May 1924

Month of 1924 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The following events occurred in May 1924:

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May 21, 1924: Thrill-killers Nathan Leopold and Richard Loeb kidnap and murder 14-year old Bobby Franks [1]
May 26, 1924: U.S. President Coolidge signs discriminatory Immigration Act of 1924 into law

May 1, 1924 (Thursday)

May 2, 1924 (Friday)

May 3, 1924 (Saturday)

  • In the closest finish ever for the championship of English football, Huddersfield Town A.F.C., with a record of 22 wins and 11 draws, defeated Nottingham Forest F.C., 3 to 0, while Cardiff City F.C. of Wales, with a record of 22 wins and 12 draws, played to a scoreless draw against Birmingham City F.C., leaving both with the same record of 57 points (23-11 for Huddersfield, 22-13 for Cardiff, based on two points for a win and one point for each draw), to finish in first place in the English League's First Division.[9][10] Under the English League rules, the tiebreaker for identical records was based on the ratio of goals scored divided by goals allowed, and Huddersfield's 60/33 ratio of 1.818 was slightly higher than Cardiff's 61/34 ratio of 1.794. If Huddersfield had scored only 2 goals in its final game, a ratio of 59/33 would have been 1.7878 for second place.[10][11]
  • The Jewish fraternity Aleph Zadik Aleph was formed in Omaha, Nebraska. It would in turn form the B'nai B'rith Youth Organization (BBYO) a year later.[12]
  • The steamship SS Catalina, known as "The Great White Steamer", and for making thousands of trips between Los Angeles and Santa Catalina Island in the U.S. state of California, was launched for the first time. Over the next 51 years, it would transport as many as 2,000 passengers at a time on the 2½ hour and 26 miles (42 km) trip to and from Santa Catalina, carrying 25 million people over the years, more passengers than any other vessel anywhere in the world, according to the Steamship Historical Society of America.[13]
  • In Argentina, 150,000 workers participated in a general strike protesting the mandatory deduction of 5% of their wages for a fund for old-age pensions.[14]
  • The "Bozenhardt incident" occurred in Berlin when German police raided the Soviet Trade Delegation.[15][16][17]
  • Zinaida Kokorina, the first female military pilot in history, made her first solo flight.[18]
  • Born:
  • Died: Mykola Mikhnovsky, 50, Ukrainian nationalist, was found hanged outside the home of his longtime political ally, Volodymyr Shemet, after having been arrested and released by the Soviet secret police agency, the GPU.[19]

May 4, 1924 (Sunday)

May 5, 1924 (Monday)

May 6, 1924 (Tuesday)

  • The Soviet Union suspended trade with Germany as it had not received satisfaction over the Bozenhardt incident.[28]
  • Near Iași, Corneliu Zelea Codreanu opened the founding meeting of the new anti-Semitic Romanian organization, Frăția de Cruce ("Brotherhood of the Cross").[29] The meeting was invaded by Romania's national police, the Poliția Română, on orders of the local police chief, Constantin Manciu. Codreanu and his associates were severely beaten and tortured before they were released, and he made plans to take revenge on Manciu, whom he would assassinate five months later on October 24.
  • Macedonian separatists presented the May Manifesto, an attempted declaration of independence.[30]
  • The Batley Bulldogs defeated the Wigan Warriors 13–7 to win the championship of the Northern Rugby Football League a predecessor to England's Rugby Football League.[31]
  • The strike in Argentina ended in victory for the workers.[32]

May 7, 1924 (Wednesday)

May 8, 1924 (Thursday)

Armstrong and de Forest
  • In a lawsuit between inventors Edwin Howard Armstrong and Lee de Forest on the question of who was entitled to the patent for the regenerative circuit, the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia reversed a finding by the interference board of the U.S. Patent Office, and held that de Forest had invented regeneration.[37] The decision would be upheld by the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals and by the U.S. Supreme Court.
  • Federico Laredo Brú, leader of the short-lived Cuban rebellion, negotiated the terms of his surrender.[38]
  • The revised version of the Sergei Prokofiev's Piano Concerto No. 2 was premiered more than 10 years after the September 5, 1913, premiere of the original version.[39] Prokofiev had reconstructed the music after the only manuscript had been destroyed by a fire in 1917.
  • Died: Sophie Lyons, 75, American philanthropist and reformed swindler, was fatally injured in a home invasion by three men.[40]

