January 1924
The following events occurred in January 1924:
January 1, 1924 (Tuesday)
- The Rose Bowl football game, at the time the only postseason bowl game in the U.S., was played before 40,000 spectators between the Washington Huskies and the Navy Midshipmen. The teams played to a 14–14 tie after Washington tied the game with a fourth quarter touchdown.
- During a New Year's Day party at the home of millionaire oil broker Courtland S. Dines, the chauffeur of actress Mabel Normand shot and wounded Dines in the abdomen with a pistol belonging to Normand. When police arrived they found Normand and fellow actress Edna Purviance in the kitchen frantically insisting they didn't know how Dines came to be shot. Alcohol was found on the premises, and the whole episode caused a scandal which caused some exhibitors to pull Purviance's film A Woman of Paris from theaters.
- Born: Earl Torgeson, baseball player, 1950 NL runs scored leader and 1957 AL fielding average leader; in Snohomish, Washington
- Died: Billy Miske, 29, American boxer, died of Bright's disease
January 2, 1924 (Wednesday)
- The Simon & Schuster publishing company was founded in the United States by Richard L. Simon and M. Lincoln Schuster.
- The Mexican government reported that federal troops loyal to President Álvaro Obregón had achieved a victory over the rebels of Adolfo de la Huerta in the vicinity of Zacualpan, State of Mexico.
- Primary railway stations in Paris closed as the water level of the Seine rose due to flooding.
- The Bulgarian government gave former King Ferdinand, who had been living in exile since 1918, permission to return to Sofia. The Kingdom of Yugoslavia immediately sent an ultimatum objecting to the move.
- Died:
- *Sabine Baring-Gould, 89, English novelist, song and hymn composer known for writing "Onward, Christian Soldiers"
- *Clara Abbott, 66, American business executive and the first woman to serve on the board of directors of a major U.S. corporation. She was on the board of Abbott Laboratories from 1900 to 1908 and again from 1911 until her death.
January 3, 1924 (Thursday)
- British archaeologist Howard Carter and his work team discovered the stone sarcophagus of Pharaoh Tutankhamun in his tomb near Luxor in Egypt.
- Felipe Carrillo Puerto, the 49-year-old Governor of the Mexican state of Yucatán since 1922, was executed by rebel followers of General Adolfo de la Huerta, who had started a revolution to overthrow the government of President Alvaro Obregón. Carrillo was killed along with 11 other people, including three of his brothers.
- The boxing-themed comedy film The Great White Way premiered at the Cosmopolitan Theatre in New York City.
- The German film New Year's Eve premiered.
- Born: Otto Beisheim, German businessman and founder of Metro AG membership discount retailer; in Vossnacken, near Velbert
January 4, 1924 (Friday)
- Germany issued an emergency decree known as the Emminger Reform, best known for abolishing the jury system in court proceedings and replacing it with a mixed system of judges.
- The Kingdom of Yugoslavia sent another sharp note to Bulgaria saying it would not accept the return of Ferdinand from exile or any further provocations. Newspapers in Belgrade clamored for war.
- Born: Wally Ris, American competitive swimmer, 1948 Olympic gold medalist in the 100m freestyle; in Chicago
January 5, 1924 (Saturday)
- Greek national hero Eleftherios Venizelos was elected as the Speaker of the Hellenic Parliament by his colleagues. Hours later, he had a minor heart attack and had to leave the session over which he was presiding.
- Automobile manufacturer Walter P. Chrysler introduced his first car, the Chrysler Six Model B-70 sedan, at the 24th Annual New York Automobile Show, held at the 256th Field Artillery Armory in the Bronx.
- The ambitious worldwide service of Dollar Steamship Company was inaugurated in a ceremony that included transmission by U.S. President Calvin Coolidge of a wireless radio signal, giving the liner SS President Harrison permission to depart from San Francisco on a 79-day voyage to Boston.
- Factories and mines in the Ruhr region shut down as laborers refused to work ten hours a day.
- In the U.S., 19-year-old Celia Cooney began a string of armed robberies, starting with the Thomas Ralston Grocery in Brooklyn, where she walked out with $680 and left in a car driven by her husband Ed Cooney. Dubbed "The Bobbed Hair Bandit" by the New York press, Celia continued working with Ed until both were arrested on April 20.
January 6, 1924 (Sunday)
- Turkish President Mustafa Kemal Atatürk survived a bomb attack, but his wife Latife Uşşaki was injured. The assailant visited Atatürk's home and asked to see him, then threw a bomb when he appeared.
- The French government gave the Catholic Church the right to reoccupy its former property under the "diocesan associations" system.
