May 1913

Month of 1913
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May 30, 1913: Treaty of London splits the Ottoman Empire
May 26, 1913: Igor Sikorsky introduces the first four-engine airplane, the Russky Vityaz bomber
May 30, 1913: Eastern Europe, before and after
May 30, 1913: Jules Goux wins the 3rd Indianapolis 500

The following events occurred in May 1913:

May 1, 1913 (Thursday)

May 2, 1913 (Friday)

  • The United States recognized the government of the new Republic of China, with American Chargé d'Affaires Edward T. Williams presenting U.S. President Woodrow Wilson's message to Chinese President Yuan Shikai.[8] As the first world leader to give recognition to the Republic of China, Wilson acted without prior notice even to the United States Congress.[9]
  • Tancrède Auguste, President of Haiti since August 1912, died suddenly, "a victim of severe anemia caused by advanced untreated syphilis, though most Haitians believed he was a victim of poison." His death set off a period of political unrest in the country for the next two years.[10][page needed]

May 3, 1913 (Saturday)

May 4, 1913 (Sunday)

  • Senator Michel Oreste was elected as the new President of Haiti by the Haitian Parliament. The city governor of Port-au-Prince attempted to attack the parliament building during voting, and was repulsed by the Haitian Army, while the U.S. gunboat USS Nashville stayed outside the harbor to be ready to intervene.[16] Oreste would serve for only eight months, being overthrown on January 27, 1914.[17]
  • Ismael Montes was elected a second time as President of Bolivia.[18]

May 5, 1913 (Monday)

May 6, 1913 (Tuesday)

May 7, 1913 (Wednesday)

May 8, 1913 (Thursday)

May 9, 1913 (Friday)

May 10, 1913 (Saturday)

French aviator Didier Masson
  • French aviator Didier Masson conducted the first aerial attack on a warship in the Western Hemisphere, attempting to drop pipe bombs onto the Mexican gunboat General Guererro, as well as the ships Democrata, 'Morelos, Tampico, and Oaxaca.[44]
  • U.S. Representative H. Olin Young of Michigan announced that he would resign his seat, because of a technicality that prevented his Progressive Party opponent, William Josiah MacDonald, from receiving 458 votes that would have given MacDonald the victory. MacDonald would take office on August 26 after being certified by the U.S. House Committee on elections.[45]
  • The United States Baseball League, an independent baseball league that had sought to challenge the existing National and American Leagues, but had only operated for only two months in 1912, made a second attempt to operate. Although it had eight teams (Baltimore, Brooklyn, New York City, Philadelphia and Washington, D.C., as well as Lynchburg, Virginia, Newark, New Jersey and Reading, Pennsylvania), the league folded after only three days,[46] having played only seven games.[47][page needed]

May 11, 1913 (Sunday)

May 12, 1913 (Monday)

RMS Lusitania

May 13, 1913 (Tuesday)

Boxer Jack Johnson
  • Jack Johnson, the world heavyweight boxing champion, was convicted by a jury in Chicago of violating the Mann Act, after being charged with taking a minor across state lines for immoral purposes. Johnson had been indicted on November 7 after Belle Schreiber, a white prostitute, testified that he had paid for her to travel by train to Pittsburgh to be with him.[53] While the one-year prison sentence and $1,000 fine were on appeal, Johnson would flee the United States, not returning until 1920 to serve his time.[54]
  • The Cross of Valour was established as the second highest military decoration in Greece.[55]
  • The football club Sparta Brodnica was established in Brodnica, Poland.[56]
  • Born: William Tolbert, 20th President of Liberia from 1971 to 1980; in Bensonville, Liberia (assassinated, 1980)[citation needed]

May 14, 1913 (Wednesday)

May 15, 1913 (Thursday)

May 16, 1913 (Friday)

  • At Sidi Garba in Tripolitania (now part of Libya), 1,000 Italian soldiers were killed or wounded in fighting with the Libyan natives.[63] The commanding officer relied on disinformation that had been provided by the Libyans to a man who had been taken prisoner and then released, and underestimated the size of the Arab defenders.[citation needed] Command divided 3,000 men into three columns, supported by four cannons and "a battery of howitzers."[This quote needs a citation] After forcing a group of Libyans to retreat, the men rested and were surrounded and attacked. Italian command would later describe the loss as "the bloodiest day in the whole Italo-Turkish War."[64]
  • Bremen Airport was established by the Bremen city government.[65]
  • The District Court in Vienna, approved the release of inheritance money to a 24-year-old artist, Adolf Hitler, under the terms of the will of his late father, Alois Hitler. Adolf, who lived at 27 Meldemannstrasse in Vienna, received 839 kronen, worth about US$168 (equivalent to $3,800 a century later), and moved a week later to neighboring Germany.[66]
  • A hoard of 81 Bronze Age gold objects was discovered during an excavation for a factory in Oberbarnim, Eberswalde, Germany.[67]
  • The town of Rocky Mountain House, Alberta was established.[68]
  • Born: Woody Herman, American jazz musician, saxophone player and bandleader for "The Herd"; as Woodrow Charles Herman, in Milwaukee, United States (d. 1987)[citation needed]

