The US FDA’s proposed rule on laboratory-developed tests: Impacts on clinical laboratory testing

The following events occurred in January 1922:

<< January 1922 >>
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January 22, 1922: Benedict XV, Roman Catholic Pope since 1914, dies at the age of 67
January 28, 1922: Collapse of the Knickerbocker movie theater in Washington kills 96 people
January 14, 1922: Michael Collins becomes the first Chairman of the Irish Free State in Dublin
January 3, 1922: New "Peace Dollar" put into circulation in the U.S.

January 1, 1922 (Sunday)

January 2, 1922 (Monday)

  • In the Rose Bowl, two of college football's undefeated and untied teams, the Washington & Jefferson Presidents (10-0-0) and the California Golden Bears (9-0-0) played to a 0 to 0 tie in Pasadena, California. The Official NCAA Division I Football Records Book lists both teams (along with three others) as the unofficial champion of the 1921 college football season.
  • On the same day, in the other major postseason college game of the time, the once-beaten (4-1-2) Aggies of Texas A&M defeated the previously undefeated and untied (10-0-0) Praying Colonels of Centre College, 22 to 14, at Dallas, Texas. The game was also notable for the introduction of the "12th Man" tradition of Texas A&M, when a student spectator is called to be ready to enter the game.
  • The Soviet government published statistical data showing that 1,766,118 people had been executed since the October Revolution.[3]
  • The value of the German mark fell to 1/32,000th of the British pound or 133rd of a British penny. With an exchange rate of $4.86 to the British pound, the U.S. dollar was worth 6,600 German marks, and American banks refused to accept the mark for payment of debts.[4][5]
  • Died: Suddha Dibyaratana, 44, Princess of Rattanakosin, and member of Thai royalty as the daughter of King Chulalongkorn, died from tuberculosis.

January 3, 1922 (Tuesday)

An example of the patented "concave-convex" steel tape measure
  • American inventor Hiram A. Farrand was granted U.S. Patent #1,402,589 for his creation of the "concave-convex" steel tape, flexible and slightly curved for ease of extension and retraction, setting the standard now used for the pocket tape measure. The "Farrand Rapid Rule" design, marketed in the 1920s by the Brown Company, set the standard still used in metallic tape measures.
  • The "Peace dollar", the new design for the American silver dollar by the United States Mint, was put into circulation six days after the striking of the first coins (dated 1921) on December 28.[6]
  • In compliance with the Treaty of Ankara, signed on October 20, France began the withdrawal of its occupation forces from Turkey, starting with the departure of French Army troops in the Mersin Province.
  • Romania and Latvia established diplomatic relations.[7]
  • Born: Sunwoo Hwi, South Korean novelist; in Chongju, Japanese Korea (now located in North Korea) (d. 1986)

January 4, 1922 (Wednesday)

  • In India, the massive 10.5 feet (3.2 m) tall Asian Elephant Guruvayur Keshavan was donated to the Guruvayur Temple by royal family of Nilambur. Keshavan, about 10-years old at the time of his capture, would serve at the temple for almost 55 years until his death on December 2, 1976.
  • Representatives of Belgium, France and Great Britain met at Cannes for a conference on Germany's inability to make reparations payments.[2]
  • Born: Tian Jiaying, Chinese teacher and editor who served as the personal secretary for Chinese Communist Party Chairman Mao Zedong from 1948 until his suicide during the Cultural Revolution (d. 1966)

January 5, 1922 (Thursday)

January 6, 1922 (Friday)

  • Éamon de Valera offered his resignation as President of the Irish Republic, saying that he "could not carry on until I know if I have the support of this Dáil ... I appeal to this House to re-elect me, give me a vote of confidence so that I can stand on the rock of an independent Irish republic. If you want this treaty you can elect someone else."[12][13]
  • Construction began on the Delaware River Bridge (now the Benjamin Franklin Bridge) between Philadelphia and Camden, New Jersey, more than a century after the first discussions to link the U.S. states of Pennsylvania and New Jersey by something other than the existing ferry services.[14] Pennsylvania Governor William C. Sproul and New Jersey Governor Edward I. Edwards both participated in the groundbreaking ceremony, and the bridge would open to traffic on July 1, 1926.[14]