May 9, 1924 (Friday)

May 10, 1924 (Saturday)

new BOI director Hoover
  • J. Edgar Hoover, a 29-year-old lawyer, became the U.S. Justice Department's Acting Director of the Bureau of Investigation, the predecessor to the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI).[47] Hoover, the Associate Director for William J. Burns, took office on a temporary basis after Burns resigned. U.S. Attorney General Harlan Fiske Stone was reportedly expected to appoint former Bureau Director William J. Burns to the position, but would eventually choose the young prosecutor to the job. Hoover would direct the FBI for the next 48 years and use the bureau to gather information on his political enemies.
  • A cave-in trapped five miners in the Black Iron Mine near Gilman, Colorado. All five were rescued 80 hours later, on May 13.[48]
  • Born:
    • Edward T. Hall, British scientist known for exposing the Piltdown Man as a fraud, and for inventing a wheelchair with a built-in respirator to allow quadraplegic persons to leave the confinement of bed; in London (d. 2001)[49]
    • Goliarda Sapienza, Italian novelist who achieved posthumous success more than a decade after her death with the publication of L'arte della gioia ("The Art of Joy"); in Catania (d. 1996)
    • Zahrad (pen name for Zareh Yaldizciyan), Turkish Armenian language poet; in Istanbul (d. 2007)
  • Died: George Kennan, 79, American explorer known for his ethnographies of many of the native people of Siberia[50]

May 11, 1924 (Sunday)

May 12, 1924 (Monday)

May 13, 1924 (Tuesday)

  • In Canada, Peter Smith, the former treasurer of the province of Ontario, was arrested along with financier Aemilius Jarvis, on charges of theft and conspiracy to defraud the provincial government, in what became known as the Ontario Bond Scandal.[60] While Smith and Jarvis would be acquitted of theft and fraud, they would both be found guilty of conspiracy on October 24, with Smith being given a three year sentence and spending six months in jail.[61]
  • Crowds in Moscow hanged effigies of Gustav Stresemann and Raymond Poincaré during a protest against the Bozenhardt incident.[58]
  • Bohemian F.C. of Dublin, commonly called "Bohemians", won their first championship, finishing in first place in the 10-team League of Ireland, the highest level of soccer football competition in the Irish Free State. Bohemians finished with 16 wins, no draws and two losses for 32 points, ahead of runner up Shelbourne F.C. (13-2-3), whom they had defeated 2—0 and 5—2 during the season.[62][page needed]
  • Born: Gerald Westheimer, German-born Australian professor of ophthalmology and researcher into visual optics; in Berlin (alive in 2026)
  • Died: Louis Hirsch, 36, American songwriter, died of pneumonia

May 14, 1924 (Wednesday)

  • The new multiracial Legislative Council of Kenya, with 11 white members, 5 Asians and one Arab (but no black Africans) convened for the first time after elections held on April 2.[63]
  • In Springfield, Massachusetts, the Methodist general conference committee voted 76 to 37 to recommend to the conference that the Methodist church never again as an organization participate in any kind of warfare under any circumstances, not even self-defense. An amendment to make an exception for wars to save the country and help humanity was tabled.[64]
  • The last college championship in the U.S. for cricket was played before the Intercollegiate Cricket Association disbanded, as Haverford College defeated the University of Pennsylvania, 94 to 34.[65]
  • Born: Eduard Petiška, popular Czech novelist; in Prague, Czechoslovakia (d. 1987)
  • Died: General Fortunato Maycotte, 32, former rebel military officer and supporter of Francisco I. Madero, was executed by firing squad.

