



January 26, 2011
Ostensibly exploring the practice of law before the internet. Heck, before good highways for that matter.




The RMS Empress of Ireland collided in thick fog with the Norwegian collier Storstad at the mount of the St. Lawrence. 1,012 out of 1,477 on board died in the quick sinking, making it the worst peacetime Canadian maritime disaster.
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Bosnian Serbs' Gavrilo Princip, Trifko Grabež, and Nedeljko Čabrinović were supplied weapons and training by Serbian Major Vojislav Tankosić. Tankosić was a member of the Black Hand Serbian military society, and the goal was to assassinate Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria, who was scheduled to inspect military maneuvers in Sarajevo in June.
Suffragist Maude Kate Smith damaged the painting Primavera by artist George Clausen at the Roycal Academy Summer Exhibition, as somehow that was supposed to advance the cause of women.
How isn't clear.
Theodore Roosevelt spoke to the National Geographic Society in Washington, D.C. about the "River of Doubt" expedition.
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The British House of Commons passed the Irish Home Rule bill. It would not take effect due to postponements caused by World War One, thereby creating a tragedy.
But for the Great War, Ireland would have been a self-governing portion of the United Kingdom in this time frame, and very likely still would be today.
The Jungle, based on the Upton Sinclair novel, was released:
In the film, Lithuanian immigrant, Jurgis Rudkus gains a job in the stockyards and meets and marries Ona. They have a child, but Rudus loses his job and Ona resorts to prostituting herself to her husband's former foreman, Connor. Rudkus kills Connor by throwing him into a cattle pen. While he's in prison, Ona dies. Upon release, he becomes an advocate for women in the Socialist Party.
Pope Pius X created 25 new cardinals.
The Belgian Catholic Party won 41 out of 88 seats of the Belgian Chamber of Representatives.
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