From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
List of events
Rand McNally Standard Map of the United States , 1921
Events from the year 1921 in the United States .
Incumbents
Warren G. Harding inauguration, March 4, 1921. Harding at right in back seat;
Woodrow Wilson at left.
Woodrow Wilson (
D -
New Jersey ) (until March 4)
Warren G. Harding (
R -
Ohio ) (starting March 4)
Thomas R. Marshall (
D -
Indiana ) (until March 4)
Calvin Coolidge (
R -
Massachusetts ) (starting March 4)
Edward Douglass White (
Louisiana ) (until May 19)
William Howard Taft (
Ohio ) (starting July 11)
Governors and
lieutenant governors
Governors
Governor of Alabama :
Thomas Kilby (
Democratic )
Governor of Arizona :
Thomas Edward Campbell (
Republican )
Governor of Arkansas :
Charles Hillman Brough (
Democratic ) (until January 11),
Thomas Chipman McRae (
Democratic ) (starting January 11)
Governor of California :
William Stephens (
Republican )
Governor of Colorado :
Oliver Henry Shoup (
Republican )
Governor of Connecticut :
Marcus H. Holcomb (
Republican ) (until January 5),
Everett J. Lake (
Republican ) (starting January 5)
Governor of Delaware :
John G. Townsend, Jr. (
Republican ) (until January 16),
William D. Denney (
Republican ) (starting January 16)
Governor of Florida :
Sidney Johnston Catts (
Prohibition ) (until January 4),
Cary A. Hardee (
Democratic ) (starting January 4)
Governor of Georgia :
Hugh M. Dorsey (
Democratic ) (until June 25),
Thomas W. Hardwick (
Democratic ) (starting June 25)
Governor of Idaho :
D. W. Davis (
Republican )
Governor of Illinois :
Frank O. Lowden (
Republican ) (until January 10),
Len Small (
Republican ) (starting January 10)
Governor of Indiana :
James P. Goodrich (
Republican ) (until January 10),
Warren T. McCray (
Republican ) (starting January 10)
Governor of Iowa :
William L. Harding (
Republican ) (until January 13),
Nathan E. Kendall (
Republican ) (starting January 13)
Governor of Kansas :
Henry J. Allen (
Republican )
Governor of Kentucky :
Edwin P. Morrow (
Republican )
Governor of Louisiana :
John M. Parker (
Democratic )
Governor of Maine :
Governor of Maryland :
Albert C. Ritchie (
Democratic )
Governor of Massachusetts :
Calvin Coolidge (
Republican ) (until January 6),
Channing H. Cox (
Republican ) (starting January 6)
Governor of Michigan :
Albert Sleeper (
Republican ) (until January 1),
Alex Groesbeck (
Republican ) (starting January 1)
Governor of Minnesota :
J. A. A. Burnquist (
Republican ) (until January 5),
J. A. O. Preus (
Republican ) (starting January 5)
Governor of Mississippi :
Lee M. Russell (
Democratic )
Governor of Missouri :
Frederick D. Gardner (
Democratic ) (until January 10),
Arthur M. Hyde (
Republican ) (starting January 10)
Governor of Montana :
Sam V. Stewart (
Democratic ) (until January 3),
Joseph M. Dixon (
Republican ) (starting January 3)
Governor of Nebraska :
Samuel R. McKelvie (
Republican )
Governor of Nevada :
Emmet D. Boyle (
Democratic )
Governor of New Hampshire :
John H. Bartlett (
Republican ) (until January 6),
Albert O. Brown (
Republican ) (starting January 6)
Governor of Oregon :
Ben W. Olcott (
Republican )
Governor of Pennsylvania :
William Cameron Sproul (
Republican )
Governor of Rhode Island :
R. Livingston Beeckman (
Republican ) (until January 4),
Emery J. San Souci (
Republican ) (starting January 4)
Governor of South Carolina :
Robert Archer Cooper (
Democratic )
Governor of South Dakota :
Peter Norbeck (
Republican ) (until January 4),
William H. McMaster (
Republican ) (starting January 4)
Governor of Tennessee :
