June 1921

Month of 1921 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The following events occurred in June 1921:

More information Su, Mo ...
Close
June 15, 1921: Bessie Coleman becomes first licensed black female pilot
June 1, 1921: Greenwood, the African-American business and residential section of Tulsa, is burned down by white rioters; at least 21 black and nine white residents killed in rioting
June 5, 1921: Laura Bromwell becomes first female stunt pilot to be killed in a crash

June 1, 1921 (Wednesday)

June 2, 1921 (Thursday)

June 3, 1921 (Friday)

Lord Byng and wife

June 4, 1921 (Saturday)

  • At least 127 people were drowned and large sections of the U.S. city of Pueblo, Colorado were heavily damaged by the bursting of several dams after heavy rains flooded the Arkansas River and the Fountain River. The business section of Pueblo was covered by waters at least 5 feet (1.5 m) deep and as high as 18 feet (5.5 m) in low-lying areas. The initial death estimate was 500 people.[19]
  • Menshevik forces captured Omsk in Siberia from the Soviet Bolsheviks, while Japan prepared to transport other anti-Bolshevik forces to reinforce the Menshevik capture of Vladivostok.[20]
  • British Prime Minister David Lloyd George presented an offer to striking British miners for settlement, and set a deadline of June 18 for them to accept it.[5]
  • At the Leipzig War Crimes Trials, a German court acquitted Karl Neumann, the U-boat commander who had torpedoed and sunk the British hospital ship HMHS Dover Castle, accepting his defense that he was just following orders. As commander of SM UC-67, Neumann ordered the sinking of Dover Castle on May 26, 1917, although 302 of the 314 crew were rescued and there were no hospital patients on the ship at the time.[21]
  • The Allied Reparations Commission awarded 600,000 tons of confiscated German ships to the United States.[5]
  • Died:

June 5, 1921 (Sunday)

June 6, 1921 (Monday)

June 7, 1921 (Tuesday)

June 8, 1921 (Wednesday)

  • U.S. Army Air Service test pilot Harold R. Harris became the first pilot to fly a pressurized aircraft, when he successfully took a Dayton-Wright USD-9A aloft with an experimental pressurized cockpit.[39]
  • The Highland Park Mosque, "the first building in the United States constructed by Muslims to use as a mosque consistent with the architectural traditions of that faith", was opened in the Detroit suburb of Highland Park, Michigan, at 242 Victor Street. It operated until 1926, when it was sold to the city of Highland Park by its builder, real estate developer and Syrian immigrant Mohammed Karob.[40]
  • President Alvaro Obregon of Mexico decreed a 25% increase on the export tax for Mexican petroleum, effective July 1.[41]
  • Babe Ruth of the New York Yankees, the highest-paid major league baseball player in the world, was placed in jail by a New York traffic court magistrate after being convicted of speeding and fined $100 after having driven 26 miles per hour (42 km/h) on a city highway.[42] Placed in a cell at 11:30 in the morning, "The Home Run King" served five and a half hours and was released at 4:00 in the afternoon, forty minutes before he was scheduled to bat for the Yankees at the Polo Grounds.
  • Born: Suharto, Indonesian military officer and politician, served as President of Indonesia from 1968 to 1998; in Kemusuk, Dutch East Indies (present-day Indonesia) (d. 2008)[43]
  • Died: Roderick Maclean, 66 or 67, Scotsman who attempted to assassinate Queen Victoria on March 2, 1882 (b. c.1854)[44]

June 9, 1921 (Thursday)

Minister Luis María Drago

June 10, 1921 (Friday)

Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh as a toddler

June 11, 1921 (Saturday)

June 12, 1921 (Sunday)

June 13, 1921 (Monday)

SS Canastota

June 14, 1921 (Tuesday)

June 15, 1921 (Wednesday)

Inside the SS Paris

June 16, 1921 (Thursday)

June 17, 1921 (Friday)

June 18, 1921 (Saturday)

June 19, 1921 (Sunday)

June 20, 1921 (Monday)

June 21, 1921 (Tuesday)

U-117 before the bombing

June 22, 1921 (Wednesday)

The 1921 U.S. Team

June 23, 1921 (Thursday)

June 24, 1921 (Friday)

  • The Council of the League of Nations formally awarded Åland to Finland on condition that the islands not be used for military purposes and that Finland would protect Swedish citizens of the Alands.[105]
The R-38 Airship
Marie Curie

June 25, 1921 (Saturday)

Jock Hutchison in 1921

June 26, 1921 (Sunday)

June 27, 1921 (Monday)

Italian Prime Minister Giovanni Giolitti

June 28, 1921 (Tuesday)

June 29, 1921 (Wednesday)

June 30, 1921 (Thursday)

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI