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<< December 1923 >>
Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
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December 1, 1923: Collapse of Italy's Gleno Dam destroys two villages, kills 356 people
December 21, 1923: Midair explosion kills all 50 crew on French Navy dirigible Dixmude

The following events occurred in December 1923:

YouTube Encyclopedic

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  • The Vengeance of USS West Virginia | History in the Dark
  • When You Are Old - William Butler Yeats
  • Fashion Of 1923

Transcription

December 1, 1923 (Saturday)

The ruins of the Gleno Dam in 2019 [1]

December 2, 1923 (Sunday)

December 3, 1923 (Monday)

Baby Peggy

December 4, 1923 (Tuesday)

Portions of The Ten Commandments were in Technicolor

December 5, 1923 (Wednesday)

  • An insurrection began in Mexico as officers in five states — Veracruz, San Luis Potosí, Chihuahua, Michoacán and Tamaulipas — ousted the federal officials and installed their own replacements. General Guadalupe Sanchez and several other officers sent a message to President Álvaro Obregón declaring that "to contribute with our military honor to the conservation of peace and respect for the free will of the people, and to prevent the odious impositions which aim at destroying in its cradle our democratic form of government, we have resolved to assume the defense of the institutions offended so seriously by the government you represent."[12][13] The rebellion was nominally led by Adolfo de la Huerta, but the rebels had little in common with each other besides opposition to Obregón.[14]
  • Six days before the conclusion of his term, Governor Edwin P. Morrow of the U.S. state of Kentucky commuted the death sentence of convicted murderer Steve McQueen, who had been a juvenile at the time of the crime. Pleas had been made to the governor's office from around the U.S. and Morrow said that he "heard the voice of God" in the requests.[15]
  • All 18 crew on the cargo steamboat T.W. Lake died when the ship sank off Lopez Island in northern Washington state.[16][17]
  • Born:
  • Died: William Mackenzie, 74, Canadian railway entrepreneur

December 6, 1923 (Thursday)

December 7, 1923 (Friday)

December 8, 1923 (Saturday)

December 9, 1923 (Sunday)

December 10, 1923 (Monday)

December 11, 1923 (Tuesday)

December 12, 1923 (Wednesday)

December 13, 1923 (Thursday)

December 14, 1923 (Friday)

December 15, 1923 (Saturday)

Commandant-General De Vecchi

December 16, 1923 (Sunday)

December 17, 1923 (Monday)

December 18, 1923 (Tuesday)

  • Farmer James D. Cummings and draftsman J. Earl McLeod, both of Washington, Kansas, filed the patent application for their invention, the bulldozer. U.S. Patent No. 1,522,378 would be granted on January 6, 1925.[53] In the patent application, they wrote "Our invention is an attachment for tractors by the use of which the surface of the ground may be easily brought into a level condition. The device is intended more particularly for filling ditches in which pipe lines have been laid but is capable of use as a grader and for other purposes."
  • The Tangier Protocol was signed in Paris by representatives of France, Spain and the United Kingdom, creating the Tangier International Zone in Morocco.[54] The Zone would be abolished in 1956 upon the independence of Morocco.
  • Andrew Volstead told a law enforcement conference in Minnesota that the American people were giving up their opposition to Prohibition and that the act bearing his name would never be amended or repealed.[55]
  • Born: British Army Field Marshal Edwin Bramall, Chief of the Defence Staff 1982–1985; in Tonbridge, Kent (d. 2019)

December 19, 1923 (Wednesday)

December 20, 1923 (Thursday)

December 21, 1923 (Friday)

December 22, 1923 (Saturday)

December 23, 1923 (Sunday)

December 24, 1923 (Monday)

December 25, 1923 (Tuesday)

December 26, 1923 (Wednesday)

