Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

August 1922

Month of 1922 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

August 1922
Remove ads

The following events occurred in August 1922:

More information Su, Mo ...
Thumb
August 22, 1922: Provisional Irish Free State chairman Michael Collins killed in an ambush during the Irish Civil War
Thumb
August 4, 1922: All telephones in the United States cease for one minute of silence in honor of telephone inventor Alexander Graham Bell
Remove ads

August 1, 1922 (Tuesday)

  • Britain published the Balfour Note, which declared that Britain would give up reparations claims as well as claims on other Allies to the extent that the United States would do the same with respect to Britain's debts.[1] The Note was met with great anger by the Americans for their being made to appear as greedy and an obstacle to international recovery.[2][3]
  • Forty people were killed and 50 injured when two trains carrying pilgrims to Lourdes collided between Agen and Tarbes, near Auch, France. In all, almost 500 passengers were on the two trains, which were both climbing uphill to Tarbes and Lourdes. According to the investigation, "the first train was too heavily laden and unable to climb a sharp gradient" and "the driver decided to return to Agen and ran down the hill backward" without regard to the second train.[4][5]
  • The House of Commons voted to expel MP Horatio Bottomley, the editor of John Bull magazine and a representative of the Hackney South constituency, after Bottomley's May 23 conviction on felony charges of fraud.[6]
  • The International Committee on Intellectual Cooperation, and an advisory organization for the League of Nations to promote the sharing of research findings between nations, held its first session.[citation needed]
  • Born: Edith Konecky, American feminist novelist; as Edith Rubin, in Brooklyn, New York City, United States (d. 2019)[citation needed]
Remove ads

August 2, 1922 (Wednesday)

Remove ads

August 3, 1922 (Thursday)

Remove ads

August 4, 1922 (Friday)

Remove ads

August 5, 1922 (Saturday)

Remove ads

August 6, 1922 (Sunday)

Remove ads

August 7, 1922 (Monday)

Remove ads

August 8, 1922 (Tuesday)

Remove ads

August 9, 1922 (Wednesday)

August 10, 1922 (Thursday)

Remove ads

August 11, 1922 (Friday)

Remove ads

August 12, 1922 (Saturday)

Thumb
Mitchelstown Castle before its destruction
Thumb
Arthur Griffith a month before his death

August 13, 1922 (Sunday)

August 14, 1922 (Monday)

August 15, 1922 (Tuesday)

August 16, 1922 (Wednesday)

August 17, 1922 (Thursday)

  • Forest fires ravaged northeastern Minnesota, leaving six people dead and hundreds homeless.[75]
Thumb
Krishnamurti
  • Jiddu Krishnamurti, an Indian resident of the U.S., began what he called " an intense 'life-changing' experience", becoming ill and then semi-conscious, awakening with a new philosophy.[76] For the rest of his life, he would tour the world, write books and attract followers to his Krishnamurti Foundation schools in India and the United States until his death in 1986.
  • Father Vladimir Abrikosov of Russia, who had converted from Russian Orthodoxy to Catholicism and then ordained a Roman Catholic priest, was arrested by Soviet authorities for persuading other Russians to become Catholic. Initially sentenced to death, Abrikosov was spared the death penalty and on September 29, he would be expelled along with 150 other intellectuals and live in exile until his death in 1966.
  • Sir Gerald Summers, a British Army officer, was appointed by the Colonial Office as the new Commissioner of British Somaliland (now the unrecognized Republic of Somaliland portion of Somalia bordering the Gulf of Aden). He would govern for three years until his death in 1925.
  • U.S. Bureau of Prohibition agents began a crackdown on hip flasks, small metal containers used by persons wishing to bring their own liquor with them to a social occasion, giving notice to resort and restaurant operators in New York City that they could be held liable for not prohibiting patrons from bringing alcohol into their establishments.[77]
  • Born:

August 18, 1922 (Friday)

  • The day after Arthur Maertens set a record by keeping a glider aloft for more than an hour at a gliding competition in Germany[78] Frederich Hentzen was able to remain in the air for more than two hours over the Wasserkuppe using the Hannover H 1 Vampyr.[79]
  • President Harding addressed Congress on the industrial crisis in the country caused by the railway and coal strikes. He urged the implementation of his recommendations to confront them, which included the creation of an independent federal commission to investigate conditions in the coal industry as well a national coal agency (the Federal Coal Commission) aimed at the prevention of profiteering.[80]
  • Died:
    • Dame Geneviève Ward, 85, American-born English stage actress and opera soprano
    • Louis Kramer, 74, American baseball executive and the last president of the American Association, which had challenged the National League as a rival until its demise at the end of the 1891 season.

