1920: Difference between revisions

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* [[April 15]]: The [[Civitan International|International Association of Civitan Clubs]] was incorporated during a meeting at the [[Southern Club]].
* [[April 15]]: The [[Civitan International|International Association of Civitan Clubs]] was incorporated during a meeting at the [[Southern Club]].
* [[November 23]]: 12 miners were killed in the [[1920 Parrish Mine explosion]].
* [[November 23]]: 12 miners were killed in the [[1920 Parrish Mine explosion]].
* [[B. B. Comer]] filled the unexpired term of [[John H. Bankhead]] in the U. S. Senate
* [[B. B. Comer]] filled the unexpired term of [[John H. Bankhead]] in the U.S. Senate
* [[Oscar Underwood]], became United States Senate Minority Leader.
* [[Oscar Underwood]], became United States Senate Minority Leader.
* [[Glenn Messer]] founded the [[Messer Flying Circus]].
* [[Glenn Messer]] founded the [[Messer Flying Circus]].
* [[J. Mercer Barnett]] was elected president of Kiwanis International.
* [[J. Mercer Barnett]] was elected president of Kiwanis International.
* [[Samford University|Howard College]] joined the Southern Association of Colleges.
* [[Cooper Green]] married [[Hattie Green|Hattie Taylor]].
* [[F. C. Bishop]] served as pastor of [[McElwain Baptist Church]].
* [[F. C. Bishop]] served as pastor of [[McElwain Baptist Church]].
* Property was purchased for a new building for [[Industrial High School]].
* [[William Dobyns]] became pastor of [[South Highland Presbyterian Church]].
* [[William Dobyns]] became pastor of [[South Highland Presbyterian Church]].
* [[6th Street Peace Baptist Church|St Timothy Baptist Church]] was organized with Reverend Sutton presiding.
* [[6th Street Peace Baptist Church|St Timothy Baptist Church]] was organized with Reverend Sutton presiding.
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* [[April 4]]: [[Franklin Glass]] stepped down as editor of ''[[The Birmingham News]]''.
* [[April 4]]: [[Franklin Glass]] stepped down as editor of ''[[The Birmingham News]]''.
* [[April 18]]: ''[[The Birmingham News]]'' acquired the rival ''[[Birmingham Ledger]]''.
* [[April 18]]: ''[[The Birmingham News]]'' acquired the rival ''[[Birmingham Ledger]]''.
==Education===
* [[April 15]]: The [[University of Alabama Board of Trustees]] voted to move the [[Medical College of Alabama]] from Mobile to [[Tuscaloosa]].
* [[Samford University|Howard College]] joined the Southern Association of Colleges.
* Property was purchased for a new building for [[Industrial High School]].


===Sports===
===Sports===
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== Individuals ==
== Individuals ==
* February: [[Joens Fries]] joined the [[Tennessee Coal, Iron and Railroad Company]].
* February: [[Joens Fries]] joined the [[Tennessee Coal, Iron and Railroad Company]].
* [[Cooper Green]] married [[Hattie Green|Hattie Taylor]].


===Births===
===Births===

Revision as of 12:00, 6 January 2015

1920 was the 49th year after the founding of the city of Birmingham. The United States 1920 Census showed Birmingham with a population of 178,806, of which 108,550 were white and 70,230 were black. It was also the census year with the greatest number of foreign immigrants, 2,160 of which hailed from Italy.

Events

Business

Education=

Sports

Works

Books

Buildings

Individuals

Births

Marriages

Deaths

Context

1920 was a leap year. It was the first year of women's suffrage, and also the first year of national prohibition (an experiment already tried in Birmingham between 1908 and 1911). Babe Ruth was traded to the Yankees. The Senate blocked the United States' membership in the League of Nations while Woodrow Wilson was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for its establishment. The Royal Canadian Mounted police were created. Joan of Arc was canonized. The Mexican Revolution puts Alvaro Obregon in power. Warren Harding defeated James Cox in the 1920 presidential race. British troops gunned down soccer fans in Dublin on Bloody Sunday. Those born in 1920 include Isaac Asimov, Sun Myung Moon, Federico Fellini, Ravi Shankar, Pope John Paul II, Yul Brynner, Ray Bradbury, Mickey Rooney and Dave Brubeck. 1920 saw the deaths of Amedeo Modigliani, Robert Peary, William Dean Howells, Max Weber, Peter Carl Fabergé and Gaston Chevrolet. Notable works of 1920 included Edith Wharton's The Age of Innocence, D. H. Lawrence's Women in Love, Karel Čapek's play R.U.R.', Gustav Holst's The Planets, and the film The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari.


1920s
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