September 1922

Month of 1922 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The following events occurred in September 1922:

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September 13, 1922: Turkish Army burns down the city of Smyrna, recently recaptured from Greece, and massacres non-Turkish residents

September 1, 1922 (Friday)

September 2, 1922 (Saturday)

  • An agreement to end the nationwide anthracite coal mining strike in the United States was reached between the United Mine Workers of America and the Policy Committee of the Anthracite Coal Operators, by extending the terms of the contract between labor and management to at least August 31, 1923. The compromise came after the intervention of U.S. President Harding, who had appealed to both sides "in the name of public welfare" to accept the proposal to end the strike in time for the onset of winter, as made by the two U.S. Senators for Pennsylvania, David A. Reed and George W. Pepper, both of whom had been in office for less than a year.[3]
  • German President Friedrich Ebert declared the "Deutschlandlied" to be the national anthem of Germany.[4] The lyrics were limited to the song's third stanza ("Einigkeit und Recht und Freiheit, Für das deutsche Vaterland!"). The song would be used in Nazi Germany (with the words of the more militant first stanza, "Deutschland, Deutschland über alles, Über alles in der Welt,") until the fall of the Third Reich in 1945.[citation needed] The "Deutschlandlied" would be made the anthem of West Germany on May 2, 1952 and continued after the reunification of Germany in 1989.[citation needed]

September 3, 1922 (Sunday)

September 4, 1922 (Monday)

September 5, 1922 (Tuesday)

September 6, 1922 (Wednesday)

Himno Nacional Brasileiro

September 7, 1922 (Thursday)

September 8, 1922 (Friday)

September 9, 1922 (Saturday)

September 10, 1922 (Sunday)

A scene from One Terrible Day
  • Film producer Hal Roach introduced the first of 220 short films in the Our Gang series, as the Pathé company released the silent 20-minute feature "One Terrible Day", directed by Robert F. McGowan and Tom McNamara. The series of movies about the adventures of a gang of children, was shown before feature films and continued until 1944, and then was syndicated on television from 1955 onward as The Little Rascals.[citation needed]
  • The New York World published an interview by Clare Sheridan with English writer Rudyard Kipling in which he was quoted as saying that America had come into the war "two years, seven months and four days too late" and had "quit the day of the Armistice, without waiting to see the thing through." Kipling believed he had made the remarks in the context of a private conversation and so in the media uproar that ensued he publicly denied ever giving Sheridan an interview at all.[26][27]
  • The New York Yankees played their last regular season games in the Polo Grounds before moving to Yankee Stadium for 1923. The Yanks swept a doubleheader against the Philadelphia Athletics in front of a capacity crowd, as an estimated 25,000 fans had to be turned away at the gate.[28]
  • Died: Wilfrid Scawen Blunt, 82, English poet and critic (b. 1840)[citation needed]

September 11, 1922 (Monday)

  • The British Mandate of Palestine began as the oath of office for the High Commissioner of Palestine was administered to Sir Herbert Samuel, as well as to the Commander in Chief of British forces there. The ceremony took place in Jerusalem in the presence of Lord Allenby, the British Army Field marshal who liberated Palestine from the Ottoman Empire, and by the Emir Abdullah of Jordan.[29]
  • Allied troops landed at Çanakkale and set up a neutral zone between Greece and Turkey.[30]
  • Turkish troops who had taken over the Smyrna Province from Greece carried out a massacre of Armenian residents under the direction of the new Turkish Governor, Nureddin Pasha, according to a statement made afterwards by a British eyewitness who had been able to flee the area. Businessman Roy Treloar said that Nureddin "commenced a systematic hunting down of Armenians, who were gathered in batches of 100, taken to Konak and murdered."[31]
  • The former Prime Minister of Greece, Eleftherios Venizelos, announced from Paris that he would form a government only if King Constantine abdicated and if Prime Minister Nikolaos Triantaphyllakos and his government resigned.[32] Although the "September 11 Revolution" in Greece is sometimes mistakenly listed as having happened on this day, Greece at the time was still operating under the Julian calendar, and the revolution took place on 24th September according to the Gregorian calendar recognized by the rest of the world.
  • Hoping to prevent a split within the Communist Party leadership in the Soviet Union, Vladimir Lenin proposed that Leon Trotsky, alongside Lev Kamenev, would become Lenin's deputy on Sovnarkom, the Council of People's Commissars. Trotsky declined to accept the invitation.[33]
  • One of the predecessors of Melbourne, Australia’s Herald Sun newspaper, The Sun News-Pictorial, was launched by Hugh Dennison as "a morning tabloid with a light touch and heavy with photographs." publication. It would merge with The Herald, effective October 8, 1990.[34]
  • The Treaty of Kars was ratified in Yerevan, setting the boundary between Turkey and the Armenian Soviet Socialist Republic and the Georgian Soviet Socialist Republic, which would continue as the Turkish-Soviet boundary afterward.[35]

