January 1912

From Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

<< January 1912 >>
Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
01 02 03 04 05 06
07 08 09 10 11 12 13
14 15 16 17 18 19 20
21 22 23 24 25 26 27
28 29 30 31  
January 17, 1912: Scott discovers that Amundsen reached the South Pole first
January 6, 1912: New Mexico becomes 47th U.S. state
January 22, 1912: The Overseas Railroad opens in Florida
January 11, 1912: American Textile workers unite in walkout

The following events occurred in January 1912:

January 1, 1912 (Monday)[edit]

January 2, 1912 (Tuesday)[edit]

January 3, 1912 (Wednesday)[edit]

January 4, 1912 (Thursday)[edit]

January 5, 1912 (Friday)[edit]

  • Dr. Sun Yat-sen issued the "Manifesto from the Republic of China to All Friendly Nations", shifting a change in its foreign policy with a promise to end the isolationism of the Manchu Emperors, and "to rejoin China with the international community".[17] On the same day, Dr. Sun met with women's suffragist Lin Zongsu and pledged to aid in allowing women the right to vote in the new republic.[18]
  • A colonial force of 200 men left the port of Dili for the inland to suppress a growing revolt in East Timor.[19]
  • The Tong Wars in New York City's Chinatown resumed, one year and two days after the January 3, 1911, truce between the Hip Sing and On Leong gangs. Lung Yu, the vice-president of the Hip Sing Tong, was killed in a shootout at a gambling hall on 21 Pell Street.[20]
  • The Moscow Art Theatre opened with a production of Hamlet, a production that drew international acclaim and brought the theater company "to the world's stage."[21]

January 6, 1912 (Saturday)[edit]

Alfred Wegener

January 7, 1912 (Sunday)[edit]

January 8, 1912 (Monday)[edit]

January 9, 1912 (Tuesday)[edit]

Equitable Building
  • The 130-foot tall Equitable Building, New York City's first skyscraper, was destroyed by a fast moving fire. The blaze had started at 5:00 in the morning, so the loss of life was low, but the offices of three of the nation's largest financial institutions — Equitable Life, Mercantile Safe Deposit, and many law firms — were destroyed. Fireproof vaults protected several billion dollars of securities, stocks and bonds from destruction.[31][32]
  • The Democratic National Committee announced that its presidential nominating convention would be held in Baltimore on June 25.[33]

January 10, 1912 (Wednesday)[edit]

January 11, 1912 (Thursday)[edit]

Caillaux
  • French Prime Minister Joseph Caillaux and his cabinet were forced to resign, two days after the French Senate concluded that he had secretly negotiated the give-away of French territory without the President's knowledge in working out a treaty with Germany. French Foreign Minister Justin de Selves declined to deny the accusations against Caillaux.[39]
  • The Russian steamer Russ, on its way across the Black Sea from Galați, Romania to Odessa, sank in with 172 people on board. Among the casualties were the new Consul General, Carl Anseff, and his family.[40]
  • Lawrence textile strike – Receiving their paychecks a day before the rest of the employees at the Everett Mills Company in Lawrence, Massachusetts, mostly Polish-speaking women employed as weavers found that the company had cut their pay (already low, ranging from 9+12 cents to 20 cents per hour) after a new state law had gone into effect limiting the work week to 54 hours. The women immediately walked off the job. The next day, the strike would spread to the other companies in the city.[41]
  • Born: Abdul Haq Akorwi, Pakistani theologian, founder of the Darul Uloom Haqqania seminary; in Akora Khattak, British India (d. 1988)

January 12, 1912 (Friday)[edit]

January 13, 1912 (Saturday)[edit]

Poincare

January 14, 1912 (Sunday)[edit]

January 15, 1912 (Monday)[edit]

January 16, 1912 (Tuesday)[edit]

January 17, 1912 (Wednesday)[edit]

  • The British Antarctic Expedition, consisting of Robert Falcon Scott and his team of four explorers, reached the South Pole, only to find the flag of Norway that had been planted by the Norwegian Expedition led by Roald Amundsen. "The Pole," Scott wrote in his journal; "Yes, but under very different circumstances from those expected. We have had a horrible day." He added, "Great God! This is an awful place and terrible enough for us to have laboured to it without the reward of priority. Well, it is something to have got here. Now for the run home and a desperate struggle. I wonder if we can do it."[68]
  • French scientist Alexis Carrel, working at the Rockefeller Institute in New York City, removed a piece of the heart of a chicken embryo, then kept the fragment alive for the remaining 32 years of his life.[69] Carrel, who won the Nobel Prize later in the year (though not for the experiment), died on November 5, 1944. The tissue lasted until September 1946.[70]
  • France's Chamber of Deputies overwhelmingly approved the new government of Prime Minister Raymond Poincaré by a vote of 440–6.[71]

January 18, 1912 (Thursday)[edit]

January 19, 1912 (Friday)[edit]

January 20, 1912 (Saturday)[edit]

  • The first successful strike in Mexican history was settled after 25 days, as company owners agreed to reduce the workday to ten hours and increase weekly wages by ten percent.[84]
  • The second round of Reichstag elections began, with 77 seats, followed by 80 on Monday and concluding with 34 on January 25.[85]

January 21, 1912 (Sunday)[edit]

Conrad

January 22, 1912 (Monday)[edit]

Sun Yat-sen
Yuan Shih-kai
  • Sun Yat-sen and Yuan Shikai completed their negotiations on the unification of the Republic of China and the area in Northern China, with Dr. Sun agreeing to yield the presidency to Yuan upon the abdication of the Emperor.[88]
  • Four black residents were lynched in Hamilton, Georgia, following the alleged murder of a white landowner,[89][90] who in some historical accounts has been a notorious sexual predator of black women in Harris County, Georgia.[91]
  • The Overseas Railroad carried its first passengers from Palm Beach to Key West with the completion of the six-year construction of the Key West Extension of the Florida East Coast Railway. Henry Flagler, the railway's owner, financed the seemingly impossible project of building bridges and landfill to lay 169 miles of railroad tracks across the waters to link the islands of the Florida Keys.[92] Flagler, 82, arrived with the other passengers at 10:43 a.m. to a cheering crowd of 10,000 people, and told the gathering, "Now I can die happy. My dream is fulfilled." He would pass away 1 year and 4 months later.[93]
  • Former Illinois Central Railroad company President J.T. Harahan and three other passengers were killed in a wreck near Kinmundy, Illinois, when the private car of Vice-president F.O. Melcher of the Rock Island line was struck from behind by another train.[94]
  • Born: Demetrios Capetanakis, Greek poet, known for his poetry collection A Greek Poet In England; in Smyrna, Ottoman Empire (d. 1944)

January 23, 1912 (Tuesday)[edit]

  • The International Opium Convention was signed at The Hague by 12 nations.[95] The signatories resolved to work toward "the gradual suppression of the abuse of opium, morphine, cocaine, as also of the drugs prepared or derived from these substances which give rise or might give rise to similar abuses."[96]
  • The town of Forgan, Oklahoma, was incorporated as the end of the line for the Wichita Falls & Northwestern Railroad Company.[97]

January 24, 1912 (Wednesday)[edit]

January 25, 1912 (Thursday)[edit]

  • General Pedro Montero, who had been proclaimed President of Ecuador on December 29 by rebelling Ecuadorian troops, was sentenced to 16 years in prison following his court-martial in Guayaquil. Montero had been captured in battle three days earlier. As soon as former president Leónidas Plaza announced the military court's findings, members of the crowd outside protested that the sentence was too light. Several rushed in inside and shot General Montero to death, then carried his corpse outside, where the mob beheaded it and burned it in a bonfire.[101]
  • Norwegian Antarctic ExpeditionRoald Amundsen and his team of four men arrived back at their base at Framheim on the Bay of Whales, along with eleven surviving dogs. They left Antarctica on the Fram five days later.[102]
  • Voting in elections for the Reichstag was concluded, with the Socialists having the largest number of seats—100 out of 397, and the Radical and National Liberal parties having 44 and 47, for a total of 191, still short of a majority. Chancellor Theobald von Bethmann Hollweg was able to find a new government.[103]
  • Karl Grulich, German aviator, tripled the record for staying aloft with multiple passengers, flying for 1 hour and 35 minutes in a Harlan monoplane over Johannistal, Germany. The prior record had been 31 minutes by Frenchman M. Busson on March 10, 1911, at Rheims.[104]

January 26, 1912 (Friday)[edit]

January 27, 1912 (Saturday)[edit]

  • According to his own letter to the magazine Popular Astronomy, amateur astronomer Frank B. Harris was observing through his telescope and saw an object crossing the Moon, which he described as something that "was fully as black comparatively as marks on this paper, and in shape like a crow poised". Harris estimated it as being 250 miles long and 50 miles wide.[110] Although nobody else reported witnessing the phenomenon, the story has been repeated in the decades that followed. The briefly reported event has been described as something "that launched the 'modern' period of anomalous lunar happenings.[111]
  • Born:

January 28, 1912 (Sunday)[edit]

January 29, 1912 (Monday)[edit]

Darrow

January 30, 1912 (Tuesday)[edit]

January 31, 1912 (Wednesday)[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "President Sun Inaugurated", New York Times, January 3, 1912
  2. ^ Lawrence M. Kaplan, Homer Lea: American Soldier of Fortune (University Press of Kentucky, 2010) p. 181
  3. ^ John Norton Pomeroy, A Treatise on Equity Jurisprudence: As Administered in the United States of America (The Lawbook Exchange, Ltd., 2002) p. 700
  4. ^ Classification of S.A.R. Engines with Renumbering Lists, issued by the Chief Mechanical Engineer’s Office, Pretoria, January 1912, pp. 7, 12, 15, 46 (Reprinted in April 1987 by SATS Museum, R.3125-6/9/11-1000)
  5. ^ Hart, George, ed. (c. 1978). The South African Railways - Historical Survey. Bill Hart, Sponsored by Dorbyl Ltd. p. 25.
  6. ^ a b The Britannica Year-Book 1913: A Survey of the World's Progress Since the Completion in 1910 of the Encyclopædia Britannica] (Encyclopædia Britannica, 1913) pp xxi-xxii
  7. ^ McCartney, Iain (1996). Old Trafford - Theatre of Dreams. Harefield: Yore Publications. ISBN 1-874427-96-8., p. 15
  8. ^ Gene Burnett, Florida's Past: People and Events That Shaped the State (Pineapple Press Inc, 1996) p. 23
  9. ^ Terry Boyle, Hidden Ontario: Secrets from Ontario's Past (Dundurn Press Ltd., 2011) p. 23
  10. ^ Afary, Janet (1996). The Iranian Constitutional Revolution, 1906-1911: Grassroots Democracy, Social Democracy, & the Origins of Feminism. Columbia University Press. p. 337.
  11. ^ Robertson, Donald B. (1986). Encyclopedia of Western Railroad History: The Desert States: Arizona, Nevada, New Mexico, Utah. Caldwell, Idaho: The Caxton Printers. pp. 77, 102. ISBN 0-87004-305-6.
  12. ^ Koehler, Peter J.; et al. (2000). Neurological Eponyms. Oxford University Press. pp. 131–132.
  13. ^ "Provincial General Election Results, 1912" (PDF). Elections PEI.
  14. ^ Beau Riffenburgh, Encyclopedia of the Antarctic (CRC Press, 2007) p. 191
  15. ^ "Royal Charter of The Boy Scouts Association", Scoutdocs.ca
  16. ^ Kim Long, The Moon Book: Fascinating Facts About the Magnificent, Mysterious Moon (Big Earth Publishing, 1998) p. 1
  17. ^ C. X. George Wei, Chinese Nationalism in Perspective: Historical and Recent Cases (Greenwood Publishing Group, 2001) p. 108
  18. ^ David Strand, An Unfinished Republic: Leading by Word and Deed in Modern China (University of California Press, 2011) p. 113
  19. ^ Gunn, Geoffrey C. (1999). Timor Loro Sae: 500 Years. Macau: Livros do Oriente. p. 180.
  20. ^ Bruce Hall, Tea That Burns: A Family Memoir of Chinatown (Simon and Schuster, 2002) p. 159; "Tong Leader Slain in Chinatown War", New York Times, January 6, 1912
  21. ^ Benedetti, Jean. 1999. Stanislavski: His Life and Art. Revised edition. Original edition published in 1988. London: Methuen. ISBN 0-413-52520-1, p. 199
  22. ^ "New Mexico Now a State". The New York Times. January 7, 1912.
  23. ^ "AEROPLANE MISHAP". The Sydney Morning Herald. National Library of Australia. 8 January 1912. p. 9. Retrieved 23 January 2012.
  24. ^ Lawrence, David M. (2002). Upheaval from the Abyss: Ocean Floor Mapping and the Earth Science Revolution. Rutgers University Press. p. 35.
  25. ^ William Morgan Shuster, The Strangling of Persia: A Story of the European Diplomacy and Oriental Intrigue that Resulted in the Denationalization of Twelve Million Mohammedans, a Personal Narrative (The Century Company, 1912) pp. 224-230
  26. ^ "Describes Red Sea Fight", New York Times, January 15, 1912; "Italian Guns Sink Turkish Flotilla", New York Times, January 13, 1912
