August 1913

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1913
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The following events occurred in August 1913:

August 1, 1913 (Friday)

  • The federal council of Venezuela authorized President Juan Vicente Gómez to assume dictatorial powers until the revolution led by Cipriano Castro could be suppressed.[1][2]
  • Mexico's President Victoriano Huerta announced that he had no intention of resigning.[2][3]
  • Russia announced that it would not participate in the Panama–Pacific International Exposition. In doing so, it joined Great Britain, Turkey, Bulgaria, Serbia, Egypt, Morocco and Siam. Another 27 nations had accepted the invitation to participate, including China, France, Japan, the Netherlands, Norway and Sweden, as well as most of the South American and Latin American countries. Austria-Hungary, Germany, Italy and Belgium were among the 15 other invited nations that had not decided on appearing at the Exposition, to open in San Francisco in 1914.[2][4]

August 2, 1913 (Saturday)

  • The U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee voted 8-4 to reject Secretary of State Bryan's proposal to sign a treaty to make Nicaragua a protectorate of the United States.;[5] Secretary Bryan dropped further discussion of the treaty for the rest of the year.[6]
  • Explosions at the East Brookside Colliery of the Philadelphia and Reading Coal and Iron Company mine at Tower City, Pennsylvania, killed 19 people and seriously injured 20. Thirteen men were killed in the blast, and five men who volunteered to be rescuers were killed in a second explosion in the 1,800 foot deep mine shaft.[7][8]
  • Pieter Cort van der Linden became the new Prime Minister of the Netherlands.[2][9]
  • French aviator Eugène Gilbert became the first person to fly 1,000 miles in a single day to win the semi-annually awarded Pommery Cup. The prize was to be given to the person who "makes the longest flight across country from sunrise to sunset on one day, during which he may stop as often as he wishes to replenish fuel". Gilbert departed Paris at 4:45 am, flew seven hours non-stop to the Spanish town of Vittoria, departed again at 1:00 and arrived at the Portuguese town of Pejabo at 8:00 pm.[10]

August 3, 1913 (Sunday)

August 4, 1913 (Monday)

  • U.S. President Woodrow Wilson asked Henry Lane Wilson to resign as U.S. Ambassador to Mexico, and sent former Minnesota Governor John Lind as his personal representative to attempt a settlement of the Mexican revolution.[12] However, President Huerta said two days later that Lind would not be allowed to enter the country unless he brought an official recognition of the Huerta government. Lind arrived in Mexico City on August 11.
  • As the uprising of China's southern provinces collapsed, the Fujian province rescinded its July 20 declaration of independence, and rebel general Xu Chongzhi fled to Japan, returning control of the province to Governor Sun Daoren.[13]
  • In fiction, August 4, 1913 marks the climax of the novel The Good Soldier, by Ford Madox Ford
  • Joseph Knowles, a 44-year-old survivalist, began his experiment of living alone in "the uncharted forests of northeastern Maine", pledging to "live as Adam lived" for two months. Before a group of reporters, Knowles removed all of his clothes, and walked into the forest without clothing, food or tools. The American press followed his progress by written notes that Knowles left at prearranged locations. Knowles would emerge from the forest on October 4, 1913, wearing a bearskin robe, deerskin moccasins, and a knife, bow and arrows that he had crafted himself.[14]
  • Born: Robert Hayden, African-American poet, as Asa Bundy Sheffey in Detroit (d. 1980)

August 5, 1913 (Tuesday)

August 6, 1913 (Wednesday)

  • John Henry Mears set a new record for traveling around the world, arriving back in New York City after 35 days, 21 hours and 35 minutes. Sponsored by the New York Evening Sun, Mears broke the old record (set by Andre Jaeger-Schmidt in 1911) by four days. Mears, who had departed the newspaper's offices in the early morning hours of July 2 returned to the same spot "at 10:10 o'clock" in the evening five weeks later.[16]
  • Venezuela's President Gomez temporarily left office in order to personally lead the nation's army against the rebels of Cipriano Castro. José Gil Fortoul of the Federal Council was designated by Gomez to act as President during Gomez's absence.[17]
  • Dr. Sun Yat-sen, the first President of the Republic of China, fled to the island of Taiwan, which at that time was the Japanese colony of Formosa, after being threatened by President Yuan Shikai.[18]
  • The Peruvian towns of Caravelí and Quicacha were destroyed by an earthquake that struck the Arequipa Province.[19]

