March 1920


The following events occurred in March 1920:

March 1, 1920 (Monday)

March 2, 1920 (Tuesday)

  • China's Prime Minister Chin Yun-p'eng resigned after his party continued to insist on negotiating with Japan on rights to China's Shantung peninsula.
  • In a city mayoral vote that attracted national attention because one of the two candidates had been a leader of the Seattle General Strike that saw a walkout of most of the U.S. city's labor force, Hugh M. Caldwell was elected Mayor of Seattle, defeating I.W.W. official James A. Duncan by a margin of 40,850 to 34,849. Conservative U.S. newspapers had characterized the vote as a question of "the most momentous issue ever brought to the polls here— that of sovietism."

March 3, 1920 (Wednesday)

March 4, 1920 (Thursday)

March 5, 1920 (Friday)

  • South Korea's right-wing daily newspaper, Chosun Ilbo, was first published as a Korean nationalist publication in Japanese Korea.
  • The Norwegian government dissolved the Metal Central of the State as the import and export crisis eased with the end of World War I. The agency controlled the limited supply of copper and other metals by Norwegian manufacturers during the war and the subsequent recovery.
  • France announced its opposition to the Allied plan for rehabilitation of the German economy, on the grounds that the French economy was in greater need of aid because most of World War I had been fought in France rather than in Germany. A United Press reporter paraphrased the French explanation by noting that "France's greatest industrial cities were laid waste and her factories wrecked with typical Teuton thoroughness" while "Germany's industries were little affected by the war because German territory was not invaded extensively."Born:
  • *Rachel Gurney, English stage, film and TV actress; in Eton, England
  • *Del Latta, American lawyer and politician, served as the U.S. representative for Ohio for 30 consecutive years from 1959 to 1989; as Delbert Leroy Latt, in Weston, Ohio, United States
  • *Leontine T. Kelly, American clergy, served as the United Methodist Bishop of San Francisco, first African American woman to become a bishop in a major Christian denomination; as Leontine Turpeau, in Washington, D.C., United States

March 6, 1920 (Saturday)

  • The Anti-Saloon League, which had successfully lobbied U.S. state legislators to pass the 18th Amendment for Prohibition, issued a statement asking that the federal government should buy the more than 60 million gallons of already-distilled whiskey that remained in bonded warehouses after it could no longer be sold without a prescription, in that "there is a constant temptation to devise ways and means of utilizing that liquor in spite of the law."
  • Prime Minister Domingos Leite Pereira of Portugal and his government resigned. António Maria Baptista formed a new cabinet on March 8.
  • The upper house of the Netherlands' States General of the Netherlands, the Eerste Kamer, voted 21 to 2 in favor of entry into the League of Nations, following up on the vote in favor cast by the Tweede Kamer on February 19.Born: Lewis Gilbert, British film director best known for three James Bond films; in London, England

March 7, 1920 (Sunday)

March 8, 1920 (Monday)

March 9, 1920 (Tuesday)

March 10, 1920 (Wednesday)

March 11, 1920 (Thursday)

March 12, 1920 (Friday)

  • Japanese soldiers in the besieged Russian city of Nikolayevsk-on-Amur launched a surprise attack on the troops of Soviet Army general Yakov Tryapitsyn rather than to comply with Tryapitsyn's ultimatum to voluntarily surrender their weapons. After three days, most of the Japanese soldiers were dead, and most of the surviving soldiers and civilians would be killed by the Soviet troops.
  • Germany's Finance Minister, Matthias Erzberger, resigned after failing in his libel lawsuit against former Vice Chancellor Karl Helfferich. Testimony by Erzberger's witnesses revealed Helfferich's corrupt business practices.
  • The Lions Club, founded as an American service organization on June 7, 1917, began its first steps in becoming Lions Clubs International with the chartering of the Border Cities Lions Club in Windsor, Ontario, after being successful in 23 U.S. states. By its 100th anniversary, LCI would have 1.4 million members in clubs in more than 200 nations.
  • The U.S. Navy submarine USS H-1 ended its service when it ran aground on a shoal off of Santa Margarita Island in California. Four men, including H-1's commanding officer Lieutenant Commander James R. Webb, were killed while they tried to reach shore, and the wreckage of H-1 sank after it was pulled off the shoal on March 24. Lt. Comm. Webb was washed overboard by a wave while guiding his men, and sailors H. S. Delmarine, Harry W. Gilles and Joseph Kauffman were found to be missing when the other 22 surviving crew reached the shore.
  • Died: Edward P. McCabe, 69, American settler, attorney and land agent who became one of the first African Americans to hold a major political office in the American Old West, served as the county clerk of Graham County, Kansas, and, from 1883 to 1887, the Kansas State Auditor

March 13, 1920 (Saturday)

March 14, 1920 (Sunday)

March 15, 1920 (Monday)

March 16, 1920 (Tuesday)

March 17, 1920 (Wednesday)

March 18, 1920 (Thursday)

March 19, 1920 (Friday)

