April 1903

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The following events occurred in April 1903:

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April 30, 1903: The town of Frank, North-West Territories, the day after the Frank Slide

April 1, 1903 (Wednesday)

  • The Midwives Act 1902 came into effect in the UK, requiring midwives to be certified and penalizing any woman practising midwifery without certification.[1]
  • George Wyndham, the United Kingdom's Chief Secretary for Ireland introduced the government's proposed bill in the House of Commons to appropriate $975,000 per year for Ireland.[2]
  • U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt departed from Washington DC on his annual trip to the western 45 states, traveling to Wisconsin (April 3), Minnesota (April 5), Wyoming (April 8)[2]
  • The new minimum wage law in the U.S. state of Indiana was declared unconstitutional by the state's supreme court. On April 8, the Court declared the weekly-payment law to be unconstitutional.[2]
  • Cambridge University defeated Oxford in their annual boat race on the river Thames, winning by six lengths.[2]
  • Died: Elliott Zborowski (born William Elliott Morris Zborowski), American racing driver, race crash (b. 1856)[3][4]

April 2, 1903 (Thursday)

  • Composer Pietro Mascagni left New York City after completing a tour of the United States.[5]

April 3, 1903 (Friday)

April 4, 1903 (Saturday)

April 5, 1903 (Sunday)

April 6, 1903 (Monday)

  • A general strike began in the Netherlands on the kingdom's transportation system on rail and by ship, in reaction to proposed restrictions on labor. The Staats-General approved anti-strike bill two days later and railway workers returned to the job.[2]

April 7, 1903 (Tuesday)

  • King Alexander of Serbia suspended the nation's constitution and declared his intention to implement new laws by decree until they could be approved.[2]
  • Voters in the U.S. state of Kansas overwhelmingly approved prohibition of the sale of alcohol.[2]
  • Died: George Chapman, 37, Polish-born serial killer known as "The Borough Poisoner", executedby hanging at Wandsworth Prison, London, UK[13]

April 8, 1903 (Wednesday)

April 9, 1903 (Thursday)

  • William Propsting became Premier of Tasmania.[16]
  • Three men were killed when a 12-inch (305 mm) gun in the forward turret of the battleship USS Iowa (BB-4) shattered during firing practice.[17]
  • A federal appellate court in St. Paul, Minnesota, declared that the Northern Securities Company was an illegal combination of businesses in restraint of trade, in violation of U.S. antitrust law, and issued an injunction prohibiting it from controlling the Northern Pacific Railroad and the Great Northern Railroad company.[2]

April 10, 1903 (Friday)

  • U.S. tycoon Joseph Pulitzer donated $2 million to Columbia University, to found a school of journalism, also making allowance for literary prizes.[18]
  • In the Philippines, U.S. Army Captain John J. Pershing led his men on the capture of the rebel fortress at Bacalod, killing 100 Moro rebels.[2]

April 11, 1903 (Saturday)

April 12, 1903 (Sunday)

  • The wreckage of the Spanish Navy ship Reina Christina, flagship of Admiral Montojo, was raised from Manila Bay, after having been sunk in the Spanish-American War in 1898. The skeletal remains of 80 of his crew were found in the hull.[2]
  • A partial lunar eclipse took place.
  • Born: Jan Tinbergen, Dutch economist and Nobel laureate, in The Hague (died 1994)

April 13, 1903 (Monday)

April 14, 1903 (Tuesday)

April 15, 1903 (Wednesday)

  • The salon of the National Society of Fine Arts was opened in Paris.[2]
  • New rules went into effect in the U.S. Civil Service system, extending the rules on classified service.[2]
  • President Loubet of France arrived in Algiers, capital of France's overseas territory of Algeria.[2]

April 16, 1903 (Thursday)

  • The Irish Nationalist convention met at Dublin and approved the principle of Britain's proposed land bill.[2]

April 17, 1903 (Friday)

  • A cold snap with freezing temperatures struck England and France.[2]

April 18, 1903 (Saturday)

April 19, 1903 (Sunday)

April 20, 1903 (Monday)

  • In the U.S., the Reading Coal and Iron Company announced the lockout of employees and two-thirds of its mines after the miners refused an order to work for nine hours on Saturday in addition to the 50 hours worked Monday through Friday.[2]
  • John Aitken was elected unopposed as Mayor of Wellington, New Zealand.[26]

April 21, 1903 (Tuesday)

  • The Kishinev pogrom ended after three days in Russia.[27]
  • The United Mine Workers labor union ordered its members to return to work at the Reading Coal and Iron Company pending adjustments of grievances by a board of labor and management.[27]
  • With the reassembly of the House of Commons and the House of Lords, the British government published the proposed international convention for construction of the Baghdad Railway.[27]
  • The Spanish government ordered the customs officials of the Sultanate of Morocco to leave Melilla.[2]
  • The Norwegian steamer Freia was wrecked near Scharhörn during a passage from Kristiania to Harlingen, Friesland, Netherlands.[28]

April 22, 1903 (Wednesday)

April 23, 1903 (Thursday)

  • The UK's Chancellor of the Exchequer, Charles Thomson Ritchie, announced the repeal of Corn Duty, to come into force on 1 July 1903.[30] The announcement came in conjunction with the presentation in the House of Commons of the annual budget. Ritchie also announced that Britain would not participate in the construction of the Baghdad Railway.[27]
  • The British Army announced the loss of 100 officers and men who were killed in Somalia in a battle with the followers of "the Mad Mullah", the Somali resistance leader.[27]
  • Andrew Carnegie announced a donation of $600,000 for the endowment of the Tuskegee Institute for university education for African-Americans in Alabama.[27]

April 24, 1903 (Friday)

April 25, 1903 (Saturday)

April 26, 1903 (Sunday)

April 27, 1903 (Monday)

April 28, 1903 (Tuesday)

April 29, 1903 (Wednesday)

April 30, 1903 (Thursday)

  • The Louisiana Purchase Exposition opened at St. Louis, Missouri with addresses by U.S. President Roosevelt and former President Grover Cleveland.[27]
  • The Ottoman Bank building at Salonika was destroyed by a dynamite explosion.[27]


References

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