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July 1920

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July 26, 1920: Charles Ponzi scheme exposed by The Boston Post
July 5, 1920: Ohio Governor James M. Cox nominated as Democratic presidential candidate after 44 ballots, selects Assistant U.S. Navy Secretary Franklin Roosevelt as running mate
July 10, 1920: Arthur Meighen becomes new Prime Minister of Canada
July 4, 1920: DuPont chemist's accidental discovery of Duco process opens the era of colorful mass-produced automobiles (pictured: a 1924 "True Blue" Oakland Tourer, first model lacquered with Duco paint)

Thursday, July 1, 1920 edit

 
Borden

Friday, July 2, 1920 edit

 
McAdoo
 
Cox
  • Delegate voting for the presidential nomination began at the 1920 Democratic National Convention at San Francisco. With a two-thirds majority (or 729½ of the 1102 delegate votes) necessary for a nomination, former Treasury Secretary (and U.S. President Woodrow Wilson's son-in-law), William Gibbs McAdoo, had 266 votes on the first ballot, followed by Attorney General A. Mitchell Palmer with 256, Ohio Governor James M. Cox with 134 and New York Governor Al Smith with 109. The other votes were split among 19 other candidates.[5] The convention adjourned for the day after the second roll call, with McAdoo still in first place.
  • Sir Herbert Samuel arrived in Jaffa to begin his duties as the first British High Commissioner for Palestine, placed under mandate by the Allied Powers.[6]
  • The Soviet Army and Ukrainian Bolsheviks captured the former Austro-Hungarian town of Lemberg, occupied at the time by Poland (which had named in Lwow), driving out Polish and Ukrainian forces.[7] For decades, it was part of the Ukrainian SSR as Lvov, and is now the Ukrainian city of Lviv.
  • Died: General William L. Marshall, 74, Chief of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers from 1908 to 1910.

Saturday, July 3, 1920 edit

  • Germany's Chancellor Constantin Fehrenbach and his new coalition government received a vote of confidence in the Reichstag by a margin of 313 to 64 [8]
  • Meeting at Brussels, the Allied Conference agreed upon a division of the reparation payments that would be expected from Germany, with the initial 8 percent being allocated to Belgium; 52% to France, 22% to the United Kingdom, 5 1/2 % to Serbia and 4% apiece to Italy, Japan and Portugal.[9] The reparation was reportedly going to be based on a principal of 6,000,000,000 British pounds sterling, along with interest, payable in installments of £150,000,000 per year for the first five years, and £250,000,000 from 1926 onward.[3]
  • Sixteen more roll calls were taken in the Democratic National Convention. On the seventh ballot, Governor Cox gained 100 votes to surpass Attorney General Palmer, and, on the twelfth ballot, Cox passed Secretary McAdoo to become the front runner. Cox had 458 when the day adjourned after the eighteenth ballot, still short of the necessary 729½ votes, and McAdoo had 330½.[10]
  • A bolt of lightning led to 18 deaths and over 100 injuries in the wreck of three streetcars near Pittston, Pennsylvania. Most of those killed were sports fans returning to Scranton from the annual Caledonian Club games against Pittston. At 7:30 in the evening, the lightning struck and knocked down a telegraph pole adjacent to the Lackawanna and Wyoming Valley Railroad line, just as the lead streetcar was approaching. Moments later, the second streetcar crashed into the back of the first one, and then "a third car telescoped the second car."[11]
  • Born: Lennart Bladh, Swedish politician, member of the Riskdag from 1974 to 1985 (d. 2006)
  • Died: Dr. William C. Gorgas, 65, Surgeon General of the United States Army during the First World War

Sunday, July 4, 1920 edit

  • A researcher at the DuPont chemical laboratories ("more by accident, I think, than by intention" General Motors CEO Alfred P. Sloan would note later), effected a chemical reaction "which led to the development of a nitrocellulose lacquer eventually called Duco."[12] Because the lacquer base could carry more color pigment in suspension, the color of automobiles was no longer limited to black and, in 1923, GM's Oakland Motor Car Company would introduce the dark blue 1924 Oakland Tourer. While cars had been custom painted in other colors in the past (with a finish that would take a month to dry), the Duco Finish permitted the mass production of cars in other colors [13] The Duco Finish was described by the DuPont company as "a pyroxylin material made from chemically treated cotton, pigments and solvents" that "will practically revolutionize the enameling business" because it dried at room temperature in a few minutes, as well as being "tough, durable, adhesive, pleasing to the eye and touch.".[14]
  • Born:

Monday, July 5, 1920 edit

  • After 43 ballots for a presidential nominee, the U.S. Democratic Party nominated Ohio Governor James M. Cox.[3] In the 30th round of voting, Secretary McAdoo had taken a 403½ to 400½ lead over Governor Cox, and maintained the lead until the 39th round, when the votes shifted to 468½ to 440 in Cox's favor. As midnight arrived, voting was in progress on a motion to adjourn.
 
Clay
  • Laura Clay, one of the Kentucky delegates to the Democratic National Convention, became the first American woman to receive a vote for a presidential nomination for a major U.S. political party. On the 33rd ballot, Augustus O. Stanley, the chairman of the Kentucky delegation, cast one of the state's 26 votes for Mrs. Clay.[15]
  • The Spa Conference between the Supreme War Council (composed of the prime ministers of the Allied nations who had won the First World War) and the German Reich, opened in the town of Spa in Belgium.[16]
  • Died:
    • Max Klinger, 63, German painter and sculptor
    • Israel Friedlander, 43, Polish-born American rabbi and Zionist leader, was murdered, along with Rabbi Bernard Cantor, while on a relief mission in the Ukraine.[17]

Tuesday, July 6, 1920 edit

  • The Democratic Convention finally had a nominee for President of the United States at 1:39 in the morning in San Francisco, as Ohio Governor James M. Cox was picked by delegates on the 44th ballot, with 699½ votes cast. "[I]t was apparent that before the ballot was completed he would obtain more than 729 votes, the two-thirds majority required to nominate," The New York Times noted, and the Vice Chairman of the Democratic National Committee then "interrupted the voting and moved to have the nomination made unanimous."[18] The 42nd balloting began at 12:26 in the morning.
  • King Christian X of Denmark ratified the treaty with Germany, returning the northern part of the former German Duchy of Schleswig to Danish control as the province of Slesvig [19]
  • A mob in Paris, Texas, forced its way into the jail at the Lamar County courthouse and seized two African-American brothers, Irving Arthur and Herman Arthur, who had been arrested on suspicion of the July 2 murder of their landlord and his son. The group then took the Arthur brothers to the county fairgrounds and burned the men at the stake.[20]
  • With the help of an army of 100,000 Cossacks, General Pyotr Wrangel's White Russian Army announced that it had surrounded and captured 18 regiments of the Red Army Cavalry, taking 20,000 prisoners and driving the Bolsheviks from Novorossiysk, Taganrog and Ekaterinodar.[21]
  • Franklin D. Roosevelt, the Assistant U.S. Secretary of the Navy, was nominated by the Democratic Party for Vice President of the United States.[22] Roosevelt, the selection of Democratic nominee James M. Cox, was approved by acclamation without a roll call vote.
  • Died: Andrew Traynor, 77, American Medal of Honor winner and Civil War veteran

Wednesday, July 7, 1920 edit

  • Arthur Meighen agreed to become the ninth Prime Minister of Canada. At the age of 44, he was the youngest person to serve as head of the Canadian government. Robert Borden, the outgoing premier had recommended to the Governor-General, the Duke of Devonshire, that Meighen would be the ideal successor. The formal transfer of power took place on Saturday, July 10.[23]
  • The government of Mexico reported a ceasefire agreement with Pancho Villa as terms of surrender were being discussed, to last until July 14.[24] Villa's demands were that the 1917 Mexican constitution be abolished and that the 1857 constitution be restored; that General Plutarco Elias Calles be dismissed as Minister of War; and that civilian elections be held.[25]
  • The U.S. Department of State announced the lifting of a ban on American trade with the Soviet Union, but said that diplomatic relations would not be established [26]
  • Born:

Thursday, July 8, 1920 edit

  • In the city of Spa in Belgium, the Allied powers gave a 24-hour ultimatum to Germany for a reduction of the German Army from 200,000 to 150,000 by the end of October, and to 100,000 by the end of January, 1921. Speaking for the Allies, British Prime Minister David Lloyd George said that if the German government failed to sign an acceptance of the disarmament plan by 12:00 noon on July 9, the Allied Powers were prepared to send troops across the Rhine river to occupy Germany.[27]
  • The Louisiana state legislature adjourned at midnight without taking up the question of the women's suffrage amendment.[28] The 19th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution would take effect the following month. Almost 50 years later, Louisiana's legislature would finally ratify the amendment.[29]

Friday, July 9, 1920 edit

  • At the Spa Conference in Belgium on terms of Germany's post-war obligations, representatives of Germany agreed to the reduction of the republic's army.[30]

Saturday, July 10, 1920 edit

Sunday, July 11, 1920 edit

  • Voting was conducted in a plebiscite in two regions of the province of East Prussia, within Germany's Free State of Prussia, to determine whether the residents of each region wished to continue to be citizens of the German Reich or for their land to become part of the Republic of Poland. Voters in the regions of Allenstein and Marienwerder voted overwhelmingly to remain part of East Prussia.[35]
  • The Allied premiers at Spa agreed that Poland would receive defense aid if it agreed to return to the frontiers that it had had prior to going to war with the Soviet Union, and demanded a ceasefire between the Soviets and the Poles.[36]
  • Poland's Army was driven out of the Belarusan capital of Minsk by local Bolsheviks and Russian Soviet troops.[37]
  • Born:
    • Yul Brynner, Russian-born American stage actor who won two Tony Awards for The King and I and an Academy Award for the film version; as Yuli Borisovich Briner in Vladivostok (died of lung cancer, 1985)
    • Zecharia Sitchin, Soviet-born British author and proponent of the "ancient astronauts" theory of human civilization, known for his book series The 12th Planet; in Baku, Azerbaijan SSR (d. 2010)
  • Died:
    • Eugénie, Spanish-born countess who was the last Empress of France during the reign of her husband, Napoleon III from 1853 until his death in 1873.
    • Charles Stephens, 58, British daredevil, was killed in an attempt to go over the Niagara Falls.

