March 1909


The following events occurred in March 1909:

March 1, 1909 (Monday)

March 2, 1909 (Tuesday)

March 3, 1909 (Wednesday)

March 4, 1909 (Thursday)

  • William Howard Taft was inaugurated as the 27th President of the United States. Because of a snowstorm, Taft took the oath indoors, becoming the first American president to do so since Andrew Jackson.
  • Born: Harry Helmsley, American real estate entrepreneur, who began as an office boy and worked his way up to being a billionaire; in the Bronx, New York

March 5, 1909 (Friday)

  • The first person to violate New York City's new law banning smoking in its subways was arrested. Louis Funcke lit up two days after the new law took effect and was released with a reprimand.
  • The charter of the Mutual Benefit Health and Accident Association, creating what is now referred to as the Mutual of Omaha insurance company, was signed in Omaha, Nebraska.

March 6, 1909 (Saturday)

  • The infamous SS General Slocum sank a second and last time. On June 15, 1904, the steamboat burned and then sank, killing 1,081 people. Nevertheless, the hull of the ship was raised and refitted as the Maryland, a barge. With a load of 500,000 bricks, the Maryland split in half and sank at New Brunswick, New Jersey, albeit without a loss of life.
  • The Simplified Spelling Board released its list of 3,300 words that should be reformed.
  • Born: Obafemi Awolowo, Nigerian politician and independence leader who served as premier of the British African colony's Western State prior to the creation of the Republic of Nigeria; in Ikenne

March 7, 1909 (Sunday)

  • The United States Senate entered the automotive age with the inauguration of transportation by electric cars, running underground through a tunnel between the new Senate Office Building and the United States Capitol.

March 8, 1909 (Monday)

  • U.S. President William Howard Taft rescinded Theodore Roosevelt's executive orders closing the navy yards at New Orleans and Pensacola.
  • In California, the new Bank Act was signed into law, to take effect on July 1. A loophole within the legislation gave the Bank of Italy an advantage in opening branch banks across the state, leading to its growth into the colossal Bank of America.

March 9, 1909 (Tuesday)

March 10, 1909 (Wednesday)

March 11, 1909 (Thursday)

March 12, 1909 (Friday)

  • In Denmark, women were allowed to vote for the first time, at least in municipal elections, and women candidates were on the ballot. All women at least 25 years old, or women of any age married to a registered voter, were allowed to participate.
  • New York City Police Department Detective Joseph Petrosino, on assignment in Sicily to investigate ties between the Italian Mafia and New York gangsters, was gunned down in Palermo on his way to meet an informant. The incident, never solved, is still cited as a cautionary tale against meeting an informant alone.
  • Three American warships, the Yorktown, the Dubuque and the Tacoma, were ordered to Nicaragua in response to a "warlike attitude" on the part of Nicaraguan President Zalaya, and an armored cruiser remained off the coast until the ships could arrive.
  • Independent Moving Pictures was founded by Carl Laemmle as a motion picture studio and production company based in Fort Lee, New Jersey. In 1912, it would merge with several other production companies to form Universal Film Manufacturing Company, later Universal Pictures, with Laemmle as president.

March 13, 1909 (Saturday)

March 14, 1909 (Sunday)

March 15, 1909 (Monday)

  • The United States Congress met in a special session called by President Taft to consider the Payne Tariff Act. House Speaker Joe Cannon was re-elected for a fourth term, but 12 of his fellow Republicans voted against him.
  • At 4:15, Edward Payson Weston, 71, set off from the New York Post Office building on a walk, hoping to become the first person to go from New York to San Francisco on foot. Delayed by blizzards, he missed his target of 100 days, arriving 105 days later in Los Angeles.
  • Selfridges department store opened in London.

March 16, 1909 (Tuesday)

March 17, 1909 (Wednesday)

  • The first concrete was poured as construction of the Panama Canal entered a new phase, beginning with the spillway at Gatun.
  • Born Ken Anderson, American animator, storyboard artist and architect, in Seattle

March 18, 1909 (Thursday)

  • Einar Dessau of Denmark spoke over a wireless radio transmitter to a government post distant, becoming, in effect, the first person to ever talk on the radio.
  • Willie Whitla, the 8-year-old son of a leading attorney in Sharon, Pennsylvania, was kidnapped by two men who appeared at the East Ward School, and hours later a ransom note was received by his parents, demanding $10,000 and closing with the note, "Dead boys are not desirable". After the father delivered $10,000 to a woman at a drugstore, Willie was released unharmed and put on a streetcar in Cleveland, where he was reunited with his father at the city's Hollenden Hotel. James and Helen Boyle were arrested in Cleveland the next day, with $9,790 of the money. James Boyle was given a life sentence and died in prison. William Whitla died of pneumonia in 1932, at the age of 31.
  • Born: Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Jr., who died 8 months later on November 8, 1909. Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt's fifth child, also named Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Jr., would be born five years later.

