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May 1922

Month of 1922 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

May 1922
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The following events occurred in May 1922:

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May 30, 1922: U.S. President Harding dedicates the Lincoln Memorial
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May 24, 1922: Soviet Communist Party leader Vladimir Lenin debilitated by first of several strokes
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Sculpture of Lincoln unveiled[1]
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May 1, 1922 (Monday)

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May 2, 1922 (Tuesday)

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May 3, 1922 (Wednesday)

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General Zhang Zuolin
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General Wu Peifu

May 4, 1922 (Thursday)

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Viktor Kingissepp
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May 5, 1922 (Friday)

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May 6, 1922 (Saturday)

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May 7, 1922 (Sunday)

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May 8, 1922 (Monday)

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May 9, 1922 (Tuesday)

May 10, 1922 (Wednesday)

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May 11, 1922 (Thursday)

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May 12, 1922 (Friday)

May 13, 1922 (Saturday)

May 14, 1922 (Sunday)

May 15, 1922 (Monday)

May 16, 1922 (Tuesday)

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RMS Majestic

May 17, 1922 (Wednesday)

May 18, 1922 (Thursday)

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President Harding on the radio

May 19, 1922 (Friday)

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Representatives of nations at the Genoa Conference
  • The Genoa Conference of 34 nations to discuss economic and political issues ended after six weeks, with a general agreement to resume tying currencies to the gold standard.[79][80]
  • The Committee on Privileges of Britain's House of Lords voted, 20 to 4, to reject the proposal to allow women to sit in the House, a decision that affected 20 women holding Peerages (hereditary titles), and was prompted after the committee had earlier ruled that Lady Rhondda could become a member of the Lords.[81][82]
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A group of Young Pioneers in 1983

May 20, 1922 (Saturday)

May 21, 1922 (Sunday)

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The route of Mallory, Norton and Somervell upper left side[96]

May 22, 1922 (Monday)

  • William J. Twaddell, a member of parliament for Northern Ireland, was shot and killed by the Irish Republican Army while walking to work. Three men followed the M.P. as he walked along Garfield Street in Belfast toward his drapery business on North Street and, "When he was within fifty yards of his premises", the three assailants fired at him with their revolvers, then fled while firing at any pursuers.[101] His death resulted in the arrest of 350 known IRA members during the investigation, but the only person put on trial would be acquitted of all charges.[citation needed]
  • London recorded its hottest May temperature in 50 years with a mark of 32.8 degrees Celsius (91 degrees Fahrenheit).[3][102]
  • An attempt by rebels to overthrow the government of Nicaragua failed after an intervention by U.S. Marines occupying the Central American nation. The rebels, led by General Arcenio Cruz, seized La Loma, a fortress overlooking the capital of Managua but the commander of a detachment of Marines encamped at Campo de Marte approached Cruz and warned him that "the marine force would not hesitate to use its artillery for the protection of American interests, the American Legation and the city"[103] Within eight hours, the rebels surrendered after the American Minister to Nicaragua worked out an agreement with the government to pardon any civilians who had participated in the rebellion and to limit punishment of members of the military to no more than 30 days imprisonment.
  • Born:
  • Died: Ada Jones, 48, English-born American singer, one of the first recording artists in the world; died of kidney failure (b. 1873)[104]

May 23, 1922 (Tuesday)

  • Vladimir Lenin, leader of the Soviet Union's Communist Party and Premier of the USSR, suffered the first of three strokes, and was rendered paralyzed on his left side and unable to speak. A confirmation was made by the Soviet government on June 3, with a statement from Lenin's physicians that Lenin's illness was a minor disorder of the blood circulation which, however, within the next few days, began to improve. Lenin suffered a second stroke on June 1, prompting officials to return from a conference in Berlin to Moscow.[105][106] He would remain inactive until October.[3]
  • On the day after the assassination of Northern Ireland M.P. William J. Twaddell, the government of Northern Ireland, led by Sir James Craig, issued a declaration outlawing the Irish Republican Army, the Irish Republican Brotherhood, the Irish Volunteers and the women's and youth's society Cumann na mBan and warned that persons joining any of the four organizations advocating independence from the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland would be liable to be arrested and prosecuted. At the same time, Sinn Féin was outlawed in the six Irish counties that constituted Northern Ireland[3] and the Ulster government began a roundup of Sinn Féin members, serving arrest warrants on 300 people between midnight and dawn and imprisoning them.[107]
  • Abie's Irish Rose, the most popular Broadway theatre play of the 1920s, was premiered at the Fulton Theatre in New York City with the first of 2,327 performances. Closing on October 21, 1927, Abie's Irish Rose would hold the record for the longest-running Broadway show until surpassed by Tobacco Road.[108]
  • Harry Greb won the American light heavyweight boxing championship from the previously undefeated Gene Tunney in what was literally one of the bloodiest bouts in boxing history. Despite bleeding profusely from a gash over his left eye, and having his nose broken, Tunney continued to fight for the full 15 rounds, and refused to quit. Referee Kid McPartland refused to stop the fight without Tunney's approval and the ring at Madison Square Garden was spattered as Tunney lost an estimated two quarts of blood.[109]
  • George Finch and Geoffrey Bruce, the lead mountaineers on the 1922 British Mount Everest expedition, became the first persons to climb to an altitude of more than 27,000 feet and more than 8,000 meters, reaching 27,300 feet (8,300 m) on the north ridge of Mount Everest, and coming within less than 2,000 feet or 550 meters of the summit of the world's tallest (29,031.7 feet (8,848.9 m)) mountain.[110]
  • WDAY of Fargo, North Dakota, the first licensed radio station in the state, went on the air.[30]
  • Born: Katharina Mangold-Wirz, Swiss marine biologist; as Katharina Wirz, in Basel, Switzerland (d. 2003)[citation needed]
  • Died: Leona Dare, 67-68, American trapeze artist and acrobat who was popular during the 1870s and 1880s for her daring feats, including performing on a trapeze while at high altitude after ascending by balloon (b. 1854 or 1855)[111]

