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April 1922

Month of 1922 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

April 1922
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The following events occurred in April 1922:

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April 1, 1922: Karl the First, the last Emperor of Austria-Hungary, dies in exile
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April 3, 1922: Soviet Communist Party leader Vladimir Lenin names Joseph Stalin as his successor
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April 14, 1922: U.S. President Harding's Secretary of the Interior, Albert B. Fall, accused of corruption
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April 1, 1922 (Saturday)

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A 500-drachma note to be cut in half. The right half became a 250-drachma bill and the left became a 250-drachma loan to the government.
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April 2, 1922 (Sunday)

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Dr. Hermann Rorschach
  • Jews who had immigrated to Palestine established two settlements that are now mid-sized cities in Israel. A group of four Americans from New York state, and five employees, established Ra'anana (which now has 75,000 residents) on land purchased by the Ahuza Company for Jewish Settlement. On the same day, Givatayim (Hebrew for "Two Hills", with a population of 58,000) was established by 22 Russian Jewish immigrants on the hills of Borochov and Kozlovsky.[citation needed]
  • The Charlie Chaplin comedy short film Pay Day was released.[citation needed]
  • Died: Hermann Rorschach, 37, Swiss psychiatrist and psychoanalyst, best known for developing what would become known as the Rorschach test; died of peritonitis from a ruptured appendix (b. 1884)[citation needed]
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April 3, 1922 (Monday)

April 4, 1922 (Tuesday)

  • H. V. Kaltenborn became the first person to "broadcast an editorial opinion over the air"[12] when his newspaper, the Brooklyn Daily Eagle, sponsored his appearance on New York City's WVP radio station. Kaltenborn became the first radio commentator, offering news analysis of the ongoing nationwide United Mineworkers of America walkout from the viewpoints "of a miner, a mine owner, and an average citizen"[13] in what he called a "spoken editorial".[14]
  • A bomb attack at a dinner for members of Hungary's "Democratic Club" in Budapest killed eight people. All the victims were Jewish, and it was suspected that the attack had been an assassination attempt aimed at the party leadership because of the placement of the explosive. Károly Rassay, the Party's leader, had not yet arrived when the explosion happened.[15][16][17]
  • The bodies of the six victims of the Hinterkaifeck murders, which had been carried out on March 31, were discovered in a farmhouse near Waidhofen, Bavaria. The case, one of Germany's most gruesome unsolved crimes, would be closed in 1955 without any person having been charged.[18]
  • Voters approved the creation of the suburban borough of Paramus, New Jersey by a vote of 238 to 10.[citation needed]
  • Born: Elmer Bernstein, American film score composer and conductor; in New York City, United States (d. 2004)[citation needed]
  • Died:
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April 5, 1922 (Wednesday)

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A 1923 advertisement for the next-generation Firestone tire
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April 6, 1922 (Thursday)

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April 7, 1922 (Friday)

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Haugdahl
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April 8, 1922 (Saturday)

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April 9, 1922 (Sunday)

  • Sir Arthur Conan Doyle arrived in the United States to conduct a lecture tour on spiritualism.[31] Arriving in New York from Liverpool on the White Star liner Baltic, he told the press, "I know absolutely what I am going to get after death— happiness. It is not mere hearsay. I have talked with and seen 20 of my dead, including my son, when my wife and other witnesses were present."[32]
  • Eleven French soldiers were killed by a bomb blast while searching for weapons as part of the Inter-Allied Commission occupation of Upper Silesia. The blast, which injured another 10 people near the city of Gleiwitz (now Gliwice in Poland), took place after French military authorities were informed that weapons and munitions had been buried in a graveyard near the Huetten Smelting Works.[33]
  • Charles Lindbergh took his first airplane flight, as a passenger in a Standard J biplane on his first flying lesson. Flight instructor Otto Timm of the Nebraska Aircraft Corporation's flying school piloted the airplane from an airfield in Lincoln, Nebraska.[34]
  • Died:

April 10, 1922 (Monday)

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April 11, 1922 (Tuesday)

