The first nationwide "football pool" in the United Kingdom, a legal betting pool for gamblers betting money on the outcome of soccer football matches, was launched as bookmakersJohn Moores, Colin Askham and Bill Hughes created the Littlewood Football Pool in Liverpool. Only 35 out of 4,000 printed betting coupons were sold for the first trial of the wagering service.[1]
The Milizia Volontaria per la Sicurezza Nazionale (MSVN), the Italian Fascist Party's "Blackshirts" paramilitary organization, began operations as a government-supported militia. Field Marshal Emilio De Bono, a retired Italian Army general and one of the Fascist Party organizers, became the Blackshirts' first commander.
Mexican troops stormed the headquarters of streetcar operators that continued to hold out on strike after the majority of them had returned to work. A shootout ensued in which 14 of the strikers were reportedly killed.[2]
Inflation worsened in Germany as the mark dropped to 220,000 against a British pound.[3]
A magnitude 8.3 to 8.5 earthquake struck the Kamchatka Peninsula in the Soviet Union, generating a twenty-five foot tsunami that raced across the Pacific Ocean.[8][9][10] The quake caused a series of seven waves over the Hawaiian Islands territory, killing at least 12 people at Kahalui on the island of Maui.[11]
Sovnarkom, the ruling executive body of the Soviet Union, approved plans to create a civil aviation authority for passenger air travel, which would lead to the foundation of the Soviet national airline, Aeroflot.MacDonald, Hugh (1975). Aeroflot: Soviet air transport since 1923. Putnam. ISBN978-0-370-00117-3.
Jack Murphy, American sportswriter for the San Diego Union whose lobbying led to major league sports teams to bring franchises to the area; in Denver, Colorado. The Chargers' home field would be renamed "Jack Murphy Stadium" in his honor after his death in 1980.
The crown of Georgia's last monarch, Giorgi XII, confiscated by Tsar Alexander I of Russia in 1801 after the Kingdom of Georgia's annexation into the Russian Empire, was returned by the Soviet Government to the Georgian State Museum in Tbilisi. Officials of the Georgian SSR would take the crown from the museum on April 23, 1930, and has not been seen publicly since then.[18]
At the opening of an air conference in London, Director of Civil Aviation Sefton Brancker predicted that within five years, an airplane would be able to travel from London to New York in just twelve hours.[19]
The General Treaty of Peace and Amity, 1923, was signed in Washington DC between representatives of the Central American nations of Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, and Nicaragua.[20] The five nations pledged that they would not give recognition to any government in the area that came to power in any manner other than a peaceful transfer of power. Only three nations (Costa Rica, Guatemala and Nicaragua) would ratify the treaty.[21]
An explosion killed 123 miners at the Stag Canon #1 mine in Dawson, New Mexico when a train jumped its track, slammed into the supporting timbers near the mine entrance, and touched off an explosion. Some of the victims were the sons of men who were killed in a 1913 mine disaster at the same site.[25][26][27]
The Irish Free State proclaimed a 10-day amnesty for rebel Irish republicans, granting them a chance to surrender without consequence, after Liam Deasy, the Deputy Chief of the Irish Republican Army, had been captured and persuaded to issue a statement urging other rebels to surrender. Richard Mulcahy, the Minister of Defence and commander-in-chief of the Free State Army, sent a notice that said. "Bearing in mind Liam Deasy's acceptance of the immediate unconditional surrender of all arms and men, the Government offers amnesty to all in arms against the Government who will surrender with their arms on or before Feb. 18."[31]
Died: W. Bourke Cockran, 69, Irish-born U.S. Congressman, died in Washington two days before he would have been inaugurated to another term. Cockran had overwhelmingly won re-election in 1922 with 70% of the vote.
Turkey withdrew its demands for foreign warships to leave the Smyrna Harbor, notifying the British and French navy admirals that it would maintain the status quo until the matter of occupation could be resolved through diplomatic means. An ultimatum to withdraw ships from the harbor had expired at sunset the day before, with no indication from any of the Allied powers that they had any intent to move any of the vessels.[35]
The Soviet Russian airline Aeroflot was founded, six days after the Sovnarkom had approved an expansion of the Red Air Fleet, and began operations under the name Dobrolet.[36]
Governor Pat Neff of Texas signed the bill passed by the Texas State Legislature to create what is now Texas Tech University in Lubbock, the first public university to serve the residents of the 70 counties of the region of West Texas.[41] Neff had vetoed an earlier attempt to create the university in 1921.
Died:Wilhelm Röntgen (spelled Roentgen outside of Germany), 77, German physicist who was the first to discover and reproduce x-rays and, in 1914, won the first Nobel Prize in Physics. Named in his honor (in addition to the official name of x-ray radiation, "Roentgen rays"; the "roentgenogram" image, commonly called "an x-ray"; and the roentgen as the unit of measure of exposure to radiation) is the element Roentgenium, atomic number 111.
The majority Social Democratic Party of Germany opposed a special law that would give the German government special powers in dealing with the Ruhr region.[44]
Italy's ruling Grand Fascist Council passed a resolution stating that no member of the Fascist Party could also be a Freemason, and anyone who was a member of both had to resign from one organization or the other.[45] The resolution stated that the Grand Council "invites all Fascisti who are also Free Masons to choose between belonging to the Fascista National Party or to Freemasonry, because the Fascisti can only recognize a discipline which is the Fascista discipline."[46]
The New York Renaissance all-black professional basketball team, commonly called "The Rens", was established as a touring group that would eventually play both black and white players, and usually defeat them. The Rens would win the first World Professional Basketball Tournament, held annually from 1939 to 1948.[47]
The first radio station in Wales, 5WA Cardiff, went on the air at 5:00 in the afternoon. At 9:00 that evening, Mostyn Thomas, sang "Dafydd y Garreg Wen", which was the first Welsh language song to be broadcast. 5WA Cardiff would operate until 1933.[48]
Alfred E. Smith, the recently inaugurated governor of the U.S. state of New York issued pardons to the last four anarchists, whom he described as "political prisoners", still imprisoned for violating state law. The move came a few weeks after Smith had freed agitator "Big Jim" Larkin who had been convicted under the same rule against sedition. "Evidence upon which they were convicted was much the same as that urged upon the trial of Larkin," Smith said of the remaining four prisoners. "Their offense consisted of spreading literature concerning the Communist Party." He added, "They made the mistake of understanding liberty and freedom as a license. While they should not be encouraged, no good can come from their further punishment, and they undoubtedly understand by this time what is meant by the majesty and dignity of the law."[49]
The U.S. Senate voted, 63 to 6, to approve the proposal of Senator George W. Norris of Nebraska to amend the U.S. Constitution to change the date for inauguration of the U.S. president and of Congress from March to January, and to have newly elected officials take office less than three months after their election, rather than 13 months. Norris's initial proposal was to change the presidential and vice-presidential inauguration from March 4 to "the third Monday in January following their election", and for U.S. Representatives and Senators to take office on the first Monday in January.[50] The measure would fail to reach a vote in the House of Representatives, but Norris persisted and the 20th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution (which sets the inauguration dates as January 20 for the president and January 3 for the Congress) would be ratified in 1933.[51] Senator Norris had first proposed an amendment that the U.S. Senate had approved, 63 to 6, on February 13, 1923, that would have set the beginning of the new presidential and vice-presidential terms on and for Congress to be the first Monday in January but the legislation had not been voted on in the House.
