December 1922


The following events occurred in December 1922:

December 1, 1922 (Friday)

December 2, 1922 (Saturday)

December 3, 1922 (Sunday)

  • Prince Andrew of Greece and wife Princess Alice of Battenberg boarded HMS Calypso, a British warship, bringing along their 17-month old son, Phillip, and emigrated to France. Phillip, who would be sent a few years later to live with Alice's mother in the United Kingdom, would grow up to marry Princess Elizabeth, heir to the British throne, in 1947 and, in 1952, would become the Prince Consort on her accession to the throne as Queen.
  • The first radio station in Puerto Rico, WKAQ-AM, began broadcasting.

December 4, 1922 (Monday)

December 5, 1922 (Tuesday)

December 6, 1922 (Wednesday)

December 7, 1922 (Thursday)

December 8, 1922 (Friday)

  • After an emergency cabinet meeting in the newly independent Irish Free State, the new government carried out the executions of four [Irish Republican Party (United States)|Republican Army (1922–1969)|Irish Republican Army] leaders who had led the takeover of the Four Courts in Dublin in April. Executed by hanging at Mountjoy Prison were Rory O'Connor, 39; Joe McKelvey, 24; Liam Mellows, 30; and Richard Barrett, 32. Irish Free State Justice Minister Kevin O'Higgins signed the order authorizing the death penalty, one day after the IRA assassination of Seán Hales. Ironically, O'Connor had been the best man at the wedding of O'Higgins 14 months earlier.
  • Former Prime Minister of Spain Manuel García Prieto, Marquis of Alhucemas, formed a government following the resignation of the previous cabinet three days earlier.
  • A lynch mob in Perry, Florida, numbering more than 3,000 people, stopped the transport of two African-American prisoners suspected of the December 2 murder of a white teacher. Charley Wright was given a mock trial that evening, pronounced guilty, and then burned to death by the mob. The other prisoner, Albert Young, was turned over to the custody of the sheriff of Taylor County but taken from jail by a different mob on December 12 and shot to death.
  • In one of the worst disasters in the history of the U.S. state of Oregon, about 24 city blocks of the business district in Astoria were destroyed by a fire that burned under the streets. The town had been constructed on a foundation of wooden pilings and spread quickly, destroying the town's department stores, hotels, banks and many other businesses and homes.
  • Appearing in person at a meeting of both houses of Congress, U.S. President Warren G. Harding delivered his State of the Union message to Congress. "It is four years since the World War ended", Harding said, "but the inevitable readjustment of the social and economic order is not more than barely begun." Harding spoke at length about the country's recent labor strife and recommended the creation of a non-partisan tribunal to replace the current Labor Board. On the matter of Prohibition he said, "The day is unlikely to come when the Eighteenth Amendment will be repealed. The fact may as well be recognized and our course adapted accordingly."
  • Born: Lucian Freud, German painter; in Berlin
  • Died: Mary Marcy, American socialist

December 9, 1922 (Saturday)

December 10, 1922 (Sunday)

December 11, 1922 (Monday)

  • The Second London Conference of four Prime Ministers broke up with no agreement in place except to meet again in Paris on January 2.
  • British couple Edith Thompson and Frederick Bywaters were found guilty of the murder of Edith's husband, Percy Thompson, and sentenced to death. They were both hanged 15 days later.
  • Gabriel Narutowicz was inaugurated as the first President of Poland amid violent rioting by an estimated 20,000 protesters, blamed on a speech made the day before by General Jozef Haller, commander-in-chief of the Army of Poland. According to an Associated Press account, the protesters, "mostly students and school boys, sought to prevent the inaugural ceremony" and "pelted the new President with snowballs" as he was being driven to the National Assembly Chamber. In clashes with police, four protesters were killed, and more than 100 injured, ten of them seriously. After the inauguration, Narutowicz went to his new official residence, the Belweder Palace, where Field Marshal Józef Piłsudski transferred his authority to an elected leader.
  • The Irish Free State Seanad, the Senate of Ireland's parliament met for its first session and elected Lord Glenavy as its first chairman.
  • Born:
  • *Dilip Kumar, Indian Hindi cinema film producer and actor; in Peshawar, British India
  • *Maila Nurmi, Finnish actress and television personality; in Petsamo
  • *Grace Paley, American short story author; in the Bronx, New York City
  • *Noah Hutchings, American evangelist and radio personality known for the syndicated program Your Watchman On The Wall; in Messer, Oklahoma
  • Died: William G. Henderson, 40, American motorcycle manufacturer and inductee into the Motorcycle Hall of Fame, was killed in an accident while testing the latest model from his Ace Motor Corporation, when he collided with an automobile at an intersection in Philadelphia.