August 7, 1913 (Thursday)

  • The Senate of France voted 245-37 to pass the loi de trois ans, extending compulsory military service from two years to three years.[2]
  • El Salvador and the United States signed a five-year treaty, pledging to submit all disputes between them "for investigation and report to an International Commission" composed of representatives from five nations. The proposed Commission would have one year to render its report, during which participating nations would withhold from going to war. The agreement was the first of the international peace treaties that Secretary Bryan had proposed in a "plan for world-wide peace".[20]
  • Died: Samuel Franklin Cody, 48, American-born British aviator, in a plane crash, along with cricketer William Evans, 30.[21]

August 8, 1913 (Friday)

  • Venustiano Carranza, leader of Mexico's rebellion against the government of President Huerta, and Governor of the State of Coahuila, sent a reply to U.S. President Wilson's proposal for a ceasefire until elections could be held in October. Carranza said that he did not recognize President Huerta's authority as legal and that his "comrades in arms in the just defense of our constitutional rights" would continue to fight.[22]
  • Born: John Facenda, American sports announcer famous for his narration of NFL films; in Portsmouth, Virginia (d. 1984); Cecil Travis, American MLB player, in Riverdale, Georgia (d. 2006); Axel Stordahl, American musician who arranged the background music for Frank Sinatra, in New York City (d. 1963); and Robert Stafford, Governor of Vermont, and later its U.S Representative, then U.S. Senator, between 1959 and 1989; in Rutland, Vermont (d. 2006)

August 9, 1913 (Saturday)

File:Kaiser in Lübeck.jpg
Last visit of Wilhelm II. in Lübeck
  • Slightly less than one year before the outbreak of World War One, a diplomat from Austria-Hungary told representatives from Italy and Germany that his Empire intended to plan an invasion of Serbia. The private discussion would be revealed on December 5, 1914, by Italian Prime Minister Giovanni Giolitti, who said that Italy refused to participate.[23]
  • The German Empreror visits Lübeck the last time
  • Born: Herman Talmadge, American politician and white supremacist who served as Governor of Georgia (1948-1955) and then U.S. Senator (1957-1981); in McRae, Georgia (d. 2002)

August 10, 1913 (Sunday)

  • The Treaty of Bucharest was signed at 10:30 a.m., ending the Second Balkan War. Serbia and Greece agreed to withdraw their troops from Bulgaria within three days, and Romania agreed to withdraw from Bulgaria within 15 days. In return, Bulgaria, which had won control of most of the region of Macedonia from Turkey in the First Balkan War, gave up 90 percent of its gains. Serbia increased its size by 80% with the acquisition of northern Macedonia, and Greece increased in size by 68% with the southern half of Macedonia.[24] Bulgaria also ceded Southern Dobruja to Romania, and agreed to demobilize its armed forces immediately. The parties also agreed to submit any future disputes over their borders for arbitration by Belgium, the Netherlands or Switzerland.[25]
  • Born: Wolfgang Paul, German physicist and 1989 winner of Nobel Prize in Physics, in Lorenzkirch; and Noah Beery Jr., American TV actor (The Rockford Files); in New York City (d. 1994)

August 11, 1913 (Monday)