Monday, July 12, 1920 edit

Tuesday, July 13, 1920 edit

  • Bolivia's President José Gutiérrez Guerra was overthrown in a coup led by General Bautista Saavedra, who led a junta of several officers and then won an election in 1921. Gutiérrez had been elected president in 1917 as the Liberal Party candidate.[43] Saavedra, leader of the Republican Party, brought an end to 21 years of Liberal Party rule would serve as President of Bolivia until his term's expiration in 1925.
  • The United Kingdom and Japan reported to the League of Nations that they were renewing treaty of alliance.[44]
  • The Trades Union Congress of the United Kingdom conducted a vote on the future of Ireland, with union members casting card votes overwhelmingly (almost 2.76 million to 1.64 million) in favor of withdrawing British troops from Ireland and Russia, and establishing a separate Irish parliament.[45]
  • Born: Anna Halprin, American dance instructor and health proponent, known for her innovations in postmodern dance and for her books on "The Five Stages of Healing" following her recovery from cancer diagnosed in 1972; as Hannah Schuman in Winnetka, Illinois (d. 2021)

Wednesday, July 14, 1920 edit

 
King Faisal of Syria

Thursday, July 15, 1920 edit

  • The Allies served an ultimatum on Germany demanding delivery of two million tons of German coal per month, or 24 million per year, less than the 29 million per year agreed upon in the Treaty of Versailles.[3] Germany responded that it had capacity to deliver no more than 1.1 million per month.[48]
 
Gibson
  • Serial killer Mose Gibson killed his seventh and last victim. Gibson broke into the home of Roy G. Trapp, a wealthy rancher near Fullerton, California, and beat Trapp to death with a miner's hammer. He then beat Trapp's wife unconscious and raped her. Gibson was arrested in Drake, California, after his description was recognized by a telegraph operator.[49] Gibson confessed to the murder of Trapp, as well as the June murder of Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Earhart in Arizona, and victims in Louisiana and Florida. Convicted of the Trapp murder, Gibson was hanged on September 24 at the San Quentin State Prison.
  • Chile mobilized 10,000 of its troops after Bolivian rebels deported former President Gutierrez to the port of Arica.[50]
  • Sinn Féin raided the Dublin post office during the daytime and, without encountering resistance, carried away government mail and mail addressed to law enforcement agencies.[51]
  • Meeting in Chicago, delegates of the Farmer-Labor Party nominated Parley Park Christensen for President and Max F. Hayes for Vice President.[52]
  • The America's Cup yachting race series was held for the first time since 1903. The UK challenger, Sir Thomas Lipton's yacht, Shamrock IV defeated the American championship representative, Resolute, in the first race.[53] No foreign challenger had won a single race except on October 19, 1871, when England's Livonia outraced the U.S. yacht Columbia.[54]

Friday, July 16, 1920 edit

Saturday, July 17, 1920 edit

  • After considering objections by Turkey to terms for a peace treaty to end the First World War, the Allied Powers delivered a ten-day ultimatum to sign the treaty, as slightly modified, or face the prospect of the Allies "ejecting the Turks from Europe once and for all".[58]
  • The U.S. Secretary of the Navy approved General Order 541 for the standard nomenclature of official identification letters and numbers for all ships, ranging from "AC-5" for the auxiliary collier USS Vulcan, to "SS-152" for the second line submarine USS H-9. The prefixes ZK, ZN and ZR were reserved for airships to be added to the fleet in the future.[59]
  • Author Sinclair Lewis delivered the completed manuscript for his bestselling novel Main Street to Harcourt Publishing [60]
  • Born:
    • Juan Antonio Samaranch, Spanish sports administrator and International Olympic Committee president from 1980 to 2001; in Barcelona (d. 2010)
    • Gordon Gould, American physicist who coined the word "laser" [61] and was first to realize the concept but who failed to patent it before another inventor; in New York City (d. 2005)
  • Died: Charles E. Courtney, 70, coach of Cornell University's championship Intercollegiate Rowing Association team since 1883

Sunday, July 18, 1920 edit

Monday, July 19, 1920 edit

Tuesday, July 20, 1920 edit

 
Johnson
  • Jack Johnson, the former World Heavyweight Boxing Champion, surrendered to U.S. authorities at the Mexican border, more than seven years after fleeing the country to avoid prison. With newsreel cameras rolling, the former champion and Los Angeles County Sheriff John Cline walked together from Tijuana over to the border patrol office at San Ysidro, California, at 10:30 in the morning local time.[69] Johnson served slightly less than a year at the United States Penitentiary in Leavenworth, Kansas, as inmate number 15461.[70]
  • France's Assemblée nationale approved of Prime Minister Alexandre Millerand by a margin of 420 to 152 in a vote of confidence.[71]
  • The British yacht Shamrock IV, piloted by Sir Thomas Lipton, took a 2 to 0 lead over the defending U.S. champion, Resolute, in the best 3-of-5 America's Cup series. With Shamrock IV one victory away from winning the Cup for the first time, Resolute was put in the situation that it "must take three straight to keep the famous cup on this side of the Atlantic."[72]

Wednesday, July 21, 1920 edit

  • The Interallied Mission to Poland began, with a delegation of French and British diplomats traveling to Warsaw in order to negotiate a peaceful end to the Polish–Soviet War. British Prime Minister David Lloyd George told the House of Commons "If ever a nation in history has gone war mad, that nation is Poland. The present Polish government has not the slightest support of a majority of the people," and added, "I am depending upon the wisdom and farsightedness of the Bolsheviks to end the war when they realize the Allies' support is with the Poles."[73] Meanwhile, the evacuation of Warsaw began as women and children left the city by train in advance of a Soviet invasion.[74]
  • In the third round of the America's Cup yachting race, Shamrock IV and Resolute finished the 30 nautical miles (56 km; 35 mi) course in exactly the same amount of time — 4 hours, 3 minutes and 6 seconds— but Resolute was awarded the victory based on a seven-minute time allowance.[75]
  • Born:

Thursday, July 22, 1920 edit

 
A "jungle gym"
  • The patent application for the newly invented playground structure of interlocking horizontal bars and uprights, called the "jungle gym" (also known as the "monkey bars") was filed by Chicago lawyer Sebastian Hinton and his company, Junglegym, Inc., under the title "climbing structure".[76] Hinton, a resident of Winnetka, Illinois, wrote in his application "I have designed a climbing apparatus, so proportioned and constructed that it provides a kind of forest top through which a troop of children may play in a manner somewhat similar to that of a troop of monkeys through the tree tops in a jungle." U.S. Patent No. 1,471,465 was awarded on October 23, 1923.
  • Losing the Polish–Soviet War, Poland replaced its government as the nation's chief of state, General Józef Piłsudski, dismissed recently appointed Prime Minister Władysław Grabski and selected Wincenty Witos and a new cabinet of ministers.[77] The selection of Witos, leader of the Polish Peasants' Party, was a compromise to the Soviet demand that a soviet government be appointed before negotiations would be considered. Witos then transmitted a request to Moscow asking for an armistice in the war. Pilsudski also placed General Tadeusz Rozwadowski in command of the defending Polish troops.
  • Ottoman Sultan Mehmed VI convened a Crown Council (Suray-i Saltanat), at the Yıldız Palace in Istanbul, attended by 55 prominent royal, political and military figures, including his prime minister, Grand Vizier Damat Ferid Pasha. The group recommended in favor of signing the treaty with the Allied Powers leaving Turkey intact, while dividing the lands of the Ottoman Empire, and some recommended that he abdicate his throne.[78][79]
  • U.S. Senator Warren G. Harding of Ohio, who had been nominated as the Republican Party candidate for president on June 12, opened his national campaign as the ceremonial formal notification was delivered to him at his home at 380 Mount Vernon Avenue in Marion, Ohio. Harding then delivered his acceptance speech, from his front porch, to a crowd of thousands of supporters [80]
  • The Prohibition Party nominated Aaron S. Watkins as its third-party presidential candidate and D. Leigh Colvin for vice president, at its convention in Lincoln, Nebraska[81] The Prohibitionists, having accomplished their purpose in ratification of the 18th Amendment to the United States Constitution, would win slightly less than 189,000 votes in the presidential election.
  • Born: Hubert "Bertie" Lewis, American-born who joined the UK's Royal Air Force and later became a British anti-nuclear activist; in Chicago (d. 2010)
  • Died:

Friday, July 23, 1920 edit

 
Kenya colonial flag

Saturday, July 24, 1920 edit

  • The French Army (composed mostly of troops from Algeria, Morocco and Senegal) fought an army of 2,000 Arab volunteers at the Battle of Maysalun outside of Damascus. After eight hours, the Syrian defenders were routed and Yusuf al-'Azma, King Faisal's Minister of War, was among the dead. French forces then marched into Damascus, "marking the start of an unhappy colonial occupation that would last twenty-six years." [84]King Faisal of Syria and his supporters fled Damascus to British protection in Palestine.[85]
  • The Soviet Union agreed to a temporary armistice in the Polish-Soviet War, as Soviet Foreign Affairs Commissar Georgy Chicherin replied to Poland's request for a ceasefire on Soviet terms [86][87] Chicherin announced that General Mikhail Tukhachevsky would send a flag of truce to Poland's General Rozwadowski to allow Polish negotiators safe passage to a neutral zone.
  • Born: Bella Abzug, American politician, lawyer, and feminist, U.S. Representative for New York from 1971 to 1977; as Bella Savitsky in New York City (d. 1998)

Sunday, July 25, 1920 edit

  • General Mariano Goybet and the French Army marched into Damascus to begin France's mandate over Syria, two weeks in advance of his commanding officer, General Henri Gourard. Making a reference to the First Crusade more than 800 years earlier, General Goybet then made a visit to the Umayyad Mosque, burial place of the 12th century Muslim commander Saladin, and declared "Saladin, nous voici."— "Saladin, we're back." The remark is usually attributed to General Gouraud.[88]
  • Born: Rosalind Franklin, English chemist who was recognized posthumously for her work that led to the discovery of the double helix structure of DNA; in Notting Hill, London (d. 1958)

Monday, July 26, 1920 edit

Tuesday, July 27, 1920 edit

  • The America's Cup would continue to stay in the United States, as Resolute won the fifth race in the best-3-of-5 series after losing the first two outings against the British challenger Shamrock IV.[94] Resolute finished one mile ahead of Sir Thomas Lipton's yacht, which had been only one race away from taking the trophy. The Resolute win marked the thirteenth consecutive time that a U.S. team had beaten a British challenger in the series, and the winning streak that would continue for another 63 years until the 1983 America's Cup win by the Australia II [54]
  • Born:

Wednesday, July 28, 1920 edit

  • Archibald "Archie" Leach, a 16-year old English vaudeville performer, arrived in the United States at Ellis Island, on the ocean liner RMS Olympic along with seven other members of "The Penders" and manager Robert Pender.[95] The troupe had been hired by American producer Charles Dillingham to be featured in a two-week engagement at New York's Globe Theatre as an act in Dillingham's Broadway production, the Good Times revue.[96] In 1931, Leach would be signed to a movie contract with Paramount Famous Lasky Corporation (now Paramount Pictures) and would be given the stage name Cary Grant.
  • Pancho Villa surrendered to Mexican Army General Eugenio Martinez, a representative of President de la Huerta, after an all-night conference [97] Villa and his 180 troops then traveled by train to Torreón, where they disbanded. In return for laying down his weapons, Villa was allowed to return to Chihuahua and granted an annual allowance by the Mexican government, while his 180 troops were allowed a year's pay from the Mexican Army and given farming land. Carl Haeglin, an American businessman who had been held for ransom, was released and all of the rebels were restored to full Mexican citizenship.[98]
  • The former Austro-Hungarian territory of the Duchy of Teschen was divided between Czechoslovakia (where it was called Těšín) and Poland (where it was Cieszyn), by order of the Allied Premiers at the Spa Conference.
  • Two all-metal airplanes departed from New York for the first trans-continental postal flight. They would arrive in San Francisco on August 8.[53]

Thursday, July 29, 1920 edit

  • Women were allowed to be part of jury trial in the United Kingdom for the first time, as a result of the new Sex Disqualification (Removal) Act 1919 that had been granted royal assent on December 23. At the court of quarter sessions in Bristol, William Henry Ayton was put on trial on charges of stealing parcels from a railway station.[99] R. E. Dummett, the prosecutor, began his opening statement by saying "Ladies and gentlemen of the jury— this the first occasion on which I have used this unfamiliar phrase. As far as I know, it has not been used before in the annals of the jurisdiction in this country, and certainly not in this city." The jury of six men and six women found Ayton guilty of the crime charged and he was sentenced to one year in jail [100]

Friday, July 30, 1920 edit

  • The 1st World Scout Jamboree opened at Olympia in London.[101][102]
  • With two days left before the supply of coal for railroads would be exhausted, U.S. President Wilson sent a telegram to John L. Lewis of the United Mine Workers of America, warning Lewis to end the walkout of coal miners in Illinois and Iowa or face the end of government recognition of the UMWA. "[Y]our action in refusing to mine coal on the terms which you had accepted may result in great suffering in many households during the coming winter and interfere with the continuation of industrial and agricultural activity," Wilson wrote, adding "the violation of the terms of your solemn obligation impairs your own good name" and "destroys the confidence which is the basis of all mutual agreements." The President promised to revisit the findings of the Bituminous Coal Commission in August about alleged inequalities in an agreement, but not "as long as the mine workers continue on strike." [103]
  • A record sized crowd for a golf match (more than 7,000 people) the largest group to ever witness a golf match in the United States, came to the Belmont Country Club at Waverley, Massachusetts, to watch English professional golfers Harry Vardon and Ted Ray play against the top U.S. amateur team of Francis Ouimet and Jesse Guilford. The British pros won the exhibition match, hyped as a revenge match for Vardon's victory over Ouimet and Ray in a tiebreaker playoff in the 1913 U.S. Open.[104]
  • Born: Martin Knowlton, American travel agent and hostel administrator, who established Elderhostel; in Dallas (d. 2009)

Saturday, July 31, 1920 edit

  • France prohibited the sale or prescription of contraceptives, as well as forbidding the distribution of "antinatalist propaganda", as a means of remedying the loss of 1.5 million men during World War I. Sociologists would determine later that the severe penalties did not restore the fertility rate to its pre-war level of an average of 2.5 children per women.[105]
  • The price of traveling by train in the United States was increased by 20 percent per person, and freight shipping rates increased by 40%, in a decision by the U.S. Interstate Commerce Commission[106][107]
  • The Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic was created by the Belarusan Communist Party, 20 days after the capital city of Minsk was recovered from Poland's control. In 1922, the Russian-dominated state would join with other "Soviet Socialist Republics" (the Russian Federation, the Trancaucasian Federation, and the Ukrainian Republic) to form the Soviet Union.
  • The Communist Party of Great Britain was formed by representatives of various British revolutionary socialist groups, at a meeting at the Cannon Street Hotel in London.
  • Died: Ion Dragoumis, 42, Greek diplomat, died after being shot by Pavlos Gyparis, the bodyguard to Dragoumis's political opponent, Greek Prime Minister Eleftherios Venizelos