May 15, 1924 (Thursday)

  • President Coolidge vetoed the World War Adjusted Compensation Act, more commonly called the "Bonus Bill", a grant of benefits for U.S. veterans of World War One. In his veto message, Coolidge wrote, "Patriotism, which is bought and paid for is not patriotism."[66] Congress would override the veto on May 19.
Robeson and Blair's scene was controversial in 1924

May 16, 1924 (Friday)

May 17, 1924 (Saturday)

May 18, 1924 (Sunday)

Kilauea erupting in 1924

May 19, 1924 (Monday)

  • The United States Senate passed the World War Adjusted Compensation Act (unofficially, the "Bonus Bill") into law when it voted 59–26 to override U.S. President Coolidge's veto.[92]
  • The first use of telephone lines to transmit images was made in a demonstration by the American Telephone and Telegraph Company of "a new process of transmitting pictures by electricity". Over a period of two hours, the company transmitted 15 photographs from its office in Cleveland, Ohio to the AT&T headquarters in New York City.[93]
  • An attempt by Korean nationalists to assassinate Makoto Saito, the Japanese Governor-General of Korea, failed after one of the eight-member Yukgunjamuibu team fired at Saito's patrol boat from the Chinese side of the Yalu River. The boat, which was conducting border patrol at Saito's request, was able to retreat before further shots could be fired.[94]
  • Dr. Roscoe R. Spencer of the U.S. Public Health Service successfully tested his research team's vaccine against Rocky Mountain spotted fever, injecting himself with "a large dose of mashed wood ticks, from lot 2351B, and some weak carbolic acid", after which he and other persons given the vaccine were able to achieve full or partial immunity to the fatal disease.[95][page needed][96]
  • A conference in Istanbul to resolve the Mosul question, a dispute between the United Kingdom and Turkey over possession of the former Mosul Vilayet, an oil-abundant province of the Ottoman Empire, broke up with no agreement reached. The Republic of Turkey claimed Mosul, on its south border, while Britain asserted that the territory should be part of the British mandate, the Kingdom of Iraq.[97]
  • The Marx Brothers made their Broadway debut with the presentation of the stage show I'll Say She Is at the Casino Theatre.[98]
  • The first aerial circumnavigation of Australia was carried out by an RAAF crew in a Fairey IIID.[99]
  • Born:

May 20, 1924 (Tuesday)

  • Over one million radio listeners in the United Kingdom listened in on an experimental broadcast from a garden in Surrey in which a nightingale's song was picked up by a microphone concealed in a bush. Cellist Beatrice Harrison played a few soft notes in the garden until the nightingale joined in.[100] It has since been suggested, however, that the "nightingale" was actually the work of a bird impressionist.[101]
  • Eight sailors were killed and five wounded in the explosion of an artillery shell during gunnery drills on the French battleship Patrie.[102][103][page needed]
  • Born: Stan Paterson, Scottish glaciologist whose research provided data on climate change in the past 100,000 years; in Edinburgh (d. 2013).[104]
  • Died: Laure Conan (pen name for Marie-Louise-Félicité Angers), 79, popular French-Canadian novelist, book author and journalist[105]

May 21, 1924 (Wednesday)

May 22, 1924 (Thursday)

May 23, 1924 (Friday)

May 24, 1924 (Saturday)

May 25, 1924 (Sunday)

President Kontouriotis

May 26, 1924 (Monday)

May 27, 1924 (Tuesday)

May 28, 1924 (Wednesday)

May 29, 1924 (Thursday)

May 30, 1924 (Friday)

  • Italian politician Giacomo Matteotti, leader of the Partito Socialista Unitario (PSI) and a member of parliament, made an impassioned speech at the Chamber of Deputies, criticizing the way the election of the previous month had been conducted and saying it had no validity due to the Fascist tactics of intimidating voters and candidates.[142] His speech was shouted down by Fascists with cries such as "villain" and "traitor".[143][page needed]
  • Born: Turk Lown, American baseball relief pitcher, known for pitching in 67 of the 154 games of the Chicago Cubs in 1957 to lead the National League in games finished; in Brooklyn, New York (d. 2016)[144]

May 31, 1924 (Saturday)

References

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