January 7, 1922 (Saturday)

Dogsomyn Bodoo
  • Dogsomyn Bodoo, the first Prime Minister of Mongolia since the nation's independence in April and a founder of the Mongolian People's Revolutionary Party, resigned after six months after having become unpopular from his campaign to reform Mongolian traditions to fit Soviet Union norms, including the banning of long hair and women's jewelry. After forcing Bodoo's resignation, new Premier Sonomyn Damdinbazar accused him and other government ministers of corruption and treason, and had him arrested. Bodoo would be executed on August 31.[17]
  • U.S. Representative Alanson B. Houghton was appointed as the new U.S. Ambassador to Germany.[18]
  • The Washington Naval Conference agreed to outlaw the use of poison gas in warfare.[19]
  • Born:
  • Died: Jørg Tofte Jebsen, 34, Norwegian theoretical physicist, died from an undisclosed illness

January 8, 1922 (Sunday)

January 9, 1922 (Monday)

  • By a margin of only two votes, Éamon de Valera was narrowly defeated for re-election as President of the Dáil Éireann, losing 60 to 58. After the vote was counted everyone in the assembly rose and cheered for him.[22] "The re-election of de Valera would have been equivalent to rescinding of the treaty" creating the Irish Free State and ratified only two days earlier, by creating two governments for southern Ireland, The New York Times wrote;[23] Three members of the Dáil— De Valera himself, an unidentified MP and Liam de Róiste— abstained from voting. De Róiste reportedly refused to vote, commenting that the motion was "calculated to throw the country into fratricidal strife". Arthur Griffith commented, after voting against the motion, "I want to say that this is not a vote taken against President De Valera. It is a vote to damn the treaty, and I want to say now there is no man I have met in my life whom I more respect and love."[24]
  • The Danish parliament approved 1.5 million kroner (roughly US$560,000) for relief against the Russian famine.[25]
  • The first elections were held for the newly established Supreme Muslim Council, a four-member body created to oversee religious courts and finances in British Palestine, and the Hajj Amin al-Husseini of Jerusalem was selected as the council's first leader. The other persons picked by the electoral college were Muhammad Murad, mufti of Haifa; 'Abd al-Latif Salah of Nablus; and Abdullah Dajani of Jaffa.[26]
  • The 1915 Leonid Andreyev play Tot, kto polučájet poščóčiny ("Anyone, who gets a slap in the face"), translated from the Russian language by Gregory Zilboorg, received its first English language performance on Broadway. Adapted as He Who Gets Slapped, and starring actor Richard Bennett in the title role, the play had a successful run of 308 performances.
  • Born:
  • Died: Maria Louise Baldwin, 67, African-American school administrator and the first black principal of a predominantly white school in the United States

January 10, 1922 (Tuesday)

  • Arthur Griffith was elected President of Dáil Éireann by the unanimous vote of all 64 deputies remaining after all 54 of Eamonn de Valera's supporters walked out.[27] The assembly then adjourned until February 14 to give his new government time to begin the organization of what would become the Irish Free State.[28]
  • The Sejm in Poland approved a bill introducing two-year compulsory military service.[29]
  • Germany inaugurated a new wireless telegraphy service, called "Blitzfunk" (literally "lightning spark") between Berlin and Hamburg, with the objective of higher priority in speedy delivery of the message. A message brought to the Berlin main office at 9:00 in the morning was transmitted to Hamburg at 9:03, where it was then transcribed and then "telephoned to the addressee at 9:10" before delivery of the telegram.[30]
  • Born:
  • Died:

January 11, 1922 (Wednesday)

