November 1920

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November 2, 1920: Warren G. Harding elected U.S. president with 60% of the popular vote, 76% of the electoral vote
November 2, 1920: Execution of teenager Kevin Barry triggers escalating violence in Ireland
November 15, 1920: League of Nations holds its first session at its permanent location in Geneva
November 25, 1920: Gaston Chevrolet and other racers killed in crash in last event of season, wins U.S. driving title

Monday, November 1, 1920

Tuesday, November 2, 1920

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Republican Warren G. Harding, Democrat James M. Cox
  • Ohio U.S. Senator Warren G. Harding, the Republican nominee, was elected President of the United States in a landslide, winning more than 60% of the vote and 404 electoral votes compared to 127 for Ohio Governor James M. Cox, and almost 17 million popular votes to Cox's 9 million.[10][11] Although Governor Cox did not make a comment, the newspaper that he owned, the Dayton News, printed an extra edition at 11:00 pm with the headline "Republican Landslide; Harding Wins".[12] In the U.S. House of Representatives, the balance was 307 Republicans against only 127 Democrats, and the Republicans' slim 49 to 47 majority in the U.S. Senate increased to 59 to 37.
  • The first licensed commercial radio station in the U.S.,
    KDKA-AM of Pittsburgh, made its debut by broadcasting news updates of the presidential and other elections with a speed unmatched by printed news. "Those results were borrowed from a newspaper but", a historian would later write, "for individuals with a radio receiver, managed to arrive much more rapidly."[13] The Westinghouse Electric Company, owner of KDKA, had been transmitting instructions for two weeks before the election[14] With Leo Rosenberg as the anchorman for the broadcast,[15] the results could be picked up by wireless receivers within a 500 miles (800 km) radius of Pittsburgh[16] Although KDKA would be the lone U.S. radio station for ten months, 30 stations would be broadcasting by 1922 and over 500 by 1924.[17]
Rep. Robertson (R-Okla.)
  • William W. Hastings.[18] Robertson was only the second woman to serve in Congress, after Jeannette Rankin
    had been elected in Montana in 1916.
  • Referendums were held in towns across Scotland on the issue of whether to ban the sale of liquor, with 18 districts banning the sale, 24 restricting sale of certain types of alcohol, and 149 staying "wet".[19]
  • The Ocoee massacre began at the black community of Ocoee, Florida, when a white mob carried out the murder of six African Americans after two white men were shot to death while trying to arrest Jules Perry, a black man who had attempted to vote earlier in the day but was denied on grounds that he hadn't paid the poll tax. The white mob then burned down the house from which the shots had been fired to kill the white vigilantes, killing the five men inside. Perry was then taken from the city jail and lynched.[20]
  • Born: Rocco Morabito, Pulitzer Prize-winning photographer; in Port Chester, New York (d. 2009)
  • Died:
    • Louise Imogen Guiney, 58, American poet
    • British India, was executed by a firing squad after his court-martial conviction of mutiny. Private Daly remains the last member of the British armed forces to be executed for mutiny.[21]

Wednesday, November 3, 1920

  • After the initial killing of six African-Americans, the Ocoee massacre continued as the Ku Klux Klan returned to burn the homes of other black residents of the town of Ocoee, Florida, near Orlando. Estimates range from 50 to 65 additional murders of black residents in the northern section of town until dawn. In the aftermath, black residents in the southern section were intimidated into moving away.[22]
  • With a 75 percent vote necessary to continue plans for a strike, British coal miners fell short, rejecting a proposed settlement by only a small majority.[2]
  • The Inter-Allied Control Commission met at Munich to request that Bavaria disarm its militia detachments.[2]
  • Born: Oodgeroo Noonuccal, aboriginal Australian poet and activist; as Kathleen Jean Mary Ruska on Stradbroke Island, Queensland (d. 1993)
  • Died: U.S. Navy Commander
    Governor of American Samoa, committed suicide by shooting himself in the chest at his residence in the Government House at Tutuila, after a formal complaint was filed with the U.S. Secretary of the Navy regarding his administration of the American territory.[23]