August 19, 1922 (Saturday)

August 20, 1922 (Sunday)

August 21, 1922 (Monday)

  • French Prime Minister Raymond Poincaré said that France would not consent to a moratorium on German reparations unless the country's mines and national forests were placed in Allied hands as a guarantee.[85]
  • George Bernard Shaw told the Chicago Tribune, "Everyone in Ireland is tired of the present political situation. I don't know what Éamon de Valera and Erskine Childers are after. When popular opinion turned against them they should have accepted the popular verdict and then tried to convert the Irish people to their views."[86]
  • Born: Mel Fisher, treasure hunter, in Indiana (d. 1998)

August 22, 1922 (Tuesday)

August 23, 1922 (Wednesday)

  • The crew of the American freighter SS Philadelphia mutinied after the ship had been prohibited from leaving the Bay of Naples by Italian customs officials, who had blocked it because of nonpayment for repairs.[92] The men ransacked and burned the ship, rendering it a total loss.[93]
  • The Federación Peruana de Futbol (FPF), the national governing body for soccer football in the South American nation of Peru, was founded in Lima with Claudio Martínez Bodero of the Atletico Chalaco team as its first president. The FPF took over the administration of the Liga Peruana de Foot Ball, which held a tournament from 1912 to 1922.
  • The city of Riverbank, California, located near Modesto, was incorporated in Stanislaus County. Its population increased 30-fold between 1930 when it had 803 people, to 2020 and now has a population of almost 25,000.
  • Born: George Kell, baseball player, in Swifton, Arkansas (d. 2009)
  • Died: Albert J. Hopkins, 76, U.S. politician who represented Illinois in Congress from 1885 to 1909, 18 years as Representative and 6 years as U.S. Senator

August 24, 1922 (Thursday)

  • The Ku Klux Klan raided a gathering outside the town of Mer Rouge, Louisiana, kidnapped five white men who were vocal opponents of the Klan and murdered two of them, though the bodies would not be found until December. This led to one of the most famous criminal cases involving the KKK.[94]
  • The German mark began to crash again, falling to 8,000 against 1 British pound or 2,000 to the American dollar.[33][95]
  • On the last day of the glider competition in Germany, Frederich Hentzen kept the Vampyr motorless airplane aloft for more than three hours and maintained an altitude of 1,000 feet (300 m).[96]
  • The body of Michael Collins was brought to Dublin and borne on a gun carriage through the streets as large throngs of mourners watched in silence.[97]
  • Born:
  • Died: William Wilson Talcott, 43, American publisher and former star quarterback, committed suicide by jumping from an excursion boat. His death came on the same day that his wife was released from a mental hospital.

August 25, 1922 (Friday)

Thumb
Cosgrave

August 26, 1922 (Saturday)

August 27, 1922 (Sunday)

August 28, 1922 (Monday)

  • At 5:15 in the afternoon, WEAF of New York City, owned by the Western Electric subsidiary of AT&T, made the first-ever broadcast of an advertisement, a radio commercial for a newly opened Queensboro Apartments complex in the Jackson Heights neighborhood of Queens.[114][115][116] A man identified as Mr. Blackwell spoke on behalf of Queensboro Corporation, which had paid $50 for 15 minutes of airtime on WEAF and used it to advocate suburban living and to promote the purchase of the rent-to-own apartments in Jackson Heights. Referring to the advantages of an "apartment-home" where one could "enjoy all the latest conveniences and contrivances demanded by the housewife and yet have all of the outdoor life that the city dweller yearns for but has deludedly supposed could only be obtained thru purchase of a house in the country," and closed with the statement "You owe it to yourself and you owe it to your family to leave the hemmed-in, sombre-hued, artificial apartment life of the congested city section and enjoy what nature intended you enjoy."[114]
  • Michael Collins was given a military funeral and buried in Glasnevin Cemetery.[117]
  • Died: Prince Gaston of Orleans, 80, French-born grandson of King Louis Philippe of France who became an officer in the Army of Spain during its war against Morocco and later in the Army of Brazil in the war against Paraguay, and who had been the groom of Isabel, Princess Imperial of Brazil in Brazil's first and only royal wedding.

August 29, 1922 (Tuesday)

August 30, 1922 (Wednesday)

Thumb
Greek General Trikupis surrenders his sword to Turkey's Mustafa Kemal Pasha.[122]

August 31, 1922 (Thursday)

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads