March 1910


The following events occurred in March 1910:

March 1, 1910 (Tuesday)

March 2, 1910 (Wednesday)

  • U.S. Army Lieutenant Benjamin Foulois became the first American military airplane pilot when he made a solo flight of the Wright Military Flyer near Fort Sam Houston at 9:30 a.m. Although Army Lts. Frederick E. Humphreys and Frank P. Lahm had both made solo flights in 1909 following instruction by the Wright brothers, the flight by Lt. Foulois followed the transport, repair and re-assembly of the Wright Military Flyer by Army personnel at the fort near San Antonio.
  • Plans to create the Rockefeller Foundation began after John D. Rockefeller, Jr., asked Congress to issue a charter for a tax-deductible organization with a mission "to promote the well-being and advance the civilization of the peoples of the world, to disseminate knowledge, and to prevent and relieve suffering".
  • Thirty-seven men were killed in the explosion of a powder magazine at the Treadwell mine in Alaska.

March 3, 1910 (Thursday)

March 4, 1910 (Friday)

March 5, 1910 (Saturday)

March 6, 1910 (Sunday)

March 7, 1910 (Monday)

March 8, 1910 (Tuesday)

March 9, 1910 (Wednesday)

March 10, 1910 (Thursday)

March 11, 1910 (Friday)

  • A typhoon in Japan struck at the Chiba and Ibaraki prefectures, destroying 84 boats and killing more than 1,100 people, mostly fishermen. Full details reached the West three weeks later.
  • Died: James Breck Perkins, 62, U.S. Congressman for New York

March 12, 1910 (Saturday)

March 13, 1910 (Sunday)

March 14, 1910 (Monday)

  • Shortly after 8:00 p.m., the Lakeview Number 1 drilling rig, located between Taft and Maricopa, California, struck oil at a depth of. Moments later, a column of oil in diameter erupted. The Lakeview Gusher was the largest in United States history, producing nine million barrels of crude oil in eighteen months.

March 15, 1910 (Tuesday)

  • The Prince Regent of China issued an edict setting a five-year period to "educate the people" before elections would be allowed.
  • France's Chamber of Deputies voted favorably on a confidence motion.
  • President Taft asked Congress to consider taking charge of islands in the Bering Sea in order to protect the seal populations there from extinction.
  • The Thanhouser Company released the first of more than 1,000 that it would produce between 1910 and 1917, starting with The Actor's Children, a one-reel feature, starring Frank Hall Crane and Yale Boss.

March 16, 1910 (Wednesday)

March 17, 1910 (Thursday)

March 18, 1910 (Friday)

  • The first controlled airplane flight in Australia took place, by a daredevil pilot who was more famous as a magician. Harry Houdini was also an aviator. At Diggers Rest, Victoria, near Melbourne, Houdini took to the air on two flights, staying aloft for more than five minutes and reaching an altitude of on his second flight. George A. Taylor is credited with taking an airplane aloft at Narrabeen, N.S.W. on December 5, 1909, and some accounts credit Fred Custance's controlled flight of March 17, 1910 at Bolivar, South Australia, as the first.
  • The Pipe of Desire by Frederick Converse, the first American-written and produced opera to be performed at the Metropolitan Opera in New York City, premiered.
  • In response to threats in California to bar Japanese ownership of land there, Japan's lower house passed a resolution barring foreigners from owning land unless the foreign government granted similar rights to Japanese citizens.
  • At St. Petersburg, Russia and Austria-Hungary signed an agreement to restore full diplomatic relations.
  • Four-wheel brakes were first patented by Henri Perrot and John Meredith Rubury.
  • Officials in Philadelphia announced discovery of a fragment of a tablet believed to date back to 2100 B.C., and containing an account of the Deluges.
  • Died: Julio Herrera y Reissig, 35, Uruguayan poet

March 19, 1910 (Saturday)

  • U.S. Representative George W. Norris of Nebraska introduced a resolution that significantly reduced the power of the Speaker of the House, Joe Cannon, and his Rules Committee, had held over what legislation would come up for a vote. With some clever parliamentary maneuvering, Congressman Norris brought a resolution that created a ten-member, bipartisan Rules Committee, selected by the representatives, and without Cannon as a member. The resolution passed, 191-156 and ended, as Norris put it, "the long dynasty of the all-powerful Speaker".