Thursday, November 4, 1920

Friday, November 5, 1920

  • At a press conference at the crowded ballroom of the Hotel Claridge in New York City, world heavyweight boxing champion Jack Dempsey and world light heavyweight champion and European heavyweight champ Georges Carpentier formally signed a contract to face each other in an eagerly-anticipated "Fight of the Century".[28] Each fighter would receive an unprecedented amount of money — $500,000 (equivalent to $7.6 million in 2023). The date and location of the bout remained to be negotiated, but it would eventually take place on July 2, 1921, in Jersey City, New Jersey.
  • Born: Douglass North, American economist and 1993 Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences laureate; in Cambridge, Massachusetts (d. 2015)

Saturday, November 6, 1920

  • The Princeton University Tigers, who claim a share of the mythical college football championship for 1920, suffered the only blemish in a season of six wins and no losses after the unbeaten Harvard Crimson overcame a 14–7 deficit in the final minute to tie the game, 14 to 14.[29] Princeton finished with a 6-0-1 record and outscored its opponents, 144 points to 23. The other claimant, the California Golden Bears, scored 510 points to its opponents 14, had a record of 9-0-0 with six shutouts, including its postseason Rose Bowl win against unbeaten Ohio State University.

Sunday, November 7, 1920

Monday, November 8, 1920

  • After the clubs within the two 8-team major baseball leagues could not agree on whether to have a powerful executive to control the sport, the peaceful coexistence of baseball's American League and National League came to an end.[33] Three AL teams (the Red Sox, White Sox and Yankees), opposed to AL President Ban Johnson, broke with the other five and agreed a plan to organize a new 12-team National League— composed of two franchises each in Boston (Braves and Red Sox), New York (Giants and Yankees), Chicago (Cubs and White Sox), the remaining five other NL teams (Brooklyn Dodgers, Cincinnati Reds, Pittsburgh Pirates, St. Louis Cardinals and Philadelphia Phillies), as New York, Chicago and Boston AL franchises jumped to the National League.[34] A 12th team was to be selected before the 1921 baseball season. The American League announced that it would operate in 1921 as a six team circuit, consisting of the Cleveland Indians, Detroit Tigers, Philadelphia Athletics, St. Louis Browns, Washington Senators and a new Boston Americans franchise.[35]
  • The popular British comic strip Rupert Bear, by Mary Tourtel, made its debut as a feature in the London newspaper, the Daily Express[36]
  • The U.S. Supreme Court ruled that private stocks of liquor could be moved and stored by their owners without violating the 18th Amendment.[37][2]
  • Born:
  • Died:

Tuesday, November 9, 1920

Flag of the Free City of Danzig
  • At
    German-speaking residents of Poland by the Treaty of Versailles) signed an agreement recognizing the semi-autonomous state under the authority of a League of Nations Commissioner, belonging to neither Poland nor Germany. In return for the recognition, Poland received the free use and service of the railway system, waterways and seaports within the Danzig state.[38]
  • Died: Alberto Blest Gana, 90, Chilean novelist and former ambassador to France and the United Kingdom

Wednesday, November 10, 1920

  • Albert Hall, specifically his statement that "I hope the day will soon come when we shall meet here to pass a blessing on the British revolution... When that day comes, woe to all those people who get in our way." Referring to two British politicians by name as persons who might be hanged in public, Malone had stated "What are a few Churchills or a few Curzon lamp posts compared with the misery of thousands of human beings?"[40] and was picked up before he could encourage similar sentiments in Ireland. He would later be sentenced to six months imprisonment under the Defence of the Realm Act 1914
    .
  • Died: U.S. Navy Admiral
    U.S. Pacific Fleet

Thursday, November 11, 1920

The Unknown Warrior, London
Tombe du Soldat inconnu, Paris
  • France and the United Kingdom both interred the remains of a casualty of World War One whose remains could not be identified, creating the first monument of a Tomb of the Unknown Soldier. In simultaneous ceremonies on the second anniversary of the Armistice of 11 November 1918 that ended the Great War, the British dedicated The Unknown Warrior at Westminster Abbey while France's La tombe du Soldat inconnu was consecrated beneath the Arc de Triomphe in Paris.[41][42] The person buried at Westminster Abbey had been one of four unidentified British Army soldiers, each exhumed from a different battlefield in France, and transported to Saint-Pol-sur-Ternoise. On November 7, Brigadier General Louis J. Wyatt selected the remains of a soldier at random and then transported by HMS Verdun to Britain.[43] In all, there 517,773 unidentified combatants who fought for the United Kingdom.[44] The soldier selected for the Arc de Triomphe was picked at random from eight oak caskets, each drawn from a site in eastern France of a major battle during the Great War, and placed in the Citadelle of Verdun. August Thin, a veteran of the war from the Verdun unit, laid a bouquet of violets on the sixth of the eight caskets.[45]
  • By a vote of 183 to 52, the
    Irish Home Rule bill passed its third and final reading in the UK House of Commons, with a provision for a dual parliament and religious freedom, while Ireland's foreign affairs, coinage, defense, taxation and wireless and cable communications would remain under British control.[46]
  • Born: Lt. General Walter Krupinski, German fighter ace pilot credited with 197 downed aircraft in World War II; in Domnau, East Prussia (now Domnovo, Poland); (d. 2000)

Friday, November 12, 1920

Commissioner Landis and the owners
  • The current organization of Major League Baseball, with the National League and American League being under the authority of a single executive, rather than operating as two organizations, began as the owners of the 16 teams in the two leagues voted unanimously to hire federal Judge Kenesaw Mountain Landis as the first MLB Commissioner.[48] Since 1905, Landis had presided over the U.S. District Court for the Northern Illinois in Chicago. After coming under criticism for presiding over baseball and the federal district court during the 1921 baseball season, Landis would step down from the federal court on March 1, 1922.
  • Italy and Yugoslavia signed a treaty to settle their territorial claims on islands in the Adriatic Sea separating the two nations and land on the eastern side of the Adriatic that had been captured by Italy from Austria-Hungary during World War One. The pact executed at the Italian seaside resort of Rapallo, near Genoa. Under the agreement, Dalmatia (Dalmacija), Longatico (Logatec), Sebenico (Šibenik) went to Yugoslavia and 11 square miles (28 km2) of former Croatian territory was created as a semi-independent buffer state as the Free State of Fiume. Italy received the islands of Cherso, Lussino and Unie[49] (now Cres, Lošinj and Unije off the coast of Croatia).
  • Austria applied for admission to the League of Nations.[50]
  • Film actress Mildred Harris was granted a divorce from film comedian Charlie Chaplin after two years, following a finding by a Los Angeles court that grounds existed to dissolve the marriage on grounds of "cruelty", the basis for the vast majority of uncontested divorces in California at the time.[51] Harris and Chaplin had agreed to a property settlement of payment to her of US$200,000 (roughly $3.1 million in 2023) in return for her agreement not to use the Chaplin name professionally.[52]
  • U.S. President
    Articles of War of the United States. The court-martial at Camp Travis, Texas, had recommended a sentence of death by firing squad for Tamme, whose real name was Antonio Tuminia.[53]
  • Villa Maria College was founded as Philadelphia's first Catholic college for women, in the town of Malvern, Pennsylvania, with the granting of a charter by Pennsylvania to the sisters of the Servants of the Immaculate Heart of Mary. In 1929, it would change its name to Immaculata College and, since 2002, Immaculata University. Immaculata would admit its first male students in 2005.
  • Born:
    Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes
    (d. 2014)

