June 1923


The following events occurred in June 1923:

June 1, 1923 (Friday)

June 2, 1923 (Saturday)

June 3, 1923 (Sunday)

  • Voters in Switzerland overwhelmingly rejected restrictions on the production of alcohol, turning down a proposal that would have given the Swiss government an exclusive monopoly on brewing and distilling.
  • A commission in New York City released the findings of its investigation into charges that some American history textbooks included anti-American propaganda. The report found eight such textbooks that were seen as pro-British. "Any history which, after 150 years, attempts to teach our children that the War of Independence was an unnecessary war and that it is still a problem as to who was right and who was wrong, should be fed to the furnace and those responsible for those books branded as un-American", commissioner David Hirschfeld said.

June 4, 1923 (Monday)

  • The British cargo ship Trevessa foundered in the Indian Ocean while traveling from Australia to Mauritius. While all but ten of the 44 crew were able to escape to lifeboats before the ship sank, sixteen men in one lifeboat spent the next 25 days drifting at sea before they were able to reach land, finally getting to the Mauritius island of Rodrigues on June 29 after a voyage of.
  • The Unitarian Universalist communion service known as the "Flower Communion", created by Norbert Čapek, was performed for the first time. The ceremony took place in a Unitarian church in the Czechoslovak capital of Prague.
  • The U.S. Supreme Court decided Meyer v. Nebraska, overturning bans in 20 states against the teaching of languages other than English in school. The case in chief had been brought by Robert T. Meyer, a teacher in a private Lutheran school, who had instructed a 10-year-old child in the German language, and had been consolidated with cases from Iowa and Ohio as well.
  • The "Zero Milestone", marking the geographic center of the city of Washington, D.C., as originally designed by Pierre Charles L'Enfant, was dedicated at a spot near the White House at latitude 38°53′42.38736″ N, longitude 77°02′11.57299″ W.
  • The musical revue that would bring the Marx Brothers to Broadway, I'll Say She Is, debuted at the Walnut Street Theatre.
  • Born:
  • *Elizabeth Jolley, English-born Australian writer; as Monica Elizabeth Knight, in Birmingham, England
  • *Dr. Margot Shiner, German-born British pediatrician and gastroenterologist; as Margot Last, in Berlin, Germany
  • Died:
  • *Frank Hayes, 22, American jockey, attained posthumous fame while riding the horse Sweet Kiss to victory at the Belmont Park in New York. Hayes crossed the finish line on Sweet Kiss ahead of everyone for his first, and only, victory in horse racing, then died of a heart attack. Doctors attributed Hayes's death to heart disease, aggravated by his efforts to lose weight in order to reach the required limit for entering the race, and the excitement of the event itself, making Hayes the only person known to have won a horse race after dying.
  • *Filippo Smaldone, 74, Roman Catholic priest canonized in 2006 as a Catholic saint
  • *Juan Soldevila y Romero, 79, Spanish cleric, Roman Catholic Archbishop of Zaragoza, who had been elevated to the rank of cardinal by the Pope, was assassinated by gunmen who also killed his chauffeur. Cardinal Soldevila was seated in his car, preparing to visit a monastery, when members of the terrorist group Los Solidarios fired multiple gunshots into the vehicle.

June 5, 1923 (Tuesday)

  • Germany asked for a new reparations conference. The proposal, as presented by Chancellor Wilhelm Cuno, asked for a new arrangement in which Germany would transfer materials worth 2.5 billion gold marks over the next five years while rebuilding the nation's economy and would then pay 1.5 billion gold marks every year beginning in 1928.
  • In an address in Washington D.C. to open the national convention of the Shriners, U.S. President Warren G. Harding delivered what was seen by reporters as a thinly veiled criticism of the Ku Klux Klan, which had recently held a large demonstration in nearby Maryland, though not mentioning the Klan by name. "Secret fraternity is one thing," Harding said. "Secret conspiracy is another. In the very naturalness of association, men band together for mischief, to exert misguided zeal, to vent unreasoning malice, to undermine our institutions. This isn't fraternity. This is conspiracy. This isn't associated with uplift; it is organized destruction. This is not brotherhood; it is the discord of disloyalty and a danger to the Republic."
  • The White House released President Harding's "Voyage of Understanding", a 19-stop speaking tour by train that would travel to 10 western states, as well as the Canadian province of British Columbia and the U.S. territory of Alaska, starting on June 20 and continuing until August 4, after which the presidential train was scheduled to take him back to Washington.
  • The tiny nation of San Marino established the Order of Saint Agatha for charitable work in the service of the republic.
  • Born: George Montague, British gay rights activist; in Hackney, London, England

June 6, 1923 (Wednesday)

June 7, 1923 (Thursday)

June 8, 1923 (Friday)

June 9, 1923 (Saturday)

June 10, 1923 (Sunday)