France fined the town of Recklinghausen 100 million marks for its disobedience. The public workers of Gelsenkirchen also went on strike in response.[52]
The government of the German city of Gelsenkirchen refused to pay a 100,000,000 fine levied as an indemnity for the wounding of two French Army soldiers in a clash with local police. In retaliation, the French occupation force arrested several of the town's top bankers[54][55] and then sent troops into the Gelsenkirchen City Hall and collected 85 million marks from the treasury, followed by 17 million more from the railroad station.[56]
Charles R. Forbes, Director of the U.S. Veterans' Bureau, resigned at the request of U.S. President Warren G. Harding amid suspicions that he had been selling surplus supplies at absurdly low prices to private contractors in exchange for kickbacks.[58] Forbes tendered his resignation while in Europe, where he had gone after being angrily confronted by President Harding in a physical altercation.[59][60]
In order to accommodate the arrival of hundreds of thousands of Greek refugees from Turkey, the government of Greece expropriated the lands of the Cham Albanians, the Muslim minority in Epirus, which had been divided between Greece and Albania following the Treaty of Bucharest that ended the Second Balkan War. While the Cham Muslim families were able to keep one home and the land upon which it was built, additional dwellings were expropriated. Compensation for the value of the land was given, if at all, at the 1914 market price rather than that of 1923.[61]
French pilot Joseph Sadi-Lecointe flew faster than any person ever before, setting a new speed record in his Nieuport-Delage NiD 42 airplane and reaching 391.304 km/h (243.145 mph) by flying the first kilometer in 9.2 seconds on a 4 km course. His average speed over the course was 377.657 km/h or 234.064 mph.[62]
The first issue of the French literary magazine Europe was published.[63]
Born:
Adolfo Faustino Sardiña, Cuban-born American fashion designer who went professionally by the single name Adolfo; in Cárdenas (d. 2021)
After 32 centuries, the inner chamber of the Tomb of Tutankhamun was opened in Egypt near Luxor, as Howard Carter and his archaeological team broke the seal and went inside to find the sarcophagus of the boy pharaoh of Egypt.[64] Present were 20 invited witnesses, including the expedition sponsor, George Herbert. Inside the tomb were 5,398 separate items, most prominently Tutankhamun's solid gold coffin. In the Egyptian chronology, agreed upon by the majority of Egyptologists,[65] Tutankhamun is believed to have died in 1323 B.C.
The Conference of Ambassadors of the Allied Powers (the UK, France, Italy and Japan) approved the transfer of the Memel Territory, a mandate of the League of Nations, to the control of Lithuania in the aftermath of the Klaipėda Revolt and Lithuania's invasion of the area that had formerly been part of Germany.[66] The League subsequently withdrew its peacekeeping troops. The transfer was conditioned on the negotiation of a formal international treaty, which would be signed on May 8, 1924.
Under pressure from dictator Benito Mussolini, the Italian Senate voted to ratify both the Washington Naval Treaty on disarmament (signed in April) and the Treaty of Santa Margherita (signed in October to settle the territorial dispute with Yugoslavia). The treaties had previously been approved by the Italian Chamber of Deputies after two days of debate, while the Italian senators debated for less than one day before voting their approval.[67]
The British Indian government announced the "Eight Unit Scheme of Indianisation" of the Indian Army, to be under the command of Indian military officers with the certification as King's Commissioned Indian Officer (KCIO) after training at one of the military institutes in Britain. Only five of the 104 British Indian Army battalions, two of the 21 cavalry regiments and one of the seven pioneer battalions were selected for Indianisation.
A train accident in France killed 27 people when the Paris-Strasbourg express hit a freight train. [70]
The 10-day amnesty period within the Irish Free State, for Irish Republicans to surrender their weapons, came to an end. W. T. Cosgrave, the head of government as President of the Executive Council issued a warning that if anyone continued in "this unnatural war upon his people after the expiration of amnesty period, he must be prepared to pay the price in full, for there will be no going back on this." [71]
Alois Rašín, 55, Czechoslovakian Minister of Finance, died from gunshot wounds inflicted on him by an assassin on January 5.
Henry Brougham, 34, former English rugby union star for the England national team prior to World War One, died more than five years after his lungs were injured by mustard gas used by the German Army against his unit in 1917.
The U.S. Supreme Court decided the case of United States v. Bhagat Singh Thind, upholding a lower court determination that the definition of "white persons" did not extend to light-skinned persons who were not of European descent for purposes of naturalized U.S. citizenship.[74] The action had been brought by Bhagat Singh Thind, a native of Punjab who had served with the U.S. Army in World War One. The Naturalization Act of 1906 limited naturalization to "free white men" and to "persons of African nativity or persons of African descent". Bhagat remained in the U.S. despite the revocation of his citizenship and would later be made a citizen when war veterans were made eligible regardless of race.
The Supreme Court also decided in Moore v. Dempsey[75] that federal courts had the right to review the results of state criminal trials to determine whether the defendant's U.S. constitutional rights had been violated, and to reverse a state decision if the Constitution had not been followed. The 1919 conviction of 12 African American men in the U.S. state of Arkansas had been reviewed after the Court granted a petition for a writ of habeas corpus brought by one of the defense attorneys.