  • The New York Philharmonic orchestra made its first recording, an abridged performance of Beethoven's 8-minute-long Coriolan Overture, for a 5-minute, 12-inch 78 rpm phonograph record disc for the Victor Talking Machine Company (later acquired by the RCA company and called RCA Victor).[36]
  • The passenger steamship S.S. Leviathan, which had been launched from Germany as the Hamburg—American Line luxury liner S.S. Vaterland before being seized by the United States when the U.S. entered World War I, was renamed the S.S. "President Harding" by vote of the United States Shipping Board while ship was in dry dock to be refurbished.[44] Board Chairman Albert Lasker said that the new name had been selected at the urging of two other shipping commissioners, both Democrats, who said that incumbent President Warren G. Harding "had done more than any other one man" to build the United States Merchant Marine fleet. On May 15, President Harding wrote to Chairman Lasker and said that "As I understand it, the board has decided to change the names of twenty-two vessels and name them after Presidents of the Republic. Let me express to the board my hearty concurrence in the action, except as it relates to one ship." While Harding described the naming of the vessel in his honor as "very considerate", "a fine compliment" and "most agreeable", he asked "that the name of the Leviathan remain unchanged."[45]
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April 12, 1922 (Wednesday)

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A photo of the verdict

April 13, 1922 (Thursday)

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Cantor

April 14, 1922 (Friday)

April 15, 1922 (Saturday)

April 16, 1922 (Sunday)

  • The Treaty of Rapallo was signed at the city of Rapallo in Italy by German Foreign Minister Walther Rathenau and Russian Foreign Minister Georgy Chicherin.[55] Germany and Russia agreed to renounce all territorial and financial claims against each other and normalize diplomatic relations.[56] Both Foreign Ministers had been in Italy to participate in the 34-nation Genoa Conference and had secretly agreed to meet separately at the nearby resort town 17 miles (27 km) east of Genoa. After ratification of the treaty by both nations, a supplementary agreement would be signed in Berlin on November 5, 1923, after the formation of the Soviet Union, to cover Germany's relations with the other USSR constituent republics.[36]
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Collins
  • Irish Free State leader Michael Collins survived an assassination attempt when gunmen fired at him as he was passing through Dublin's Rutland Square.[57] According to Collins, he and his associates had returned to Dublin from the town of Naas in County Kildare where he had addressed a meeting earlier in the day, and the four car group had arrived at Vaughn's Hotel when they saw a group of 12 men emerge from a house ahead. Nobody in the group recognized Collins and walked past him, then began firing guns at the men in the cars. Collins then drew his own revolver and fired at the attackers from behind. He said later that he was almost shot by a gunman "but fortunately he did not me." He disarmed the youth at gunpoint. "I asked him if he knew who I was, and when he replied 'No,' I told him.... That seemed to make him more uncomfortable then ever."[58] Collins's luck would run out on August 22, with his death in a gunbattle with assassins in County Cork.
  • Born:
  • Died: Frank Lawless, 51, Irish revolutionary and politician, member of Ireland's Dáil Éireann from 1918 to 1922; died from injuries sustained in an accident where the horse-drawn carriage he was riding overturned (b. 1870)[citation needed]

April 17, 1922 (Monday)

  • Cemal Azmi, who had carried out the Armenian genocide while he was serving as the Ottoman Empire's Governor of the Trebizond Province, was shot to death along with his former chief adviser, Bahaeddin Şakir, while both of them were walking on Uhlandstrasse in Berlin, by two former Armenian residents of Turkey, as part of Operation Nemesis. Arshavir Shirakian, who had carried out the vengeance killing of former Ottoman Grand Vizier Said Halim Pasha in Rome on December 6, shot and killed Azmi. Şakir attempted to run away but he was stopped and killed by Aram Yerganian.[59]
  • Tornadoes swept through the U.S. states of Illinois, Indiana and Ohio, killing about 50 people.[60] The community of Hedrick, Indiana suffered nine deaths and 100 injuries.[61]
  • In Paris, the two rival monarchist claimants from the House of Braganza to the throne of Portugal agreed to a truce. The former king, Manuel II (who had been deposed in 1910 when Portugal became a republic), entered into an agreement with Duarte Nuno de Bragança, the grandson of King Miguel I (who was deposed in 1834), unifying the monarchist movement that had been divided between Manuel's "Constitutionalist" branch and Duarte's "Miguelist" branch. Duarte agreed to support Manuel if the monarchy was restored, and Manuel agreed that upon his death, Duarte would be his successor as head of the royal house of Portugal.[62] The agreement would be a moot point, in that the Portugal's monarchy was never restored. The pretender to the throne, who would have been "King Duarte III" from 1932 to 1976, would be allowed to return to Portugal to live in 1952 and to keep the royal residence in Coimbra, the Palácio de São Marcos.
  • Portuguese aviator Sacadura Cabral and navigator Gago Coutinho lost their trouble-plagued Fairey III seaplane, the Lusitânia, as they continued their attempt to make the first aerial crossing of the South Atlantic, after having started from Portugal on March 30 en route to Brazil. After having layovers of six days and twelve days for repairs, they departed from the Portuguese-ruled São Vicente Island off of West Africa and as they approached Brazilian territory, Brazil's Saint Paul Rocks, lost one of the floats from the Lusitânia and had to abandon their aircraft, which sank in the sea. Rescued, they were transported to the Brazilian island of Fernando de Noronha. Portugal's Navy provided a second Fairey III seaplane, the Patria, for them and on May 12 they would attempt to fly back to Saint Paul Rocks to resume their journey, and be forced to ditch in the South Atlantic again. Ultimately, the Portuguese duo would arrive in Rio in a different airplane on June 17.[63]
  • Born: Raphael I Bidawid, Iraqi Assyrian priest, Patriarch of the Chaldean Catholic Church from 1989 until his death in 2003; in Mosul, Mandatory Iraq (present-day Iraq) (d. 2003)[citation needed]
  • Died: Luke Kennedy, chief hit-man for the Hogan Gang of organized criminals in St. Louis; shot to death near Wellston, Missouri by members of Egan's Rats.[64]