September 12, 1922 (Tuesday)

September 13, 1922 (Wednesday)

September 14, 1922 (Thursday)

September 15, 1922 (Friday)

September 16, 1922 (Saturday)

September 17, 1922 (Sunday)

September 18, 1922 (Monday)

  • The Turkish Army completed the "Great Offensive" (Büyük Taarruz), the three-week final push to rid Asia Minor of Greek occupational forces, winning the last battles of the Greco-Turkish War with the capture of Artake (Erdek) and Pegaea (Biga).
  • Hungary was admitted to the League of Nations.[45]
  • The Canadian government, led by William Lyon Mackenzie King, informed Britain that authority from Parliament would be required before a Canadian force would be sent to defend the Dardanelles.[70]
  • The 47 miners trapped in the Argonaut Mine in Jackson, California on August 27 were found dead, twenty-two days after the August 27 accident.[71] The recovery team from the U.S. Bureau of Mines found that the miners had built a wall and stuffed it with their clothing in an attempt to make an airtight block of carbon monoxide 4,350 feet (1,330 m) below the surface.[72]
  • The engagement of the Germany's deposed former Kaiser, Wilhelm II, to Hermine Reuss of Greiz was announced. The news was neither popular among his sons nor within monarchist circles, who found it distasteful that he remarry only a year after the death of his first wife.[73][74]
  • The New York Yankees defeated the St. Louis Browns, 3 to 2, to win a three-game series at St. Louis that ultimately decided the pennant winner of the American League.[75] Going into the game, the Yankees had a record of 87-56 and the Browns 87-57.[76] At season's end, the Yankees were 94-60 and the Browns 93-61.[77][page needed] St. Louis first baseman George Sisler went hitless, ending his then-AL record streak at 41 games.

September 19, 1922 (Tuesday)

September 20, 1922 (Wednesday)

  • The United States Senate fell 4 votes shy of the two-thirds majority required to override President Harding's veto of the Soldier's Bonus Bill.[81] despite Harding's own prediction that the bill would be passed anyway. The House of Representatives had voted overwhelmingly, 258 to 54, to override the veto. In the Senate, with only 72 senators present and 48 votes necessary for the two-thirds requirement, the vote to override was 44 to 28.[82]
  • A press conference was held in New York to announce the formation of a new company, with a one million dollar initial investment, to market and develop "a process of coloring motion pictures in their natural tints," invented by chemical engineer Daniel Frost Comstock of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. The company, called Techni Color, Inc., would become the dominant supplier for color film during most of the 20th century. Reporters were invited to a private showing of a demonstration film to take place the next day, and a public display was promised for October.[83]
  • In Paris, French Prime Minister Raymond Poincaré, British Foreign Secretary Lord Curzon and Italian diplomat Carlo Sforza met to discuss the Chanak Crisis.[84]
  • Born: Leslie Buck, Slovak-born American businessman and inventor of the Anthora coffee cup popular in Greek-owned coffee shops in New York City; as Laszlo Büch, in Chust, Czechoslovakia (present-day Khust, Ukraine) (d. 2010)[citation needed]

September 21, 1922 (Thursday)

September 22, 1922 (Friday)

