Английская Википедия:August 1913

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Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Events by month Шаблон:Calendar

Файл:Participants in the Bucharest Peace Treaty negotiations, 1913.jpg
August 10, 1913: Bucharest treaty ends Second Balkan War
Файл:Harry Brearley.jpg
August 20, 1913: Stainless steel invented by British metallurgist Harry Brearley (pictured, the stainless steel plaque honoring him)
Файл:Assembly of the Little Mermaid statue (Copenhagen, Langeline, 1913).jpg
August 23, 1913: The Little Mermaid statue assembled in Copenhagen
Файл:Karluk in the Ice Bartlett.PNG
August 13, 1913: Canadian arctic ship Karluk trapped in ice
Файл:Expedition to Mount Olympus of 1913 (2).jpg
August 2, 1913: Mortal men reach the summit of Mount Olympus, home of the Greek gods

The following events occurred in August 1913:

August 1, 1913 (Friday)

Файл:Juan Vicente Gómez, 1911.jpg
Juan Vicente Gómez, President of Venezuela.

August 2, 1913 (Saturday)

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. However, President Victoriano 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.[22]
  • As the uprising of China's southern provinces collapsed, the Fujian province rescinded its July 20 declaration of independence, and rebel general Xu Chongzhi fled to Japan, returning control of the province to Governor Sun Daoren.[23]
  • 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.[24] However, there were rumors that Knowles's story was a hoax.[25]
  • The sports club Arromba was established in Americana, São Paulo, Brazil. It was renamed Rio Branco in 1961.[26]
  • In fiction, August 4, 1913, marks the climax of the novel The Good Soldier, by Ford Madox Ford.
  • Born: Robert Hayden, American poet; 24th Consultant in Poetry to the Library of Congress (1976-1978) and the first African-American to hold that position; as Asa Bundy Sheffey, in Detroit (d. 1980)

August 5, 1913 (Tuesday)

August 6, 1913 (Wednesday)

August 7, 1913 (Thursday)

  • The Senate of France voted 245-37 to pass the Three Years Act, extending compulsory military service from two years to three years.[35]
  • 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".[36]
  • Wild west showman and pioneer aviator Samuel Franklin Cody was killed along with English cricketer William Evans when an experimental Cody Floatplane crashed during a test flight near Mytchett, England.[37]
  • The Wiri railway station opened to serve the Southern Line of Auckland. It closed in 2005.[38]

August 8, 1913 (Friday)

August 9, 1913 (Saturday)

August 10, 1913 (Sunday)

August 11, 1913 (Monday)

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 for its cookies, first marketed on March 6, 1912.[50] 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".[51]

August 13, 1913 (Wednesday)

Шаблон:Multiple image

August 14, 1913 (Thursday)

Файл:Stamp of Russia 2012 No 1558 Pyotr Nesterov.jpg
P. N. Nesterov
  • In the skies near Kiev, Russian aviator Pyotr Nesterov became the first person to execute a loop, flying his Nieuport airplane on an upward pitch until he was upside down, then bringing it back down.[59]

August 15, 1913 (Friday)

August 16, 1913 (Saturday)

Файл:Southampton, Pilgrim Fathers' Memorial - geograph.org.uk - 644655.jpg
Pilgrim monument

August 17, 1913 (Sunday)

August 18, 1913 (Monday)

  • Venezuelan government troops recaptured the town of Coro, Venezuela, located in the state of Falcón, from the rebels led by Cipriano Castro. Two of the rebel leaders, General Lazaro Gonzales and General Urbina, were killed in the battle, while Castro was able to flee.[70]
  • 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.[71] 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".[72]

August 19, 1913 (Tuesday)

August 20, 1913 (Wednesday)

Файл:Émile Ollivier - französischer Ministerpräsident.jpg
Émile Ollivier
  • French state leader Émile Ollivier, who served as the 24th Prime Minister of France, died in Saint-Gervais-les-Bains in southeast France. Some obituaries were not kind, with The New York Times accusing him of "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.[77]
  • 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."[78]
  • Born: Roger Wolcott Sperry, American medical researcher, recipient of the 1981 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for his work in split-brain research; in Hartford, Connecticut (d. 1994)[79]

August 21, 1913 (Thursday)

August 22, 1913 (Friday)

August 23, 1913 (Saturday)

August 24, 1913 (Sunday)

August 25, 1913 (Monday)

August 26, 1913 (Tuesday)

August 27, 1913 (Wednesday)

Файл:Harry Hawker.jpg
Unlucky pilot Harry Hawker.
  • 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 Шаблон:Convert 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.[103]
  • U.S. President Woodrow Wilson delivered a written message to Congress, proclaiming American neutrality in Mexico's civil war, and urged all Americans to leave that nation. 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".[104]
  • 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 Шаблон:Convert radius and broke windows in nearby homes.[105]
  • Born: Nina Schenk Gräfin von Stauffenberg, Russian-German matriarch, wife of Claus von Stauffenberg, who was imprisoned after her husband attempted to assassinate Adolf Hitler in 1944; in Kovno, Russian Empire (now Kaunas), Lithuania (d. 2006)

August 28, 1913 (Thursday)

August 29, 1913 (Friday)

August 30, 1913 (Saturday)

August 31, 1913 (Sunday)

Файл:TimothySullivan.jpg
Unidentified accident victim for two weeks, U.S. Congressman Timothy Sullivan.