References edit

  1. ^ "Sir Robert Borden Announces He Is Determined to Resign— Decision This Time Is Final, He Declares", Winnipeg Evening Tribune, July 1, 1920, p1
  2. ^ "Sir Robert Borden, Premier of Canada, Is Ailing, Resigns", Chicago Tribune, July 2, 1920, p13
  3. ^ a b c d "Record of Current Events", The American Review of Reviews Volume 62 (August, 1920), pp135-140
  4. ^ "Border twin cities in the Baltic Area: anomalies or nexuses of mutual benefit?", by Thomas Lunden, in Twin Cities: Urban Communities, Borders and Relationships over Time, ed. by John Garrard and Ekaterina Mikhailova (Routledge, 2019)
  5. ^ "M'ADOO HIGH ON 2 BALLOTS— His Vote Is 289; Palmer, 264; Cox, 159; Adjourn", Chicago Daily Tribune, July 3, 1920, p1
  6. ^ "British High Commissioner for Palestine Is on the Job", Chicago Sunday Tribune, July 4, 1920, p4
  7. ^ "Lemberg Taken by Bolshevists", Vancouver Daily World, July 3, 1920, p1
  8. ^ "German Cabinet Wins— Vote of Confidence in New Government Is 313 to 64", New York Times, July 4, 1920, p15
  9. ^ "France, 52; Britain, 22", The Observer (London), July 4, 1920, p13
  10. ^ "18 Ballots; Cox Leading as Deadlock Holds", Chicago Sunday Tribune, July 4, 1920, p1
  11. ^ "Lightning Causes Triple Wreck; 18 Die", Chicago Sunday Tribune, July 4, 1920, p1
  12. ^ Alfred P. Sloan, Jr., My Years with General Motors (Doubleday, 1964) p236
  13. ^ "You can have any color (including black)", by Alex Planes, in The Motley Fool column, July 4, 2013
  14. ^ "A New du Pont Product— Duco Finish opens a much larger field for the practical use of soluble cotton", The Du Pont Magazine (November–December 1922), p14
  15. ^ "First Woman to Get Vote for President— Laura Clay", Chicago Daily Tribune, July 6, 1920, p1
  16. ^ "Spa Crowds Give Germans Icy Greeting", New York Tribune, July 5, 1920, p1
  17. ^ "Relief Workers Who Were Slain Carried $400,000", Chicago Daily Tribune, July 13, 1920, p1
  18. ^ "Cox Nominated on 44th Ballot after Palmer Quit", The New York Times, July 6, 1920, p1
  19. ^ "North Schleswig Again Danish; Treaty Is Signed", Chicago Daily Tribune, July 6, 1920, p1
  20. ^ "Two Burned at Stake; Wrong Men Is Belief", Chicago Daily Tribune, July 7, 1920, p1
  21. ^ "Says Wrangel Has Wiped Out 18 Red Regiments", Chicago Daily Tribune, July 19, 1920, p1
  22. ^ "Pick Roosevelt with Cox", Chicago Daily Tribune, July 7, 1920, p1
  23. ^ "Meghen, Youngest Premier, Goes into Office on Fine Record of Past Nine Years", Edmonton Journal, July 7, 1920, p1
  24. ^ "Report Villa Enters Into an Armistice", Chicago Daily Tribune, July 7, 1920, p1
  25. ^ "Bandit Villa Makes Known Peace Terms", Chicago Daily Tribune, July 14, 1920, p3
  26. ^ "U.S. Trade with Russia Allowed at Trader's Risk— No Recognition of the Soviet Granted", Chicago Daily Tribune, July 8, 1920, p7
  27. ^ "Disarm or We'll Occupy Ruhr, Allies Tell Berlin", New York Tribune, July 9, 1920, p1
  28. ^ "Louisiana Fails to Ratify Suffrage Despite Cox's Plea", Washington Post, July 9, 1920, p1
  29. ^ "19th Amendment By State", National Park Service
  30. ^ "Germans Sign; Aim at Victory on Reparation", Chicago Daily Tribune, July 10, 1920, p1
  31. ^ "New Brunswick Goes Bone Dry in Plebiscite— 41,436 Electors Voted for Total Prohibition", Montreal Gazette, March 12, 1920, p1
  32. ^ "Fords Buy Railway into Coal Fields", The New York Times, July 11, 1920, p1
  33. ^ "Ford Purchases Big Coal Corporation in Kentucky," Chicago Tribune, July 16, 1920, p5
  34. ^ "Diplomats Warn Peking Government— City under Martial Law", The New York Times, July 11, 1920, p8
  35. ^ "Germans Win Plebiscites", Washington Post, July 13, 1920, p6
  36. ^ "Allies Demand Armistice For Poles Under Threat Of War on Bolseviki", New York Tribune, July 12, 1920, p1
  37. ^ "Poles in Rout; Reds Capture Minsk, Lemberg", Chicago Sunday Tribune, July 4, 1920, p4
  38. ^ "Lithuania Agrees to Peace with Soviets", Rochester (NY) Democrat and Chronicle, July 13, 1920, p2
  39. ^ "Japan Rejects Suffrage by Vote of 283 to 155", Chicago Daily Tribune, July 14, 1920, p3
  40. ^ "Governor Clement Refuses To Call Special Session", Burlington (VT) Daily News, July 12, 1920, p1
  41. ^ Colleen Aycock, Mark Scott, Tex Rickard: Boxing's Greatest Promoter (McFarland, 2014) pp.136-137
  42. ^ "Japanese Asks Intermarriage with Americans", Chicago Daily Tribune, July 13, 1920, p1
  43. ^ "Bolivian Rebels Seize President and the Cabinet", Chicago Daily Tribune, July 14, 1920, p1
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july, 1920, 1920, january, february, march, april, june, july, august, september, october, november, december, 1011, 1718, 2425, 31july, 1920, charles, ponzi, scheme, exposed, boston, postjuly, 1920, ohio, governor, james, nominated, democratic, presidential, . 1920 January February March April May June July August September October November December lt lt July 1920 gt gt Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa0 1 0 2 0 30 4 0 5 0 6 0 7 0 8 0 9 1011 12 13 14 15 16 1718 19 20 21 22 23 2425 26 27 28 29 30 31July 26 1920 Charles Ponzi scheme exposed by The Boston PostJuly 5 1920 Ohio Governor James M Cox nominated as Democratic presidential candidate after 44 ballots selects Assistant U S Navy Secretary Franklin Roosevelt as running mateJuly 10 1920 Arthur Meighen becomes new Prime Minister of CanadaJuly 4 1920 DuPont chemist s accidental discovery of Duco process opens the era of colorful mass produced automobiles pictured a 1924 True Blue Oakland Tourer first model lacquered with Duco paint Contents 1 Thursday July 1 1920 2 Friday July 2 1920 3 Saturday July 3 1920 4 Sunday July 4 1920 5 Monday July 5 1920 6 Tuesday July 6 1920 7 Wednesday July 7 1920 8 Thursday July 8 1920 9 Friday July 9 1920 10 Saturday July 10 1920 11 Sunday July 11 1920 12 Monday July 12 1920 13 Tuesday July 13 1920 14 Wednesday July 14 1920 15 Thursday July 15 1920 16 Friday July 16 1920 17 Saturday July 17 1920 18 Sunday July 18 1920 19 Monday July 19 1920 20 Tuesday July 20 1920 21 Wednesday July 21 1920 22 Thursday July 22 1920 23 Friday July 23 1920 24 Saturday July 24 1920 25 Sunday July 25 1920 26 Monday July 26 1920 27 Tuesday July 27 1920 28 Wednesday July 28 1920 29 Thursday July 29 1920 30 Friday July 30 1920 31 Saturday July 31 1920 32 ReferencesThursday July 1 1920 edit nbsp BordenSir Robert Borden announced that he was resigning after nine years of service as prime minister of Canada because of poor health 1 Borden made his announcement at a meeting in Ottawa of his Unionist Party colleagues 2 3 The former German town of Walk was divided by an arbitration commission between Estonia where most of the area including the railway station became the town of Valga and Latvia where the southern suburbs part became Valka 4 Born George I Fujimoto American chemist and discoverer of the Fujimoto Belleau reaction in Seattle d 2023 Aziz Sedky prime minister of Egypt from 1972 to 1973 and the developer of Egypt s industrialization during the rule of President Nasser in Cairo d 2008 Died Delfim Moreira 51 President of Brazil 1918 to 1919Friday July 2 1920 edit nbsp McAdoo nbsp CoxDelegate voting for the presidential nomination began at the 1920 Democratic National Convention at San Francisco With a two thirds majority or 729 of the 1102 delegate votes necessary for a nomination former Treasury Secretary and U S President Woodrow Wilson s son in law William Gibbs McAdoo had 266 votes on the first ballot followed by Attorney General A Mitchell Palmer with 256 Ohio Governor James M Cox with 134 and New York Governor Al Smith with 109 The other votes were split among 19 other candidates 5 The convention adjourned for the day after the second roll call with McAdoo still in first place Sir Herbert Samuel arrived in Jaffa to begin his duties as the first British High Commissioner for Palestine placed under mandate by the Allied Powers 6 The Soviet Army and Ukrainian Bolsheviks captured the former Austro Hungarian town of Lemberg occupied at the time by Poland which had named in Lwow driving out Polish and Ukrainian forces 7 For decades it was part of the Ukrainian SSR as Lvov and is now the Ukrainian city of Lviv Died General William L Marshall 74 Chief of the U S Army Corps of Engineers from 1908 to 1910 Saturday July 3 1920 editGermany s Chancellor Constantin Fehrenbach and his new coalition government received a vote of confidence in the Reichstag by a margin of 313 to 64 8 Meeting at Brussels the Allied Conference agreed upon a division of the reparation payments that would be expected from Germany with the initial 8 percent being allocated to Belgium 52 to France 22 to the United Kingdom 5 1 2 to Serbia and 4 apiece to Italy Japan and Portugal 9 The reparation was reportedly going to be based on a principal of 6 000 000 000 British pounds sterling along with interest payable in installments of 150 000 000 per year for the first five years and 250 000 000 from 1926 onward 3 Sixteen more roll calls were taken in the Democratic National Convention On the seventh ballot Governor Cox gained 100 votes to surpass Attorney General Palmer and on the twelfth ballot Cox passed Secretary McAdoo to become the front runner Cox had 458 when the day adjourned after the eighteenth ballot still short of the necessary 729 votes and McAdoo had 330 10 A bolt of lightning led to 18 deaths and over 100 injuries in the wreck of three streetcars near Pittston Pennsylvania Most of those killed were sports fans returning to Scranton from the annual Caledonian Club games against Pittston At 7 30 in the evening the lightning struck and knocked down a telegraph pole adjacent to the Lackawanna and Wyoming Valley Railroad line just as the lead streetcar was approaching Moments later the second streetcar crashed into the back of the first one and then a third car telescoped the second car 11 Born Lennart Bladh Swedish politician member of the Riskdag from 1974 to 1985 d 2006 Died Dr William C Gorgas 65 Surgeon General of the United States Army during the First World WarSunday July 4 1920 editA researcher at the DuPont chemical laboratories more by accident I think than by intention General Motors CEO Alfred P Sloan would note later effected a chemical reaction which led to the development of a nitrocellulose