December 12, 1922 (Tuesday)

December 13, 1922 (Wednesday)

  • Uruguay's President Baltasar Brum engaged in a duel with deadly weapons against his political rival, Luis Alberto de Herrera, in front of several hundred witnesses. The combat took place at an airfield about from Montevideo late in the afternoon. According to an Associated Press report, the two men stood 25 paces apart and fired at each other twice, after their seconds had tried to talk them out of the duel. Whether by intention or accidentally, neither man's bullets struck the other. President Brum challenged Herrera to the duel after Herrera told a newspaper that President Brum had manipulated election results. Under Uruguayan law, dueling was permitted at the time so long as a "tribunal of honor" investigated the truth of the grievances of the challenger.
  • The Transcaucasian Socialist Federative Soviet Republic was created as a unified state by the members of a loose federation consisting of the Armenian SSR, the Azerbaijani SSR and the Georgian SSR. The new entity would last for only 17 days before becoming a member of the Soviet Union on December 30.
  • At least 15 people were fatally scalded, and 40 injured, in an accident on the Houston East and West Texas Railway at the depot at Humble, Texas. Houston East passenger train number 28 sideswiped a freight train's locomotive, tearing loose a two-inch diameter steam pipe. The pipe crashed into the window of the car on the train reserved for smokers and sprayed the compartment with its boiling contents.
  • The first trial in the Herrin Massacre began in Marion, Illinois.
  • Irish irregulars took Carrick-on-Suir.
  • Died: Hannes Hafstein, 61, Icelandic politician and poet

December 14, 1922 (Thursday)

December 15, 1922 (Friday)

December 16, 1922 (Saturday)

December 17, 1922 (Sunday)

  • The last British troops left Dublin and the last British military installation, the Marlborough Barracks, was formally handed over to the Irish National Army, which would later rename it the McKee Barracks.
  • Józef Piłsudski was made Chief of the Polish General Staff to replace Władysław Sikorski as well as acting president after the assassination of Narutowicz.
  • Jenks Harris, an actor with Universal Studios, led a gang of five other people and robbed the local bank of Piru, California of $11,000. Harris told the police that he had gotten the idea while he was playing a minor part in a Universal production that had been filmed near Piru.
  • The British cargo ship SS Smerdis sank in the River Mersey at Liverpool after colliding with another ship, SS City of London, drowning 10 of her 18 crew.
  • Born: Alan Voorhees, transportation engineer and urban planner, in Highland Park, New Jersey

December 18, 1922 (Monday)

December 19, 1922 (Tuesday)

December 20, 1922 (Wednesday)

December 21, 1922 (Thursday)

December 22, 1922 (Friday)

December 23, 1922 (Saturday)

  • Pope Pius XI promulgated his first encyclical, Ubi arcano Dei consilio.
  • The 10th All-Russian Congress of Soviets opened at the Grand Opera House in Moscow with more than 3,000 legislators, 90 percent of whom were Communist Party members, in order to give approval of the latest planning programs of the Russian government. On the agenda was a proposal from the Ukraine Communist Party for a treaty of union of the Communist nations.
  • Vladimir Lenin began dictating his notes expressing his views on the party leadership and the matter of who should succeed him. He expressed reservations about all the party leaders, but was particularly critical of Joseph Stalin.
  • The British cargo ship SS Maid of Delos foundered a gale in St George's Channel off Skomer, Pembrokeshire, killing all 26 of her crew.
  • Born: Micheline Ostermeyer, French athlete and concert pianist, in Rang-du-Fliers, Pas-de-Calais département
  • Died: Bernard Kirk, 22, American college football player and star end for the University of Michigan, died six days after a December 17 auto accident.

December 24, 1922 (Sunday)

December 25, 1922 (Monday)

December 26, 1922 (Tuesday)

December 27, 1922 (Wednesday)

  • The Japanese aircraft carrier Hosho was commissioned, the first ship designed from the beginning to be a carrier.
  • The science fiction film The Man from M.A.R.S., notable for using "Teleview", an early 3-D process, was released in theaters under the title M.A.R.S.. A preview showing of the film had been given to the press on October 13.
  • "For the first time in 3,277 years," objects were taken out of the Tomb of Tutankhamun as employees of New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art and the government of Egypt brought out a stretcher holding an intricately carved 14" x 12" x 12" box containing objects that had been buried with the boy pharaoh. Pictures of the contents were taken by Egyptologist Harry Burton began a 10-year project in photographing the Tomb of Tutankhamun and the individual items excavated from within.
  • At a press conference in Chicago, structural engineer Joseph Strauss unveiled his plans for what would be the world's longest bridge, a span over the "Golden Gate", the strait between San Francisco Bay and the Pacific Ocean. "If and when erected," The New York Times noted, "the structure will be the greatest in point of magnitude and span in the world." Construction would begin ten years later and the bridge would open in 1937.

December 28, 1922 (Thursday)

December 29, 1922 (Friday)

December 30, 1922 (Saturday)

December 31, 1922 (Sunday)