  • The London ambassadors conference, of Europe's six "Great Powers" (Austria-Hungary, France, Germany, Italy, Russia, the United Kingdom), settled on the boundaries of the new Principality of Albania, created from former Turkish territory by the Balkan League during the First Balkan War. Greece received most of the Chameria, the southern part of the region occupied by the Albanian people, which was incorporated into Epirus, with the capital, Yanina, being renamed as Ioannina.[26] British Foreign Secretary Edward Grey told Parliament the next day that the division of the Albanian people had been made to avoid a war between the Great Powers over the region.[27]
  • Twelve workers on the Panama Canal, all but one of them Panamanian, were killed in a sudden rockslide at the quarry at Puerto Bello.[28]
  • Born: Sir Angus Wilson, British novelist, in Bexhill-on-Sea (d. 1991); H. Clay Earles, American auto racing entrepreneur, in Axton, Virginia (d. 1999)

August 12, 1913 (Tuesday)

  • The brand name "Oreo" was registered by the United States Patent and Trademark Office for exclusive use by the National Biscuit Company (Nabisco) for its cookies, first marketed on March 6, 1912.[29] Theories of the origin of the name include that it was from the Greek word oros (όρος) (for "mountain"), or the French word or (for "gold"), or the Greek word oraia (ωραία), meaning "nice".[30]

August 13, 1913 (Wednesday)

August 14, 1913 (Thursday)

August 15, 1913 (Friday)

  • Dr. Albert Schweitzer performed major surgery for the first time at the site of what would become the Albert Schweitzer Hospital at Lambaréné in Gabon, at that time a part of French Equatorial Africa in the jungle. The mission hospital was still under construction, but the patient had a strangulated hernia that required immediate attention. With his wife as the anesthetist, Dr. Schweitzer did the operation in the students' housing at the nearby mission school.[36]

August 16, 1913 (Saturday)

August 17, 1913 (Sunday)

  • The passenger ship State of California struck an uncharted reef off of Admiralty Island in Alaska, and sank within three minutes with 40 of the 179 passengers and crew drowning. The Pacific Coast Steamship Company vessel had been on its way from Seattle to Skagway.[39]
  • Harry K. Thaw, the millionaire who murdered architect Stanford White on June 25, 1906, and then was confined to an asylum rather than imprisoned, walked out of the mental hospital at Matteawan, New York and fled to Canada.[40] Thaw would be recaptured, sent back to the hospital and finally be released in 1924, and would die in Florida on February 22, 1947.[41]
  • Massachusetts angler Charles Church caught a five foot long, 73 pound striped bass, the largest up to that time. Church's record would stand for almost 58 years as the mark that "remained the goal of every striper fisherman", until July 17, 1981, when Captain Bob Roschetta would reel in a 76-pound bass.[42]
  • The Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria, heir to the throne of Austria-Hungary, was appointed as Inspector General of that nation's armed forces by his uncle, the Emperor Franz Joseph I. Franz Ferdinand would be assassinated less than a year later, leading to the outbreak of World War One.[43]
  • Born: W. Mark Felt, American law enforcer and FBI Associate Director 1972-73, identified in 2005 as the secret source for Watergate information whom reporters Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein identified only as "Deep Throat"; in Twin Falls, Idaho (d. 2008); and Rudy York, American major league baseball player between 1934 and 1948; in Ragland, Alabama (d. 1970)

August 18, 1913 (Monday)

  • At the roulette wheel at Le Grande Casino in Monte Carlo, Monaco, the color black came up 26 times in a row. The probability of the occurrence was 1 in 136,823,184[44] The incident is cited as an illustration of the gambler's fallacy, because after the wheel stopped at black ten straight times, casino patrons began betting large sums of money on red, on the logic that black could not possibly come up again. The odds of red or black coming up on any individual spin were the same each time—18 out of 37; to no surprise of statisticians, "the casino made several million francs that night".[45]
  • Venezuela government troops recaptured the town of Santa Ana de Coro, located in the state of Falcón, from the rebels led by former President Cipriano Castro. Two of the rebel leaders, General Lazaro Gonzales and General Urbina, were killed in the battle, while President Castro was able to flee.[46]

August 19, 1913 (Tuesday)

