October 1921

October 1, 1921 (Saturday)

  • New York City's dockworkers and longshoremen walked out on strike after disagreeing with their union leaders over the extent of a wage cut.[1]
  • An earthquake struck near Elsinore, Utah, prompting fears of the end of the world. The quakes also rocked the towns of Richfield and Monroe.[2]
  • The city of Freital, located in the Saxony state of Germany, was created by the merger of the villages of Deuben, Potschappel and Döhlen.[3]
  • French Army Lieutenant Georges Kirsch set a new speed record, flying 300 kilometres (190 mi) in one hour, 4:39.2, averaging 279 kilometres per hour (173 mph) in winning the Coupe Deutsch de la Meurthe airplane race.[4] Joseph Sadi-Lecointe crashed after an apparent bird strike.[5]
  • Born: James Whitmore, U.S. actor, in White Plains, New York[6] (died 2009)
  • Died: Youlan, 37, Chinese Princess-Consort and the birth mother (in 1906) of the last Emperor of China, Puyi, committed suicide by swallowing opium.[7]

October 2, 1921 (Sunday)

  • Georges Clemenceau, unveiling a war memorial in his home village, answered critics who had accused him of having sacrificed the rights of France to "the policy of alliances".[8]
  • Guatemala's legislature ratified the four-nation treaty to complete the formation of the Federation of Central America with Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador, though Costa Rica had still not ratified. The new federation came into existence on October 10.[1]
  • While on a voyage from Fairbanks to Tolovana, Alaska, with 21 crewmen but no passengers or cargo aboard, the 495-gross register ton, U.S. 149.6-foot (45.6 m) passenger ship Tanana, a sternwheel paddle steamer, hit a submerged snag on the Tanana River 1 mile (1.6 km) above Minto. While attempting to beach, it sank in 6 feet (1.8 m) of water.[9]
  • In the Italian city of Modena, Fascists and Socialists fought on the streets during riots.[1]
  • Born: Edmund Crispin (pen name of Robert Bruce Montgomery), British crime writer and composer (died 1978)[10]
  • Died:

October 3, 1921 (Monday)

October 4, 1921 (Tuesday)

  • Swedish Prime Minister Oscar von Sydow and his cabinet resigned in the wake of recent parliamentary elections.[17] Von Sydow was succeeded by former Prime Minister Hjalmar Branting, who organized a new government on October 13.
  • Rioting broke out in London following a peaceful march by 10,000 unemployed people to Hyde Park, escorted by 500 policemen who controlled side traffic. At Hyde Park, parade leaders announced that the group should march through Trafalgar Square to the London County Council building, and an estimated 3,000 people proceeded on the unauthorized march. When speakers attempted to climb on the monument to Admiral Nelson, the police rushed in and charged the crowd, and rioting began.[18]
  • Born: Francisco Morales-Bermúdez, President of Peru from 1975 to 1980; in Lima.[19]
  • Died: Madeline Davis, 23, an inexperienced amateur stunt flier, during an attempt to become the first woman to transfer from a moving automobile to an airplane flying overhead via a rope ladder, at Long Branch, New Jersey, United States. Davis lost her grip on the ladder and hit the ground at a speed of about 45 miles per hour (72 kilometres per hour).[20][21]

October 5, 1921 (Wednesday)

October 6, 1921 (Thursday)

October 7, 1921 (Friday)

  • The Burgenland dispute between Austria and Hungary was submitted by the League of Nations for mediation by Italy.[1]
  • China responded to Japan's demands for Shantung province (now Shandong), rejecting them completely.[36]
  • The U.S. Army tested a new type of flashless explosive power to make night artillery invisible, and made the first public demonstration of "the world's greatest gun", the new 16 inches (410 mm) diameter cannon that could fire an artillery shell 20 miles (32 km).[37]

October 8, 1921 (Saturday)

  • The British Laird Line passenger ship SS Rowan was rammed from astern by the U.S. ship West Camak in fog in the North Channel. While passengers were mustered on deck, another UK ship, Clan Malcolm, coming to aid in the rescue, rammed the Rowan from starboard, causing it to sink with the loss of 22 of the 97 people on board.[38][39][40]
  • The first live radio broadcast of an American football game took place as KDKA of Pittsburgh covered the University of Pittsburgh Panthers defeating the University of West Virginia Mountaineers, 21 to 13.[41] 1) p. 116
  • The first "Sweetest Day" took place in the U.S. in candy shops across the United States .[42]
  • Died: Michael F. Farley, 58, former U.S. Representative for New York, died three days after contracting anthrax while shaving.[43] Farley had nicked himself with a razor and had been using a contaminated shaving brush that infected the cut in his neck, and became progressively worse.

October 9, 1921 (Sunday)

October 10, 1921 (Monday)

October 11, 1921 (Tuesday)

  • The Anglo-Irish peace talks opened in London with British Prime Minister David Lloyd George, Lord Birkenhead, Winston Churchill, Laming Worthington-Evans, Hamar Greenwood and Gordon Hewart for the UK, and Arthur Griffith, Michael Collins, R.C. Barton, E.J. Duggan and Gavan Duffy for Ireland.[52]
  • Born: Henry G. Marsh, one of the first African-American mayors of a city of at least 100,000 people (Saginaw, Michigan from 1967 to 1969); in Knoxville, Tennessee (d. 2011) [53]

October 12, 1921 (Wednesday)

  • The League of Nations reached a decision on the division of Upper Silesia between Poland and Germany, but did not reveal the terms.[54]
  • Born: Albert Blaustein, American lawyer who assisted in the drafting of constitutions in 13 world nations; in Brooklyn (d. 1994) [55]
  • Died:

October 13, 1921 (Thursday)

October 14, 1921 (Friday)

  • By a margin of only four votes, the U.S. House of Representatives narrowly rejected a plan, proposed by New York Congressman Isaac Siegel, to increase its number from 435 to 460. The vote was 142 for, and 146 against, a plan to direct the House Census Committee to apportion representatives based on the 1920 U.S. Census. A second plan, offered by Massachusetts Representative George H. Tinkham, would have reduced the number of House members from 435 to 425, with the number would have been based on the number of registered voters in a state rather than its population, with the intent as a deterrent to the disenfranchisement of African-American voters in the South. By voice vote, the Tinkham plan (which would have taken 33 seats away from Southern states with literacy tests and poll taxes), was overwhelmingly rejected as well.[62]
  • The lives of all 8 of the crew of the U.S. schooner Maplefield were saved when a freighter, the United Fruit company transport, the Ulua, spotted the distressed vessel while in a heavy storm about 60 miles (97 km) from Pensacola, Florida. According to the crew of theMaplefield, which was staying afloat partly because of its cargo of lumber, the schooner had been drifting out of control for 48 hours in a gale, and had been hours away from striking rocks and sinking.[63]

October 15, 1921 (Saturday)

October 16, 1921 (Sunday)

  • Babe Ruth, the highest-paid baseball player in the world, defied a threat of suspension by Baseball Commissioner Kenesaw M. Landis, by appearing in an unauthorized exhibition baseball game in Buffalo, New York against the "Polish Nationals of Buffalo", along with fellow New York Yankees Bob Meusel and Bill Piercy. Two other teammates, Carl Mays and Wally Schang, withdrew from the contest after Landis had issued his order, and Buffalo's minor league baseball park, used by the International League, changed plans to host the game. Ruth hit one home run in the game and his team won, 4 to 2.[67][68]

October 17, 1921 (Monday)

