What a Difference a Century Makes: 1921
By: M. Callahan
Counting & confirming the presidential Electoral votes in a calm & dignified manner...the way statesmen and national leaders are supposed to behave...showing appropriate decorum and respect for the Constitution.
US Population: 106,021,537 - 15% rise over 1910
Public Figures
President: Warren G. Harding
Vice President: Calvin Coolidge
Virginia Governor: Henry Carter Stuart
Chief Justice Supreme Court: William Howard Taft
Speaker of the House: Frederick H. Gillett (R-Massachusetts)
Senate Majority Leader: Henry Cabot Lodge (R-Massachusetts)
VA Senators: Claude A. Swanson & Carter Glass
BORN: John Glen, HRS Prince Philip, Gene Roddenberry, Ben Bradley, Mary Jackson, James Clavell, Alex Haley, Sugar Ray Robinson, Roy Campanella, Betty Friedan, Nancy Reagan
DIED: Bat Masterson, Lady Randolph Churchill, Enrico Caruso, Prince Louis of Battenberg. Emmeline Wells, John Boyd Dunlop
Married: French President Charles de Gaulle (30) weds Yvonne Vendroux (20), Author Ernest Hemingway (22) marries 1st wife Hadley Richardson (29) , Actor Jack Haley (22) weds Florence McFadden
HISTORICAL EVENTS
NY Yankees player Roger Peckinpaugh with NY Giants player Dave Bancroft and umpires at Polo Grounds, 1921 World Series. Photo credit: The George Grantham Bain collection at the Library of Congress
The 1921 World Series featured the New York Giants and the New York Yankees, who relied on the power game demonstrated by Babe Ruth. Ruth had just finished his best season ever but was unable to start the final three games because of an infected arm and a bad knee. This was the first World Series appearance by the Yankees, who have since gone onto play in the Series a record 40 times. The 1921 Series was a closely contested matchup that ended on a double play featuring a baser running miscue. This was also the first World Series to be broadcast on radio, with Grantland Rice covering the games live through Pittsburgh's KDKA.
After getting outscored 6–0 in the first two games of this series and falling behind 4–0 in the top of the third, the Giants tied it with four runs of their own in the bottom half. Later on, an 8 run 7th inning highlighted by Ross Youngs' bases loaded triple turned the tide as the Giants got their first win of this series. Ruth was taken out in the eighth after again scraping his elbow sliding into a base. The Yankees announced after the game that the elbow would have to be lanced and that he would not return for the rest of the Series.
In game 5, Ruth's arm was still bandaged, but he played again. In the fourth, with the score tied 1–1, he shocked everyone by bunting and beating it out. His teammate Meusel then doubled, scoring Ruth all the way from first base for the go-ahead run in a 3–1 Yankee win. The Giants battled back from 3–0 and 5–3 deficits to take Game 6. Then, Phil Douglas scattered eight hits and held the Yankees to one run, the Giants winning 2-1 on Frank Snyder's RBI double in the seventh inning.
Facing elimination, Yankee manager Miller Huggins sent Ruth out to pinch-hit in the bottom of the ninth. The Babe, nursing both elbow and knee injuries, had sat out this game and missed all of Games 6 and 7. The bases were empty and the Yankees still trailed by the lone run of the game scored by the Giants in the top of the first. A HR would tie the game, and a hit or a walk would give the Yankees a chance. But Ruth grounded out, and shortly afterwards Frank Baker hit into a double play after a walk by Aaron Ward who was thrown out at third base for the final out of the Series, giving the Giants their first world championship since Christy Mathewson's record three complete shutouts in 1905. Final score: (5–3): New York Giants (N.L.) over New York Yankees (A.L.) (3)
1921s Fashion Trends
Favorite Pastimes:
Golf, Horseback Riding, Swimming, Tennis, Polo, Baseball, Football
Home Décor Trends
Geometric prints, oriental touches, chrome, glass and heavily polished wood, monochrome color scheme, mirrors & mirrored chests-tables.
Art Deco, a modernist style became the rage. This included a minimalist feel far different from any previous time.
Interior décor colors: muted, primarily a pastel palette. including jade green, dusty peach, dusty rose, navy blue, medium blue, faded yellow, light grey, sand, burnt orange, buff, and violet (purple).
Depression of 1920–1921
A sharp deflationary recession in the United States, United Kingdom and other countries, beginning 14 months after the end of World War I. The absorption of millions of veterans into the growing economy was complicated by shifting from a wartime to a peacetime economy. Factors identified as contributing to the downturn include returning troops, which created a surge in the civilian labor force (4.1% in a single year or approximately 1.6 million workers); a decline in labor union strife; changes in fiscal and monetary policy; and changes in price expectations.
Following the end of the depression, the Roaring Twenties brought a period of economic prosperity between August 1921 and August 1929, one month before the stock market crash that triggered the start of the Great Depression.
World Series: The Chicago White Sox Baseball team is accused of throwing the World Series
Stanley Cup: Senators defeated Vancouver three games to two.
World Heavyweight Boxing: Jack Dempsey
NOBEL AWARDS 1921:
Peace: Christian Lous Lange of Norway, author-political scientist, and Prime Minister Hjalmar Branting of Sweden.
Literature: Anatole France "in recognition of his brilliant literary achievements
Chemistry: Frederick Soddy "for his contributions to our knowledge of the chemistry of radioactive substances, and his investigations into the origin and nature of isotopes.
Physics: Albert Einstein for his services to Theoretical Physics
PULITZER PRIZES
Pulitzer-Drama: Miss Lulu Bett, by Zona Gale
Pulitzer-Fiction: Edith Wharton for “Age of Innocence”
Pulitzer– Biography: The Americanization of Edward Bok, by Edward Bok
Pulitzer Journalism: The Boston Post for its exposure of the operations of Charles Ponzi by a series of articles which finally led to his arrest.