  • France's budget for 1924 showed a surplus of 568 million francs.[79]
  • Ships, planes and camel riders searched the Mediterranean and North African coastline looking for any trace of the Dixmude, though expectations of finding survivors were low.[80] On December 29, the search for more survivors halted and the French government began sending condolences to the families of the victims.[81]
  • A fire at one of the buildings of the Illinois State Hospital for the Insane in Chicago killed 14 patients and a nurse.[82]
  • Born: Victor Owusu, Ghanaian lawyer and politician, Attorney General of Ghana 1966-1969 and 1971–1972, Foreign Minister 1969–1971; in Agona, Gold Coast crown colony (d. 2000)
  • Died: Dietrich Eckart, 55, German journalist and early member of the Nazi Party, died of a heart attack

December 27, 1923 (Thursday)

Gustave Eiffel

December 28, 1923 (Friday)

December 29, 1923 (Saturday)

Zworykin's invention
  • Russian-born American engineer Vladimir K. Zworykin and Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing Company filed the first application for Zworykin's invention, "Television System". U.S. Patent No. 2,141,059 would be granted on December 20, 1938. His application stated "One of the objects of my invention is to provide a system for enabling a person to see distant moving objects or views by radio. Another object of my invention is to eliminate synchronizing devices heretofore employed in television systems. Still another object of my invention is to provide a system for broadcasting, from a central point, moving pictures, scenes from plays, or similar entertainments."[89]
  • The government of Germany agreed to pay the expenses incurred by France and Belgium for occupation of Germany's Ruhr area.[90]
  • The Italian steamship SS Mutlah and its crew of 40 disappeared after sending a distress call while sailing in the Mediterranean Sea.[91]
  • Britain and France clashed over the French collection of taxes on a mine in the Ruhr owned by British subjects.[92]
  • The Frank Lloyd-directed fantasy drama film Black Oxen, starring Corinne Griffith, Conway Tearle and Clara Bow, was released.[citation needed]
  • Born:
  • Died: Johann Mayer, 37, German serial killer, was executed by guillotine at the Köln Prison

December 30, 1923 (Sunday)

December 31, 1923 (Monday)

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  35. ^ "9 Die, 7 Hurt in Crash of N.Y. Central Flyer; 'Bill' Donovan Killed", Philadelphia Inquirer, December 10, 1923, p. 1
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  41. ^ "One Farthing in Damages Given to British Lord". Chicago Daily Tribune. July 19, 1923. p. 3.
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  43. ^ "U. S. Flier Drowned When Plane Falls— Lawrence Sperry, Aerial Pioneer, Meets Death in English Channel", Philadelphia Inquirer, December 14, 1923, p. 3
  44. ^ "Quakes Wreck Towns, Kill Many in Colombia; Eighty-Five Dead Already Found in Ruins of Cumbal, Near the Ecuador Border", The New York Times, December 16, 1923, p. 2
  45. ^ "29 Men Perish in Atlantic and Pacific Wrecks— Seamen Frozen to Death in Open Boat Before Arrival of Rescue Vessels Off Carolina", Philadelphia Inquirer, December 17, 1923, p. 1
  46. ^ "Canton Bulldogs Take Professional Grid Title", Baltimore Sun, December 16, 1923, p. 2-1
  47. ^ "Terrible results of battle with lone negro farmer", Easton (PA) Daily Free Press, December 15, 1923, p. 3
  48. ^ "Greece Facing Dynastic Crisis; Radicals Gain— Republicans Claim Victory in Elections and Clamor for Deposition of King George", Philadelphia Inquirer, December 18, 1923, p.1
  49. ^ "Obregon's Air Forces Bomb Rebel Troops". Chicago Daily Tribune. December 17, 1923. p. 1.
  50. ^ "Pacific Wreck Costs Eleven Lives", Philadelphia Inquirer, December 17, 1923, p.8
  51. ^ Comptes Rendus des Seances de la Septieme Conference Generale des Poids et Measures (Gauthier-Villars, 1927) p. 67
  52. ^ "La proclamation de l'unite syrienne", L'Illustration (January 24, 1925) p. 68
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  55. ^ "Volstead Law to Remain, Its Author Says". Chicago Daily Tribune. December 19, 1923. p. 19.
  56. ^ "U.S. Refuses to Stop "Vacation" for Greek King". Chicago Daily Tribune. December 20, 1923. p. 3.
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