The Blue Boy
  • The Blue Boy, the most famous of the paintings of British artist Thomas Gainsborough, was sold at auction to an American art dealer, Joseph Duveen, by the Duke of Westminster. The Daily Telegraph of London commented that "We have seen too much in these stressful times of that rigorous code of national taxation which has shaken the foundations of private ownership in inherited lands and treasures. Some relief may be derived from the fact that it is the generous wont of American millionaires to leave their spoils of European art treasures to public galleries." Duveen bid £170,000 (roughly $809,000 at the exchange rate then of $4.76 to a British Pound, and equivalent to $12,030,000 in 2021). He also bought the Joshua Reynolds painting Sarah Siddons as the Tragic Muse for an additional £30,000 after the Duke of Westminster had declined to sell The Blue Boy by itself for £150,000.[69]
  • The U.S. Congress voted to bestow the Medal of Honor to the unidentified British Army soldier who had been interred near London in The Tomb of The Unknown Warrior.[70][71] King George V announced in a message to General John J. Pershing that the Unknown Soldier selected by the U.S. would receive Britain's highest award, the Victoria Cross, on Armistice Day.
  • Brazil's President Epitácio Pessoa addressed the Brazilian Congress on the subject of the crisis in the coffee industry and proposed new measures to protect Brazilian producers.[72]
  • Born: George Mackay Brown, Scottish poet and author, in Stromness, Orkney (died 1996)[73]
  • Died: Yaa Asantewaa, 81, former Ashanti queen and military leader who led the War of the Golden Stool against British colonial forces in 1900.[74][75]

October 18, 1921 (Tuesday)

October 19, 1921 (Wednesday)

  • The Prime Minister of Portugal was assassinated along with the Republic's founder and first president, and other members of the government, by rioters in Lisbon angry over the abolition of the monarchy of Portugal. Prime Minister António Granjo and former President António Machado Santos were murdered after their residences were breached. Two former officials, Navy Minister José Carlos da Maia was killed as well.[83][84] General Manuel Maria Coelho was sworn in later in the evening as the fifth person to serve as Prime Minister in 1921.[85]
  • A packaged explosive, in the form of wrapped mail delivery containing a "Mills bomb" — a British-made fragmentation hand grenade — was delivered to the office of the U.S. Ambassador to France, Myron T. Herrick. Because of a busy schedule, Herrick was delayed in opening the registered delivery, marked "personal", and took it to his home. Herrick's valet, British Army veteran Lawrence Blanchard, avoided being killed after loosening the wrapping of a package at Herrick's home, because he recognized the sound of a spring and whirring characteristic of the grenade. Blanchard had the presence of mind to throw the package into an empty room, but still caught a piece of shrapnel in his leg.[86]
  • Born: Gunnar Nordahl, Swedish footballer and manager, in Hörnefors (died 1993)[87]

October 20, 1921 (Thursday)

  • Charles, the last Emperor of Austria-Hungary, arrived in Hungary on an airplane flight from Switzerland in an attempted coup d'etat. Charles, who had been Emperor Karl I of Austria and King Karoly IV of Hungary within the dual monarchy, landed in western Hungary near Sopron (formerly Ödenburg) with former Empress Zita, met up with Hungarian Army troops who were still loyal to the monarchy, and then advanced to the city of Szombathely (formerly Steinamanger).[88]
  • The Allied Powers notified Germany and Poland of their decision on the division of Upper Silesia.[68]
  • The U.S. cargo ship Santa Rita departed New Orleans, Louisiana, for Italy, and was lost with all hands. It was last seen off of the coast of Key West, Florida.[89]

October 21, 1921 (Friday)

October 22, 1921 (Saturday)

  • Germany's cabinet resigned after the League of Nations announced its decision to award part of Silesia to Poland.[96]
  • The League of Nations announced an agreement between the 10 major members of the League declaring the Aland Islands, recently awarded to Finland, neutral.[68]
  • Assassins in Bulgaria shot and killed Alexander Dimitrov, the kingdom's Minister of War, along with his chauffeur and two other passengers in an attack on his automobile in an ambush near Kyustendil, a resort town southwest of Sofia.[97]
  • Born: Georges Brassens, French singer-songwriter, in Sète (d. 1981)[98]

October 23, 1921 (Sunday)

  • Roughly 350,000 union members among railroad clerks, freight handlers, express employees and station employees voted against the proposed October 30 strike by the "Big Five" labor unions.[99]
  • Former Austro-Hungarian Emperor Charles I, seeking to reclaim the throne of Hungary, arrived with his troops within five miles (8 km) of the capital at Budapest, and some dispatches reported that he had overthrown the regency of Admiral Miklos Horthy.[100]
  • A Category 4 hurricane swept into Florida’s Tampa Bay, killing at least eight people and causing $10 million of damage [101] (equivalent to $145 million in 2021).[102][103]
  • Born: Denise Duval, French operatic soprano, in Paris (died 2016)[104]

October 24, 1921 (Monday)

  • The coup attempt by former King Károly of Hungary was put down by the Regent, Admiral Miklós Horthy.[105] Károly, the former Emperor Charles I of Austria-Hungary, was placed under arrest along with his wife Zita after being caught by government troops near the village of Tata and interned at an abbey in Tihany [106] and would eventually be sent back into exile on the Portuguese island of Madeira.[107]
  • In a ceremony in the French city of Châlons-en-Champagne, the unidentified soldier to be interred in the United States Tomb of the Unknown Soldier at Arlington National Cemetery was selected from four possible persons. U.S. Army Sergeant Edward F. Younger, who had been awarded the Distinguished Service Cross for valor during World War One, was tasked with picking from four identical caskets, and placed flowers on the third from the left.[108][109][110]
  • Elections were held in Norway for the 150 seats of the unicameral Storting. The coalition between the liberal Frisinnede Venstre party of Prime Minister Otto Blehr and the conservative Høyre party of former premier Otto B. Halvorsen, retained control with 57 seats.[111]
  • U.S. Treasury Secretary Andrew Mellon announced new regulations concerning physician prescription of alcohol. Doctors could prescribe up to 2½ gallons of beer or two quarts of wine for medicinal purposes for as often as necessary, but whiskey and other alcohol were limited to one pint, nor more often than 10 days.[112] The action came at the same time that the U.S. Senate was considering a bill, passed by the House of Representatives in August, to prohibit beer from being prescribed as a medicine.

October 25, 1921 (Tuesday)

October 26, 1921 (Wednesday)

  • French Prime Minister Aristide Briand received a vote of confidence in the Chamber of Deputies, 338 to 172, days before his scheduled October 29 departure to the United States to represent France at the Washington Disarmament Conference.[118]
  • German Chancellor Joseph Wirth formed a new cabinet and received a 232 to 132 vote of confidence from the Reichstag.[119]
  • Edward, Prince of Wales, left the UK for an eight-month tour of India and Japan. The future King Edward VIII boarded the Royal Navy battle cruiser HMS Renown at Portsmouth on a voyage to Bombay (now Mumbai). The crew of Renown included as a midshipman Prince Charles, Count of Flanders, the second son of King Albert I of Belgium.[120]
  • The Chicago Theatre, now the oldest surviving grand movie palace in the United States, opened with The Sign on the Door, starring Norma Talmadge and Lew Cody.[121]
  • U.S. President Warren G. Harding spoke at the 50th anniversary of the founding of Birmingham, Alabama, to an audience of black and white residents, declaring that there must be equality between the races in "political and economic life" but that the black and white needed to remain segregated.[122] U.S. Senator Pat Harrison of Mississippi said later, "The President's speech was unfortunate... Of course, every rational being desires to see the negro protected in his life, liberty and property. I believe in giving him every right under the law to which he is entitled, but to encourage the negro... to strive through every political avenue to be placed upon equality with the whites, is a blow to the whole white civilization of this country that will take years to combat." Harrison added, "If the President's theory... that the black person, either man or woman, should have full economic and political rights with the white man or white woman, then that means that the black man can strive to become President of the United States... It means white women should work under black men in public places, as well as in all trades and professions... Place the negro upon political and economic equality with the white man or woman and the friction between the races will be aggravated." [123]
  • Born: Frances Scott Fitzgerald, American journalist, to novelists F. Scott Fitzgerald and Zelda Fitzgerald (d. 1986)

October 27, 1921 (Thursday)