Saturday, November 13, 1920

  • A group of teenagers carried out the largest train robbery in U.S. history, up to that time, after breaking into a rail car on the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy Railroad after it was loaded with a United States Mint shipment of currency, bonds and gold at Omaha, Nebraska. The U.S. Post Office charter was part of a transfer of monies from San Francisco to Chicago.[54] At the train's first stop outside of Omaha, the robbers emptied the bags from the car and loaded them into a waiting automobile, unaware that the mailbags were carrying more than the normal amount of money orders and cash. The amount stolen, originally thought to be one million dollars was soon revealed to be more than $3,500,000[55] (equivalent to almost $46 million in 2020). The ringleader was 17 years old and aided by his younger brother and another young accomplice. Much of the money was burned, and only a small amount was recovered.[56]
  • Born:
  • Died: Luc-Olivier Merson, 74, French illustrator known for his designs of France's currency and postage stamps

Sunday, November 14, 1920

  • Parliamentary elections were held in Greece for the 370 seats of the National Assembly.[57] The result was a surprising loss for the Prime Minister Eleftherios Venizelos and his Liberal Party, who had expected to win easily.
  • Defeated by the Soviet Army, Russian White Army General Pyotr Wrangel fled from the Crimea on the French warship Sebastopol.[58] Wrangel's Prime Minister of the rebel government arrived at Constantinople and conceded that the Soviets had won the Russian Civil War.[59]
  • Karl Huszar
    "ordered that the black flag of mourning should fly over public buildings during the application of the treaty... lamenting the crushing weight of the terms imposed."
  • Banks in the U.S. state of North Dakota began failing; within 10 days, 13 had closed their doors to depositors.[61]
  • Six children between the ages of 3 and 10 years old were killed in New York City, and 12 other children seriously injured, in a panic at the Catheirne Theatre when a clogged furnace sent smoke into the auditorium during a movie. Although there was no fire, smaller children were trampled during the panic to flee the theater.[62]
  • Born:
    Canadian Women’s Army Corps officer and the first indigenous woman in the Canadian Armed Forces; at the Muskeg Lake Cree Nation reserve at Marcelin, Saskatchewan
    (d. 2011)

Monday, November 15, 1920

Tuesday, November 16, 1920

Wednesday, November 17, 1920

  • Dimitrios Rallis formed a cabinet as the new Prime Minister and Foreign Minister of Greece.[75]
  • The Talang Tuo inscription, dating from the year 684 CE, was discovered by Dutch explorer Louis Westernenk on the Indonesian island of Sumatra, near Palembang.[76]
  • Born: George Dunning, Canadian-born British film animator and director known for the 1968 psychedelic Beatles film Yellow Submarine (d. 1979)

Thursday, November 18, 1920

  • By government decree, the Soviet Union became the first nation to legalize abortion, its main purpose being "to reduce the high mortality rate associated with illegal abortions".[77] Under the law, repealed by a second decree in 1936, abortion was available during the first trimester of pregnancy at the request of the woman.[78]
  • Sixteen members of a work crew of 33 lumberjacks were drowned in Maine's Chesuncook Lake, after a boat chartered by their employer caught fire while taking the men to the lumber camp of Great Northern Paper Company. While none were injured by the fire, the survivors were those who were able to swim to shore in icy waters[79]
  • Born:
    prime minister of Egypt from 1978 to 1980 and negotiator of the Camp David Accord treaty between Egypt and Israel; in the Qalyubiyya Governorate
    (d. 2008)

Friday, November 19, 1920

Saturday, November 20, 1920

  • An
    Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia, directing the organization of the church for those bishops and adherents who had been forced to flee the Soviet Union.[80] Ukase Number 362 gave a set of 10 instructions to bishops in exile on what to do if they were unable to communicate with the Patriarch himself.[81]

Sunday, November 21, 1920

  • "Bloody Sunday" took place in Dublin, with the simultaneous morning killing of 14 members of the British intelligence unit, nicknamed "The Cairo Gang" by the Irish Republican Army; followed in the afternoon by a reprisal from the Royal Irish Constabulary that killed 14 people watching a game of Gaelic football at the Croke Park stadium; and closing with the arrest and murder of three IRA officials by local police at Dublin Castle in the evening.[82] At 9:00 in the morning, under the command of Michael Collins, groups of 6 to 8 IRA members made simultaneous home invasions around Dublin and shot members of the Cairo Gang.[83] In the afternoon, 16 trucks carrying members of the Black and Tans drove into Croke Park, where 5,000 people were watching Dublin's match against Tipperary, and the soldiers fired into the crowd, killing 11 outright and injuring dozens of others, including three who died of their wounds later.[84][85] In the evening, three of the IRA members who had assisted in the morning killings were tortured and then beaten to death at Dublin Castle.
  • Born: Stan Musial, American major league baseball outfielder, three-time National League MVP, and Hall of Fame enshrinee; in Donora, Pennsylvania (d. 2013)
  • Died:

Monday, November 22, 1920

  • The
    DuPont chemical company made a successful move to acquire a large portion of auto manufacturer General Motors Corporation and helped relieve "one of the most violent Stock Market declines in recent years" that had started ten days earlier. Pierre S. du Pont and his associates bought all three million of the shares owned by GM founder and CEO William C. Durant for a reported US$40,000,000 (equivalent to $523 million a century later).[86] Durant was replaced as CEO on November 30.[87]
  • Outgoing U.S. President Woodrow Wilson, acting as arbitrator for the League of Nations in delineating the boundary between the new Republic of Armenia and the Republic of Turkey, submitted his decision to the League's Supreme Council. Only 10 days later, Wilson's work became a moot point with Armenia's surrender of the western half of its territory to Turkey in the December 2 Treaty of Alexandropol.[88][89]
  • What was an apparent hoax was reported nationwide from the hamlet of Howesville, West Virginia, where (the news item from Morgantown said) the residents "were thrown into a panic tonight when a large meteor fell at Howesville.. according to reports received here." The news story added that "The meteor struck in the business section of Howesville, near the railroad station. It exploded as it buried itself in the earth. The force of the blast was heard for several miles. An automobile standing near the railroad station was damaged by the explosion and the occupants of the machine were dazed, but escaped injury." The dispatch added "There are no telephones in Howesville and detailed information as to the meteor could not be obtained tonight.[90][91][92][93]
  • New Mexico's Governor Octaviano A. Larrazolo issued pardons to 16 Mexican followers of Pancho Villa, all of whom were serving sentences of life in prison for accompanying Villa on his attack on Columbus, New Mexico, on March 9, 1916.[94] Villa's forces killed 15 American civilians and 10 U.S. Army soldiers in the battle that followed. Governor Larrazolo declared that the 16 convicts had no direct involvement with the killings, that they acted under duress of being killed if they disobeyed an order to accompany Villa, and that they had ridden into Columbus in the belief that they were attacking a garrison in the Mexican town of Palomas, a border town a few miles from Columbus. Of the other Mexican attackers who were captured after the raid, six were executed by hanging in 1916.
  • Born: Baidyanath Misra, Indian economist
  • Died: George Breck, 57, American mural painter

Tuesday, November 23, 1920

  • Anchorage, Alaska, now the largest city in the U.S. state of Alaska, was incorporated, a little more than five years after it was first settled.[95][96] Leopold David took office as the new city's first Mayor.