  • The derailing of a train carrying dynamite caused an explosion killing almost 100 people in the Mexico City suburb of Tacubaya.[47]
  • After his airplane failed at an altitude of 900 feet (270 m), aviator Adolphe Pégoud became the first person to bail out to safety from an airplane and to land safely.[48]
  • The Turkish council of ministers voted to drop claims to territory west of the Maritza River in return for keeping Adrianople.[49]
  • Born: Dick Simmons, American TV actor who played the title role in Sergeant Preston of the Yukon, in Saint Paul, Minnesota (d. 2003); and John Argyris, Greek-born German aeronautical engineer and computer scientist, in Volos (d. 2004)

August 20, 1913 (Wednesday)

  • The combination of materials that would become known as "stainless steel was cast for the first time, by British metallurgist Harry Brearley. On test number 1008, at a laboratory in Sheffield, Brearley created an alloy that consisted of 12.8% chromium, 0.44% manganese, 0.2% silicon, 0.24% carbon and 85.32% iron. Brearley would later recount that "When microscopic studies of this steel were being made, one of the first noticeable things was that the usual reagent used for etching the polished surface of a microsection would not etch, or etched very slowly... The significance of this is that etching is a form of corrosion, and the specimens behaved in vinegar and other food acids as they behaved with the etching reagents." [50]
  • Dr. Mario Piacenza became the first person to climb Mount Numakum, a 22,000 foot high Himalayan peak.[38]
  • Born: Roger Wolcott Sperry, American neurobiologist, and co-recipient of the 1981 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine; in Hartford, Connecticut (d. 1994)
  • Died: Émile Ollivier, 88, Prime Minister of France in 1870. Ollivier was blamed in his obituary for "diplomacy... of the wildest and most unreasonable kind" with German Prussia. He was forced to resign after the outbreak of the Franco-Prussian War, which saw the unification of Germany and the fall of Paris to German troops.[51]

August 21, 1913 (Thursday)

  • The San Miguel Corporation, one of the largest food and beverage conglomerates n Southeast Asia, was incorporated in the Philippines.[52]
  • Born: John Henry Faulk, American radio show host whose career was ruined after he was wrongfully identified as a Communist sympathizer and blacklisted; in Austin, Texas (d. 1990). Faulk later won a $3.5 million verdict against his accusers.
  • Born: Robert Krasker, Australian-born British cinematographer, in Perth (d. 1981)

August 22, 1913 (Friday)

  • Fifty men, employed at a gold mine in the Mysore State of India, were killed as they were being lowered into the mine shaft. The cable that held their elevator cage broke, sending them plummeting to the bottom.[53]
  • As it neared completion, Wolf House, built by author Jack London, was destroyed by a fire before he could move in. "Carefully designed to avert natural disasters and last a thousand years," an author would write later, "it lasted two days." [54] In 1995, a forensic team would conclude that the fire was accidental, caused by the summer heat and the resulting combustion of an oil-soaked rag left behind by a workman.[55]
  • Born: Bruno Pontecorvo, Italian nuclear physicist and Soviet spy who defected to the USSR in 1950; in Marina di Pisa

August 23, 1913 (Saturday)

August 24, 1913 (Sunday)

August 25, 1913 (Monday)

August 26, 1913 (Tuesday)

August 27, 1913 (Wednesday)