May 24, 1922 (Wednesday)

  • The first use of binding arbitration in the United States, as a substitute for a civil trial in court, took place at a conference room of the New York City Lawyers' Club at 115 Broadway as the state of New York's Arbitration Act went into effect. The very first case was a dispute between business partners Benjamin H. Lee and Jesse M. Barrymore over the amount of $130, which The New York Times described as "so small that it would be eaten up in court costs and lawyers' fees no matter how quickly it was decided." The first arbitrator, agreed upon by the parties, was a private attorney, Alexander Rose, and was notable for requiring no lawyers to represent the parties and costing only $10 for a 75-minute hearing.[112]
  • Italy and Soviet Russia signed a two-year commercial treaty in Rome. Russia later refused to ratify it.[113][114][115]
  • Pope Pius XI opened the 26th International Eucharistic Congress in Rome with 30,000 people taking part in the opening ceremony.[116]
  • Ten German Navy sailors aboard the torpedo boat T-18 were killed when the boat collided with the battleship Hannover.[117]
  • The unlucky Green Star Steamship freighter SS Eurana arrived back in New York City after departing in September 1920 to Baltimore and then toward Singapore, stopping for major problems with turbines and boilers at Honolulu for three months, then Singapore, Shanghai, Hong Kong, Indonesia and Sri Lanka (where feed pumps and condenser tubes slowed the ship) then to Aden for more repairs before going through the Suez Canal to the Mediterranean and finally to the Atlantic and a return to New York.[citation needed]
  • Died: John B. Rae, 83, American labor leader, served as the first President of the United Mine Workers of America from 1890 to 1892 (b. 1838)[citation needed]

May 25, 1922 (Thursday)

  • A general strike was called in Rome in protest against the disorders in San Lorenzo. Thousands of pilgrims attending the Eucharistic Congress had to walk to St. Peter's Basilica to hear the Mass because all public transportation was shut down.[118]
  • Babe Ruth was ejected for the first time from a baseball game as a member of the New York Yankees. Only six days after returning from a five-week suspension, Ruth was playing against the Washington Senators (which the Yankees won, 6 to 4) at the Polo Grounds. He had thrown dirt in the face of umpire George Hildebrand after being called out at second base while trying to stretch a single into a double. Ejected from the game, Ruth was heckled by a fan the way to the dugout, and "in a flash he vaulted to the roof of the dugout, clambered through a box filled with people and started up the aisle in the direction of his tormentor" who "put several rows between him and the Babe and from this point of safety listened to a series of scathing remarks from the irate player." After Ruth left, the Pullman conductor who shouted the remarks and refused to give his name, left the park after being asked by the Yankees' management to go.[119] Ruth was fined $200 and suspended for one game.[120]
  • Born: Enrico Berlinguer, Italian politician, served as the leader of the Italian Communist Party from 1972 until his death; in Sassari, Kingdom of Italy (present-day Italy) (d. 1984)[citation needed]
  • Died: Roy Redgrave, 49, English stage actor and film actor, considered to be the first member of the Redgrave acting dynasty (b. 1873)[citation needed]

May 26, 1922 (Friday)

May 27, 1922 (Saturday)

May 28, 1922 (Sunday)

May 29, 1922 (Monday)

May 30, 1922 (Tuesday)

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President Harding addressing the crowd

May 31, 1922 (Wednesday)

References

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