March 19, 1909 (Friday)

March 20, 1909 (Saturday)

  • Colonel Duncan B. Cooper and his son Robin J. Cooper were both convicted of second degree murder in the death of former United States Senator Edward W. Carmack, and both sentenced to 20 years in prison. Senator Carmack, who represented Tennessee as a Congressman and then as a Senator, had been shot and killed in Nashville on November 8, 1908. Colonel Cooper was pardoned on April 13, 1910, and lived until November 4, 1922. Robin Cooper was retried and acquitted in 1910. Almost nine years later, he was seen driving away from his home with a stranger, and found the next day by his car, dead from a fractured skull.

March 21, 1909 (Sunday)

March 22, 1909 (Monday)

March 23, 1909 (Tuesday)

  • Less than three weeks out of the White House, former U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt departed New York on the steamer Hamburg, bound for an African safari from which he would not return until June 16, 1910. The expedition was sponsored by the Smithsonian Institution.
  • New York became the second state to make Columbus Day a legal holiday, to be celebrated on October 12 annually. Colorado had been the first, in a bill approved on April 1, 1907.

March 24, 1909 (Wednesday)

March 25, 1909 (Thursday)

March 26, 1909 (Friday)

  • A crowd of 10,000 demonstrated in Cairo, the day after British authorities in Egypt restored the 1881 "Law of Publications", barring newspapers from supporting nationalist causes.
  • The National Board of Censorship, based in New York City, held its first meeting. On the first night, it reviewed of film for obscene or "crime for crime's sake" material. After six hours, were cut.
  • Harvey Cushing performed his first trans-sphenoidal surgery in Boston, a superior nasal approach with omega-shaped incision.

March 27, 1909 (Saturday)

March 28, 1909 (Sunday)

  • In a speech in Ottawa, Alexander Graham Bell announced that Canada had been the birthplace of the telephone. Bell told listeners that "The first transmission of speech over a wire was in the Autumn of 1876 on a line furnished by the Dominion Telegraph Co. of Canada between Brantford and Mount Pleasant." The transmission was only one way, however, with the first reciprocal conversation on the same line occurring later between Bell and Watson.

March 29, 1909 (Monday)

  • German Chancellor Bernhard von Bülow announced the doctrine of Nibelungentreue, the concept that the German and Austrian empires were united by their common language and heritage. Fighting on the same side in World War I, the two empires would fall together in 1918.

March 30, 1909 (Tuesday)

March 31, 1909 (Wednesday)

  • The first newsreel was shown in cinemas as Charles Pathé introduced the Pathé Faits Divers.
  • Kansas became the first American state to prohibit use of the "common drinking cup" on trains and in railroad depots and public schools, with an order from the State Board of Health to take effect on September 1. Dr. Samuel Jay Crumbine, the Secretary of the Board, began lobbying for the ban after studies demonstrated that a tin cup, shared and drunk from by members of the public, was germ-infested and promoted the spread of disease. Sanitary, disposable paper cups were soon introduced, and the spread of disease was eliminated at the expense of creating the "throwaway society".
  • The Serbian ambassador to Austria-Hungary formally presented his government's acceptance of the Austrian annexation of Bosnia. "Serbia undertakes to renounce from now onwards the attitude of protest and opposition which she has adopted with regard to the annexation since last autumn," announced the Ambassador. With those humiliating words, the Serbians averted an invasion by the Austrian Imperial forces.
  • Hull No. 401, the keel of the RMS Titanic, the largest ship to that time was laid at the Harland and Wolff shipyards in Belfast. The ship would later become well known for her ill-fated maiden voyage.
  • The American flag was lowered at Camp Columbia and the Cuban flag was hoisted, marking the withdrawal of all American troops from Cuba. The following morning at 10:00, the Sumner and the McClellan transported the remaining Americans home.
  • Georgia ended its controversial "convict lease system", returning 1,200 imprisoned felons from private stockades to county jails. Until then, private companies had been paying the state for the use of the convicts' services.