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December 1921

Month of 1921 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

December 1921
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The following events occurred in December 1921:

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December 6, 1921: United Kingdom signs treaty recognizing independence of "Irish Free State"
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December 1, 1921: U.S. Navy airship C-7 demonstrates successful flight with helium rather than flammable hydrogen
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December 25, 1921: Sedition sentences, of Socialist Eugene V. Debs and 23 others, commuted by President Harding for release from prison
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December 9, 1921: All 43 crew of U.S. Navy submarine S-48 rescued after sinking
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December 1, 1921 (Thursday)

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Stan Laurel (seated) and Oliver Hardy in The Lucky Dog
  • The short (24 minutes) silent comedy film The Lucky Dog, starring Stan Laurel, was released by the Amalgamated Producing Company. Wearing a full mustache, another comedian, Oliver Hardy, had a role in the film as an armed robber confronting Laurel.[citation needed]
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December 2, 1921 (Friday)

December 3, 1921 (Saturday)

December 4, 1921 (Sunday)

  • The Irish nationalist delegates rejected the British settlement offer of Dominion status, in that it continued to require an oath of allegiance to the British crown for all government members, and continued the partition of the island of Ireland.[4]
  • A delegation representing the "Far Eastern Republic" arrived in Washington, D.C., in hopes of obtaining American help in driving Japanese troops from Siberia and seeking diplomatic recognition.[4]
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10,000 Mark note, worth $52 in January 1922, $3.15 in January 1923 [10]
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December 5, 1921 (Monday)

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December 6, 1921 (Tuesday)

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The signed treaty
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December 7, 1921 (Wednesday)

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December 8, 1921 (Thursday)

  • A U.S. Senate subcommittee investigating capital punishment in the U.S. Army announced that only 11 of the servicemen given the death sentence during World War I had actually been executed.[4]
  • Irish republican leader Éamon de Valera declared that, after discussions with his cabinet, he and two ministers were opposed to ratification of the Anglo-Irish peace treaty, but referred the matter to the Irish parliament, Dáil Éireann, for further discussion. De Valera asked the Irish people to continue orderly conduct during the debate. Arthur Griffith, one of the Irish republicans who had signed the treaty as a delegate, declared that he was strongly in favor of ratification.[4]
  • Died: Henry D. Flood, 56, American politician, served as the U.S. Congressman for Virginia from 1901 until his death (b. 1865)[4]
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December 9, 1921 (Friday)

December 10, 1921 (Saturday)

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December 11, 1921 (Sunday)

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December 12, 1921 (Monday)

  • As Germany's economic crisis worsened, the German Federal Council increased the rates for all communication (postal, telephone, telegraph) and railway transportation to a new level that was 20 times as much as it had been before World War I.[4]
  • In an attempt to resolve the dispute between Chile and Peru over the legal status of the Tacna and Arica territory on the borders of the two nations, Chile proposed that a plebiscite be held among the residents of the area in South America.[4]
  • At Allahabad in India, the visit of the Prince of Wales was welcomed by a small crowd of British residents, while almost all native Indians boycotted the ceremonies.[4]
  • In the town of Franklin, Kansas, a group of 2,000 immigrants, mostly women whose husbands were striking miners, formed a mob and attacked non-union labor that had come to replace the strikers, using red pepper and throwing rocks. The Kansas National Guard was sent in to restore order.[4]
  • Britain extended the India Sedition Act to its territory in Burma, where the Prince of Wales was scheduled to visit.[4]
  • Died: Henrietta Swan Leavitt, 53, American astronomer; died of stomach cancer (b. 1868)[29]

December 13, 1921 (Tuesday)

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Congressman John A. Elston
  • John A. Elston, 47, a member of the U.S. House of Representatives from California since 1915, committed suicide at the age of 47 by drowning himself in the Potomac River. Elston, who represented the area around the San Francisco Bay, left a suicide note in his coat, found at the bank of the river near the Washington Monument. He wrote "I am in a chain of circumstances that spell ruin, although my offense was innocently made in the beginning. I hope all the facts will come out. Staying means embarrassment to my district and to a worthy people, clean and generous." Earlier in the day, Elston had failed to answer roll call in the House and detectives looked for him, taking him to get medical attention. Hours later, he disappeared again and his body was found two days later.[30][31]
  • Signing the Four-Power Treaty on Insular Possessions, Japan, the United States, United Kingdom, and France agreed to recognize the status quo in the Pacific Ocean, pledging not to interfere with each other's territories.[32]
  • The U.S. Railroad Labor Board ruled that "time-and-a-half" overtime pay would not be required except when a worker had been on the job for more than ten hours on a shift, but restricted railroads to scheduling workers for no more than an eight-hour shift, with allowance for overruns.[4]

December 14, 1921 (Wednesday)

  • Japan agreed to accept the "5:5:3 ratio" on total tonnage of ships in the Imperial Japanese Navy, with Japan to have 3/5ths as many warships in its fleet as the United States Navy and the Royal Navy of the United Kingdom. U.S. Secretary of State Charles Evans Hughes had proposed the limitation on November 12, based on the total amount of coastline (including colonial possessions) that each nation had to defend. Numerically, the United Kingdom would have 20 warships totaling 582,050 tons; the United States would have 18 warships combining for 525,850 tons; and Japan would have 10 warships at 313,300 tons.[4]
  • The Allied Reparation Commission announced that it had been delivered forfeited German ships that the Commission valued as being worth 756 million gold marks based on the worth of the German mark at the end of World War I.[4]

December 15, 1921 (Thursday)

December 16, 1921 (Friday)

December 17, 1921 (Saturday)

December 18, 1921 (Sunday)

  • Austria and Czechoslovakia adjourned their international conference over border disputes and agreed to submit further controversies to international arbitration.[34]
  • Poland's football team played its first international match, losing 1 to 0 to Hungary in a match in Budapest.[43]

December 19, 1921 (Monday)

December 20, 1921 (Tuesday)

December 21, 1921 (Wednesday)

December 22, 1921 (Thursday)

December 23, 1921 (Friday)

December 24, 1921 (Saturday)

  • Forty-four people were killed and one hundred more injured in tornadoes that swept across the U.S. states of Arkansas, Louisiana, and Mississippi on Christmas Eve.[34]
  • Colombia ratified the treaty with the United States recognizing the independence of Panama, a former Colombian province that had been declared a separate nation after the intervention of the U.S. in 1903.[34]
  • The New Economic Policy of the Soviet Union, created by Premier Vladimir Lenin, was approved by the 9th All-Russian Soviet Congress.[34]
  • The first radio station in France, Radio Tour Eiffel, began broadcasting from a studio near the Eiffel Tower, where the transmitter was installed. The inaugural broadcast, of 30 minutes, consisted of an engineer with the message, "Allô, allô, ici poste militaire de la Tour Eiffel" ("Hello, hello, this is the military post of the Eiffel Tower.") Regular transmissions would begin on February 6.[51]

December 25, 1921 (Sunday)

December 26, 1921 (Monday)

December 27, 1921 (Tuesday)

December 28, 1921 (Wednesday)

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The new Peace Dollar

December 29, 1921 (Thursday)

December 30, 1921 (Friday)

  • Saad Zaghloul, the former Prime Minister of Egypt, was deported by British authorities to Ceylon (now Sri Lanka), roughly 3,500 miles (5,600 km) away. Sent with Zaghloul were five of his political allies, after the British government concluded that the original plan for exile on the island of Malta was insufficient.[34]
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Stinson and Bertaud

December 31, 1921 (Saturday)

References

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