COST OF COMMON CONSUMER GOODS
Housing, fuel and miscellaneous items have been stable for the past year while food, clothing, and furniture have declined in price. Unemployment rate soars to 11.7%.
Movie Ticket: $0.15
Hoover Vacuum: $39.00
Electric Wash Machine: $81
Chevrolet: $525
Gallon of Gas: $0.26
Newspaper: $0.02 daily edition
Movie Tickets: $0.15
Ave. Home Cost: $3,200-6,400 depending on size & area
Telephone: The Bell Company charged a flat $3.00 per month.
Toys:
Pedal Car: $10.95
Clock work train set: $5.95
Tricycle: $8.95
Toy Cars: from $0.39
Erector Sets: $0.98-9.98
Tinker Toy Sets: $0.63-1.75
Olympic Flyer Wagon: $4.98
Boys Bike: $15.98
Flossy Flirt Doll: $1.98-4.98
Wind Up Airplane: $0.87
Stick Horse: $0.59
Swinging Horse: $3.69
Ladies Clothing:
Georgette Crepe Blouse: $5.98
Silk Crepe Blouse: $3.79
Canton Crepe Dress: $13.95
Wool Coat: $10.50
Gingham House Dress: $2.98
Men’s Clothing:
Shirts: $1.79-2.39
Wool Serge Suit: $22.75
Sport or Work Suit: $11.75
Trousers: $3.75-4.65
Coveralls: $2.29 - $2.48
1921 Washington
DC Population: 437,571 - 32% increase over 1919
Easter Egg Roll at White House in 1921
National Photo Company Collection, Library of Congress
President Warren G. Harding began: March 4, 1921, to Aug. 2, 1923. Died suddenly of a heart attack. He presided in the period directly after WWI with soaring unemployment, changing economic times, an agricultural recession resulting in low crop prices and low farm incomes. He died of an apparent heart attack and was succeeded by Vice President Calvin Coolidge.
Looking east State, War and Navy Building
now used as the Executive Office Building (OEOB)
The U.S. Supreme Court in 1921 Day, Brandeis, McKenna, Pitney. Taft, McReynolds, Holmes, Clarke and Van Devanter
1 : Toland, John (1976). Adolf Hitler. New York: Doubleday & Company
2: Hoffmann, Peter (2000). Hitler's Personal Security: Protecting the Führer 1921–1945. Da Capo Press..
3: Wikipedia
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Members of the Irish negotiation committee returning to Ireland in December 1921, The peacemakers - George Gavan Duffy, Erskine Childers, Robert Barton and Arthur Griffith Photo credit: National Library of Ireland
The Washington Naval Conference, was a disarmament conference called by the United States, held in Washington from November 12, 1921 to February 6, 1922. It was attended by nine nations regarding interests in the Pacific Ocean & East Asia.
Hitler’s forged membership card for the German Worker’s Party. His member number was actually 555.
SA Unit Nürnberg, in front of the main railway station. Photo credit the German Federal Archive
Smoke billowing over Tulsa, Oklahoma
during 1921 race riot
Tulsa Race Riot (Greenwood Massacre): Mobs of white residents attack black residents and businesses in Greenwood District, Tulsa, Oklahoma. The official death toll is 36, but later investigations suggest an actual figure between 100 and 300. 1,250 homes are destroyed and roughly 6,000 African Americans imprisoned in one of the worst incidents of mass racial violence in the United States.
Patients recovering in Tulsa hospital from race riots
1921 Fashion at the White House: Bob haircuts, drop waistlines, fancy trims & collars, strapped shoes with higher & narrower heels.
Inaugural address by Warren Harding 1921
New Year's Reception at the White House, National Photo Co. Collection
Easter Egg Roll at White House in 1921
National Photo Company Collection
Thomas Edison punching a time clock on his
75th birthday 1921
Henry Ford, Thomas Edison, Warren Harding and Harvey Firestone near cabin at Firestone camp
Haircut and radio entertainment offered at DC barber
Pres. Harding's new $ 9,000.00
White House locomobile
Wash Monument Armistice night 1921 with the monument not yet completed.
National Photo Company Collection
Clarendon area of Arlington
National Photo Co. Collection
Tank 1921 with Key Bridge in background
Washington, D.C
Kids examining the trunk of the Morse Elm which stood on the NW corner of Fourteenth Street and Pennsylvania Avenue, NW. It was cut down in 1921 during a road widening project. The tree was named for the inventor Samuel F. B. Morse, who was reported to have held meetings beneath it in 1849 regarding U.S. government use of his newly-patented telegraph…… American Forests Magazine, April 1931
.
November 11, 1921 three years after the armistice that ended World War I, Pres. Harding presided over the dedication of the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier
The Phillips Collection, opened in 1921, as America's first museum of modern art. It featured a permanent collection of nearly 3,000 works by American and European impressionist and modern artists . The museum is housed in three adjoining buildings including Phillips' Georgian Revival home.
Margaret Gorman, 1st Miss America and from DC
White Castle Hamburger Restaurant
opens in Wichita, Kansas, the foundation of the world's first fast food chain.
The Dentzel Carousel building at Glen Echo amusement park, just outside Washington, D.C.,
in Glen Echo, Maryland
Pictures are from Wikipedia and the Library of Congress, Private Collections, Library of Virginia, National Library of Ireland and the German Federal Archive.
Reproduction of this story and photographs, in part or in whole, requires the written permission of the author. Copyright © 2011 Annandale Chamber of Commerce. All rights reserved.
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