Act was amended to prohibit drug manufacturers from making false claims on the labels of medication.[81]
  • Four-year-old Bobby Dunbar disappeared while his parents were on a fishing trip to a lake near their home in Opelousas, Louisiana. After an eight-month search by Bobby's father, police in Mississippi would announce that they had found the child under the care of handyman William Cantwell Walters, who said that he had been entrusted to take care of Bruce Anderson by Bruce's mother. In a dispute between the Dunbars and Mrs. Anderson, a court would award the boy to the Dunbars, while Walters would be convicted of kidnapping Bobby and serve two years before the verdict was reversed. In 2004, a DNA test would show that Walters had been right and that the child returned to the Dunbars had not been Bobby. It was presumed that the child raised by the Dunbars had been Bruce Anderson, who lived until 1966, and that Bobby Dunbar had died more than 91 years earlier.[82][83]
  • Born:

August 24, 1912 (Saturday) edit

  • Portugal put down the native uprising at East Timor. The revolt cost 3,424 Timorese killed and 12,567 wounded, and 289 Portuguese killed and 600 wounded.[84]
  • Turkish troops massacred Serbians at Sjenica in what is now Serbia.[85]
  • The Panama Canal bill was signed into law, providing that, on the opening of the Canal in 1914, "no tolls shall be levied upon vessels engaged in the coastwise trade of the United States". The discrimination in favor of American vessels would be repealed on June 15, 1914.[86]
  • The Lloyd–La Follette Act was passed, amending the U.S. Post Office Appropriations Act by prohibiting federal employees from being removed except for inefficiency, and not without written notice or a right to appeal.[87]
  • Alaska was made a U.S. territory by passage of the Second Organic Act and given limited self-government. The U.S. government still controlled Alaska's natural resources. Although an elected Territorial Legislature was created, it could not pass any laws related to fishing, wildlife, soil, divorce, gambling or liquor.[88]
  • The collier USS Jupiter, the first electrically propelled ship in the United States Navy, was launched. In 1922, after being decommissioned and refurbished, it would be commissioned as the first American aircraft carrier, the USS Langley.[89]
  • Born: Essie Summers, New Zealand romance writer, author of close to 60 novels, in Christchurch (d. 1998)

August 25, 1912 (Sunday) edit

 
Kuomintang emblem

August 26, 1912 (Monday) edit

August 27, 1912 (Tuesday) edit

August 28, 1912 (Wednesday) edit

 
Brusilov

August 29, 1912 (Thursday) edit

August 30, 1912 (Friday) edit

August 31, 1912 (Saturday) edit

References edit

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