Dr. Collip

January 12, 1922 (Thursday)

  • The Seamen's strike of 1922 began at the ports of Hong Kong and in Canton as Chinese workers of the Seamen's Union walked off their jobs when a demand for a salary increase was turned down by the maritime companies.[35] The strike would last for 52 days, ending on March 5 after the companies agreed to raise wages by 15% with a cap at 30%.
  • The British government announced an amnesty for all Irish political prisoners.[36] Sir Winston Churchill, then the Secretary of State for the Colonies, wrote the proclamation declaring that "The King has been pleased, at the moment when the Provisional Irish Government is due to take effect, to grant general amnesty with respect to all offences committed in Ireland from political motives prior to the operation of the truce, July 11, last. The release of the prisoners to which amnesty applies may begin forthwith. It is the King's confident hope that this act of oblivion will aid in powerfully establishing relations of friendship and good-will between the peoples of Great Britain and Ireland." The amnesty applied to 1,010 persons still in confinement in Britain.[37][38]
  • Aristide Briand resigned as Prime Minister of France.[39][40]
  • By a narrow margin of 46 to 41, the United States Senate voted to allow Republican U.S. Senator Truman H. Newberry of Michigan to retain his seat. The vote was along party lines, with 9 Republicans joining all 32 Democrats in the Senate in opposing the seating of Newberry.[41]
  • Born: Tadeusz Żychiewicz, Polish journalist and art historian, in Bratkowice (d. 1994)

January 13, 1922 (Friday)

  • The conference at Cannes, regarding German reparations, ended abruptly after the resignation of France's Prime Minister Briand, but with an agreement to allow Germany to temporarily suspend reparations payments.[42]
  • Adolf Hitler was sentenced to three months in prison for disrupting a meeting at a beer hall where speaker Otto Ballerstedt was seriously injured.[43]
  • The first and last elections for the Vilnius Sejm, the parliament of the Republic of Central Lithuania were held, for the primary purpose of voting in favor of annexation of the puppet state into Poland. The voting was boycotted by most of the Lithuanians in the Vilnius region, and the legislators elected were of Polish ancestry. On February 20, the new parliament would vote for the "republic" to be legally annexed into Poland.[44]
  • WHA in Madison, Wisconsin became the first licensed radio station in that state.[45]
  • WLB in Minneapolis, the first radio station in the state of Minnesota, went on the air.[45]
  • Born: Albert Lamorisse, French filmmaker and writer, in Paris (d. 1970)

January 14, 1922 (Saturday)

January 15, 1922 (Sunday)

  • The Leipzig War Crimes Trials, an attempt by the Allied Powers to prosecute German Empire nationals who had committed atrocities during World War I, effectively came to an end when the Allied Commission concluded that allowing Germany's Weimar Republic to sentence war criminals had been ineffective because of the lenient sentences.[53]
Prime Minister Poincaré
  • Raymond Poincaré became Prime Minister of France for the second time, after organizing a new Cabinet of ministers to replace the cabinet of Aristide Briand.[54]
  • The Woodrow Wilson Foundation was launched at a meeting in Washington, D.C. After the meeting, several thousand supporters marched two miles to greet Wilson at his home. "I need hardly tell you that such a demonstration and evidence of friendship makes me very happy", Wilson told the crowd from his doorstep. "There can be no doubt as to the vitality of the League of Nations."[55]

January 16, 1922 (Monday)

January 17, 1922 (Tuesday)

January 18, 1922 (Wednesday)

January 19, 1922 (Thursday)

January 20, 1922 (Friday)

  • American confectioner Harry Burt applied for the first patent for the process of manufacturing a melted chocolate coating that could be applied to ice cream mass production of his invention, the Good Humor bar, for resale by way of ice cream trucks. Burt would be granted U.S. Patent No. 1,470,524 on October 9, 1923, for "Process of Making Frozen Confections".[63] The application was filed four days before the patent for a similar chocolate-covered ice cream product on a stick, the Eskimo Pie, was granted on January 24 to Christian Kent Nelson.
  • The condition of Pope Benedict XV was reported to be grave.[64]
  • The Lithuanian National Assembly approved the abolition of titles of nobility as well as the abolition of capital punishment.[65]
  • Born: Ed Westcott, American photojournalist and historian for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers who documented the construction of Oak Ridge, Tennessee and the work of the Manhattan Project; in Chattanooga, Tennessee (d. 2019)
  • Died: Milton L. Haney, 96, "The Fighting Chaplain" of the 55th Illinois infantry during the American Civil War, recipient of the Medal of Honor for heroism at the 1864 battle of Atlanta

January 21, 1922 (Saturday)

January 22, 1922 (Sunday)

January 23, 1922 (Monday)

January 24, 1922 (Tuesday)

  • U.S. Patent #1,404,539 was issued to candy store owner Christian Kent Nelson of Onawa, Iowa for his invention of a process of covering ice cream with melted chocolate. Originally sold by Nelson under the name "I-Scream Bars", the confection would be trademarked as the "Eskimo Pie" for mass production and marketing. The new confection was an immediate success.[69] In 2021, it would re-branded once more as an Edy's Pie.[70]
  • Composer Felix Borowski was shot at with a pistol and then beaten with it in his Chicago apartment. Borowski's secretary was arrested and confessed to the crime, saying that Borowski had derailed his career as a pianist and that he had "nothing to live for."[71]
  • Composer Carl Nielsen's Symphony No. 5 was given its first performance, as the Copenhagen Symphony Orchestra performed the score nine days after it had been completed by Nielsen.[72]
  • Popular English pianist Myra Hess made her American debut at a concert in New York City.[citation needed]
  • Born: Charles W. Socarides, psychiatrist, in Brockton, Massachusetts (d. 2005)

January 25, 1922 (Wednesday)

January 26, 1922 (Thursday)

January 27, 1922 (Friday)

January 28, 1922 (Saturday)

  • Ninety-six people died, and 133 were injured, in the collapse of the Knickerbocker Theatre in Washington, D.C.[83] A few minutes before 9:00 in the evening, the roof gave way under the weight of 29 inches (740 mm) of snow that had fallen in the first 28 hours of a blizzard, while at least 300 people were inside watching a silent movie, Get-Rich-Quick Wallingford. The roof fell upon people in the theater balcony, and the balcony itself then fell upon people in the seats below.[84]
  • The British ocean liner SS Athenia, built for the Anchor-Donaldson Line, was launched from Glasgow, to go into service in 1923.[85] On September 3, 1939, the day of the United Kingdom's declaration of war on Nazi Germany, the Athenia would become the first British ship to be torpedoed and sunk during World War II.[86]
  • Born: Robert W. Holley, American biochemist and Nobel laureate; in Urbana, Illinois (d. 1993)
  • Died: Dr. Andrew Jackson Barchfeld, 58, U.S. Congressman for Pennsylvania 1905 to 1917, was killed in the Knickerbocker Theatre collapse.

January 29, 1922 (Sunday)

January 30, 1922 (Monday)

January 31, 1922 (Tuesday)

  • The U.S. Senate passed an $11 billion foreign debt refunding bill and voted down an amendment to use the interest to finance a soldier's bonus.[89]
  • Ireland's National Army, composed of Irish Republican Army volunteers who supported the Anglo-Irish Treaty, made its first public appearance as command of a British Army barracks near Dublin was transferred to Irish Army control.

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  7. ^ "Political and Diplomatic Relations". Embassy of Romania. Archived from the original on March 5, 2016. Retrieved June 15, 2015.
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  48. ^ "120,000 Armenians to Leave Turkey; Ask League Council, Through Cardinal Mercier, for Ships to Transport Them", The New York Times, January 15, 1922, p. 1
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