lacquer eventually called Duco 12 Because the lacquer base could carry more color pigment in suspension the color of automobiles was no longer limited to black and in 1923 GM s Oakland Motor Car Company would introduce the dark blue 1924 Oakland Tourer While cars had been custom painted in other colors in the past with a finish that would take a month to dry the Duco Finish permitted the mass production of cars in other colors 13 The Duco Finish was described by the DuPont company as a pyroxylin material made from chemically treated cotton pigments and solvents that will practically revolutionize the enameling business because it dried at room temperature in a few minutes as well as being tough durable adhesive pleasing to the eye and touch 14 Born Anthony Barber British Chancellor of the Exchequer from 1970 to 1974 in Kingston upon Hull Yorkshire d 2005 Leona Helmsley American real estate financier and owner of the Helmsley Hotels chain famously nicknamed The Queen of Mean because of her tyrannical treatment of employees as Leona Rosenthal in Marbletown New York d 2007 Monday July 5 1920 editAfter 43 ballots for a presidential nominee the U S Democratic Party nominated Ohio Governor James M Cox 3 In the 30th round of voting Secretary McAdoo had taken a 403 to 400 lead over Governor Cox and maintained the lead until the 39th round when the votes shifted to 468 to 440 in Cox s favor As midnight arrived voting was in progress on a motion to adjourn nbsp ClayLaura Clay one of the Kentucky delegates to the Democratic National Convention became the first American woman to receive a vote for a presidential nomination for a major U S political party On the 33rd ballot Augustus O Stanley the chairman of the Kentucky delegation cast one of the state s 26 votes for Mrs Clay 15 The Spa Conference between the Supreme War Council composed of the prime ministers of the Allied nations who had won the First World War and the German Reich opened in the town of Spa in Belgium 16 Died Max Klinger 63 German painter and sculptor Israel Friedlander 43 Polish born American rabbi and Zionist leader was murdered along with Rabbi Bernard Cantor while on a relief mission in the Ukraine 17 Tuesday July 6 1920 editThe Democratic Convention finally had a nominee for President of the United States at 1 39 in the morning in San Francisco as Ohio Governor James M Cox was picked by delegates on the 44th ballot with 699 votes cast I t was apparent that before the ballot was completed he would obtain more than 729 votes the two thirds majority required to nominate The New York Times noted and the Vice Chairman of the Democratic National Committee then interrupted the voting and moved to have the nomination made unanimous 18 The 42nd balloting began at 12 26 in the morning King Christian X of Denmark ratified the treaty with Germany returning the northern part of the former German Duchy of Schleswig to Danish control as the province of Slesvig 19 A mob in Paris Texas forced its way into the jail at the Lamar County courthouse and seized two African American brothers Irving Arthur and Herman Arthur who had been arrested on suspicion of the July 2 murder of their landlord and his son The group then took the Arthur brothers to the county fairgrounds and burned the men at the stake 20 With the help of an army of 100 000 Cossacks General Pyotr Wrangel s White Russian Army announced that it had surrounded and captured 18 regiments of the Red Army Cavalry taking 20 000 prisoners and driving the Bolsheviks from Novorossiysk Taganrog and Ekaterinodar 21 Franklin D Roosevelt the Assistant U S Secretary of the Navy was nominated by the Democratic Party for Vice President of the United States 22 Roosevelt the selection of Democratic nominee James M Cox was approved by acclamation without a roll call vote Died Andrew Traynor 77 American Medal of Honor winner and Civil War veteranWednesday July 7 1920 editArthur Meighen agreed to become the ninth Prime Minister of Canada At the age of 44 he was the youngest person to serve as head of the Canadian government Robert Borden the outgoing premier had recommended to the Governor General the Duke of Devonshire that Meighen would be the ideal successor The formal transfer of power took place on Saturday July 10 23 The government of Mexico reported a ceasefire agreement with Pancho Villa as terms of surrender were being discussed to last until July 14 24 Villa s demands were that the 1917 Mexican constitution be abolished and that the 1857 constitution be restored that General Plutarco Elias Calles be dismissed as Minister of War and that civilian elections be held 25 The U S Department of State announced the lifting of a ban on American trade with the Soviet Union but said that diplomatic relations would not be established 26 Born William T Coleman U S Secretary of Transportation from 1975 to 1977 and only the second African American to serve on a U S presidential cabinet in the Germantown section of Philadelphia d 2017 Frank Sandy Tatum American attorney golf executive and president of the United States Golf Association from 1978 to 1980 d 2017 Thursday July 8 1920 editIn the city of Spa in Belgium the Allied powers gave a 24 hour ultimatum to Germany for a reduction of the German Army from 200 000 to 150 000 by the end of October and to 100 000 by the end of January 1921 Speaking for the Allies British Prime Minister David Lloyd George said that if the German government failed to sign an acceptance of the disarmament plan by 12 00 noon on July 9 the Allied Powers were prepared to send troops across the Rhine river to occupy Germany 27 The Louisiana state legislature adjourned at midnight without taking up the question of the women s suffrage amendment 28 The 19th Amendment to the U S Constitution would take effect the following month Almost 50 years later Louisiana s legislature would finally ratify the amendment 29 Friday July 9 1920 editAt the Spa Conference in Belgium on terms of Germany s post war obligations representatives of Germany agreed to the reduction of the republic s army 30 Saturday July 10 1920 editThe Canadian province of New Brunswick became the first to consider whether to stay with the nationwide prohibition that had been enacted in 1918 New Brunswick voters opted overwhelmingly 41 436 to 20 769 in favor of keeping the prohibition against liquor and a second proposal to allow the sale of beer and light wine failed with only 23 713 for and 38 375 against 31 The Ford Motor Company announced its purchase of the Detroit Toledo amp Ironton Railroad and of 400 000 acres of forest land for use in its automobiles 32 The next week Ford purchased his own coal mines the Banner Fork Coal Company in Harlan County Kentucky 33 Glinda of Oz the 14th and last of L Frank Baum s book series was published 14 months after Baum s death Beijing was placed under martial law as Zhang Zuolin traveled to Tianjin to negotiate peace 34 Born Owen Chamberlain American physicist and 1959 Nobel laureate for his discovery with Emilio Segre of the antiproton in San Francisco d 2006 Died Lord Fisher 79 British Admiral of the Fleet in the Royal Navy s First Sea Lord during the First World War Sunday July 11 1920 editVoting was conducted in a plebiscite in two regions of the province of East Prussia within Germany s Free State of Prussia to determine whether the residents of each region wished to continue to be citizens of the German Reich or for their land to become part of the Republic of Poland Voters in the regions of Allenstein and Marienwerder voted overwhelmingly to remain part of East Prussia 35 The Allied premiers at Spa agreed that Poland would receive defense aid if it agreed to return to the frontiers that it had had prior to going to war with the Soviet Union and demanded a ceasefire between the Soviets and the Poles 36 Poland s Army was driven out of the Belarusan capital of Minsk by local Bolsheviks and Russian Soviet troops 37 Born Yul Brynner Russian born American stage actor who won two Tony Awards for The King and I and an Academy Award for the film version as Yuli Borisovich Briner in Vladivostok died of lung cancer 1985 Zecharia Sitchin Soviet born British author and proponent of the ancient astronauts theory of human civilization known for his book series The 12th Planet in Baku Azerbaijan SSR d 2010 Died Eugenie Spanish born countess who was the last Empress of France during the reign of her husband Napoleon III from 1853 until his death in 1873 Charles Stephens 58 British daredevil was killed in an attempt to go over the Niagara Falls Monday July 12 1920 editSoviet Russia signed a treaty with Lithuania acknowledging Lithuania s independence and bringing an end to the Lithuanian Soviet War 38 On June 14 1940 the independence of the Republic of Lithuania would come to an end with an invasion by the Soviet Union and the creation of the Lithuanian SSR as part of the Soviet Union Japan s House of Representatives rejected a resolution to grant women the right to vote with only 155 in favor and 283 against 39 Vermont s Governor Percival W Clement declined to call a special session of the state legislature to consider the 19th Amendment on women s suffrage 40 Sports promoter George Tex Rickard took advantage of the recently passed Walker Law and signed an ambitious ten year lease at 300 000 a year for exclusive use of Madison Square Garden Within the first eight months of the lease Rickard had over one million dollars in earnings on his investment 41 George Shima Japanese American businessman nicknamed The Potato King and President of the Japanese Association of America testified before the California House Committee on Immigration that the state should legalize intermarriage between Japanese and Americans There may be objections now he said but a hundred years from now we will look back upon it as all right 42 Born Sir Randolph Quirk British linguist and co founder of the Survey of English Usage project near Kirk Michael on the Isle of Man d 2017 Tuesday July 13 1920 editBolivia s President Jose Gutierrez Guerra was overthrown in a coup led by General Bautista Saavedra who led a junta of several officers and then won an election in 1921 Gutierrez had been elected president in 1917 as the Liberal Party