March 20, 1910 (Sunday)

March 21, 1910 (Monday)

March 22, 1910 (Tuesday)

  • Fire destroyed the main building at Texas Christian University, located at that time in Waco. After the disaster, the city of Fort Worth offered the trustees fifty acres of land on which to build a new campus, and "T.C.U." moved to its current location.
  • William H. Taft, as President of the United States, made what has been described as "the most dramatic event in the history of arbitration in the prewar years" giving an American endorsement in favor of creating a "World Court" for the resolution of disputes between nations.
  • The British House of Lords passed a reform resolution, declaring that possession of a peerage was not a right of entitlement to membership in the House.

March 23, 1910 (Wednesday)

  • A rebellion by Rif tribesmen in Spanish Morocco was finally suppressed after 8 months. During the conflict, an estimated 8,000 Berbers and 2,000 Spanish soldiers were killed.
  • Congress established the Sitka National Monument.
  • Born: Akira Kurosawa, Japanese screenwriter, producer, and director, in Shinagawa;

March 24, 1910 (Thursday)

March 25, 1910 (Friday)

  • The Japanese battleship Satsuma, largest of Japan's ships to that time, was commissioned.
  • The city of Mount Dora, Florida, was incorporated.
  • A fire at the Fish Furniture Store in Chicago killed 16 employees, mostly women and girls, who had been trapped on the fourth and fifth floors. A clerk at the store said that he had accidentally set the blaze while filling pocket cigarette lighters with benzene as directed by his boss.
  • Born: Magda Olivero, Italian opera soprano; in Saluzzo

March 26, 1910 (Saturday)

  • The Immigration Act of 1910 amended existing law to deny entrance to the United States of criminals, paupers, anarchists and diseased persons.
  • Orville Wright began instruction of five student aviators at the first flying school, located on Washington Ferry Road in Montgomery, Alabama. The site later became Maxwell Air Force Base.

March 27, 1910 (Sunday)

  • A fire during a barn-dance in Ököritófülpös, Hungary, killed 312 people. The ballroom was decorated with pine branches and lanterns, and one of the branches caught fire.
  • Eight sailors were killed and three injured by the explosion of a gun on the battle cruiser USS Charleston.
  • U.S. First Lady Helen Taft and the wife of Japan's Ambassador to the United States, the Viscountess Chinda, planted two cherry blossoms in Washington D.C., the first of many that would grace the American capital. After the first gift of trees in 1909 proved to be unsuitable, a full array of blossoms would be planted in 1912.
  • Died: Alexander Agassiz, 74, Swiss-born American mining magnate, oceanographer and zoologist. The Alexander Agassiz Medal of the U.S. National Academy of Sciences is named in his honor.

March 28, 1910 (Monday)

March 29, 1910 (Tuesday)

  • The Pennsylvania Railroad granted a 6% increase in pay for all employees earning less than $300 a month, followed the next day by a similar raise by the Pennsylvania & Reading Railroad.
  • The men of the city of Georgetown, Washington voted 389-238 in favor of bringing their municipality to an end by its annexation to Seattle.

March 30, 1910 (Wednesday)

March 31, 1910 (Thursday)

  • The city of Stoke-on-Trent was created by the merger of six English towns: Tunstall, Burslem, Stoke, Fenton, Longton and Hanley.
  • In a dispute over wage demands, 300,000 bituminous coal miners walked out on strike.
  • The Australian-based White Star Line steamer S.S. Pericles sank within three hours after striking a rock near Cape Leeuwin. All passengers and crew were rescued, but the ship remained lost until 1957.
  • The Senate of France approved a program of compulsory old-age insurance by a majority of 560-4, days after the National Assembly had voted in favor of it 280-3. The new law took effect on April 5.
  • Born: Edward Seago, English artist; in Norwich