  • British aviator Harry Hawker was two-thirds of the way done with his quest to become the first person to fly an airplane around the British Isles, and slightly less than 500 miles from winning a £10,000 prize ($25,000 in 1913 USD, worth roughly $580,000 or £375,000 a century later), when his plane crashed in an accident blamed on his footwear. Hawker escaped serious injury, but "His boots were rubber-soled, and at a critical moment his foot slipped off the rudder bar" of his seaplane, which went out of control and crashed into the Irish Sea, a few feet from the Irish coast at Loughshinny. Hawker escaped with only a broken arm. The sponsor of the prize, the British newspaper the Daily Mail, presented Hawker with a smaller £1,000 prize "in recognition of his skill and courage. The rubber-soled boots, which cost Hawker the equivalent of half a million dollars, were ruined by the seawater.[65]
  • U.S. President Wilson delivered a written message to Congress, proclaiming American neutrality in that nation's civil war, and urged all Americans to leave Mexico. Wilson stated that he would "see to it that neither side to the struggle now going on in Mexico receive any assistance from this side of the border" and that the U.S. could not "be the partisans of either party" nor "the virtual umpire between them".[66]
  • A meteor crashed into the Sakonnet River, near Tiverton, Rhode Island. The explosion, which news reports said "sounded like the discharge of a twelve-inch gun", was heard within a 20-mile radius and broke windows in nearby homes.[67]
  • Born: Nina Schenk von Stauffenberg, Russian-born wife of German Count Claus von Stauffenberg, who was imprisoned after his 1944 attempt to assassinate Adolf Hitler; in Kovno (now Kaunas), Lithuania (d. 2006)

August 28, 1913 (Thursday)

August 29, 1913 (Friday)

August 30, 1913 (Saturday)

  • The U.S. Naval Air Service was established upon recommendation of Admiral George Dewey. On January 20, the Pensacola Naval Air Station would be created in Pensacola, Florida.[69]
  • French Jesuit priest Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, assisting on the expedition to locate further remains of the Piltdown Man, found a canine tooth that perfectly fit the skull of the alleged early ancestor of homo sapiens.[70]
  • Eight men and one woman aboard the tugboat Alice were killed when the boilers exploded as the boat was towing barges on the Ohio River near Coraopolis, Pennsylvania. The force of the blast hurled one of the boilers a distance of 1,600 feet. Six other persons survived and were rescued by a passing steamer, the Harriet.[71]
  • Born: Thomas F. Torrance, American theologian, to missionary parents in Chengdu, China; (d. 2007)

August 31, 1913 (Sunday)

  • The last barrier to the Pacific side of the Panama Canal was opened with the explosion of 44,800 pounds of dynamite, allowing the Pacific Ocean to flow into the locks at Miraflores. Work began two days later "to remove the last barrier of the Atlantic Channel".[72]
  • The city of Nanjing was retaken from rebels by Chinese government troops.[38]
  • Dublin Lock-out: "Bloody Sunday": The dispute escalated when the Dublin Metropolitan Police killed one demonstrator and injured 500 more in dispersing the street-car strike protesters. Thirty people were arrested, including the Irish Transport Union leader, James Larkin, whose attempt to an address the crowd from a hotel balcony was followed by the police intervention.[73] The burial of James Nolan, three days later, was attended by 50,000 people.[74]
  • Born: Bernard Lovell, British radio astronomer, in Oldland Common (d. 2012); Helen Levitt, American photographer, in New York (d. 2009); Jacques Foccart, French politician who controlled that nation's policies toward Africa, in Ambrières (d. 1997); and Ray Dandridge, Negro League baseball player and Baseball Hall of Fame enshrinee who was the first African-American in the minor league American Association; in Richmond, Virginia (d. 1994)
  • Died: Timothy Sullivan, 51, former U.S. Congressman and New York City political boss, after being struck and dismembered by a train. Sullivan remained unidentified for several days and was set to be sent to a potter's field for the poor, but was recognized on September 13 by a policeman, after which he received a large funeral.[75]

