October 1909


The following events occurred in October 1909:

October 1, 1909 (Friday)

  • Bhupinder Singh, the Maharaja of the Sikh princely state of Patiala, assumed full power upon attaining his 18th birthday. A Council of Regency had ruled in his name when he had assumed the throne at the age of 9. Bhupinder Singh ruled until his death in 1938.

October 2, 1909 (Saturday)

October 3, 1909 (Sunday)

October 4, 1909 (Monday)

  • As Dr. Frederick Cook's claim of being first to reach the North Pole, was being questioned, his claim to have made the first ascent of Denali was called into doubt. Cook had stated in his book, To the Top of the Continent, that he had reached the summit of the Alaskan mountain on September 16, 1906. His mountain guide, Edward N. Barrill, swore out an affidavit that he and Cook had never been closer than to Denali, and that Cook had ordered him to alter his diary entries. The October 4 affidavit was published ten days later in a New York newspaper, the Globe and Commercial Advertiser.
  • Born: Murray Chotiner, American political advisor to Richard Nixon; in Pittsburgh

October 5, 1909 (Tuesday)

October 6, 1909 (Wednesday)

October 7, 1909 (Thursday)

October 8, 1909 (Friday)

October 9, 1909 (Saturday)

  • William James Sidis of Brookline, Massachusetts, became the youngest student ever admitted into Harvard University. The 11-year-old son of two Russian physicians began studies in mathematics.
  • In college football, Kentucky defeated Illinois, 6–2. At a chapel service following the game, ROTC Commandant Philip Carbusier noted that the team "fought like wildcats", inspiring the team's nickname.

October 10, 1909 (Sunday)

October 11, 1909 (Monday)

  • The Convention Internationale Relative à la Circulation des Automobiles was signed in Paris by 17 European nations, establishing common rules for rules of the road in the signatory nations. The treaty included the first four universal traffic signs, rules on passing and overtaking, and letter symbols for a car's nation of origin.

October 12, 1909 (Tuesday)

October 13, 1909 (Wednesday)

October 14, 1909 (Thursday)

October 15, 1909 (Friday)

  • The Dover Harbour was opened as a suitable port for the British Navy after eleven years and $20,000,000 worth of improvements. The Prince of Wales dedicated the harbor, which could now accommodate the largest British dreadnoughts.
  • Born: Margie Hines, American voice actress, in Glendale, Queens, New York

October 16, 1909 (Saturday)

October 17, 1909 (Sunday)

October 18, 1909 (Monday)

October 19, 1909 (Tuesday)

October 20, 1909 (Wednesday)

  • The entire town of Shipton, Kansas, was sold at public auction. William Irwin had owned the site and Fred Warnow was the high bidder at $2,620. Located in Saline County, Kansas, Shipton had been a farming community until 1895, when the post office and the railroad station were closed, and the citizens moved closer to nearby Salina.

October 21, 1909 (Thursday)

  • The Madras Aquarium, the first aquarium in India, was opened as part of the government museum in Madras. The aquarium was emptied of its contents in 1942, when the city was evacuated due to a threatened invasion by Japan.

October 22, 1909 (Friday)

October 23, 1909 (Saturday)

  • An Arbitral Tribunal, of the International Court of Justice at The Hague, issued its ruling in the Grisbadarna case, delimiting the maritime frontier between Norway and Sweden, and setting out a legal principle still followed in international law: "a state of things which actually exists and has existed for a long time should be changed as little as possible".

October 24, 1909 (Sunday)

October 25, 1909 (Monday)

  • In the city of Empúries in Spain, a bust of Asklepios, the Greek god of medicine, was discovered. Empuries, also called Ampurias, was on the site of the Greek settlement of Emporion.
  • Fort Meade, Florida, was incorporated for the second time as a city, after having been disincorporated in 1903.

October 26, 1909 (Tuesday)

  • Itō Hirobumi, who had served as Prime Minister of Japan and later as Japan's Governor-General in the protectorate of Korea, was assassinated while waiting to change trains at a station in Harbin, China. Dressed in Western clothing, An Chung-gun walked past the Russian security officers assigned to guard Hirobumi, then fired three shots at the Japanese statesman. Struck in the liver, Hirobumi died fifteen minutes later. An, a Korean nationalist, was executed on March 25, 1910, and Japan annexed Korea later that year.
  • U.S. Army Lieutenant Frederick E. Humphreys became the first military pilot to fly an airplane solo, after three weeks of instruction by Wilbur Wright.
  • The Rockefeller Sanitary Commission for the Eradication of Hookworm Disease, more popularly known as the "Hookworm Commission" was created, with Dr. Charles Wardell Stiles as its chairman. Over a five-year period, the Commission reduced the number of cases of the disease in the United States. In 1915, the International Health Commission extended the campaign throughout the world.
  • The sinking of the British steamer Hestia killed 35 of the 41 people aboard after the ship struck a reef off of the island of Grand Manan in the Canadian province of New Brunswick.

October 27, 1909 (Wednesday)

October 28, 1909 (Thursday)

October 29, 1909 (Friday)

October 30, 1909 (Saturday)

October 31, 1909 (Sunday)