September 1923

Month of 1923 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The following events occurred in September 1923:

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September 1, 1923: Earthquake kills over 100,000 people in Japan, leaves two million homeless
September 8, 1923: Seven U.S. Navy destroyers wrecked during exercises
September 14, 1923: Champion Dempsey knocked out of the ring by challenger Firpo

September 1, 1923 (Saturday)

September 2, 1923 (Sunday)

  • Admiral Yamamoto Gonnohyōe was installed as Prime Minister of Japan as part of an "emergency cabinet" installed the day after the earthquake, and to fill the vacancy left by the August 24 death of Katō Tomosaburō.[citation needed]
  • The Kantō Massacre of non-Japanese ethnic minorities began in Japan in the aftermath of the earthquake the day before, starting with vigilante groups targeting Korean residents on the island of Honshu, at first with the encouragement of local police, and then with the participation of police and the Imperial Japanese Army. An estimated 6,000 people of Korean, Chinese or Ryukyuan descent were killed after rumors were spread that minorities were seeking to overthrow the Japanese government during the chaos following the earthquake.[5][9][10]
  • A "German Day" rally attended by over 100,000 nationalists was held in Nuremberg to commemorate the 53rd anniversary of victory over the French in the Battle of Sedan. Adolf Hitler and Erich Ludendorff were in attendance as Nazis were among the paraders.[11][12]
  • German Chancellor Gustav Stresemann suggested in a speech in Stuttgart that the passive resistance campaign in the Ruhr should be ended. "Every honest person in the Ruhr district and along the Rhine is longing for the hour when he will again return to work", Stresemann said. "This hour will have to come, and through German productive work the real solution of the conflict can be found. The purpose of passive resistance was to bring about this solution. We are ready to make the greatest material sacrifices, but we are not willing to give up the liberty of German soil."[13]
Chaney as Quasimodo

September 3, 1923 (Monday)

September 4, 1923 (Tuesday)

September 5, 1923 (Wednesday)

September 6, 1923 (Thursday)

Peter II of Yugoslavia as a young boy

September 7, 1923 (Friday)

An Interpol ID card[31]

September 8, 1923 (Saturday)

September 9, 1923 (Sunday)

September 10, 1923 (Monday)

September 11, 1923 (Tuesday)

September 12, 1923 (Wednesday)

September 13, 1923 (Thursday)

September 14, 1923 (Friday)

September 15, 1923 (Saturday)

Spain's Premier Primo de Rivera[56]
Oklahoma's Governor Walton
  • Oklahoma Governor Jack C. Walton declared "absolute martial law" statewide in his fight against the Ku Klux Klan. The official proclamation said that anyone who aided or abetted the Klan would be "deemed to be enemies of the sovereign state of Oklahoma and shall be dealt with by the military forces of the state."[58] Governor Walton announced further that he was suspending the writ of habeas corpus in Tulsa County.
  • Twelve people were killed and many injured in food riots in the German Silesian town of Sorau.[59]
  • In Britain, French socialite Marguerite Alibert was acquitted in her murder trial. On July 10, she had shot and killed her husband, Ali Kamel Fahmy Bey, at the Savoy Hotel in London.[60]
  • The costume adventure film Scaramouche premiered at the Shubert-Belasco Theater in Washington, D.C.[18]
  • Born: Mikhail Tanich, popular Russian songwriter and founder of the group Lesopoval; as Mikhail Tankhilevich, in Taganrog, Russian SFSR, Soviet Union (present-day Russia) (d. 2008)[citation needed]

September 16, 1923 (Sunday)

September 17, 1923 (Monday)

Berkeley homes after the fire

September 18, 1923 (Tuesday)

A 2014 stamp honoring King Michael and Queen Anne

September 19, 1923 (Wednesday)

September 20, 1923 (Thursday)

September 21, 1923 (Friday)

September 22, 1923 (Saturday)

September 23, 1923 (Sunday)

September 24, 1923 (Monday)

September 25, 1923 (Tuesday)

  • The German government, led by Friedrich Ebert, officially ended its campaign of passive resistance against occupying forces.[80] In response, extremist groups, upset over Germany "losing another war", met to discuss overthrow of the government.[81] Nazi Party leader Adolf Hitler met in Munich with the top right-wing leaders who would form the Kampfbund and persuaded them to entrust him as their leader. Ernst Röhm would write later that Hermann Kriebel, Hitler, Hermann Göring of the Sturmabteilung, Adolf Heiss and Joseph Seydel of the Bund Reichskriegsflagge, and Friedrich Weber of the Bund Oberland, conferred on the situation and that "In a magnificent speech lasting two hours and a half, Hitler unraveled a gripping picture of the political situation, and at its conclusion requested us to entrust the full political leadership to him. Tears in his eyes... Heiss extended him his hand and acceded to his request, and Weber followed his example. I was also highly emotional, for I was seeing the concept take shape for which I had yearned for so long. Now I believed that the hour of our liberation was nearer..."[82]
  • The first scheduled passenger airline service by flying boat commenced as British Marine Air Navigation Company began flights with three Supermarine Super Eagle aircraft on flights between Southampton in Britain, and Guernsey, one of the Channel Islands.[83]
  • Born:

September 26, 1923 (Wednesday)

September 27, 1923 (Thursday)

The CB&Q Wreck

September 28, 1923 (Friday)

September 29, 1923 (Saturday)

September 30, 1923 (Sunday)

References

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