candidate 43 Saavedra leader of the Republican Party brought an end to 21 years of Liberal Party rule would serve as President of Bolivia until his term s expiration in 1925 The United Kingdom and Japan reported to the League of Nations that they were renewing treaty of alliance 44 The Trades Union Congress of the United Kingdom conducted a vote on the future of Ireland with union members casting card votes overwhelmingly almost 2 76 million to 1 64 million in favor of withdrawing British troops from Ireland and Russia and establishing a separate Irish parliament 45 Born Anna Halprin American dance instructor and health proponent known for her innovations in postmodern dance and for her books on The Five Stages of Healing following her recovery from cancer diagnosed in 1972 as Hannah Schuman in Winnetka Illinois d 2021 Wednesday July 14 1920 edit nbsp King Faisal of SyriaGeneral Henri Gouraud France s new High Commissioner for Syria issued an ultimatum to Faisal al Hashemi the self proclaimed King of Syria demanding unopposed access to the railway between Riyaq in modern day Lebanon and Aleppo with a deadline of July 20 46 47 King Faisal responded favorably before the deadline but on July 22 Gourard sent in occupational troops and issued additional demands Born Tom Neil British RAF flying ace who downed 14 enemy aircraft in World War II in Bootle Merseyside d 2018 Marijohn Wilkin American gospel music songwriter known for One Day at a Time as Marijohn Melson in Kemp Texas d 2006 Hewitt Dunn American gunner and bombardier during World War II and The Korean war he remains one of the United States Air Force most decorated Enlisted men and was the only man in the Eighth Air Force to fly over 100 combat missions d 1961 Died Albert von Keller 76 German painterThursday July 15 1920 editThe Allies served an ultimatum on Germany demanding delivery of two million tons of German coal per month or 24 million per year less than the 29 million per year agreed upon in the Treaty of Versailles 3 Germany responded that it had capacity to deliver no more than 1 1 million per month 48 nbsp GibsonSerial killer Mose Gibson killed his seventh and last victim Gibson broke into the home of Roy G Trapp a wealthy rancher near Fullerton California and beat Trapp to death with a miner s hammer He then beat Trapp s wife unconscious and raped her Gibson was arrested in Drake California after his description was recognized by a telegraph operator 49 Gibson confessed to the murder of Trapp as well as the June murder of Mr and Mrs Jacob Earhart in Arizona and victims in Louisiana and Florida Convicted of the Trapp murder Gibson was hanged on September 24 at the San Quentin State Prison Chile mobilized 10 000 of its troops after Bolivian rebels deported former President Gutierrez to the port of Arica 50 Sinn Fein raided the Dublin post office during the daytime and without encountering resistance carried away government mail and mail addressed to law enforcement agencies 51 Meeting in Chicago delegates of the Farmer Labor Party nominated Parley Park Christensen for President and Max F Hayes for Vice President 52 The America s Cup yachting race series was held for the first time since 1903 The UK challenger Sir Thomas Lipton s yacht Shamrock IV defeated the American championship representative Resolute in the first race 53 No foreign challenger had won a single race except on October 19 1871 when England s Livonia outraced the U S yacht Columbia 54 Friday July 16 1920 editThe Treaty of Saint Germain en Laye with Austria and many of the Minority Treaties all signed on September 10 1919 between the founding members of the League of Nations and future League members went into effect in accordance with their terms 55 The world s first public radiotelephone service was inaugurated to link California s Catalina Island to land lines on the mainland through a relay station at the Los Angeles suburb of San Pedro 56 57 Born Larry Jansen American major league baseball pitcher in Verboort Oregon d 2009 Saturday July 17 1920 editAfter considering objections by Turkey to terms for a peace treaty to end the First World War the Allied Powers delivered a ten day ultimatum to sign the treaty as slightly modified or face the prospect of the Allies ejecting the Turks from Europe once and for all 58 The U S Secretary of the Navy approved General Order 541 for the standard nomenclature of official identification letters and numbers for all ships ranging from AC 5 for the auxiliary collier USS Vulcan to SS 152 for the second line submarine USS H 9 The prefixes ZK ZN and ZR were reserved for airships to be added to the fleet in the future 59 Author Sinclair Lewis delivered the completed manuscript for his bestselling novel Main Street to Harcourt Publishing 60 Born Juan Antonio Samaranch Spanish sports administrator and International Olympic Committee president from 1980 to 2001 in Barcelona d 2010 Gordon Gould American physicist who coined the word laser 61 and was first to realize the concept but who failed to patent it before another inventor in New York City d 2005 Died Charles E Courtney 70 coach of Cornell University s championship Intercollegiate Rowing Association team since 1883Sunday July 18 1920 editThe largest weed colony of plants descended from a common ancestor a clonal growth covering 99 acres 40 ha was found by botanist Harvey A Ward who discovered the field of Gaylussacia brachycera box huckleberry near Losh s Run Perry County Pennsylvania 62 63 64 Hammonasset Beach State Park the most popular summer attraction in the U S state of Connecticut opened to the public near the town of Madison 65 Born Dolph Sweet Adolphus J Sweet American television and film actor best known as Nell Carter s co star in Gimme a Break in New York City d 1985 Died Prince Joachim of Prussia 29 youngest son of the former German Royal Family a day after shooting himself at his Potsdam residence the Villa Leignitz 66 As Joachim Hohenzollern he reportedly had difficulty in adjusting to the loss of his royal fortune and a bitter divorce from his wife Albert Zurner 30 German diver and 1908 Olympic gold medalist inductee into the International Swimming Hall of Fame was killed in a diving accident Monday July 19 1920 editThe Second Congress of Communist International Comintern opened in Russia at Saint Petersburg and on July 23 moved to Moscow where it lasted until August 7 At the conference Lenin s Twenty one Conditions for the admission of a Communist party into Comintern 19 of which were published in advance of the meeting were adopted 67 What was at the time the largest and most powerful wireless station in the world was completed in France near Bourdeaux With a capability to send messages half way around the world the station had eight antenna towers each 200 metres 660 ft high 68 Born Robert Mann American violinist and composer who co founded the Juilliard String Quartet in 1946 in Portland Oregon d 2018 Emile Idee French professional bicyclist and five time Criterium National winner in Nouvion le Comte Hauts de France departement living in 2024 Died Hasan bey Aghayev 45 Azerbaijan Democratic Republic politician was assassinated while on a visit to Tbilisi in Georgia Tuesday July 20 1920 edit nbsp JohnsonJack Johnson the former World Heavyweight Boxing Champion surrendered to U S authorities at the Mexican border more than seven years after fleeing the country to avoid prison With newsreel cameras rolling the former champion and Los Angeles County Sheriff John Cline walked together from Tijuana over to the border patrol office at San Ysidro California at 10 30 in the morning local time 69 Johnson served slightly less than a year at the United States Penitentiary in Leavenworth Kansas as inmate number 15461 70 France s Assemblee nationale approved of Prime Minister Alexandre Millerand by a margin of 420 to 152 in a vote of confidence 71 The British yacht Shamrock IV piloted by Sir Thomas Lipton took a 2 to 0 lead over the defending U S champion Resolute in the best 3 of 5 America s Cup series With Shamrock IV one victory away from winning the Cup for the first time Resolute was put in the situation that it must take three straight to keep the famous cup on this side of the Atlantic 72 Wednesday July 21 1920 editThe Interallied Mission to Poland began with a delegation of French and British diplomats traveling to Warsaw in order to negotiate a peaceful end to the Polish Soviet War British Prime Minister David Lloyd George told the House of Commons If ever a nation in history has gone war mad that nation is Poland The present Polish government has not the slightest support of a majority of the people and added I am depending upon the wisdom and farsightedness of the Bolsheviks to end the war when they realize the Allies support is with the Poles 73 Meanwhile the evacuation of Warsaw began as women and children left the city by train in advance of a Soviet invasion 74 In the third round of the America s Cup yachting race Shamrock IV and Resolute finished the 30 nautical miles 56 km 35 mi course in exactly the same amount of time 4 hours 3 minutes and 6 seconds but Resolute was awarded the victory based on a seven minute time allowance 75 Born Isaac Stern Polish born American violinist in Krzemieniec now Kremenets in western Ukraine d 2001 Jean Daniel French journalist and founder of the weekly news magazine Le Nouvel Observateur in 1964 in Blida French Algeria d 2020 Gunnar Thoresen Norwegian soccer football forward and national team member from 1946 to 1959 in Larvik d 2017 Constant Dutch painter and sculptor as Constant Anton Nieuwenhuys in Amsterdam d 2005 Thursday July 22 1920 edit nbsp A jungle gym The patent application for the newly invented playground structure of interlocking horizontal bars and uprights called the jungle gym also known as the monkey bars was filed by Chicago lawyer Sebastian Hinton and his company Junglegym Inc under the title climbing structure 76 Hinton a resident of Winnetka Illinois wrote in his application I have designed a climbing apparatus so proportioned and constructed that it provides a kind of forest top through which a troop of children may play in a manner somewhat similar to that of a troop of monkeys through the tree tops in a jungle U S