  27. ^ Wendy Watson, Brick by Brick: An Informal Guide to the History of South Africa (New Africa Books, 2007) p.51
  28. ^ "India Reconciled by the King's Visit", New York Times, January 9, 1912
  29. ^ "The Monetary Bill Sent to Congress", New York Times, January 10, 1912
  30. ^ Grace L. Miller, "The I.W.W. Free Speech Fight: San Diego, 1912,", Southern California Quarterly, v.54, no. 3 (1972) pp. 216-218.
  31. ^ "$18,000,000 EQUITABLE BUILDING BURNS, WITH $2,000,000 CONTENTS; MAYBE 9 DEAD", New York Times, January 10, 1912, p1
  32. ^ Landau, Sarah; Condit, Carl W. (1996). Rise of the New York Skyscraper, 1865–1913. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press. pp. 67–69. ISBN 978-0-300-07739-1. OCLC 32819286.
  33. ^ "Democrats to Meet in Baltimore June 25", New York Times, January 10, 1912
  34. ^ "French Number 39,601,509", New York Times, January 11, 1912
  35. ^ Anthony J. Watts, The Royal Navy: An Illustrated History (Naval Institute Press, 1994) p. 85
  36. ^ Franks, Norman, Aircraft vs. Aircraft: The Illustrated Story of Fighter Pilot Combat From 1914 to the Present Day, London: Grub Street, 1998, ISBN 1-902304-04-7, p. 9.
  37. ^ Daniel, Clifton, ed., Chronicle of the 20th Century, Mount Kisco, New York: Chronicle Publications, 1987, ISBN 0-942191-01-3, p. 158
  38. ^ Barnes, C.H. Shorts Aircraft since 1900. London:Putnam, 1967, p. 79
  39. ^ J. F. V. Keiger, Raymond Poincaré (Cambridge University Press, 2002) p. 126; "Political Chaos France's Peril", New York Times, January 12, 1912
  40. ^ "172 Drowned in Black Sea", New York Times, January 12, 1912
  41. ^ Mildred A. Beik, Labor Relations (Greenwood Publishing Group, 2005) pp. 103–104
  42. ^ "German Socialist Gains May Be 100", New York Times, January 14, 1912
  43. ^ "Strike Riots Close Big Lawrence Mills", New York Times, January 13, 1912
  44. ^ Kevin Hillstrom and Laurie Collier Hillstrom, Industrial Revolution in America: Mining and Petroleum (Volume 5) (ABC-CLIO, 2006) p. 141
  45. ^ Bruce Watson, Bread and Roses: Mills, Migrants, and the Struggle for the American Dream (Penguin, 2006) p. 17; "Lawrence Strike Comes to an End", New York Times, March 14, 1912
  46. ^ Ray Horak, Telecommunications and Data Communications Handbook (John Wiley & Sons, 2007) p. 202
  47. ^ Valerie Green and Lynn Gordon-Findlay, If These Walls Could Talk: Victoria's Houses from the Past (TouchWood Editions, 2001) p. 152
  48. ^ Polly Alison Morrice and Joyce Hart, Celebrate the States: Iowa (Marshall Cavendish, 2007) p. 16
  49. ^ Mark W. Seeley and Belinda Jensen, Minnesota Weather Almanac (Minnesota Historical Society, 2006) p. 55
  50. ^ Milburn Calhoun and Bernie McGovern, Louisiana Almanac 2008-2009 (Pelican Publishing,2008) p. 245
  51. ^ Keiger 2002) p. 126
  52. ^ Mattern, Joanne (2010). Maryland: Past and Present. Rosen Publishing Group. p. 41.
  53. ^ "Flies 88 Miles in an Hour". The New York Times. 14 January 1912.
  54. ^ "BOYCE-SNEED FEUD - The Handbook of Texas Online". Retrieved 1 August 2012.
  55. ^ Untiedt, Kenneth L. (2008). Death Lore: Texas Rituals, Superstitions, and Legends of the Hereafter. University of North Texas Press. ISBN 978-1-57441-256-7.
  56. ^ "Spain's Cabinet Out; At Issue With King", New York Times, January 15, 1912
  57. ^ Marie-Claire Bergère and Janet Lloyd, Sun Yat-sen (Stanford University Press, 1998) p. 433
  58. ^ "Open Senate Debate on Peace Treaties", New York Times, January 16, 1912
  59. ^ Le Baron Bradford Prince, A Concise History of New Mexico (The Torch Press, 1912) p. 219
  60. ^ San Diego: the Birthplace of Naval Aviation Part One
  61. ^ "London Attracted by 'Oedipus Rex'", New York Times, January 16, 1912
