May 1909


The following events occurred in May 1909:

May 1, 1909 (Saturday)

  • Walter Reed Medical Center opened for treatment of Washington, D.C., residents and veterans.
  • Tens of thousands of California residents turned out at San Francisco to greet the visiting Japanese ships IJN Aso and Soya, which had been captured from Russia during the Russo-Japanese War of 1905.

May 2, 1909 (Sunday)

May 3, 1909 (Monday)

May 4, 1909 (Tuesday)

  • Tony Malfeti's body was found; he had been kidnapped on March 14.
  • In New Knoxville, Ohio, 29-year-old butcher Martin Engel, the grandfather of future astronaut Neil Armstrong, died of tuberculosis. His wife and his nearly two-year-old daughter, Viola Louise Engel, Neil Armstrong's future mother, were at his bedside.
  • In Las Cruces, New Mexico, Wayne Brazel was acquitted of the February 29, 1908, murder of Pat Garrett. The trial had begun on April 19, and the jury took 15 minutes to reach the verdict that Brazel, who fired his shot while Garrett was urinating, had acted in self-defense.

May 5, 1909 (Wednesday)

  • A change in the electoral law of the German free state of Saxony took effect, providing for four different classes of voters. All taxpaying men, 25 or older, had one vote, and men with higher incomes had two, three or four votes. Men received an additional vote upon turning 50.
  • Jackson County, Colorado, was created from the western section of Larimer County.

May 6, 1909 (Thursday)

May 7, 1909 (Friday)

May 8, 1909 (Saturday)

  • The comedy film cliché of "a pie in the face" was introduced with the release of Broncho Billy Anderson's 4-minute silent movie Mr. Flip, and the title character, played by Ben Turpin, being the first recipient for harassing a waitress. The act would be perfected in longer films on May 1, 1913, with Mack Sennett's That Ragtime Band, with comedienne Mabel Normand being "pied" or throwing a pie.
  • Herbert Lang and James P. Chapin set off on the ship SS Zeeland on the first project to catalog the plant and animal species of Central Africa. The Congo Expedition of the American Museum of Natural History would yield thousands of specimens.
  • The town of Concrete, Washington, was incorporated as a merger of the communities of Baker and Cement City. The town was featured in the 1993 Robert De Niro and Leonardo DiCaprio film This Boy's Life.
  • The Bhawal case began when the Bhawal Sanyasi, kumar of the Bhawal Estate in Bengal, reportedly died at about at the "Step aside" building in Darjeeling, where he had traveled for medical treatment. A body was cremated, and the controversy over whether the prince had actually died began. Ultimately, there would be three long court cases and, ultimately the Privy Council in London upheld the theory that the kumar Ramendranath Roy had not actually died, but had been in a coma and had ultimately been revived.

May 9, 1909 (Sunday)

  • Japanese sugar plantation workers in Hawaii walked out on strike, after five months of trying to get wages comparable to those paid to Portuguese and Puerto Rican laborers for the same work. By June, 7,000 had walked off the job. After five months, the plantation owners relented and brought the Asian workers' pay up to par.

May 10, 1909 (Monday)

May 11, 1909 (Tuesday)

May 12, 1909 (Wednesday)

  • Leopold Stokowski made his debut as a conductor, for the Colonne Orchestra in Paris.
  • In South Bethlehem, New York, at least twenty employees of the Callanan Road Improvement Company were killed by the premature explosion of of dynamite as they were preparing to shoot inside a quarry.

May 13, 1909 (Thursday)

  • The first Giro d'Italia, Italy's premiere bicycle race, began at 2:53 in the morning in Milan with 127 starters. On May 30, Luigi Ganna was the first of the 49 remaining riders to return to Milan for the win.
  • The British platinum producer Lonmin was incorporated as the London and Rhodesian Mining and Land Co., Ltd.

May 14, 1909 (Friday)

May 15, 1909 (Saturday)

May 16, 1909 (Sunday)

  • Harper B. Lee, the first gringo bullfighter, made his first appearance in Mexico City's Plaza el Toreo.
  • A hailstorm in Uvalde County, Texas, caused major damage, but not as seriously as reported in some papers. The hailstones, some weighing as much as, were heavy enough to kill several cows. A San Antonio paper reported that "Damage in the amount of at least $10,000 was done in Uvalde and five or six head of stock were killed," and added "The report that several Mexicans had been killed by hail stones is not correct." Dispatches from Galveston greatly exaggerated the damage in the rest of the nation. The New York Times reported that the hailstones "are said to have measured nearly a foot and a half in circumference and ranged in weight from seven to ten pounds", and that "eight lives are reported lost, while the number of live stock killed is reported anywhere from 500 to 2,000 dead ... loss to crops and farm property will aggregate between $200,000 and $300,000. The hailstones piled up in some places four feet high." The New York Herald said that the hailstones killed rancher James Carpenter "and seven Mexican hired men".

May 17, 1909 (Monday)

May 18, 1909 (Tuesday)

May 19, 1909 (Wednesday)

May 20, 1909 (Thursday)

May 21, 1909 (Friday)

May 22, 1909 (Saturday)

May 23, 1909 (Sunday)

May 24, 1909 (Monday)

May 25, 1909 (Tuesday)

May 26, 1909 (Wednesday)

May 27, 1909 (Thursday)

May 28, 1909 (Friday)

May 29, 1909 (Saturday)

  • Augusto B. Leguía, the President of Peru, was briefly taken hostage during an attempted coup, but rescued by loyal troops. The uprising had begun four days earlier when an anti-Chinese rally of the Workers' Party degenerated into a riot in Lima. As a concession to the rioters, President Leguia halted Chinese immigration to Peru, admitting only those immigrants who had at least 500 pounds sterling in resources.
  • The first sale of an airplane to a non-military buyer took place when the G.H. Curtiss Manufacturing Co. delivered its Curtiss No. 1, nicknamed the Golden Flyer, to the New York Aeronautical Society to complete a $5,000 purchase.

May 30, 1909 (Sunday)

May 31, 1909 (Monday)