  • Less than 72 hours before U.S. railroad employees were scheduled to go on a nationwide strike, the executive committee of the "Big Five" transportation unions (for engineers, trainmen, firemen, conductors, and switchmen) met at the Hotel Morrison in Chicago and, after a four hour conference that ended at 11:30 at night, announced that the strike was called off. [124] Speaking for the committee, L. E. Sheppard of the Order of Railway Conductors said that the unions had backed down "due to the growing public opinion that the strike would be against the Labor Board, and consequently the Government, and not against the railroads." Sheppard added "We called this strike to gain certain rights to which our men were entitled. It soon became evident, however, that the roads were succeeding in their misleading propaganda to the effect that we really would be striking against the Government." [125]
  • U.S. Representative Thomas L. Blanton of Texas was unanimously (203 to 113) censured by the House of Representatives for reading "unspeakable, vile, foul, filthy, profane, blasphemous and obscene" language in to the Congressional Record. The language, partially redacted by the Government Printing Office as "G__d D___n your black heart, you ought to have it torn out of you, you u____ s_____ of a b_____. You and the Public Printer has no sense. You k_____ his a____ and he is a d_____d fool for letting you do it.".[126] A motion to expel Blanton from Congress was 203 in favor and 113 against, eight votes short of the required two-thirds majority for expulsion.[127]
  • The railroad unions announced that the planned November 1 strike was called off.[68]
  • Following the example of the Chamber of Deputies, the French Senate voted its confidence in Prime Minister Aristide Briand by a margin of 301 to 29, on the eve of his departure for the Washington Disarmament Conference.[68]
  • Poland and Germany both announced their acceptance of the division of Upper Silesia made by the League of Nations. [128]
  • Died: Yan Fu, 67, Chinese scholar and translator[129]

October 28, 1921 (Friday)

  • The first ever gubernatorial recall election in the U.S. was held in North Dakota, United States, after the incumbent, Lynn Frazier, was blamed for an economic depression in the agricultural sector. [130] Frazier, who had won election as a candidate of the Non-Partisan League, was recalled from office before completing his term in a vote that not only determined whether he would continue in office, but that elected his replacement, Ragnvald A. Nestos. Frazier lost to Nestos by a margin of about 97,000 votes to 106,000. [131]
  • At least 35 people drowned in Canada in the town of Britannia Beach, British Columbia, after floods swept away fifty houses into the Howe Sound. [132]
  • The body of an unidentified Italian Army soldier, killed in World War One, was selected from among 11 sets of remains to be interred in Italy's Tomb of the Unknown Soldier (Tomba del Milite Ignoto).[133]
  • Died: Ahmed Raza Khan Barelvi ("Ala-Hazrat"), 65, British Indian Islamic scholar [134]

October 29, 1921 (Saturday)

McMillin scoring for Centre against Harvard

October 30, 1921 (Sunday)

October 31, 1921 (Monday)

  • The International Women's Sports Federation (Fédération Sportive Féminine Internationale or FSFI) was founded in Paris at a convention attended by delegates from France, the UK, the U.S., Italy and Czechoslovakia. Alice Milliat of France after the International Olympic Committee had refused to include track and field events for women in the 1924 Olympics.[141]
  • The British House of Commons voted its approval of Prime Minister David Lloyd George and his government's policy toward Ireland, 439 to 43.[68]
  • The Mauritius-registered ship Dersingham, travelling from Singapore to Port Louis, was in communication for the last time. It was subsequently presumed to have foundered in the Indian Ocean with the loss of all on board.[142]
  • Died: William Egan, 37, American gangster, was killed in a drive-by shooting in front of a tavern that he owned, prompting a war between organized crime gangs in St. Louis.[143]

