January 1913

Month of 1913 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The following events occurred in January 1913:

More information Su, Mo ...
Close
January 9, 1913: Future U.S. President Richard Nixon (2nd from right) born in California
January 23, 1913: Ottoman Empire Navy Minister Nazim assassinated, Prime Minister Kamil overthrown in coup in Turkey
Dutch calendar for January 1913, designed by Theo van Hoytema

January 1, 1913 (Wednesday)

January 2, 1913 (Thursday)

Australia's Kangaroo and Map stamp series

January 3, 1913 (Friday)

January 4, 1913 (Saturday)

January 5, 1913 (Sunday)

January 6, 1913 (Monday)

January 7, 1913 (Tuesday)

January 8, 1913 (Wednesday)

Caricature of Lt-Colonel Sir Robert William Inglis, published in Vanity Fair, January 8, 1913, as "Men of the Day" Number 2306

January 9, 1913 (Thursday)

January 10, 1913 (Friday)

January 11, 1913 (Saturday)

Kirstie's Cairn, Changue Forest The memorial reads "In memory of Christopher McTaggart, shepherd, who perished in snow storm near this spot, 11 January 1913, aged 19 years." The copyright on this image is owned by Oliver Dixon and is licensed for reuse under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 2.0 license.
  • Having recently proclaimed their independence from China, Tibet and Mongolia signed a mutual defense treaty that, under its terms, was "for all time."[52]
  • The Paris intra-urban transit system went entirely to electric streetcars, as the last horse-drawn streetcar made its final run on the city's rails.[53]
  • The county clerk for Ottawa County, Kansas, was accidentally locked inside the vault at the courthouse, and nobody in the office knew the combination except for him. Fortunately, former clerk John Bell, living in Salina, remembered the combination "after spending an hour searching his memory for the correct numerals."[This quote needs a citation] After 2+12 hours, when the vault was opened, "the liberated Baldwin fell to the floor unconscious" from lack of oxygen but survived.[54]
  • Born: Lona Cohen, American spy, who worked with husband Morris Cohen to share secrets of the Manhattan Project to the Soviet Union; as Leontine Theresa Petka, in Adams, Massachusetts (d. 1992)[citation needed]

January 12, 1913 (Sunday)

January 13, 1913 (Monday)

January 14, 1913 (Tuesday)

January 15, 1913 (Wednesday)

January 16, 1913 (Thursday)

January 17, 1913 (Friday)

President-elect Raymond Poincaré

January 18, 1913 (Saturday)

January 19, 1913 (Sunday)

January 20, 1913 (Monday)

January 21, 1913 (Tuesday)

January 22, 1913 (Wednesday)

Jim Thorpe at the New York Polo Grounds in 1913

January 23, 1913 (Thursday)

January 24, 1913 (Friday)

January 25, 1913 (Saturday)

January 26, 1913 (Sunday)

January 27, 1913 (Monday)

The old "Liberty Head nickel"
The new "Buffalo nickel"

January 28, 1913 (Tuesday)

January 29, 1913 (Wednesday)

January 30, 1913 (Thursday)

January 31, 1913 (Friday)

References

Sources

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI