April 1905


The following events occurred in April 1905:

April 1, 1905 (Saturday)

April 2, 1905 (Sunday)

  • The Simplon Tunnel through the Alps was opened to railway traffic.
  • The government of Chile, having recently enlarged its territory by the settlement of its boundary dispute with Bolivia, announced that it wanted to acquire sovereignty over two provinces in Peru, Tacna and Arica.

April 3, 1905 (Monday)

April 4, 1905 (Tuesday)

April 5, 1905 (Wednesday)

April 6, 1905 (Thursday)

  • A violent strike by the Teamsters' Union began in Chicago as the 10,000 members of the local United Brotherhood of Teamsters walked off the job to join 5,000 members of the 26 locals of the National Tailors' Association. After the Teamsters entered, rioting began on April 7 and would continue through August 1. Before the strike was settled, 21 people had been killed and 416 injured in what was the most deadly labor dispute in 20th century up to that time; it remains second only to the East St. Louis Riot of 1917.

April 7, 1905 (Friday)

April 8, 1905 (Saturday)

  • Hundreds of people were killed in Spain in the collapse of a dam holding back a reservoir near Madrid.
  • Died: Sarah E. Goode, 49, the second African-American woman to receive a U.S. patent, in 1885 for her invention of a folding bed

April 9, 1905 (Sunday)

April 10, 1905 (Monday)

  • The last legal executions in China by the practice of Lingchi, a method of slow torture called "death by a thousand cuts" because of the gradual severing of parts of the body, were carried out in Beijing on a condemned Mongol prisoner. "Fou-tchou-li", later referred to as Fuzhuli had been convicted of the murder of his master. Photographs were taken by French soldiers at the scene, leading to pressure on the Chinese government to abolish the penalty entirely.
  • The Ottoman Empire's governor of the Mutasarrifate of Jerusalem in Ottoman Palestine issued a decree allowing Chechen immigrants, who had fled persecution in the Russian Empire, to own lands that they had settled on, leading to the rapid growth of the city of Zarqa, now located in Jordan.

April 11, 1905 (Tuesday)

April 12, 1905 (Wednesday)

  • The New York Hippodrome, at the time the world's largest theater with 5,300 seats, had its grand opening with an extravagant show called A Yankee Circus on Mars, followed by the drama Andersonville. The theater would be closed on August 16, 1939, to be demolished in order for the real estate to be sold for more than the building was worth.
  • The Diatto-Clément automobile company was founded in Italy as part of a partnership between the railway car manufacturer Diatto and the French carmaker Clément-Bayard.
  • The cities of Twin Falls, Idaho, and Alachua, Florida were incorporated.

April 13, 1905 (Thursday)

April 14, 1905 (Friday)

April 15, 1905 (Saturday)

  • The FA Cup was won by Aston Villa over Newcastle United, 2 to 0, before a crowd of 101,117 people at the Crystal Palace stadium in South London.
  • The Norddeutscher Fußball-Verband, one of the earliest national soccer football leagues in Germany, was formed by the agreement of six regional associations from eight different German kingdoms, principalities and duchies.

April 16, 1905 (Sunday)

  • The Battle of Čelopek was fought in the Ottoman Empire as a force of 130 Serbian Chetnik fighters killed an entire column of 200 Ottoman Army soldiers and officers, while losing only four of its own men.

April 17, 1905 (Monday)

April 18, 1905 (Tuesday)

April 19, 1905 (Wednesday)

  • The United Kingdom and the Republic of Nicaragua signed the Harrison-Altamirano Treaty, recognizing absolute Nicaraguan sovereignty over the Mosquito Coast. The new treaty annulled the 1860 Zeldon-Wyke Treaty that had preserved British authority on the Mosquito Indians reservation.

April 20, 1905 (Thursday)

April 21, 1905 (Friday)

April 22, 1905 (Saturday)

April 23, 1905 (Sunday)

  • German General Lothar von Trotha commander of troops in Germany's colony of Südwestafrika, ordered the extermination of the Nama people within the colony's borders, ultimately killing 10,000 of the Africans. Von Trotha's proclamation Aan de oorlogvorende Namastamme, proclaimed that "The Nama who chooses not to surrender and lets himself be seen in German territory will be shot, until all are exterminated." The Nama extermination followed an order by von Trotha on October 2, 1904, to kill the Ovaherero people in the colony.
  • Died: Joe Jefferson, 76, American comedian and actor

April 24, 1905 (Monday)

  • China's Empress Regent Cixi abolished further use in executions of the nation's three most cruel torture execution methods, lingchi, gibbeting, and desecration of a dying person.

April 25, 1905 (Tuesday)

April 26, 1905 (Wednesday)

April 27, 1905 (Thursday)

  • General Alexander Alexandrovich Kozloff was appointed as the new Governor-General of Moscow, replacing the recently assassinated Grand Duke Sergius.

April 28, 1905 (Friday)

  • A tornado struck Laredo, Texas and killed 16 people: nine in Laredo, seven in Nuevo Laredo.
  • Herbert W. Bowen, the U.S. Ambassador to Venezuela, was removed from office the Department of State and directed to return to the U.S. to explain charges made against him by the Assistant U.S. Secretary of State Francis B. Loomis. The State Department replaced with William W. Russell, the U.S. Ambassador to neighboring Colombia.

April 29, 1905 (Saturday)

April 30, 1905 (Sunday)