References

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  1. "Gomez Dictator to Oppose Castro", New York Times, August 2, 1913
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 "Record of Current Events", The American Monthly Review of Reviews (September 1913), pp297-298
  3. "Huerta to Stick; No Interference", New York Times, August 2, 1913
  4. "Russia Latest To Decline; Joins Seven Other Nations in Refusing — 27 Have Accepted", New York Times, August 2, 1913
  5. "Kills Protectorate Plan for Nicaragua", New York Times, August 3, 1913
  6. "Nicaraguan Plan Shelved", New York Times, August 4, 1913
  7. "Five Rescuers Die with Mine Victims", New York Times, August 3, 1913
  8. J. Stuart Richards, Death in the Mines: Disasters and Rescues in the Anthracite Coal Fields of Pennsylvania (The History Press, Feb 28, 2007) p59
  9. "To Form a Dutch Cabinet", New York Times, August 3, 1913
  10. "Flies 1,030 Miles in a Day", New York Times, August 3, 1913
  11. Paul A. Gilje, Rioting in America (Indiana University Press, 1999) p132; Robert Justin Goldstein, Political Repression in Modern America (University of Illinois Press, 1978, 2001) p.90.
  12. "Wilson Suggests Plan to Mexico", New York Times, August 5, 1913
  13. Joyce A. Madancy, The Troublesome Legacy of Commissioner Lin: The Opium Trade and Opium Suppression in Fujian Province, 1820s to 1920s (Harvard University Asia Center, 2003) pp224-225
  14. John F. Kasson, Houdini, Tarzan, and the Perfect Man: The White Male Body and the Challenge of Modernity in America (Macmillan, 2001) p191; Robert D. Gilbreath, Compel: How to Get Others in Your Organization to Think and Act Differently (John Wiley & Sons, 2007) pp52-53; Stanley Rogers, Crusoes and Castaways: True Stories of Survival & Solitude (George G. Harrap & Co., 1932, reprinted by Courier Dover Publications, 2011) p140
  15. "The New Canon Law in Its Practical Aspects: Papers Reprinted from "the Ecclesiastical Review", October, 1917-August, 1918" by Andrew Brennan Meehan, et al., (American Ecclesiastical Review, 1918) p71
  16. "Cuts a Slice off Globe-Circling Time", New York Times, August 7, 1913
  17. "Gomez Leads 7,000 Against Castro", New York Times, August 6, 1913
  18. "Dr. Sun Yat-sen Flees from China", New York Times, August 7, 1913
  19. "Serious Shocks in Peru", New York Times, August 9, 1913
  20. "First Bryan Peace Treaty Is Signed", New York Times, August 8, 1913
  21. "Aviator Cody Killed in a Flight", New York Times, August 8, 1913
  22. "Carranza Says Fighting Must Go On; He Will Not Recognize Gen. Huerta", New York Times, August 9, 1913
  23. J. Holland Rose, The Origins of the War (Cambridge University Press, 1914) p188
  24. Frank Maloy Anderson and Amos Shartle Hershey, Handbook for the Diplomatic History of Europe, Asia, and Africa, 1870-1914 (Government Printing Office, 1918) pp439-441
  25. "Allies Sign Peace; Turkey Obstinate", New York Times, August 11, 1913
  26. Edwin E. Jacques, The Albanians: An Ethnic History from Prehistoric Times to the Present (McFarland, 1995) p337
  27. Tom Gallagher, Outcast Europe: The Balkans, 1789-1989, from the Ottomans to Milošević (Routledge, 2001) p65
  28. "12 Die in Panama Slide", New York Times, August 12, 1913
  29. "Detailed trademark information from the official US federal trademark database (USPTO): "OREO"
  30. David Feldman, Why Do Clocks Run Clockwise?: Mysteries of Everyday Life Explained (HarperCollins, 2009)
  31. "Eight Articles of Impeachment Against Gov. Sulzer", New York Times, August 14, 1913
  32. "Glynn Governor, Says Carmody", New York Times, August 19, 1913
  33. Gustavus Myers, The History of Tammany Hall (Applewood Books, 2012) p376
  34. Richard Diubaldo, Stefansson and the Canadian Arctic (McGill-Queen's University Press, 1999) pp82-83