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  86. "Bomb for Herrick Wounds His Valet in His Paris Home", The New York Times, October 20, 1921, p. 1
  87. "Gunnar Nordahl: The Swede who demolished Italian defences". The Football Experience. Retrieved 15 November 2019.
  88. "Charles in Hungary Backed by Troops, Seeks Throne Again", The New York Times, October 23, 1921, p. 1
  89. "Reinsurance rates". The Times (42903). London. 14 December 1921. col B, p. 20.
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  93. "Victor McKusick, 86, Dies; Medical Genetics Pioneer", by Lawrence K. Altman, The New York Times, July 24, 2008
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  96. "German Cabinet Resigns Office— Quits as Berliners Get News of Silesian Decision With End of Printers' Strike", The New York Times, October 23, 1921, p. 1
  97. "Bulgarian War Minister Assassinated; His Chauffeur and Two Companions Also Slain", The New York Times, October 23, 1921, p. 1
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  100. "Charles Wins First Battle for Throne; Moves on Capital, May Have Entered It; Horthy Troops Flee or Join Ex-Ruler", The New York Times, October 24, 1921, p. 1
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  106. "Charles and Zita Await Their Fate, Interned in Abbey", The New York Times, October 26, 1921, p. 1
  107. "Charles Carried into Exile on a British Ship As Napoleon Was; Zita to Bear Another Heir", The New York Times, November 5, 1921
  108. "50th Infantry man Selects WWI Unknown Soldier", 1st Battalion 50th Infantry Association Website
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  110. "Unknown Soldier Chosen in France— American Corporal Designates Him by Placing Flowers on One of Four Coffins", The New York Times, October 25, 1921, p. 13
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  116. "Bat Masterson Dies at Editor's Desk— Sporting Writer and Last of Oldtime Western Gun Fighters Was 67", The New York Times, October 26, 1921, p. 14
  117. "Briand Victorious in French Chamber; Sails on Saturday", The New York Times, October 27, 1921, p. 1
  118. "Wirth Gets Cabinet, Reichstag Backs It", The New York Times, October 27, 1921, p. 6
  119. "Queen Sheds Tears As Wales Departs", The New York Times, October 27, 1921, p. 9
  120. "Historic Theatres & Movie Palaces of Balaban and Katz: The Chicago Theatre, A Brief History". Uptown Chicago Resources (online). Compass Rose Cultural Crossroads, Inc. 2007. Retrieved June 13, 2014.
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  122. "Praise and Assail Harding Negro Talk— Harrison Severest Critic", The New York Times, October 28, 1921, p. 4
  123. "Railroad Strike Is Called Off by Unions' Unanimous Vote on Basis of Labor Board Putting Wage Cases After Rules; Found They Were Going to Fight Government, Leaders Say", The New York Times, October 28, 1921, p. 1
  124. "Strike Was Called Off in Deference To Public Opinion and the Administration", The New York Times, October 28, 1921, p. 1
  125. "But is the record complete? A case of censorship of the Congressional Record", by Robert D. Stevens, Government Publications Review 9 (1982) pp. 75-80
  126. "Blanton Censured, Falls Later in Faint— House Is Unanimous for Formal Rebuke After Expulsion Proposal Fails", The New York Times, October 28, 1921, p. 1
  127. "Germany Accepts Silesian Decision", The New York Times, October 28, 1921, p. 10
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  129. "North Dakota to Vote October 28 on Recall Aimed at Gov. Frazier and Townley League", The New York Times, September 17, 1921, p. 1
  130. "North Dakota Vote Ousts League Rule", The New York Times, October 31, 1921, p. 1
  131. "Flood Wrecks Town; 35 to 60 Drown", The New York Times, October 30, 1921, p. 1
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  134. "Largest Throng Ever in Stadium Except for Harvard-Yale Clash to See Crimson and Kentucky Colonels Fight for Supremacy Today; Crowd of 45,000 to See Stadium Clash", Boston Globe, October 29, 1921, p. 12
  135. "Centre Wins Battle 6 to 0— McMillin's Thrilling Run Nets Lone Score— Penalty Stops Harvard at End", Boston Sunday Globe, October 30, 1921, p. 1
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  138. "Central America to Vote— First Congress of New Republic Will Be Chosen Sunday", The New York Times, October 27, 1921, p. 5
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