June 11, 1923 (Monday)

  • The U.S. Supreme Court decided Rindge Co. v. County of Los Angeles, holding that a local government could use its power of eminent domain to take land from a private landowner for the specific purpose of building a scenic highway, despite the fact that a highway could be built elsewhere on land within the government's jurisdiction. Writing the opinion on behalf of a unanimous court, Justice Edward T. Sanford wrote, "Public uses are not limited, in the modern view, to matters of mere business necessity and ordinary convenience, but may extend to matters of public health, recreation and enjoyment. Thus, the condemnation of lands for public parks is now universally recognized as a taking for public use. A road need not be for a purpose of business to create a public exigency; air, exercise and recreation are important to the general health and welfare; pleasure travel may be accommodated as well as business travel; and highways may be condemned to places of pleasing natural scenery."
  • Born:
  • *Dr. Eric J. Trimmer, English general practitioner and medical writer known for The Natural History of Quackery and for a subsequent series of books for the general public about health and medical science; in London, England
  • *Özdemir Asaf, Turkish poet; in Ankara, Turkey

June 12, 1923 (Tuesday)

June 13, 1923 (Wednesday)

  • Chinese President Li Yuanhong was captured at the railway station in Tientsin when troops surrounded the train in which he was fleeing from Beijing. Orders to stop the train came directly from the Governor of Zhili province, Wang Chengbin. Li won his freedom the next day by sending a message to Beijing, by telegram, resigning his office and turning over authority to the cabinet.
  • The value of the German mark fell further to an exchange rate of 100,000 marks to the U.S. dollar. Prior to World War One, the exchange rate had been 4.20 marks to a U.S. dollar. By June 1923, the rate was 81,000 marks to a dollar.
  • The Igor Stravinsky ballet Les noces was given its first performance, premiering in Paris and presented by the Ballets Russes to choreography by Bronislava Nijinska.

June 14, 1923 (Thursday)

June 15, 1923 (Friday)

June 16, 1923 (Saturday)

June 17, 1923 (Sunday)

June 18, 1923 (Monday)

  • On the Italian island of Sicily, several villages built on the side of Mount Etna— specifically, Piccilo, Pallamelata and Ferro— were destroyed by lava, but no casualties were reported as residents had time to evacuate.
  • Pancho Villa, a diminutive Philippine boxer whose real name was Francisco Guilledo, won the world flyweight championship when he knocked out the titleholder, Welsh boxer Jimmy Wilde, in the seventh round before 40,000 spectators at the Polo Grounds in New York City.
  • Speculation about Henry Ford running for president ended when he was quoted as saying, "I am much too occupied with my own affairs to become the next president and I do not intend to run."
  • Political leader Marcus Garvey was found guilty of mail fraud for using the U.S. mail to sell stock in the bankrupt Black Star Line.
  • Died:
  • *Vasili Komaroff, 52, Soviet Russian serial killer who murdered at least 33 people over a two year period; executed by firing squad with his wife and accomplice Sofya Komaroff
  • *Walter Flanders, 52, American automobile and motorcycle manufacturer; died three days after being seriously injured in a car accident
  • *Hristo Smirnenski, 24, Bulgarian poet; died of tuberculosis

June 19, 1923 (Tuesday)

June 20, 1923 (Wednesday)

June 21, 1923 (Thursday)

June 22, 1923 (Friday)

June 23, 1923 (Saturday)

June 24, 1923 (Sunday)

June 25, 1923 (Monday)

June 26, 1923 (Tuesday)

June 27, 1923 (Wednesday)

June 28, 1923 (Thursday)

June 29, 1923 (Friday)

  • Juan Crisóstomo Gómez, Vice President of Venezuela, Governor of the Caracas Federal District and the younger brother of President Juan Vicente Gómez, was assassinated in his room at the presidential residence in Caracas, the Miraflores Palace.
  • French Prime Minister Raymond Poincaré made a speech in the French Senate indirectly responding to the pope's letter by explaining that "the only screw that we have on Germany is her desire to recover the Ruhr. We have no thought of annexation, and we energetically refute all accusations of imperialism. France does not wish to confiscate the Ruhr. We will keep it, however, until Germany has paid her debt." Poincaré also called the resistance movement in the Ruhr "active, insidious and criminal."
  • Died: Gustave Kerker, 66, German composer; died of apoplexy

June 30, 1923 (Saturday)

  • A time bomb exploded on a Belgian troop train just as the cars were crossing over the Hochfeld railway bridge in the occupied Ruhr region of Germany. Eight Belgian soldiers were killed, along with two German civilians. Another 43 were injured. The bomb had been placed in a toilet of the car, which was transporting the Belgian soldiers home while they were on leave. The bridge itself was wrecked, and the mayor of Hochfeld and 12 other local officials were arrested by occupation forces as suspects in the crime.