Edward Terry Sanford of Tennessee was sworn in as the new Associate Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court and would serve until his death in 1930. Sanford's entry returned the Court to its full roster of nine justices for the first time since the new term began in October.[77]
Helen Murray Free, American chemist and inventor who created the home tests of blood and urine for detection of diabetes and high blood sugar; in Pittsburgh (d. 2021)
An uneasy truce in the "Egan-Hogan war" between Egan's Rats and the Hogan Gang, the two main organized criminal gangs in the U.S. city of St. Louis, Missouri, came to an end after eight months when Dint Colbeck of the Rats invaded the Hogan territory on the city's north side and killed Jacob Mackler, a lawyer for the Hogan Gang.[citation needed]
The first landing on a ship designed as an aircraft carrier was made on the Imperial Japanese Navy carrier Hōshō, which had been commissioned on December 27. One of several British pilots supplied under a contract between the Sempill Mission and the Imperial Navy, landed on the new Mitsubishi 1MF carrier fighter airplane, designed by British engineer Herbert Smith, on the 552 feet (168 m) long and 74.25 feet (22.63 m) wide flight deck.[81] The first takeoff was made six days later by test pilot William Jordan.[82]
A fiery explosion at the Wheldale Colliery in Castleford, West Yorkshire, fatally injured nine coal miners. One man died at the scene, and the other eight died later from their burns.[84]
U.S. President Warren G. Harding established the first strategic petroleum reserve in the nation, Naval Petroleum Reserve Number 4, by Executive Order #3797.[85]
The Governor of the Mexican state of Yucatán sent notice to the American press, by way of a press release to all consulates in the U.S, that Yucatán's laws on divorce had been amended to make the legal dissolution of marriage easy and inexpensive. Governor Felipe Carrillo Puerto advertised that a divorce by mutual consent could be had for $45 costs and a contested divorce without cause could be obtained after a 30-day period for reconciliation. The only requirement for getting the divorce was for the petitioner to live in Yucatán for 30 days before an order could become final.[89]
The Freistaat Flaschenhals, literally the "Free State of the Bottleneck", was abolished by the French occupational government in the Ruhr.[90] The "free state", based in Lorch am Rhein in what is now the German state of Hesse, had been established in 1919 in an area between the occupational zones of the U.S. and France.
Major General Henry Allen, who had been the military governor of the U.S. occupation zone in Germany and commanded the American Expeditionary Force occupation troops that had recently withdrawn, left the fortress of Ehrenbreitstein in Koblenz, ending the first U.S. occupation of European territory.[91]
A fast-moving fire killed 13 residents of an 18-unit apartment building in Kansas City, Missouri, after starting in the H & H Garage on the ground floor of the structure. Another 21 were able to escape down stairways with less than 15 minutes between the sounding of the alarm and the building's destruction.[92]
Nguyen Chanh Thi, South Vietnamese military leader who lead a coup d'état against the government in 1964 and became part of the ruling military junta until his own overthrow; in Huế (d. 2007)
U.S. President Warren G. Harding sent a special message to the Senate calling on the body to give him the authority to have the United States join the World Court.[93] The Senate declined to vote on the matter.[94]
The first naming of an extraterrestrial object for the United States was made when officials of the Pulkovo Observatory in the Soviet Union voted to approve the renaming of the asteroid 916 to 916 America.[95]
Fred Steiner, American composer and conductor known for music used in various TV shows, including Star Trek, Hogan's Heroes and Gunsmoke; in New York City (d. 2011)
The excavation site of the Tomb of Tutankhamun at Luxor was closed by Howard Carter and Arthur Callender, who arranged to have the door to the tomb blocked and then filled the excavation with tons of sand and rubble until work could resume in the autumn.[97] The reburial of the tomb came two days after The New York Times had broken the news that 250 American tourists aboard the liner S.S. Adriatic were "bound for Luxor to visit the famous royal tomb", including U.S. Senator Oscar Underwood of Alabama and Congressmen Allen T. Treadway (Massachusetts) and Wallace H. White (Maine).[98]
Indian nationalist Kishan Singh Gargaj, one of the founders of the Babbar Akali movement against the colonial authorities of British India, was arrested in Mahal in the Punjab Province after being turned in by a friend for an award of 2,000 rupees. Kishan Singh would be hanged by the British government three years and one day later.[99]
Britain's first dance music radio programme was broadcast when Marius B. Winter and his band played for over an hour with a news bulletin as an interlude.[101]
The nation of Greece used the Julian calendar for the last time before adopting the Gregorian calendar, used by most of the world, the next day.[102] In that the Julian calendar was 13 days behind the Gregorian, the day was noted as "February 15". The next day was March 1 rather than February 16.
U.S. President Harding signed the Smoot-Burton Act (officially the British War Debt Act of 1923) into law, a compromise of the United Kingdom's debt to the U.S. arising from World War One loans, setting the value at $4,604,004,128,000 with a scheduled payment of $4,128,000 for a round figure of exactly $4.6 billion dollars to be financed with British bonds.[103]
^Roberts, Priscilla Mary (2005). World War One. ABC-CLIO. p. 1721. ISBN1-85109-879-8. IMRO members as well as other opponents of Stamboliyski's foreign and domestic policies murdered him... cutting off the hand that signed the Niš Treaty.
^Clayton, John (February 3, 1923). "All Germany Feels French Thumbscrews". Chicago Daily Tribune. p. 1.
^Grange, William. Cultural Chronicle of the Weimar Republic. Scarecrow Press, 2008. p. 139.
^"Pacific Bed Is Torn by Terrific Quake; Waves Hit Hawaii", The New York Times, February 4, 1923, p. 1
^"Earthquake Costs Hawaii $1,000,000— Seven Tidal Waves Sweep Islands, Kill Twelve, Toss Ships About and Leave Wreckage", The New York Times, February 5, 1923, p. 1
^Wales, Henry (February 5, 1923). "British Quit Turk Parley". Chicago Daily Tribune. p. 1.
^"Central Americans Adopt Arms Limit", The New York Times, February 8, 1923, p. 4
^Anderson, Chandler P. (1925). "The Central American Policy of Non-Recognition". The American Journal of International Law. 19 (1). Cambridge University Press: 164–166. doi:10.2307/2189093. JSTOR2189093. S2CID146967913.
^"'Wildflower' Is Melodius", The New York Times, February 8, 1923, p. 17
^"Son and Heir Born to Princess Mary; King George's First Grandchild Is Only a Commoner Yet, but Is Sixth Heir to Throne", The New York Times, February 8, 1923, p. 1
^"Explosion Entombs 122 Mine Workers; 100 Reported Dead — Rescue Parties Penetrate a Mile Into Dawson (N.M.) Mine and Find Two Bodies", The New York Times, February 10, 1923, p. 15
^"106 Bodies Recovered; Fourteen More Still Remain in New Mexican Mine", The New York Times, February 13, 1923, p. 18
^"Cumberland Death Roll 33; One Body Left in British Columbia Mine", The New York Times, February 11, 1923, p. 9
^"Gives Irish Rebels Ten Days to Yield— Free State Grants Amnesty as Liam Deasy, Condemned Leader, Moves for Peace", The New York Times, February 9, 1923, p. 2
^Albert, Norman (February 9, 1923). "Conacher Scored Six for North Toronto". Toronto Star. p. 12.
^ abKitchen, Paul (2008). Win, Tie, or Wrangle: The Inside Story of the Old Ottawa Senators – 1883–1935. Manotick, Ontario: Penumbra Press. p. 246. ISBN978-1-897323-46-5.
^Wales, Henry (February 12, 1923). "Clamp Down Ruhr Embargo". Chicago Daily Tribune. p. 1.
^Williams, Paul (February 13, 1923). "Oppose Dictatorship". Chicago Daily Tribune. p. 2.
^De Santo, V. (February 15, 1923). "Fascisti Ouster of Freemasons Bow to Church". Chicago Daily Tribune. p. 2.