  62. ^ "Turkish Parliament to End", New York Times, January 14, 1912
  63. ^ "New Election in Turkey", New York Times, January 18, 1912
  64. ^ J. M. Barrie, Scott's Last Expedition - The Personal Journals of Captain R. F. Scott, C.V.O., R.N., on His Journey to the South Pole (1913, reprinted by READ BOOKS, 2009) pp. 423-424
  65. ^ "China", in The New International Year Book: A Compendium of the World's Progress for the Year 1912 (Dodd, Mead and Company, 1913) p. 149
  66. ^ Haberman, Steve (2003). "Silent Screams". Midnight Marquee Press. p. 100. ISBN 978-1-936168-15-6
  67. ^ "Zeittafel" (Timetable), in Georg Heym 1887–1912, Ausstellungskatalog, S. 13.
  68. ^ Barrie 1913, pp. 423-424
  69. ^ Paul A. Offit, Vaccinated: One Man's Quest to Defeat the World's Deadliest Diseases (HarperCollins, 2008) p. 38
  70. ^ "Test Tube Heart Dies at Age of 34", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, October 2, 1946, p. 1
  71. ^ "The Change in France", New York Times, January 18, 1912
  72. ^ "Fierce Fight in Ecuador", New York Times, January 20, 1912
  73. ^ "Gale over Britain Wrecks Many Ships", New York Times, January 19, 1912
  74. ^ George B. Clark, Treading Softly: U.S. Marines in China, 1819-1949 (Greenwood Publishing Group, 2001) p. 52
  75. ^ "Coal Miners Vote to Strike", New York Times, January 19, 1912
  76. ^ Ian Packer, The Letters of Arnold Stephenson Rowntree to Mary Katherine Rowntree, 1910-1918 (Cambridge University Press, 2002) p. 78
  77. ^ Moore, Tony (18 January 2012). "Brisbane's great strike remembered". Brisbane Times. Retrieved 23 January 2012.
  78. ^ Miklós Kun, Stalin: An Unknown Portrait (Central European University Press, 2003) p. 123
  79. ^ "Morse Pardoned in Death's Shadow", New York Times, January 19, 1912
  80. ^ "Ice harvesting", in Encyclopedia of New York City (Yale University Press, 2010)
  81. ^ "On the role of the weather in the deaths of R. F. Scott and his companions", by Susan Solomon and Charles R. Stearns
  82. ^ Endacott, G. B. Government and people in Hong Kong, 1841-1962 : a constitutional history Hong Kong University Press. (1964)
  83. ^ "History of the RFS". RFS (in Russian). Retrieved 13 December 2020.
  84. ^ "Mexican textile workers: from conquest to globalization", by Jeffrey Bortz, in The Ashgate Companion to the History of Textile Workers, 1650-2000 (Ashgate Publishing, 2010) pp. 346-347
  85. ^ "German Second Ballots On", New York Times, January 21, 1912
  86. ^ Michael Newton, The Encyclopedia of Unsolved Crimes (Infobase Publishing, 2010) p. 263
  87. ^ Frederick R. Karl, A Reader's Guide to Joseph Conrad (Syracuse University Press, 1997) p. 236
  88. ^ William L. Tung, The Political Institutions of Modern China (Springer, 1968) pp. 30-31
  89. ^ "Woman and 3 Men Lynched by Mob", Chicago Daily Tribune, 23 January 1912, accessed 6 April 2016
  90. ^ (Associated Press), "Three Colored Men and Woman Lynched", VALLEY SENTINEL, (Carlisle, Pennsylvania), January 26, 1912, accessed 6 April 2016
  91. ^ Jeff Calder, " 'Family Tree’ unpacks mystery of a 1912 Georgia lynching", Books & Literature, Atlanta Journal-Constitution, 9 January 2016, accessed 6 April 2016
  92. ^ Seth H. Bramson, Florida East Coast Railway (Arcadia Publishing, 2006) p21
  93. ^ Walter E. Campbell, Across Fortune's Tracks: A Biography of William Rand Kenan, Jr (UNC Press Books, 1996) pp. 158-159
  94. ^ "Harahan Killed in Railroad Wreck", New York Times, January 22, 1912
  95. ^ "Opium Convention Signed", New York Times, January 28, 1912
  96. ^ Richard Davenport-Hines, The Pursuit of Oblivion: A Global History of Narcotics (W. W. Norton & Company, 2004) p. 210