Patent No 1 471 465 was awarded on October 23 1923 Losing the Polish Soviet War Poland replaced its government as the nation s chief of state General Jozef Pilsudski dismissed recently appointed Prime Minister Wladyslaw Grabski and selected Wincenty Witos and a new cabinet of ministers 77 The selection of Witos leader of the Polish Peasants Party was a compromise to the Soviet demand that a soviet government be appointed before negotiations would be considered Witos then transmitted a request to Moscow asking for an armistice in the war Pilsudski also placed General Tadeusz Rozwadowski in command of the defending Polish troops Ottoman Sultan Mehmed VI convened a Crown Council Suray i Saltanat at the Yildiz Palace in Istanbul attended by 55 prominent royal political and military figures including his prime minister Grand Vizier Damat Ferid Pasha The group recommended in favor of signing the treaty with the Allied Powers leaving Turkey intact while dividing the lands of the Ottoman Empire and some recommended that he abdicate his throne 78 79 U S Senator Warren G Harding of Ohio who had been nominated as the Republican Party candidate for president on June 12 opened his national campaign as the ceremonial formal notification was delivered to him at his home at 380 Mount Vernon Avenue in Marion Ohio Harding then delivered his acceptance speech from his front porch to a crowd of thousands of supporters 80 The Prohibition Party nominated Aaron S Watkins as its third party presidential candidate and D Leigh Colvin for vice president at its convention in Lincoln Nebraska 81 The Prohibitionists having accomplished their purpose in ratification of the 18th Amendment to the United States Constitution would win slightly less than 189 000 votes in the presidential election Born Hubert Bertie Lewis American born who joined the UK s Royal Air Force and later became a British anti nuclear activist in Chicago d 2010 Died William K Vanderbilt 70 American multimillionaire and thoroughbred horse entrepreneur May Wright Sewall 86 American women s rights activist and suffragistFriday July 23 1920 edit nbsp Kenya colonial flagBy an order in council the United Kingdom annexed the British East Africa Protectorate and declared it the colony of Kenya with Major General Edward Northey as the first colonial governor Northey chose the name of the colony from Mount Kenya 82 which in turn was derived from the Kikuyu language name for the snow capped peak Kere Nygaga for mountain of whiteness 83 Colonial status would continue until December 12 1963 with the granting of independence to Kenya Saturday July 24 1920 editThe French Army composed mostly of troops from Algeria Morocco and Senegal fought an army of 2 000 Arab volunteers at the Battle of Maysalun outside of Damascus After eight hours the Syrian defenders were routed and Yusuf al Azma King Faisal s Minister of War was among the dead French forces then marched into Damascus marking the start of an unhappy colonial occupation that would last twenty six years 84 King Faisal of Syria and his supporters fled Damascus to British protection in Palestine 85 The Soviet Union agreed to a temporary armistice in the Polish Soviet War as Soviet Foreign Affairs Commissar Georgy Chicherin replied to Poland s request for a ceasefire on Soviet terms 86 87 Chicherin announced that General Mikhail Tukhachevsky would send a flag of truce to Poland s General Rozwadowski to allow Polish negotiators safe passage to a neutral zone Born Bella Abzug American politician lawyer and feminist U S Representative for New York from 1971 to 1977 as Bella Savitsky in New York City d 1998 Sunday July 25 1920 editGeneral Mariano Goybet and the French Army marched into Damascus to begin France s mandate over Syria two weeks in advance of his commanding officer General Henri Gourard Making a reference to the First Crusade more than 800 years earlier General Goybet then made a visit to the Umayyad Mosque burial place of the 12th century Muslim commander Saladin and declared Saladin nous voici Saladin we re back The remark is usually attributed to General Gouraud 88 Born Rosalind Franklin English chemist who was recognized posthumously for her work that led to the discovery of the double helix structure of DNA in Notting Hill London d 1958 Monday July 26 1920 editThe Boston Post printed the first of a series of investigative reports exposing Charles Ponzi s fraudulent investment scheme the Securities Exchange Company 89 90 91 The newspaper s findings would lead to the Massachusetts investigation that would bring a halt to Ponzi s activities and would add the phrase Ponzi scheme used in the July 26 headline to the English language Chile s presidential election was decided by two electoral votes a month after the June 25 popular vote Arturo Alessandri had 179 votes and his opponent Luis Barros Borgono had 175 92 93 Tuesday July 27 1920 editThe America s Cup would continue to stay in the United States as Resolute won the fifth race in the best 3 of 5 series after losing the first two outings against the British challenger Shamrock IV 94 Resolute finished one mile ahead of Sir Thomas Lipton s yacht which had been only one race away from taking the trophy The Resolute win marked the thirteenth consecutive time that a U S team had beaten a British challenger in the series and the winning streak that would continue for another 63 years until the 1983 America s Cup win by the Australia II 54 Born Charles Ginsburg American engineer who led the research team at Ampex that developed the first practical videotape recorder in San Francisco d 1992 Howard Hibbett American literary specialist whose translations introduced the English speaking world to Japanese literature in Akron Ohio d 2019 Wednesday July 28 1920 editArchibald Archie Leach a 16 year old English vaudeville performer arrived in the United States at Ellis Island on the ocean liner RMS Olympic along with seven other members of The Penders and manager Robert Pender 95 The troupe had been hired by American producer Charles Dillingham to be featured in a two week engagement at New York s Globe Theatre as an act in Dillingham s Broadway production the Good Times revue 96 In 1931 Leach would be signed to a movie contract with Paramount Famous Lasky Corporation now Paramount Pictures and would be given the stage name Cary Grant Pancho Villa surrendered to Mexican Army General Eugenio Martinez a representative of President de la Huerta after an all night conference 97 Villa and his 180 troops then traveled by train to Torreon where they disbanded In return for laying down his weapons Villa was allowed to return to Chihuahua and granted an annual allowance by the Mexican government while his 180 troops were allowed a year s pay from the Mexican Army and given farming land Carl Haeglin an American businessman who had been held for ransom was released and all of the rebels were restored to full Mexican citizenship 98 The former Austro Hungarian territory of the Duchy of Teschen was divided between Czechoslovakia where it was called Tesin and Poland where it was Cieszyn by order of the Allied Premiers at the Spa Conference Two all metal airplanes departed from New York for the first trans continental postal flight They would arrive in San Francisco on August 8 53 Thursday July 29 1920 editWomen were allowed to be part of jury trial in the United Kingdom for the first time as a result of the new Sex Disqualification Removal Act 1919 that had been granted royal assent on December 23 At the court of quarter sessions in Bristol William Henry Ayton was put on trial on charges of stealing parcels from a railway station 99 R E Dummett the prosecutor began his opening statement by saying Ladies and gentlemen of the jury this the first occasion on which I have used this unfamiliar phrase As far as I know it has not been used before in the annals of the jurisdiction in this country and certainly not in this city The jury of six men and six women found Ayton guilty of the crime charged and he was sentenced to one year in jail 100 Friday July 30 1920 editThe 1st World Scout Jamboree opened at Olympia in London 101 102 With two days left before the supply of coal for railroads would be exhausted U S President Wilson sent a telegram to John L Lewis of the United Mine Workers of America warning Lewis to end the walkout of coal miners in Illinois and Iowa or face the end of government recognition of the UMWA Y our action in refusing to mine coal on the terms which you had accepted may result in great suffering in many households during the coming winter and interfere with the continuation of industrial and agricultural activity Wilson wrote adding the violation of the terms of your solemn obligation impairs your own good name and destroys the confidence which is the basis of all mutual agreements The President promised to revisit the findings of the Bituminous Coal Commission in August about alleged inequalities in an agreement but not as long as the mine workers continue on strike 103 A record sized crowd for a golf match more than 7 000 people the largest group to ever witness a golf match in the United States came to the Belmont Country Club at Waverley Massachusetts to watch English professional golfers Harry Vardon and Ted Ray play against the top U S amateur team of Francis Ouimet and Jesse Guilford The British pros won the exhibition match hyped as a revenge match for Vardon s victory over Ouimet and Ray in a tiebreaker playoff in the 1913 U S Open 104 Born Martin Knowlton American travel agent and hostel administrator who established Elderhostel in Dallas d 2009 Saturday July 31 1920 editFrance prohibited the sale or prescription of contraceptives as well as forbidding the distribution of antinatalist propaganda as a means of remedying the loss of 1 5 million men during World War I Sociologists would determine later that the severe penalties did not restore the fertility rate to its pre war level of an average of 2 5 children per women 105 The price of traveling by train in the United States was increased by 20 percent per person and freight shipping rates increased by 40 in a decision by the U S Interstate Commerce Commission 106 107 The Byelorussian Soviet Socialist Republic was created