Wednesday, November 24, 1920

  • The unbeaten Ohio State Buckeyes football team, which had completed its schedule unbeaten and untied (7-0-0) and won the Big Ten Conference title, was selected by a committee in Pasadena, California, to represent the best Eastern U.S. college football team in the Rose Bowl. Their opponent was the Pacific Coast Conference champion, the unbeaten and untied (8-0-0) California Golden Bears.[97] At the time, the Rose Bowl game was the only post-season college football game in the United States. On New Year's Day, California, would beat Ohio State, 28 to 0.
  • U.S. President Wilson pardoned Franz von Rintelen, a German national who had been imprisoned for espionage and war conspiracy. Rintelen was released from prison upon posting a bond on condition that he leave the United States by January 1.[61]

Thursday, November 25, 1920

Friday, November 26, 1920

  • What is now listed as "The deadliest earthquake in Albania"[102] killed 200 people, mostly in the town of Tepelenë in the southern portion of the country. According to seismological data, the 6.2 magnitude tremor struck at 8:51 UTC (9:51 in the morning local time) and lasted seven seconds, collapsing buildings.[103]
  • Regent of Greece at the opening of the new Greek Parliament, pending the selection of a new monarch.[104]
  • The
    Catholic Syrian Bank, one of the oldest banks in India, was incorporated in Thrissur (now in the Kerala state) under the Indian Companies Act 1913.[105]

Saturday, November 27, 1920

  • The Mark of Zorro, a silent film starring Douglas Fairbanks as the original film hero with a cape and mask, was shown for the first time,[106] beginning with an invitation-only premiere at the Capitol Theatre in New York City.[107] Among those influenced by Fairbanks was Bob Kane, the creator of Batman, would later say that was a "profound influence" that had given him "the idea of the dual identity" for a character.[108]
  • Eighteen warehouses in the English city of Liverpool and its suburb, Bootle, were set fire to in one evening in what was suspected by police to be an Irish attack. Most of the buildings were cotton warehouses, torched with gasoline and paraffin shortly before 9:00 in the evening.[109]
  • Italy's Chamber of Deputies voted, 221 to 12, to approve the Treaty of Rapallo with Yugoslavia.[110]
  • Born: Buster Merryfield, English television comedian known for his role as "Uncle Albert" in Only Fools and Horses; in Battersea, London (d. 1999)
  • Died: Alexius Meinong, 67, Austrian philosopher

Sunday, November 28, 1920

Monday, November 29, 1920

Tuesday, November 30, 1920

  • France's National Assembly voted, 387 to 195, to renew diplomatic relations with the Vatican after 47 years. In a separate vote, the re-establishment of a French Embassy in Vatican City was approved, 397 to 209. France had severed relations with Vatican in 1873 after the Franco-Prussian War.[119]
  • Charles Ponzi, known for defrauding investors in a practice which would thereafter bear his name as a "Ponzi scheme", pleaded guilty to one of two federal indictments for using the U.S. mail for the purpose of fraud. Ponzi was sentenced to five years in prison, the maximum sentence allowed, at Plymouth, Massachusetts. A fine, also part of the maximum sentence, was waived because Ponzi had gone bankrupt and had no resources to repay the money lost by his investors. Under federal law, Ponzi would be eligible for parole after 20 months, one-third of his sentence.[120]
  • W.C. Durant resigned as President of General Motors, 10 days after his large share of stock in GM was purchased by a consortium led by Pierre S. DuPont. DuPont was then made President of GM.[121]
  • The U.S. Navy Board of Inquiry delivered its final report on alleged Navy killings in Haiti, and determined that 1,142 Haitians had died in 298 separate skirmishes with U.S. forces.[61]
  • A "war for supremacy in the control of golf in America" was announced by the Western Golf Association, which announced that at its meeting on January 15, it would change its name to the American Golf Association and then challenge the United States Golf Association (USGA). Under an unwritten agreement between the WGA and the USGA, the USGA had 400 member clubs from coast to coast, while the WGA had limited its membership "to clubs west of a line just east of Pittsburgh, Buffalo and Atlanta".[122]
  • Born: Virginia Mayo (stage name for Virginia Clara Jones), American film actress and dancer; in St. Louis (d. 2005)