References

Шаблон:Reflist

Шаблон:Events by month links

  1. "Gomez Dictator to Oppose Castro", The New York Times, August 2, 1913
  2. "Record of Current Events", The American Monthly Review of Reviews (September 1913), pp. 297-298
  3. "Record of Current Events" September 1913, pp. 297-298
  4. "Huerta to Stick; No Interference", The New York Times, August 2, 1913
  5. "Record of Current Events" September 1913, pp. 297-298
  6. "Russia Latest To Decline; Joins Seven Other Nations in Refusing — 27 Have Accepted", The New York Times, August 2, 1913
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  8. Sayles, Adelaide B. The Story of The Children's Museum of Boston: From Its Beginnings to November 18, 1936. Boston: Geo. H. Ellis Co., 1937, pp. 7-8.
  9. Negro Year Book: An Annual Encyclopedia of the Negro. 1918. p. 144. Via Google Books.
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  12. Thomas T Mackie & Richard Rose (1991) The International Almanac of Electoral History, Macmillan, p. 243 (vote figures)
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  21. Paul A. Gilje, Rioting in America (Indiana University Press, 1999) p. 132; Robert Justin Goldstein, Political Repression in Modern America (University of Illinois Press, 1978, 2001) p. 90
  22. "Wilson Suggests Plan to Mexico", The New York Times, August 5, 1913
  23. 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) pp. 224-225
  24. John F. Kasson, Houdini, Tarzan, and the Perfect Man: The White Male Body and the Challenge of Modernity in America (Macmillan, 2001) p. 191; Robert D. Gilbreath, Compel: How to Get Others in Your Organization to Think and Act Differently (John Wiley & Sons, 2007) pp. 52-53; Stanley Rogers, Crusoes and Castaways: True Stories of Survival & Solitude (George G. Harrap & Co., 1932, reprinted by Courier Dover Publications, 2011) p. 140
  25. The 1913 ‘Nature Man’ Whose Survivalist Stunts Were Not What They Seemed. atlasobscura.com, by Robert Moor July 07, 2016
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  27. "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) p. 71
  28. Шаблон:Cite web
  29. "Cuts a Slice off Globe-Circling Time", The New York Times, August 7, 1913
  30. "Gomez Leads 7,000 Against Castro", The New York Times, August 6, 1913
  31. "Dr. Sun Yat-sen Flees from China", The New York Times, August 7, 1913
  32. "Serious Shocks in Peru", The New York Times, August 9, 1913
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  34. Istorija o kojoj se ne priča at mojacrvenazvezda.net
  35. "Record of Current Events" September 1913, pp. 297-298
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  39. "Carranza Says Fighting Must Go On; He Will Not Recognize Gen. Huerta", The New York Times, August 9, 1913
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  43. J. Holland Rose, The Origins of the War (Cambridge University Press, 1914) p. 188
  44. "Allies Sign Peace; Turkey Obstinate", The New York Times, August 11, 1913
  45. Frank Maloy Anderson and Amos Shartle Hershey, Handbook for the Diplomatic History of Europe, Asia, and Africa, 1870-1914 (Government Printing Office, 1918) pp. 439-441
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  47. Tom Gallagher, Outcast Europe: The Balkans, 1789-1989, from the Ottomans to Milošević (Routledge, 2001) p. 65
  48. "12 Die in Panama Slide", The New York Times, August 12, 1913
  49. Bonsucesso at Arquivo de Clubes Шаблон:Webarchive
  50. Шаблон:Cite web
  51. David Feldman, Why Do Clocks Run Clockwise?: Mysteries of Everyday Life Explained (HarperCollins, 2009)
  52. "Record of Current Events" September 1913, pp. 297-298
  53. "Eight Articles of Impeachment Against Gov. Sulzer", The New York Times, August 14, 1913
  54. "Glynn Governor, Says Carmody", The New York Times, August 19, 1913
  55. Gustavus Myers, The History of Tammany Hall (Applewood Books, 2012) p. 376
  56. Richard Diubaldo, Stefansson and the Canadian Arctic (McGill-Queen's University Press, 1999) pp. 82-83
  57. "Record of Current Events" September 1913, pp. 297-298
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  59. Robin D. S. Higham, et al. Russian Aviation and Air Power in the 20th Century (Taylor & Francis, 1998) p. 92
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  83. "Fifty Miners Killed by Cage Fall", The New York Times, August 23, 1913
  84. Anne Trubek, A Skeptic's Guide to Writers' Houses (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2011) p. 110
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  87. Copenhagen Sights: Travel Guide to the Top 30 Attractions in Copenhagen, Denmark (MobileReference, 2010)
  88. Christopher Kobrak and Per H. Hansen, European Business, Dictatorship, and Political Risk, 1920-1945 (Berghahn Books, 2004) p. 180
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  100. "Lind Declares His Mission Ended", The New York Times, August 26, 1913
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