- Born:
- *Kim Dae-jung, President of South Korea from 1998 to 2003 after having previously been a dissident, and laureate of the Nobel Peace Prize in 2000; on the island of Hauido in Chōsen when Korea was under the rule of the Japanese Empire
- *Earl Scruggs, American musician and songwriter; near Boiling Springs, North Carolina
January 7, 1924 (Monday)
- The Fédération Internationale de Hockey was founded in Paris by representatives of field hockey of Austria, Belgium, Czechoslovakia, France, Hungary, Spain, and Switzerland, with Paul Léautey as its first president. A century later, the FIH would govern the rules of field hockey and oversee 140 national associations.
- Mexican rebels captured the oil port city of Tampico.
- Kiyoura Keigo became Prime Minister of Japan.
- Born:
- *Geoffrey Bayldon, English stage, film and TV actor; in Leeds
- *Gene L. Coon, American TV producer known for developing the Star Trek TV series with Gene Roddenberry; in Beatrice, Nebraska
January 8, 1924 (Tuesday)
- The Soviet newspaper Pravda reported that Leon Trotsky was ill, a statement which the rank and file took to mean as a sign of his imminent removal.
- United Kingdom Labour Party leader Ramsay MacDonald gave a speech at a packed Royal Albert Hall where he announced that Labour would accept office as soon as it was invited to do so, though it would be taking over a "bankrupt estate". MacDonald pledged to run the country along sound economic lines, make efforts through the League of Nations to retain peace in Europe, and end the "pompous folly" of refusing to recognize the Soviet Union.
- Born: Ron Moody, English stage and film actor known for his portrayal of Fagin in the 1968 film musical Oliver! and the 1983 Broadway revival; actor, in Tottenham, Middlesex
January 9, 1924 (Wednesday)
- Ramsay MacDonald was re-elected leader of Britain's Labour Party at a full party meeting.
- Born:
- *Keeve Milton "Kip" Siegel, American physicist and entrepreneur, founder of KMS Fusion to develop the first laser-controlled thermonuclear fusion; in New York City
- *Mary Kaye, American guitarist and performer, in Hawaii
- Died: Franz Josef Heinz, 39, German separatist former leader of the "Autonomous Palatinate" in association with the Rhenish Republic, was assassinated in Speyer by 20 members of the German nationalist paramilitary group, the Viking League. The attack on the dining room of the Wittelsbacher Hof also killed a hotel guest and an employee, while two of the assassins died in a shootout.
January 10, 1924 (Thursday)
- All 43 crew of the British submarine were killed when the sub sank after a collision with the battleship in a training exercise in the English Channel.
- The Cohn-Brandt-Cohn film company, founded in 1918 by Joe Brandt and brothers Harry Cohn and Jack Cohn, rebranded itself, changing its name to Columbia Pictures.
- In the occupied Rhineland, France imposed a curfew and closed the borders between the occupied section and the rest of Germany, permitting no traffic in or out except for railroad business and food supplies and a curfew was imposed. The move came amid fears of a new separatist coup attempt after the murder of Franz Josef Heinz the previous day. Relations between Britain and France became strained when French Prime Minister Raymond Poincaré refused to allow British officials into the occupied Rhineland to conduct their own investigation of the separatist movement there.
- Born:
- *Earl Bakken, American inventor who created the first wearable artificial pacemaker, developed by his company Meditronic; in Columbia Heights, Minnesota
- *Max Roach, American jazz drummer; in Newland, North Carolina
- *Marilyn Cotlow, American opera singer known for starring in the original Broadway production of Gian Carlo Menotti's 1947, The Telephone; in Minneapolis.
- Died: Peter MacQueen, 60, U.S. war correspondent, church pastor and adventurer, died one day before his 61st birthday.
January 11, 1924 (Friday)
- Mexican government troops recaptured Pachuca from the rebels, and began a battle to retake Tuxpan.
- Born:
- *Roger Guillemin, French neuroendocrinologist, recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
- *Slim Harpo, American blues musician; in Lobdell, Louisiana
January 12, 1924 (Saturday)
- Mexican mountaineer irregulars loyal to President Obregón recaptured Oaxaca City from the rebels.
- France rejected a British-backed proposal to arrange a League of Nations committee to investigate separatism in the Rhineland Palatinate. Prime Minister Poincaré insisted it was strictly the business of the countries directly involved in administrating the region.
- Bengali activist Gopinath Saha shot a man he thought was Calcutta police commissioner Charles Tegart, but learned that he had killed a different Englishman, Ernest Day, instead. Saha was sentenced to death for the crime and hanged on March 1.
- Born:
- *Olivier Gendebien, Belgian racing driver, four-time winner of the 24 hours of Le Mans race ; in Brussels
- *Chris Chase, American journalist, model and actress; in New York City
- Died: Alexis Lapointe, 63, eccentric French Canadian endurance runner, was killed when he was struck by a train.