References

  1. ^ "Dr Zayas Elected President of Cuba", Boston Daily Globe, November 4, 1920, p12
  2. ^ a b c d e "Record of Current Events", The American Review of Reviews Volume 62 (December, 1920), pp585-589
  3. ^ "Dr Harding Goes on the Warpath— Accepts Judge's Denial of 'Negro Blood' Story", Boston Daily Globe, November 2, 1920, p1
  4. ^ "Hunt for Radium Valued at $13,000— Woman at Utica Hospital Threw It Away", Boston Daily Globe, November 2, 1920, p9
  5. ^ "Looking for Radium in a Hospital Sewer!", La Crosse (WI) Tribune and Leader-Press, November 17, 1920, p16
  6. ^ "News Items", New York Medical Journal, April 6, 1921, p546
  7. ^ "British Execute Boy, 18, For Sinn Fein Slaying", Washington Times, November 1, 1920, p1
  8. ^ "Kill 6, Wound 8 in Fourteen Raids by Sinn Feiners— Kevin Barry Dies in Dublin Jail, While Thousands Recite Prayers in the Countryside", The New York Times, November 2, 1920, p1
  9. ^ "10 IRA men reburied 80 years on", CNN.com, October 14, 2001
  10. ^ "Harding Wins; Million Lead Here; Big Republican Gains in Congress", The New York Times, November 3, 1920, p1
  11. ^ "Harding Victory Keeps Growing; Senate Majority 22, House 150— His Electoral Vote 404", Boston Daily Globe, November 5, 1920, p1
  12. ^ "Cox Paper Concedes Landslide to Harding; Defeated Owner Mum", Pittsburgh Gazette Times, November 3, 1920, p1
  13. ^ Mitchell Stephens, Beyond News: The Future of Journalism (Columbia University Press, 2014) p56
  14. ^ "Radio Phones to Flash Election Vote in Danville", Washington Herald, November 2, 1920, p12
  15. ^ Ed Salamon, Pittsburgh's Golden Age of Radio (Arcadia Publishing, 2010) p7
  16. ^ "Will Use Wireless— Election Returns to be Sent Out From Pittsburgh", South Bend (IN) Tribune, November 2, 1920, p5
  17. ^ Steve J. Wurtzler, Electric Sounds: Technological Change and the Rise of Corporate Mass Media (Columbia University Press, 2007) p24
  18. ^ "Woman Elected to Congress by Oklahoma", Boston Daily Globe, November 4, 1920, p1
  19. ^ "Scotland Goes Wet in Ratio of 36 to 10", Boston Daily Globe, November 4, 1920, p20
  20. ^ "Burn Five Negroes and Hang Another— Florida Mob Inflicts Severe Reprisals in Raid", Boston Daily Globe, November 4, 1920, p3
  21. ^ "We must pardon Private Daly, the last man shot for mutiny", by Fergal Keane, The Irish Independent, January 9, 1999
  22. ^ David F. Krugler, 1919, The Year of Racial Violence: How African Americans Fought Back (Cambridge University Press, 2014) p300
  23. ^ "Samoan Governor Commits Suicide— Was to Face an Inquiry", The New York Times, November 6, 1920, p1
  24. ^ "Storm Wrecked Sailor Is Eaten By Big Sharks", Oakland (CA) Tribune, November 4, 1920, reprinted in sharkattackfile.net
  25. ^ "Shark Attacks Wreck Victims— Survivor Tells How 64 Persons Struggled in Sea as Typhoon Raged", Washington Post, November 12, 1920, p1
  26. ^ "Deutsche Bank Forges Ahead", Vancouver Daily Province, November 4, 1920, p7
  27. ^ "Gov Clement Gives Graham Full Pardon— Vermont Ex-Governor Freed Two Hours After Being Sentenced to From Five to Eight Years", Boston Daily Globe, November 5, 1920, p1
  28. ^ "Carpentier Signs to Meet Dempsey", The New York Times, November 6, 1920, p1
  29. ^ "Harvard, in Last Ditch Pull-up, Battles Princeton to 14-14 Tie", Boston Sunday Globe, November 7, 1920, p1