  • In a bout for boxing's world light heavyweight championship, held in Paris between title holder Georges Carpentier of France and Louis Mbarick Fall (who fought under the name "Battling Siki") of Senegal, Siki was supposed to lose on purpose in return for not being injured by Carpentier. When Carpentier knocked Siki down in the fifth round, Siki knocked Carpentier out in the sixth round and (after a disqualification by the referee that was reversed by the ringside judges), Siki became the new world champion.[citation needed]
  • Turkish nationalists seized Ezine, Çanakkale in the Allied neutral zone of Turkey.[92]
  • The Cable Act (named for its sponsor, Congressman John L. Cable) was signed into law in the United States, allowing an American woman who married a non-U.S. citizen to keep her citizenship if her husband was eligible to become a citizen.[93]
  • The existence of Dorothy Ruth, one-year-old daughter of Babe Ruth, became public knowledge for the first time following weeks of sightings of Babe and wife Helen with the child around the New York hotel where they lived. Helen claimed that it had been kept a secret from the public because the baby had been ill since birth, but the truth was that the child was the product of one of Babe's extramarital affairs.[94][95]
  • Born:

September 23, 1922 (Saturday)

  • The U.S. Army airship C-2 completed the first transcontinental airship flight across the United States, arriving at Ross Field in Arcadia, California after having set off from Langley Field in Virginia on September 14.[96]
  • After three days of discussion in Paris the representatives of France, Great Britain and Italy sent Turkey a proposal to hold a conference for a peaceful settlement of the Chanak Crisis.[97]

September 24, 1922 (Sunday)

September 25, 1922 (Monday)

September 26, 1922 (Tuesday)

September 27, 1922 (Wednesday)

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Former King Constantine, new King George II of Greece
  • King Constantine of Greece abdicated the throne in the wake of Greece's defeat in the Greco-Turkish War. He stepped down in favor of his son, George II and the Greek cabinet resigned.[111][112] Constantine had previously abdicated in 1917 in favor of another son, Alexander, then returned to the throne in 1920 upon Alexander's death.
  • Ireland's parliament, the Dáil, voted to approve the "Special Powers Act", authorizing the Irish National Army to establish trials and to impose death sentences for activity in opposition to the Anglo-Irish Treaty.[113][114]
  • The first 3D film, The Power of Love, premiered at the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles.[115] The silent film, made with a stereoscopic camera with the Anaglyph 3D system (one red lens and one green lens filming from different angles), was rendered in three dimensions with the use of spectacles with two different lenses. The finale consisted of two different endings showing at the same time, with the viewer given the option of closing one eye in order to see a happy ending or a tragic ending.
  • Born: Mikhail Shuydin, Soviet Russian comedian and circus entertainer; in Kazachy, RSFSR (present-day Russia) (d. 1983)[citation needed]
  • Died: C. Michie Smith, 68, Scottish astronomer (b. 1854)[citation needed]

September 28, 1922 (Thursday)

  • A bolt of lightning struck an arsenal of explosives and the blast killed 144 people at the Falconara Fort, located in Italy near La Spezia.[116][117] According to the initial account from the Associated Press, the blast "destroyed everything within a radius of ten miles" after 1,500 tons of explosives went off despite being stored in deep tunnels.
  • Raisuli, leader of Moroccan rebels, surrendered to Spanish authorities after decades of living outside their reach.[118]
  • Reisenweber's Cafe, one of the largest and most popular restaurants and nightclubs in New York City, was closed permanently after being found to have violated the Prohibition Volstead Act for continuing to serve liquor to its patrons.[119]
  • Born:
  • Died: William J. Seymour, 52, African-American Pentecostal preacher and evangelist; died from a heart attack (b. 1870)[citation needed]

September 29, 1922 (Friday)

September 30, 1922 (Saturday)

  • In the wake of the capture by the Turkish Army recaptured the city of Kydoniae (renamed Ayvalık) from Greece, Greek Orthodox priests in the city waited for evacuation by ship on the recommendation of their superior, the Metropolitan Bishop Gregory Orologas.[123] The group was arrested at the harbor by order of the Turkish occupational force, and the assembled priests were executed three days later.
  • Sotirios Krokidas became the interim Prime Minister of Greece following the overthrow of the government.[citation needed]
  • The New York Yankees clinched the American League pennant with a 3–1 win over the Boston Red Sox, finishing one game ahead of the second-place St. Louis Browns.[124]

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