by the Belarusan Communist Party 20 days after the capital city of Minsk was recovered from Poland s control In 1922 the Russian dominated state would join with other Soviet Socialist Republics the Russian Federation the Trancaucasian Federation and the Ukrainian Republic to form the Soviet Union The Communist Party of Great Britain was formed by representatives of various British revolutionary socialist groups at a meeting at the Cannon Street Hotel in London Died Ion Dragoumis 42 Greek diplomat died after being shot by Pavlos Gyparis the bodyguard to Dragoumis s political opponent Greek Prime Minister Eleftherios VenizelosReferences edit Sir Robert Borden Announces He Is Determined to Resign Decision This Time Is Final He Declares Winnipeg Evening Tribune July 1 1920 p1 Sir Robert Borden Premier of Canada Is Ailing Resigns Chicago Tribune July 2 1920 p13 a b c d Record of Current Events The American Review of Reviews Volume 62 August 1920 pp135 140 Border twin cities in the Baltic Area anomalies or nexuses of mutual benefit by Thomas Lunden in Twin Cities Urban Communities Borders and Relationships over Time ed by John Garrard and Ekaterina Mikhailova Routledge 2019 M ADOO HIGH ON 2 BALLOTS His Vote Is 289 Palmer 264 Cox 159 Adjourn Chicago Daily Tribune July 3 1920 p1 British High Commissioner for Palestine Is on the Job Chicago Sunday Tribune July 4 1920 p4 Lemberg Taken by Bolshevists Vancouver Daily World July 3 1920 p1 German Cabinet Wins Vote of Confidence in New Government Is 313 to 64 New York Times July 4 1920 p15 France 52 Britain 22 The Observer London July 4 1920 p13 18 Ballots Cox Leading as Deadlock Holds Chicago Sunday Tribune July 4 1920 p1 Lightning Causes Triple Wreck 18 Die Chicago Sunday Tribune July 4 1920 p1 Alfred P Sloan Jr My Years with General Motors Doubleday 1964 p236 You can have any color including black by Alex Planes in The Motley Fool column July 4 2013 A New du Pont Product Duco Finish opens a much larger field for the practical use of soluble cotton The Du Pont Magazine November December 1922 p14 First Woman to Get Vote for President Laura Clay Chicago Daily Tribune July 6 1920 p1 Spa Crowds Give Germans Icy Greeting New York Tribune July 5 1920 p1 Relief Workers Who Were Slain Carried 400 000 Chicago Daily Tribune July 13 1920 p1 Cox Nominated on 44th Ballot after Palmer Quit The New York Times July 6 1920 p1 North Schleswig Again Danish Treaty Is Signed Chicago Daily Tribune July 6 1920 p1 Two Burned at Stake Wrong Men Is Belief Chicago Daily Tribune July 7 1920 p1 Says Wrangel Has Wiped Out 18 Red Regiments Chicago Daily Tribune July 19 1920 p1 Pick Roosevelt with Cox Chicago Daily Tribune July 7 1920 p1 Meghen Youngest Premier Goes into Office on Fine Record of Past Nine Years Edmonton Journal July 7 1920 p1 Report Villa Enters Into an Armistice Chicago Daily Tribune July 7 1920 p1 Bandit Villa Makes Known Peace Terms Chicago Daily Tribune July 14 1920 p3 U S Trade with Russia Allowed at Trader s Risk No Recognition of the Soviet Granted Chicago Daily Tribune July 8 1920 p7 Disarm or We ll Occupy Ruhr Allies Tell Berlin New York Tribune July 9 1920 p1 Louisiana Fails to Ratify Suffrage Despite Cox s Plea Washington Post July 9 1920 p1 19th Amendment By State National Park Service Germans Sign Aim at Victory on Reparation Chicago Daily Tribune July 10 1920 p1 New Brunswick Goes Bone Dry in Plebiscite 41 436 Electors Voted for Total Prohibition Montreal Gazette March 12 1920 p1 Fords Buy Railway into Coal Fields The New York Times July 11 1920 p1 Ford Purchases Big Coal Corporation in Kentucky Chicago Tribune July 16 1920 p5 Diplomats Warn Peking Government City under Martial Law The New York Times July 11 1920 p8 Germans Win Plebiscites Washington Post July 13 1920 p6 Allies Demand Armistice For Poles Under Threat Of War on Bolseviki New York Tribune July 12 1920 p1 Poles in Rout Reds Capture Minsk Lemberg Chicago Sunday Tribune July 4 1920 p4 Lithuania Agrees to Peace with Soviets Rochester NY Democrat and Chronicle July 13 1920 p2 Japan Rejects Suffrage by Vote of 283 to 155 Chicago Daily Tribune July 14 1920 p3 Governor Clement Refuses To Call Special Session Burlington VT Daily News July 12 1920 p1 Colleen Aycock Mark Scott Tex Rickard Boxing s Greatest Promoter McFarland 2014 pp 136 137 Japanese Asks Intermarriage with Americans Chicago Daily Tribune July 13 1920 p1 Bolivian Rebels Seize President and the Cabinet Chicago Daily Tribune July 14 1920 p1 Great Britain Treaty with Japanese Chicago Daily Tribune July 13 1920 p1 British Labor in Threat Over Irish New York Herald July 14 1920 p3 Martin Sicker The Middle East in the Twentieth Century Greenwood Publishing Group 2001 p69 Janet Wallach Desert Queen The Extraordinary Life of Gertrude Bell Doubleday 1996 Allies Demand Yes or No on Coal Today Chicago Daily Tribune July 16 1920 p1 Negro Convict Confesses He Killed Seven Cannot Enumerate All His Robberies Chicago Daily Tribune July 24 1920 p4 New Rulers of Bolivia Deport Guerra and Aides Chicago Daily Tribune July 16 1920 p2 Postoffice at Dublin Raided in Daylight Fifty Sinn Feiners Many without Masks Seize Official Mail Baltimore Sun July 16 1920 p1 Labor Names Christensen After a Split Chicago Daily Tribune July 15 1920 p1 a b Record of Current Events The American Review of Reviews Volume 62 September 1920 pp248 252 a b History of the Cup Chicago Daily Tribune July 28 1920 p2 The League of Nations Starts An Outline by its Organisers Macmillan 1920 p240 Telephone Company s Accomplishments and Plans The Wireless Age magazine April 1922 p50 Central Get Me Catalina Tis Possible Now Over New Wireless Telephone Los Angeles Times July 16 1920 pC 3 Yield in 10 Days or Quit Europe Allies to Turks Chicago Sunday Tribune July 18 1920 p1 Standard Nomenclature and List of Vessels U S Navy U S Navy 1920 Main Street by Mark Schorer American Heritage October 1961 Nick Taylor LASER The inventor the Nobel laureate and the thirty year patent war Simon amp Schuster 2000 Rhodora Journal of the New England Botanical Club October 1920 p167 Largest Weed Colony GuinnessWorldRecords com Pennsylvania s Oldest Citizen by Nathan D McMillen The Pennsylvania Center for the Book Fall 2010 Greg McHone Great Day Trips to Discover the Geology of Connecticut Perry Heights Press 2004 p149 Kaiser s Son Kills Self Joachim His Fortune Gone Ends His Life Chicago Daily Tribune July 19 1920 p1 Tenth Congress of the Russian Communist Party Marxists org World s Biggest Wireless Plant Yanks Memorial Chicago Daily Tribune July 20 1920 p1 Jack Johnson Surrenders to U S Officials I m Mighty Glad to Be Back Says Pugilist Held Under Mann Act St Louis Star July 20 1920 David L Hudson Jr Boxing in America An Autopsy ABC CLIO 2012 p25 Millerand Wins Despite Attack by M Tardieu Chicago Tribune July 21 1920 p1 Shamrock Wins Second Race One More Takes Cup Chicago Daily Tribune July 22 1920 p1 Lloyd George Assails Poland as War Mad Chicago Tribune July 22 1920 p4 Warsaw Flight Begins Yank Relief Forces Also Quitting City Chicago Daily Tribune July 22 1920 p1 U S Yacht Wins Closest Finish in Cup History Chicago Daily Tribune July 22 1920 p1 U S Patent No 1 471 465 New Cabinet Asks Soviets for Armistice Peasant Premier Radios Moscow Chicago Daily Tribune July 24 1920 p1 Crown Council of Turks Vote to Sign Treaty Princes Ask Sultan to Abdicate Chicago Daily Tribune July 24 1920 p3 Arbitral Award Of the President of the United States of America Woodrow Wilson p x Armenian Genocide Reparations Harding Accepting Nomination Denounces Wilson s League San Francisco Chronicle July 23 1920 p1 Watkins Picked by Drys He Is Also from Ohio Chicago Daily Tribune July 23 1920 p3 Colony and Protectorate of Kenya 1920 1963 in Historical Dictionary of Kenya ed by Robert M Maxon and Thomas P Ofcansky Rowman amp Littlefield 2014 pp 57 58 Mount Kenya in Historical Dictionary of Kenya p 232 Eugene Rogan The Arabs A History Basic Books 2019 Carlisle Rodney 2007 World War I Facts on File p 291 ISBN 978 0 8160 6061 0 Truce Halts Red Armies Accept Offer of Armistice Envoys on Way Chicago Sunday Tribune July 25 1920 p1 Polish Soviet Armistice Set to Being Friday Chicago Daily Tribune July 27 1920 p1 General Gouraud Saladin We re Back Did He Really Say It 27 May 2016 Questions the Motive Behind Ponzi Scheme Barron Says Reply Coupon Plan Can Be Worked Only in Small Way Reports From Europe Are Expected Today The Boston Post July 26 1920 p1 Mitchell Zuckoff Ponzi s Scheme The True Story of a Financial Legend Random House 2005 p17 In Ponzi We Trust by Mary Darby Smithsonian Magazine December 1998 Chile Choosing Chief Electors Meet Today to Select President of Republic Philadelphia Inquirer July 26 1920 p8 Wins by Two Votes Bakersfield CA Morning Echo July 30 1920 p9 America s Cup Stays Here Resolute Wins Beats Lipton Yacht a Mile Chicago Daily Tribune July 28 1920 p1 Marc Eliot Cary Grant A Biography Random House 2005 p37 Graham McCann Cary Grant A Class Apart Columbia University Press 1998 p40 Villa Offers Surrender Pancho Told to Give Self up to Martinez Chicago Daily Tribune July 27 1920 p1 Villa Surrenders Chicago Daily Tribune July 29 1920 p1 Gary Powell Convicted Landmark Cases in British Criminal History Amberley Publishing 2018 Quentin Falk The Musical Milkman Murder Kings Road Publishing 2012 1st World Jamboree The Pine Tree Web 1998 Archived from the original on May 14 2011 Retrieved February 23 2011 15 000 Witness Big Procession of Boy Scouts Chicago Daily Tribune August 2 1920 p3 Text of President s Message Warning Miners to End Strike Louisville KY Courier Journal July 31 1920 p1 English Golfers Win from Amateur Stars Ray and Vardon Get Revenge for Ouimet Victory of 1913 Boston Post July 31 1920 pS 1 Population Policy in France 1896 2003 by Jean Claud Chesnais in Demography Analysis and Synthesis A Treatise in Population Academic Press 2006 p441 Railways Get 1 500 000 000 More in Rates 40 Per Cent Freight Increase in East All Passenger Fares to Go Up 20 Per Cent New York Times August 1 1920 p1 R R Rates Go Way Up Seattle Star July 31 1920 p1 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title July 1920 amp oldid 1195871413, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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