  35. Robin D. S. Higham, et al. Russian Aviation and Air Power in the 20th Century (Taylor & Francis, 1998) p92
  36. George Nichols Marshall, David Poling, Schweitzer: A Biography (Johns Hopkins University Press, 1971) p110
  37. Burton Jesse Hendrick, The Life and Letters of Walter H. Page (Library of Alexandria, 1924)
  38. 38.0 38.1 38.2 38.3 38.4 "Record of Current Events", The American Monthly Review of Reviews (October 1913), pp297-298
  39. "Death List Now 40 in Alaskan Wreck", New York Times, August 20, 1913
  40. "H. K. Thaw Escapes from Matteawan", New York Times, August 18, 1913
  41. Edward Wagenknecht, American Profile: 1900-1909 (University of Massachusetts Press, 1982) p131
  42. Al Ristori, The Complete Book Of Surf Fishing (Skyhorse Publishing Inc., 2008) p216
  43. Gordon Brook-Shepherd, The Austrians: A Thousand-Year Odyssey (Basic Books, 2002) p151
  44. "Roulette", in The Universal Book of Mathematics: From Abracadabra to Zeno's Paradoxes, by David Darling (John Wiley & Sons, 2004) p278
  45. Deanna Haunsperger and Stephen Kennedy, The Edge of the Universe: Celebrating Ten Years of Math Horizons (The Mathematical Association of America, 2007) p5
  46. "Castro Stronghold Falls", New York Times, August 19, 1913
  47. "Explosion Kills 100", New York Times, August 20, 1913
  48. "Airman Uses Parachute", New York Times, August 20, 1913
  49. "Seeks Only Adrianople", New York Times, August 20, 1913
  50. Harold M. Cobb, The History of Stainless Steel (ASM International, 2010) p41
  51. "Ollivier, France's War Premier, Dies", New York Times, August 21, 1913
  52. SanMiguel.com
  53. "Fifty Miners Killed by Cage Fall", New York Times, August 23, 1913
  54. Anne Trubek, A Skeptic's Guide to Writers' Houses (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2011) p110
  55. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  56. Copenhagen Sights: Travel Guide to the Top 30 Attractions in Copenhagen, Denmark (MobileReference, 2010)
  57. Christopher Kobrak and Per H. Hansen, European Business, Dictatorship, and Political Risk, 1920-1945 (Berghahn Books, 2004) p180
  58. Helmuth Von Glasenapp, Jainism: An Indian Religion of Salvation (Motilal Banarsidass Publishers, 1999) pp89-90
  59. "City of San Gabriel — History"
  60. "Frank Sentenced to Die", New York Times, August 27, 1913
  61. Michael Newton, The Ku Klux Klan in Mississippi: A History (McFarland, 2010) p65
  62. "Dublin Strikers Rioting", New York Times, August 31, 1913;
  63. "The Dublin 1913 Lockout", Padraig Yeates, History Ireland (2009)
  64. "Lind Declares His Mission Ended", New York Times, August 26, 1913
  65. "Rubber-soled Shoe Ends Hawker's Trip", New York Times, August 28, 1913
  66. "Wilson's Message; Gamboa's Reply", New York Times, August 28, 1913
  67. "Meteor Falls in River", New York Times, August 29, 1913
  68. Steven E. Sanderson, Agrarian Populism and the Mexican State: The Struggle for Land in Sonora (University of California Press, 1981) p57
  69. "Pensacola Naval Air Station", in Historical Dictionary of the United States Navy, James M. Morris and Patricia M. Kearns, eds. (Scarecrow Press, 2011) p323
  70. J. S. Weiner, The Piltdown Forgery, Fiftieth Anniversary Edition (Oxford University Press, 2003) p150
  71. "Tug Explosion Kills Nine", New York Times, August 31, 1913
  72. "Blast Lets Pacific Reach Canal Locks", New York Times, September 1, 1913
  73. "500 Hurt, 1 Dead in Dublin Riots", New York Times, September 1, 1913
  74. "50,000 at Burial of Dublin Laborer", New York Times, September 1, 1913
  75. "Sullivan, Timothy Daniel", in Political Corruption in America: An Encyclopedia of Scandals, Power, and Greed, Mark Grossman, ed. (ABC-CLIO, 2003) pp312-313; Raymond A. Mohl, The Making of Urban America (Rowman & Littlefield, 1997) p146