April 18, 1922 (Tuesday)

  • In Yugoslavia, 400 or more people in Serbia were killed in the explosion of a large stockpile of munitions near a railway station in Monastir.[65] According to the Associated Press, a stockpile of 400 carloads of ammunition and explosives had been stored near the town's passenger railway station when it exploded at around noon; the blast destroyed an army barracks where 1,800 soldiers were at a dining hall, and collapsed a church where school children were attending a worship service.[66]
  • The Republic of Central Lithuania was formally incorporated under the sovereignty of Poland despite Lithuania's objections.[67]
  • Economist John Maynard Keynes wrote an editorial urging Britain to give Russia a loan of £150 million to be spent on British goods that either promoted agricultural production or improved communications. Doing so, Keynes wrote, would ameliorate Russia's famine and cut food prices worldwide by speeding up the time it would take to make Russia an exporter of food again.[68]
  • Actor William Desmond was badly injured in a fall during the shooting of a scene for the film serial Perils of the Yukon. He and others were standing on a 50-foot cliff when a ledge of melting ice and snow gave way, plunging Williams into the river below.[69] Desmond, 44, recovered and would appear in films until shortly before his death in 1949.
  • FC Spartak Moscow, the most successful soccer football team in the Soviet Union and later of Russia, played its very first game, initially as an independent team (not affiliated with the Communist regime) created as "Moscow Sports Circle" (MKS) by a group of athletes from the Moscow district of Presnja. After renaming itself Krasnaja Presnja, it fell under the control of the Communist Party youth organization Komsomol and would eventually be named Spartak in 1935 as part of the Spartak athletic society. In that first match, an exhibition game or "friendly", MKC defeated the six-time Moscow champions, Zamoskvoretskii Klub Sporta, 3 to 2.[70]
  • The borough of New Milford, New Jersey, was created by voters in a referendum. It had a population of more than 19,000 people fifty years later, and then had a gradual decline.[citation needed]
  • Born:

April 19, 1922 (Wednesday)

April 20, 1922 (Thursday)

April 21, 1922 (Friday)

April 22, 1922 (Saturday)

April 23, 1922 (Sunday)

April 24, 1922 (Monday)

April 25, 1922 (Tuesday)

  • Russia responded to the Genoa Conference note of two days earlier, by sending a note of its own to Poland, saying that "in no case can it permit treaties concluded by Russia to depend for their legality on the action of powers not signatory."[93]
  • Voters approved the incorporation of Moorestown, New Jersey, a suburb of Philadelphia, in a special referendum authorized by the New Jersey state legislature.[94]
  • Died: Frederick Van Rensselaer Dey, 61, American dime novelist and pulp fiction author who wrote 1,076 "Nick Carter" detective stories and paperback novels from 1890 until his death; committed suicide (b. 1861)[95]

April 26, 1922 (Wednesday)

April 27, 1922 (Thursday)

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Grant Memorial
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Kingdom of Egypt flag
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The current Arab Republic of Egypt flag

April 28, 1922 (Friday)

April 29, 1922 (Saturday)

April 30, 1922 (Sunday)

References

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