August 1923

Month of 1923 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The following events occurred in August 1923:

August 2, 1923: U.S. President Warren G. Harding (far left) dies suddenly at San Francisco hotel, Vice President Calvin Coolidge sworn in the next day
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August 1, 1923 (Wednesday)

  • A medical bulletin from President Harding's physicians reported from San Francisco that there was a "slight improvement in the lung condition" but no change otherwise.[1] A followup report said that he had eaten two soft-boiled eggs for breakfast and had "a slight and only slight attack of indigestion" that "was more than overbalanced by the decline of the President's temperature to normal for the first time."[2] At the same time, committees in San Francisco and Los Angeles agreed to turn over the remaining expenses associated with entertainment during Harding's tour "to a state fund to provide everything necessary for the comfort of President Harding" during his convalescence, including the lease of a private home "in the cool and bracing atmosphere close to San Francisco" during August.[3]
  • A parade of the Ku Klux Klan drew a crowd of 100,000 people in Lima, Ohio.[citation needed]
  • The silent historical drama Little Old New York, based on a play of the same name, was released by Goldwyn Pictures,[citation needed] and cast Marion Davies and Harrison Ford (a star of the 1920s and no relation to the more successful star of later decades) as a daughter and a stepson competing for a large inheritance. Produced by newspaper mogul William Randolph Hearst, the film was one of the 10 most popular in 1923.[citation needed]
  • The wife of film comedian Al St. John was granted a divorce in Los Angeles court. "He started drinking in October 1917, and I haven't seen him sober since that time," she testified.[4]
  • Born:
  • Died: Alexander Y. Malcomson, 58, American businessman who provided the initial financing for the launch of the Ford Motor Company; died of pneumonia (b. 1865)

August 2, 1923 (Thursday)

  • United States President Warren G. Harding died at 7:30 p.m. San Francisco time (10:30 Washington time). At 7:51, a statement of "the saddest news that telegraph wires can carry" was sent across the nation, signed by his five physicians: "The President died instantaneously and without warning and while conversing with members of his family at 7:30 p.m. Death was apparently due to some brain involvement, probably due to an apopleptic stroke. During the day he had been free from discomfort, and there was every justification for anticipating a prompt recovery."[5] While the cause of death was officially said at the time to have been from a stroke, it is now more commonly believed to have been from heart failure.[6]
  • Konstantin Päts became the Riigivanem or "State Elder" of Estonia for the second time, succeeding Juhan Kukk as the Baltic nation's head of state and head of government.[citation needed]
  • The military and economic alliance of France and Poland, signed on February 21, 1921, took effect upon ratification by both nations.[citation needed]
  • British Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin told the House of Commons that "If the British people feel that the wounds of Europe were being kept open instead of being healed," by the collection of large reparations from Germany, "there might then easily ensue the last thing in the world that I would like to see," while Ramsay MacDonald said "It is perfectly clear that France is in the Ruhr not for the purpose of getting reparations," but "an attempt to continue war after formal peace has been declared."[7]
  • Born:
  • Died:

August 3, 1923 (Friday)

August 4, 1923 (Saturday)

August 5, 1923 (Sunday)

August 6, 1923 (Monday)

August 7, 1923 (Tuesday)

August 8, 1923 (Wednesday)

August 9, 1923 (Thursday)

August 10, 1923 (Friday)

August 11, 1923 (Saturday)

August 12, 1923 (Sunday)

August 13, 1923 (Monday)

August 14, 1923 (Tuesday)

August 15, 1923 (Wednesday)

Rose Marie in 1930

August 16, 1923 (Thursday)

August 17, 1923 (Friday)

August 18, 1923 (Saturday)

  • A typhoon killed more than 200 people at Macao, Portugal's colony on the mainland of China, with boats being capsized in the Macao harbor and buildings collapsing in the city from high winds and waves.[55]
  • At least 12 people were killed in the collapse of a church in the Spanish village of Navarredonda de la Rinconada, and 30 more were injured. The dead and injured were part of a crowd of 100 people who had climbed on top of the church roof to watch a bullfight in a bullring near the church.[56]
  • Czechoslovakia and France signed a new trade pact.[57]
  • Helen Wills won the U.S. national tennis championship at the U.S. National, beating defending U.S. champion Molla Mallory in straight sets at Forest Hills, New York, 6-2 and 6–1.[58]
Sports superstar Mary Lines

August 19, 1923 (Sunday)

August 20, 1923 (Monday)

August 21, 1923 (Tuesday)

August 22, 1923 (Wednesday)

August 23, 1923 (Thursday)

August 24, 1923 (Friday)

August 25, 1923 (Saturday)

August 26, 1923 (Sunday)

August 27, 1923 (Monday)

August 28, 1923 (Tuesday)

  • Germany's government offered to end their passive resistance campaign in the Ruhr in exchange for the release of deportees and prisoners and a guarantee of the "safety of life and subsistence of the Ruhr population."[107]
  • U.S. Army pilots Lowell Smith and John Richter broke aviation endurance records by staying in the air for 37 consecutive hours over Rockwell Field in San Diego. Mid-air refueling was used to accomplish the feat.[108]
  • Japan's Crown Prince Hirohito moved into the Akasaka Palace,[citation needed] intending to stay only temporarily, but would remain there for five years until two months before his coronation, because the Tokyo earthquake leveled available housing four days later on September 1.
  • Groundbreaking was held to start construction of the Parliament House of Australia in Canberra.[109]
  • Ex-Pennsylvania governor William Cameron Sproul suggested that Prohibition hastened the death of Warren G. Harding. "I think President Harding's death was accelerated by the fact that he thought it was his duty, because of Prohibition, to set a public example and abstain", Sproul said. "He was accustomed to an occasional drink of scotch. I was his personal friend and I know, and in that laborious task of a trip to Alaska, I'm sure he missed it."[110]
  • The trademark for Lincoln Logs, the notched wooden toys patented by John Lloyd Wright on August 31, 1920, was registered.[111]
  • Died:

August 29, 1923 (Wednesday)

August 30, 1923 (Thursday)

Chaney as Quasimodo, with Patsy Ruth Miller as co-star

August 31, 1923 (Friday)

References

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