^"Fascisti Shut Out Masonic Members; Council Votes That They Must Choose Between One Organization and the Other", The New York Times, February 14, 1923, p. 9
^"Smith Pardons Last Four Anarchists Held by State as Political Prisoners", The New York Times, February 14, 1923, p. 1
^"Senate for Change of Congress Date; Norris Amendment, Which Ends 'Lame Ducks' Service, Also Advances Inauguration; Proposal Now Goes to House, but Passage at This Session Is Doubtful", The New York Times, February 14, 1923, p. 1
^John R. Vile, Encyclopedia of Constitutional Amendments, Proposed Amendments, and Amending Issues, 1789-2002 (ABC-CLIO, 2003), p. 468
^"French at Essen Break the Boycott; Collect by Force Gelsenkirchen's 100,000,000 Marks Fine and 5,000,000 in Addition", The New York Times, February 19, 1923, p.4
^"Pittsburg Deal Removes Two Big Newspapers", The Fourth Estate: A Weekly Newspaper for Advertisers and Newspaper Makers, February 17, 1923 p. 2
^Robert H. Ferrell, The Strange Deaths of President Harding (University of Missouri Press, 1996), p. 121
^Scott B. MacDonald, Separating Fools from Their Money: A History of American Financial Scandals (Taylor & Francis, 2017)
^Ktistakis, Giorgos (February 2006). Περιουσίες Αλβανών και Τσάμηδων στην Ελλάδα: Aρση του εμπολέμου και διεθνής προστασία των δικαιωμάτων του ανθρώπου' [Properties of Albanians and Chams in Greece: Nullification of the State of War and international protection of human rights] (PDF). Minorities in Balkans (in Greek). Athens, Greece: Center of Studying of Minority Groups. p. 53. Retrieved 24 March 2009.
^"French Flier Breaks World's Speed Record In Flight at More Than 234 Miles an Hour" , The New York Times, February 16, 1923, p. 1
^"Tut-Ankh-Amen's Inner Tomb Is Opened, Revealing Undreamed of Splendors, Still Untouched after 3,400 Years", The New York Times, February 17, 1923, p. 1
^"The chronology of ancient Egypt", by K. A. Kitchen, World Archaeology (October, 1991), p. 202
^"Memel Is Awarded to the Lithuanians; Ambassadors' Council Gives Them Sovereignty 'With Certain Conditions.'", The New York Times, February 17, 1923, p. 6
^"Mussolini Speeds Treaty Acceptance— Italian Senate Ratifies the Washington and Santa Margherita Agreements", The New York Times, February 17, 1923, p. 6
^"22 Madmen Die in Ward's Island Fire; 3 Attendants Perish in Rescue Work; Fire Apparatus Ancient and Inadequate", The New York Times, February 19, 1923, p. 1
^"Court Rules Hindu Not a 'White Person'— Bars High Caste Native of India From Naturalization as an American Citizen", The New York Times, February 20, 1923, p. 21
^"13 Die in Fire Trap Above a Garage; 21 Others Barely Escape When Swift Flames Raze a Two-Story Frame Building", The New York Times, February 24, 1923, p. 6
^"Senators Shelve World Court Plan Until December", The New York Times, March 3, 1923, p. 1
^"General Notes", Popular Astronomy (May, 1923) p.364
^Williams, Paul (February 26, 1923). "New Land Along Rhine Taken by French Troops". Chicago Daily Tribune. p. 3.
^"Pharaoh's Tomb Is Closed Till Autumn", The New York Times, February 27, 1923, p. 1
^"Hundreds on Way to Luxor— Of 600 Aboard the Adriatic 250 Plan to See Tomb of Tut-ankh-Amen", The New York Times, February 25, 1923, p. 6
^Malwinderjit Singh Waraich and Gurdev Singh Sidhu, The Babbar Akali Case Judgement: From Liberation of Gurdwaras to National Liberation (Unistar Books, 2007) p. 22
^Warren, Beth Gates (2011). Artful Lives: Edward Weston, Margrethe Mather, and the Bohemians of Los Angeles. Los Angeles: J. Paul Getty Museum. p. 337. ISBN978-1-60606-070-4.
^Briggs, Asa (2000). The History of Broadcasting in the United Kingdom: Volume I: The Birth of Broadcasting. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 254. ISBN978-0-19-212926-0.