  97. ^ Hodges, V. Pauline "Forgan," Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture, Oklahoma Historical Society, 2009. Accessed April 15, 2015.
  98. ^ "M 6.5 - southern Greece". United States Geological Survey. January 24, 1912. Retrieved November 22, 2015.
  99. ^ "Significant Earthquake: GREECE: ASPROGERAKAS (KEPHALLENIA)". National Geophysical Data Center. January 24, 1912. Retrieved December 2, 2017.
  100. ^ The Sikh Encyclopedia; Bakhshish Singh Nijjar, History of the United Panjab (Volume 1) (Atlantic Publishers, 1996) p. 125
  101. ^ "Montero Beheaded by Mob", New York Times, January 27, 1912
  102. ^ Elspeth Joscelin and Grant Huxley, Scott of the Antarctic (University of Nebraska Press, 1990) p. 249
  103. ^ "The Result in Germany", New York Times, January 27, 1912
  104. ^ "Still Another Air Record", New York Times, January 26, 1912; Henry Villard, Contact! The Story of the Early Aviators (Courier Dover Publications, 2002) p. 183
  105. ^ Woodhouse, Eiko (2004). The Chinese Hsinhai Revolution: G.E. Morrison and Anglo-Japanese Relations, 1897-1920. Routledge Curzon. p. 138.
  106. ^ "Los Caños de Carmona". jaimepf.blogspot.com (in Spanish). 16 February 2011. Retrieved 14 August 2021.
  107. ^ Phillips, Henry Albert (January 1912). "For the Cause of the South (Edison)". The Motion Picture Story Magazine. short story based on plot details of that Edison film. pp. 103–112. Retrieved 10 June 2020 – via Internet Archive, San Francisco.
  108. ^ "'MOVIE' FILMS BURN WITH EDISON STUDIO...". The New York Times. 29 March 1914. p. 13. ProQuest Historical Newspapers, Ann Arbor, Michigan; subscription access through The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Library. Retrieved 8 June 2020.
  109. ^ Eveland, Annie Charnley (3 January 2019). "Two deaths caused by 1974 Pe-Ge Tavern fire". Walla Walla Union-Bulletin. Retrieved 14 August 2021.
  110. ^ "Peculiar Phenomenon on the Moon", Popular Astronomy (June-July, 1912) p398
  111. ^ David A. J. Seargent, Weird Astronomy: Tales of Unusual, Bizarre, and Other Hard to Explain Observations (Springer, 2010) p. 12
  112. ^ "Storm Jail and Kill Ecuador Generals"], New York Times, January 29, 1912
  113. ^ Mary Clabaugh Wright, ed., China in Revolution: The First Phase, 1900-1913 (Yale University Press, 1968) pp. 193-194
  114. ^ "Stimson to Close Sixteen Army Posts", New York Times, January 29, 1912
  115. ^ Turney, Chris (2012). 1912: The Year the World Discovered Antarctica. London: The Bodley Head. pp. 163–165. ISBN 978-1-84792-174-1.
  116. ^ "ISU Official Results: World Championships" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-11-06.
  117. ^ "Sidney Lens papers, 1910-1986", by Mindy C. Pugh (Chicago Historical Society, 1988)
  118. ^ The I.W.W.: Its First Seventy Years, Fred W. Thompson & Patrick Murfin, 1976, p. 56
  119. ^ Michael S Lief, et al., Ladies And Gentlemen Of The Jury: Greatest Closing Arguments In Modern Law (Simon and Schuster, 1999) pp. 65-67
  120. ^ Roald Amundsen, with Arthur G. Chater, The South Pole: An Account of the Norwegian Antarctic Expedition in the "Fram," 1910-1912 (J. Murray, 1913) p. 353
  121. ^ Boyne, Walter J. (2003). The Influence of Air Power upon History. Pelican Publishing. p. 38.
  122. ^ Brown, Mark (14 August 2009). "Githa Sowerby, the forgotten playwright, returns to the stage". The Guardian. Retrieved 2013-02-25.
  123. ^ "Tyneside honours forgotten writer". BBC. 26 August 2009. Retrieved 2013-02-25.
  124. ^ Hodgson, Barbara (17 September 2009). "Author Is Brought Back to Life". The Journal. Newcastle upon Tyne. Archived from the original on April 20, 2013. Retrieved 2013-02-25.