A. H. Roberts (
Democratic ) (until January 15),
Alfred A. Taylor (
Republican ) (starting January 15)
Governor of Texas :
William P. Hobby (
Democratic ) (until January 18),
Pat Morris Neff (
Democratic ) (starting January 18)
Governor of Utah :
Simon Bamberger (
Democratic ) (until January 3),
Charles R. Mabey (
Republican ) (starting January 3)
Governor of Vermont :
Percival W. Clement (
Republican ) (until January 6),
James Hartness (
Republican ) (starting January 6)
Governor of Virginia :
Westmoreland Davis (
Democratic )
Governor of Washington :
Louis Folwell Hart (
Republican )
Governor of West Virginia :
John J. Cornwell (
Democratic ) (until March 4),
Ephraim F. Morgan (
Republican ) (starting March 4)
Governor of Wisconsin :
Emanuel L. Philipp (
Republican ) (until January 3),
John J. Blaine (
Republican ) (starting January 3)
Governor of Wyoming :
Robert D. Carey (
Republican )
Lieutenant governors
Lieutenant Governor of Alabama :
Nathan Lee Miller (
Democratic )
Lieutenant Governor of California :
Clement Calhoun Young (
Republican )
Lieutenant Governor of Colorado :
George Stepham (
Republican ) (until month and day unknown),
Earl Cooley (
Republican ) (starting month and day unknown)
Lieutenant Governor of Connecticut :
Clifford B. Wilson (
Republican ) (until January 5),
Charles A. Templeton (
Republican ) (starting January 5)
Lieutenant Governor of Delaware : vacant (until January 18),
J. Danforth Bush (
Republican ) (starting January 18)
Lieutenant Governor of Idaho :
Charles C. Moore (
Republican )
Lieutenant Governor of Illinois :
John G. Oglesby (
Republican ) (until January 10),
Fred E. Sterling (
Republican ) (starting January 10)
Lieutenant Governor of Indiana :
Edgar D. Bush (
Republican ) (until January 10),
Emmett Forrest Branch (
Republican ) (starting January 10)
Lieutenant Governor of Iowa :
Ernest Robert Moore (
Republican ) (until January 13),
John Hammill (
Republican ) (starting January 13)
Lieutenant Governor of Kansas :
Charles S. Huffman (
Republican )
Lieutenant Governor of Kentucky :
S. Thruston Ballard (political party unknown)
Lieutenant Governor of Louisiana :
Hewitt Bouanchaud (
Democratic )
Lieutenant Governor of Massachusetts :
Channing H. Cox (
Republican ) (until January 6),
Alvan T. Fuller (
Republican ) (starting January 6)
Lieutenant Governor of Michigan :
Luren D. Dickinson (
Republican ) (until January 1),
Thomas Read (
Republican ) (starting January 1)
Lieutenant Governor of Minnesota :
Thomas Frankson (
Republican ) (until January 4),
Louis L. Collins (
Republican ) (starting January 4)
Lieutenant Governor of Mississippi :
Homer H. Casteel (
Democratic )
Lieutenant Governor of Missouri :
Wallace Crossley (
Democratic ) (until month and day unknown),
Hiram Lloyd (
Republican ) (starting month and day unknown)
Lieutenant Governor of Montana :
W. W. McDowell (political party unknown) (until month and day unknown),
Nelson Story Jr. (political party unknown) (starting month and day unknown)
Lieutenant Governor of Nebraska :
Pelham A. Barrows (
Republican )
Lieutenant Governor of Nevada :
Maurice J. Sullivan (
Democratic )
Lieutenant Governor of New Mexico :
Benjamin F. Pankey (
Republican ) (until January 1), William H. Duckworth (
Republican ) (starting January 1)
Lieutenant Governor of New York :
Jeremiah Wood (
Republican ) (starting January 1)
Lieutenant Governor of North Carolina :
Oliver Max Gardner (
Democratic ) (until January 12),
William B. Cooper (
Democratic ) (starting January 12)
Lieutenant Governor of North Dakota :
Howard R. Wood (
Republican )
Lieutenant Governor of Ohio :
Clarence J. Brown Sr. (
Republican )
Lieutenant Governor of Oklahoma :
Martin E. Trapp (
Democratic )
Lieutenant Governor of Pennsylvania :
Edward E. Beidleman (
Republican )
Lieutenant Governor of Rhode Island :
Emery J. San Souci (
Republican ) (until January 4), Harold Gross (
Republican ) (starting January 4)
Lieutenant Governor of South Carolina : J. T. Liles (
Democratic ) (until January 18),
Wilson Godfrey Harvey (
Democratic ) (starting January 18)
Lieutenant Governor of South Dakota :
William H. McMaster (
Republican ) (until January 4),
Carl Gunderson (
Republican ) (starting January 4)
Lieutenant Governor of Tennessee :
Andrew L. Todd, Sr. (
Democratic ) (until month and day unknown),
William West Bond (
Democratic ) (starting month and day unknown)
Lieutenant Governor of Texas : Willard Arnold Johnson (
Democratic ) (until January 18), Lynch Davidson (
Democratic ) (starting January 18)
Lieutenant Governor of Vermont :
Mason S. Stone (
Republican ) (until January 6),
Abram W. Foote (
Republican ) (starting January 6)
Lieutenant Governor of Virginia :
Benjamin Franklin Buchanan (
Democratic )
Lieutenant Governor of Washington : vacant (until January 10),
William J. Coyle (
Republican ) (starting January 10)
Lieutenant Governor of Wisconsin :
Edward F. Dithmar (
Republican ) (until January 3),
George F. Comings (
Republican ) (starting January 3)
Events
January–March
March 4:
Warren G. Harding becomes the 29th U.S. president
Calvin Coolidge becomes the 29th U.S. vice president
Unknown Soldier from
World War I being taken from the
USS Olympia (C-6) at the
Washington Navy Yard and transported to the US Capitol to lay in state. On November 11 the body is interred at
Arlington National Cemetery .
January –
E. W. Scripps and
William Emerson Ritter found Science Service , later renamed
Society for Science & the Public , in the United States, with the goal of keeping the public informed of scientific developments.
[1]
January 1 – In
American football , the
University of California defeats
Ohio State 28–0 in the
Rose Bowl .
January 2
January 21 – The full-length
silent
comedy-drama film
The Kid , written, produced, directed by and starring Charlie Chaplin (in his Tramp character), with
Jackie Coogan , is released.
March 4 –
Warren G. Harding is sworn in as the 29th
president of the United States , and
Calvin Coolidge is sworn in as the 29th
vice president of the United States .
March 25 – The first
Lowe's opens in
North Wilkesboro, North Carolina .
April–June
July–September
October–December
October 5 – The
World Series baseball game in North America is first broadcast on the radio, by
Newark, New Jersey , station WJZ,
Pittsburgh station KDKA, and a group of other commercial and amateur stations throughout the eastern U.S.
October 8 – The first
Sweetest Day is staged in
Cleveland, Ohio .
October 26 – The
Chicago Theatre , the oldest surviving grand
movie palace , opens.
October 29
November 11 – During an
Armistice Day ceremony at
Arlington National Cemetery , the
Tomb of the Unknowns is dedicated by U.S. President
Warren G. Harding .
November 23 – The
Sheppard–Towner Act is signed by President Harding, providing federal funding for maternity and child care.
[8]
December 13 – In the Four Power Treaty on Insular Possessions, the
Empire of Japan , the United States,
United Kingdom and
French Third Republic agree to recognize the status quo in the Pacific.
Undated
Ongoing
Births
Lloyd Bentsen
January 1 –
William Pulgram , Austrian-American architect (d.
2020 )
January 3
January 4 –
Leo Sarkisian , musicologist, broadcaster (d.
2018 )
[11]
January 6 –
Cary Middlecoff , golfer (d.
1998 )
[12]
January 9 –
John Sperling , businessman, founded the
University of Phoenix (d.
2014 )
January 10 –
Rodger Ward , race car driver (d.
2004 )
January 11
January 14 –
Murray Bookchin , libertarian socialist (d.
2006 )
[14]
January 16 –
Henry Sayler , politician (d.
2021 )
January 17 –
Herb Ellis , American actor (d.
2018 )
January 19 –
Patricia Highsmith , crime fiction writer (died 1995 in Switzerland)
January 21 –
Howard Unruh , spree killer (d.
2009 )
[15]
January 24 –
Beatrice Mintz , biologist (d.
2022 )
[16]
January 27
January 29
January 31
February 4 –
Betty Friedan , feminist author (died
2006 )
February 8
February 11 –
Lloyd Bentsen , U.S. Senator from Texas from 1971 to 1993 (died
2006 )
[19]
February 12
February 14
February 15
February 17 –
Duane Gish , biochemist and academic (died
2013 )
February 20 –
Buddy Rogers , pro wrestler (died
1992 )
February 24 -
Abe vigoda , actor (died
2016 )
February 26
February 27 –
Michael Fox , actor (died
1996 )
March 1 –
Richard Wilbur ,
poet laureate (died
2017 )
March 2 –
Cornelius Edward Gallagher , politician (died
2018 )
March 3 –
Diana Barrymore , actress (died
1960 )
[22]
March 4 –
Robert F. Ruth , politician (died
2018 )
March 5 –
Berkley Bedell , politician (died
2019 )
March 11 –
Frank Harary , mathematician (died
2005 )
[23]
March 12 –
Gordon MacRae , singer and actor (died
1986 )
[24]
March 13 –
Al Jaffee , cartoonist (MAD Magazine ) (died
2023 )
March 16 –
Donald M. Kendall , businessman (d.
2020 )
March 27 –
Tom Bevill , U.S. Representative from
Alabama from 1967 to 1997 (died
2005 )
March 30 –
Clemens Kalischer , photojournalist, art photographer (died
2018 )
March 31 –
Peggy Rea , television actress (died
2011 )
April 1
April 3
April 7 –
Robina Asti , flight instructor and LGBT activist (died
2021 )
April 9
April 10
April 15 –
Ken Potts , U.S. Navy sailor and World War II veteran (died
2023 )
April 20 –
Kenneth O. Chilstrom , U.S. Air Force officer (died
2022 )
April 21 –
John R. Huizenga , nuclear physicist (died
2014 )
April 23
May 1 –
Boo Morcom , pole vaulter and jumper (died
2012 )
May 9
May 23
May 20 –
Hal Newhouser , baseball player (died
1998 )
May 25
May 30 –
Leon Hale , journalist and author (died
2021 )
June 3 –
John Shelton Wilder , politician, Lieutenant Governor of Tennessee (died
2010 )
June 7 –
Dorothy Ruth , horse breeder and author (died
1989 )
June 9 –
Forrest Bird , biomedical engineer (died
2015 )
June 13 –
Nancy Warren , baseball pitcher (died
2001 )
June 15 –
James Emanuel , African American poet and scholar (died
2013 )
June 17 –
Tony Scott , jazz clarinetist (died
2007 )
June 19 –
Howell Heflin , U.S. Senator from Alabama from 1979 to 1997 (died
2005 )
July 2 –
William Proctor Wilson , businessman and philanthropist (died
2010 )
July 4
July 5 –
Al Kozar , second baseman (d.