  • The United States Senate failed to ratify the Treaty of Versailles, a move which rejected U.S. entry into the League of Nations. The vote was 49 for and 35 against, seven short of the necessary two-thirds majority. President Wilson had announced in advance that he would not sign any ratification of the resolution by U.S. Senator Henry Cabot Lodge for an amended version of Article X of the treaty, a factor in the failure of the Senate to join. The American press generally condemned the failure of the treaty and disagreed as to whether Republican U.S. senators or the Democrat president were to blame. The New York Times commented that "Mr. Lodge has been beaten at his own game, a most despicable deadly game" while the New York World faulted President Wilson saying that "The inefficiency, all-sufficiency and self-sufficiency of our self-named and only negotiator created a bedevilment whose waves never could be disquieted... he was able to command enough senators to drive a knife into the heart of his own work."
  • Germany surrendered five warships to United States control under the terms of the 1918 Armistice, including the battleship SMS Ostfriesland and the light cruiser SMS Frankfurt.Born:
  • *Kjell Aukrust, Norwegian novelist artist; in Alvdal, Norway)
  • *Paul Hagen, Danish film and TV actor, best known as a regular for the Danish TV series Huset på Christianshavn; in Copenhagen, Denmark

March 20, 1920 (Saturday)

March 21, 1920 (Sunday)

March 22, 1920 (Monday)

  • Washington became the 35th U.S. state to ratify the 19th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, permitting women the right to vote nationwide. The vote in favor of ratification was unanimous in the state house of representatives, and the state senate followed suit. With 35 states having ratified, only one more was necessary for the 19th Amendment to become part of the U.S. Constitution, but it would take almost five months before Tennessee would become the 36th state on August 18, 1920.
  • Bainbridge Colby was confirmed by the Senate as the new U.S. Secretary of State, replacing Robert Lansing. "The confirmation to-day was not unanimous," the New York Tribune noted, reporting that "No record vote was had, but several Senators answered in the negative on a viva voce vote."
  • In a postseason best-of-three college basketball championship title series, between the best eastern team and the best western team the Maroons handed the Quakers their first loss of the season, winning 28 to 24 before a crowd of 3,600 at the Chicago campus's Bartlett Gymnasium. At halftime, Chicago led Penn, 18–3. Penn staged a furious comeback attempt but was never able to take the lead. The series moved to Philadelphia for Game 2 on March 25.Born:
  • *Werner Klemperer, German-born American actor, winner of two Emmy Awards for his role as "Colonel Klink" in the 1960s comedy Hogan's Heroes; in Cologne, Weimar Republic
  • *Ross Martin, Polish-born American actor, known for his role as "Artemus Gordon" in the 1960s adventure show The Wild Wild West; as Martin Rosenblatt, in Grodek, Poland
  • *Josip Manolić, Croatian politician, first Prime Minister of Croatia after its 1991 separation from Yugoslavia; in Kalinovac, Kingdom of Yugoslavia
  • *Gilbert Plass, Canadian physicist, one of the first scientists to make the connection between atmospheric carbon dioxide and global warming during the 1950s; in Toronto, Canada

March 23, 1920 (Tuesday)

March 24, 1920 (Wednesday)

  • Syria's King Faisal issued an ultimatum for the French Army to leave Syria and the British Army to withdraw from Palestine by April the 6th. British Prime Minister David Lloyd George replied that the Allies did not recognize Faisal as the rightful king.
  • The town of East Brookfield, Massachusetts, the last municipality to be founded in the state, was incorporated by vote of the state Senate.Born:
  • *Corbin Harney, elder and spiritual leader of the Newe people; in Bruneau, Idaho, United States
  • *Mary Stolz, American children's and young adult's author; as Mary Slattery, in Boston, United States
  • Died:
  • *Mrs. Humphry Ward, 68, British novelist and founding president of the Women's National Anti-Suffrage League
  • *William J. Browning, 69, American Politician, U.S. Representative from New Jersey from 1911 to 1920; collapsed and died of a heart attack after getting a shave and haircut inside the U.S. Capitol barber shop. Reportedly, he joked with the barber, "Well, it will probably be the last chance you'll ever get to shave me."
  • *Maria Antonietta Torriani, 80, Italian journalist and author who published under the pen name Marchesa Colombi

March 25, 1920 (Thursday)

March 26, 1920 (Friday)

March 27, 1920 (Saturday)

March 28, 1920 (Sunday)

  • On Palm Sunday, 380 people in the United States were killed by a series of 37 tornadoes that swept through the eastern half of the United States, from Illinois to Georgia. Heaviest hit was Troup County, Georgia, which was struck at 5:45 in the evening local time, killing 27 people in LaGrange alone, and over 100 elsewhere in the county. Indiana and Ohio both suffered more than 50 deaths each.
  • France's Chamber of Deputies voted 518 to 70 in favor of confidence in Prime Minister Millerand.
  • Popular movie stars Mary Pickford and Douglas Fairbanks were married at a private ceremony in Los Angeles, a little less than a month after her March 2 divorce from Owen Moore.
  • Died: Elmer Apperson, 58, pioneer automobile manufacturer, co-founded the Apperson Brothers Motor Company with his younger brother, Edgar

March 29, 1920 (Monday)

March 30, 1920 (Tuesday)

  • Former U.S. war relief administrator Herbert Hoover, who had been placed on the ballot by supporters in both Democrat and Republican presidential primaries, formally announced that he would run for the Republican Party nomination for President of the United States. Hoover announced his decision in a lengthy telegram sent to the chairman of a "Hoover for President" club in California.
  • Grover Bergdoll, known as "the millionaire draft dodger", began a five-year prison sentence for desertion at Fort Jay in New York. He would serve only five months before escaping in August while being allowed to visit his mansion in Philadelphia.

March 31, 1920 (Wednesday)