  30. ^ Stephen Kotkin, Stalin: Paradoxes of Power, 1878-1928 (Penguin, 2014) p379
  31. ^ Birgit Beumers, Pop Culture Russia!: Media, Arts, and Lifestyle (ABC-CLIO, 2005) p1
  32. ^ Richard Stites, Revolutionary Dreams: Utopian Vision and Experimental Life in the Russian Revolution (Oxford University Press, 1991)
  33. ^ "At a Meeting to Depose Ban Johnson as the American League President a New 12-team National League Is Proposed", This Day in Baseball
  34. ^ "League Baseball Ripped Wide Open— New National Circuit Formed by 11 Clubs Including Both in Boston— One More to be Admitted", Boston Daily Globe, November 9, 1920, p1
  35. ^ "American League Plans Boston Club", Boston Daily Globe, November 9, 1920, p7
  36. ^ Mark I. West, A Children's Literature Tour of Great Britain (Scarecrow Press, 2003) p121
  37. ^ "Orders Liquor Agent to Act— Owners May Take Their Liquor Home", Boston Daily Globe, November 9, 1920, p1
  38. ^ Raphael Lemkin, Axis Rule in Occupied Europe: Laws of Occupation, Analysis of Government, Proposals for Redress (The Lawbook Exchange, Ltd., 2008) p155
  39. ^ "Member of Parliament Arrested As Red in Dublin", Pittsburgh Gazette-Times, November 11, 1920, p1
  40. ^ "Parliament Man Held for Sedition— Lieut. Col. L'Estrange Accused of Expressing Hope for Coming of 'British Revolution.'", Barre (VT) Daily Times, November 12, 1920, p1
  41. ^ Laurence V. Moyer, Victory Must be Ours: Germany in the Great War, 1914–1918 (Pen and Sword, 1995)
  42. ^ Brian Joseph Martin, Napoleonic Friendship: Military Fraternity, Intimacy, and Sexuality in Nineteenth-century France (University Press of New England, 2011) p271
  43. ^ "The day that Ted helped Unknown Warrior to his rest", by Karen Dunne, Crawley Observer, June 1, 2016
  44. ^ "11/11/18: The significance of the Unknown Soldier", Queensland Country Life, November 12, 1918
  45. ^ "Commemorating France’s Unknown Soldier", by Robert Korengold, Bonjour Paris, November 7, 2012
  46. ^ "Irish Home Rule Bill Is Adopted— Motion to Reject Lost by Vote of 183 to 52", Boston Daily Globe, November 12, 1920, p1
  47. ^ "Cork Hunger Strikers Fed— All Likely to Recover, Say Physicians— Strike Called Off by Decision of Arthur Griffith", Boston Daily Globe, November 13, 1920, p1
  48. ^ "Judge Landis Accepts to Save Game for Kids", Boston Daily Globe, November 13, 1920, p1
  49. ^ "Italy and Serbia Sign Adriatic Pact", Boston Daily Globe, November 13, 1920, p1
  50. ^ "Austria Applies to Enter League", Boston Daily Globe, November 13, 1920, p8
  51. ^ "Divorce Reform in California: The Governor's Commission on the Family and Beyond", by Philip L. Hammer, Santa Clara Law Review (1969)
  52. ^ "Charley Chaplin's Wife Gets Divorce— Mildred Harris Accused Him of Cruelty", Boston Daily Globe, November 13, 1920, p1
  53. ^ "Wilson Refuses to Let Spy be Shot", Boston Daily Globe, November 14, 1920, p1
  54. ^ "Train Robbers Get $1,000,000— Record Looting of Fast Mail in Iowa", Boston Post, November 15, 1920, p1
  55. ^ "Train Robbers Get $3,500,000— Amount First Reported Lost Trebled", Boston Post, November 17, 1920, p4
  56. ^ "How 3 Boys Accomplished the World's Biggest Robbery", San Francisco Examiner, December 19, 1920
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