May 17, 1913 (Saturday)

May 18, 1913 (Sunday)

May 19, 1913 (Monday)

May 20, 1913 (Tuesday)

David du Bose Gaillard, engineer for the Panama Canal.
Mario García Menocal, President of Cuba.

May 21, 1913 (Wednesday)

May 22, 1913 (Thursday)

American Society for the Control of Cancer poster from 1938

May 23, 1913 (Friday)

May 24, 1913 (Saturday)

Boxer Luther McCarty
  • The collapse of a municipal pier in Long Beach, California, killed 35 women and one man. There were 10,000 people crowded on the double-deck pier when the top level gave way and fell on the persons below.[88][89]
  • The Turkish-American steamship Nevada, with 200 passengers and crew, strayed into a mined part of the harbor at Smyrna while trying to avoid another ship, and struck three mines before sinking. Based on reports of 80 survivors, initial news stories reported 120 people had drowned.[90] The figure was later revised to forty deaths.[91]
  • Princess Luise, the only daughter of Kaiser Wilhelm, was married to Prince Ernest Augustus of Cumberland, in the last royal wedding to take place in Germany.[92]
  • Luther McCarty, who was recognized as the "white world heavyweight boxing champion"[93] (Jack Johnson was the world champion), died in the first round of a bout in Calgary against Arthur Pelkey. McCarty was killed when Pelkey punched him in the chest, and fell to the mat halfway through the first round.[93] An autopsy later determined that McCarty had died of a broken neck and hemorrhage, as a result of a hit to the jaw 30 seconds earlier that had snapped his head back.[94] Pelkey would be tried for manslaughter, and acquitted on June 24.[95]
  • Sports club São José was established in Porto Alegre, Brazil.[96]
  • Born: Peter Ellenshaw, British-born American production designer, best known for design work for Walt Disney Studios including Treasure Island and 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea, recipient of the Academy Award for Best Visual Effects for Mary Poppins; as William Samuel Cook Ellenshaw, in London, England (d. 2007)[citation needed]

May 25, 1913 (Sunday)

Colonel Alfred Redl of the Austro-Hungarian Army.
  • Colonel Alfred Redl, director of intelligence for the Army of Austria-Hungary from 1907 to 1912, committed suicide after being discovered that he had passed secrets to the Russian Empire for eleven years. Redl had betrayed his nation after the Russians had discovered that he was a homosexual and used the information as blackmail. Redl's successor, Captain Maximilian Ronge, agreed to Redl's request for a loaded revolver after confronting him at Vienna's Hotel Klomser.[97]
  • Peter Kürten, a German serial killer called "The Vampire of Dusseldorf" by the press, committed his first provable murder, although his killing spree of at least nine people would not start until 1929. Kurten broke into a home and slit the throat of 9-year-old Christine Klein while she was sleeping. Kürten, who would claim that he killed 79 people, would be convicted of nine and would be executed on July 2, 1931.[98]
  • Adolf Hitler, an immigrant from Austria-Hungary, took up residence in Germany, a nation that he would eventually rule. The 24-year old painter and his friend, Rudolf Häusler, rented a room at 34 Schleissheimerstrasse in Munich.[66]
  • Belgian cyclist Paul Deman won the first Tour of Flanders road cycling race, completing the 324 kilometres (201.3 miles) course from Ghent to Mariakerke, Belgium in a time of 12 hours, 3 minutes, 10 seconds.[99]
  • The football club Santa Cruz was established in Santa Cruz, Chile.[100]
  • Born:

May 26, 1913 (Monday)

Igor Sikorsky

May 27, 1913 (Tuesday)

May 28, 1913 (Wednesday)

May 29, 1913 (Thursday)

Composer Igor Stravinsky
The original dancers for The Rite of Spring

May 30, 1913 (Friday)

Indy 500 winner Jules Goux

May 31, 1913 (Saturday)

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