
By Joey
& Rao
Dance Marathons are the
latest craze. Many new inventions helped the economic boom of 1920s. The year
1924 was very important. Many famous political and economic events took place.
Barney’s opens on New York’s Seventh Avenue at 17th Street. Saks Fifth
Avenue opens. People are singing "Tea for Two" and "It had to
be you."
- V.I.
Lenin dies of sclerosis on January 21. He was 53 years old. Petrograd is
renamed Leningrad, and a Josef Stalin and Leon Trotsky fight for
power. More
about Lenin
- On January 24 First
Winter Olympics held in Chamonix, France.
- The
Wrigley Building is completed in May with a 32-story tower on Michigan
Avenue for the William Wrigley Jr. Co. It has 442,000 square feet of office
space and is the first large building north of the Chicago River.
- On May 10 J.
Edgar Hoover is appointed director
of the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
- On May 15, All
God’s Chillun Got Wings by a man named Eugene
O’Neill opened at New
York’s Provincetown Playhouse.
Former football star Paul
Robeson was one of the stars in the show. Paul played a black man
married to a white woman. The Ku
Klux Klan threatens violence. Click here to see a playbill. Click
here to see the Playbill.
- Congress passed "The
Johnson-Reed Immigration Act" on May 26. It limited the annual
quota from any country to 2 percent of U.S. residents of that nationality in
1890. The act totally excludes Korean
Americans despite a warning by the Japanese ambassador of deadly
consequences if the United States abandoned the Japan's Agreement.
- Kleenex
is the first disposable handkerchief. It is introduced on June 12 by
Kimberly Clark.
- "Little
Orphan Annie" appears October 5 in the NewYork Daily News.
Chicago Tribune staff cartoonist Harold
Lincoln Gray, 30, has helped Sidney Smith draw "The Gumps" and
has developed a blank-eyed, 12-year-old character together with her dog
Sandy, her guardian Oliver "Daddy" Warbucks, and his manservant
Punjab. The comic strip will campaign against communism, blind liberalism,
and other threats to free enterprise and rugged individualism, continuing
beyond Gray’s death in 1968.
- On October 10, the Washington
Senators take game seven to win the World
Series by defeating the New York Giants 4 games to 3.
- President
Coolidge won the reelection on a platform of "Coolidge
Prosperity" and took office at the White House. Unable to decide
between President Wilson’s son-in-law William Gibbs McAdoo from California
and New York’s Catholic governor Alfred E. Smith. The Democrats nominated
New York corporation lawyer John W. Davis on the 103rd ballot at the
convention in Madison Square Garden, which is in New York. Though Davis won
only 136 electoral votes and 29 percent of the popular vote against 382
electoral votes and 54 percent of the popular vote for Coolidge.
- In November, Wheaties,
(created when a health clinician created crunchy flakes when he spilled
gruel onto a hot stove) is introduced by Washburn Crosby Company. The cereal
will later become "the breakfast of champions".
- On November 4, Nellie
Tayloe Ross of Wyoming and Miriam
Ferguson of Texas are the first two women elected Governors in the
United States.
- Maxwell
Motor Corp. introduced the first Chrysler
motorcar in 1924. It was called the "Chrysler Six" could go 70
mph and created quite a stir when it was introduced.
- Karl Manne Georg Siegbahn
won the nobel
prize in physics in 1924. He won it for his discoveries and research in
the field of X-ray spectroscopy.
- Using Mount Wilson's
powerful telescope Edwin Hubble discovers
another galaxy.
- International
Business Machines Corporation is organized in New York by Thomas J.
Watson.
- The first Macy’s
Thanksgiving Day Parade moves 2 miles from Central Park West down
Broadway to Herald Square, beginning an annual promotion event designed to
boost Christmas sales.
- Some of the popular songs
of the day were:
- The
discovery of insulin gives diabetics a new lease on life. Canadian
medical researchers Frederick Grant Banting, at age of 31, and Charles
Herbert Best at age 23, isolated the hormone (Banting called it "isletin")
from canine pancreatic juices, and use it to save the life of Leonard
Thompson, age 14, who was dying in Toronto General Hospital.
1920
1921 1922 1923
1924 1925 1926
1927 1928 1929
1900s
1910s 1920s 1930s
1940s 1950s
1960s 1970s
1980s 1990s
e-mail
us at thongell@pocanticohills.org
last
updated 12/04/05