2007 )
July 6
July 7 –
Johnny Van Cuyk , relief pitcher (died
2010 )
July 8 –
Don Ray , basketball player (died
1998 )
July 9 –
David C. Jones , U.S General (died
2013 )
July 10
July 12 –
Brother Blue , African-American educator, storyteller, actor, musician and street performer (died
2009 )
July 15
July 16 –
Bernard W. Rogers , United States Army general (died
2008 )
July 18
July 19 –
Elizabeth Spencer , writer (died
2019 )
[29]
July 22
July 24 –
Billy Taylor , jazz musician (died
2010 )
July 25 –
Marv Rackley , baseball player (died
2018 )
July 26 –
Jean Shepherd , storyteller, radio and television personality (died
1999 )
August 3
August 4
August 9
August 10
August 11
August 13
August 14 –
Sidney Rittenberg , journalist, consultant and author (died
2019 )
August 19 –
Gene Roddenberry , television producer (died
1991 )
August 20 –
Gloria Parker , musician and bandleader (died
2022 )
[30]
August 21
August 23 –
Kenneth Arrow , economist, recipient of the
Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences in 1972 (died
2017 )
August 24 –
George W. Blair , politician (died
2020 )
August 25 –
Henry Abraham , academic (died
2020 )
August 26
August 29 –
Iris Apfel , interior designer (died
2024 )
August 30 –
David Finn , public relations executive (died
2021 )
[32]
September 2 –
Josephine Lenard , professional baseball player (died
2007 )
September 3
September 8 –
Mosie Lister , singer (died
2015 )
September 11
September 12 –
Frank McGee , television personality (died
1974 )
September 13
September 17 –
Roger H. Zion , politician (died
2019 )
September 19 –
Morton Mandel , businessman (died
2019 )
September 22 –
Robert I. Price , admiral (died
2019 )
September 27
October 3 –
John H. Cushman , military officer (died
2017 )
October 5
October 6
October 7
October 11 –
Shaw McCutcheon , cartoonist (died
2016 )
October 14 –
Jeffrey G. Smith , general (died
2021 )
October 18
October 19
October 21 –
Victor A. McKusick , "father of genetic medicine" (died
2008 )
October 26
October 27 –
Warren Allen Smith , gay rights activist, writer and humanities humanist (died
2017 )
October 31 –
Wendell Nedderman , American engineering educator (died
2019 )
November 3 –
Charles Bronson , film actor (died
2003 )
November 6 –
James Jones , novelist (died
1977 )
November 8
November 10 –
Owen Bush , actor (died
2001 )
November 11 –
Molly Dodd , actress (died
1981 )
November 15
November 20 –
Dan Frazer , actor (died
2011 )
November 22 –
Rodney Dangerfield , born Jacob Rodney Cohen, comedian (died
2004 )
[35]
November 24
November 29 –
Jackie Stallone , born Jacqueline Labofish, astrologer, dancer, wrestling promoter and mother of Sylvester Stallone (died
2020 )
December 3
December 4 –
Sanford K. Moats , American Air Force general
December 5
December 6 –
Otto Graham , American football player, in Waukegan, Illinois (died
2003 )
December 8 –
Carl Corley , author and illustrator (died
2016 )
December 10 –
John P. Fullam , judge (died
2018 )
December 14
December 21 –
Robert Lipshutz , lawyer and politician, 17th
White House Counsel (died
2010 )
December 26
Deaths
January 20 –
Mary Watson Whitney , astronomer (born
1847 )
[37]
February 7 –
John J. Gardner , member of the House of Representatives from New Jersey from 1893 to 1913 (born
1845 )
February 17 –
Rosetta Luce Gilchrist , physician and author (born
1850 )
March 8 –
Thomas H. Paynter , U.S. Senator from Kentucky from 1907 to 1913 (born
1851 )
March 29
April 21 –
Tom O'Brien , baseball player (born
1860 )
April 23 –
John P. Young , managing editor of the San Francisco Chronicle (b.
1849 )
May 19 –
Edward Douglass White , 9th
Chief Justice of the United States from 1910 to 1921, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court from 1894 to 1910 and U.S. Senator from Louisiana from 1891 to 1894 (born
1845 )
May 26 –
Donald Evans , poet, publisher, music critic and journalist (born
1884 )
June 12 –
Murphy J. Foster , U.S. Senator from Louisiana from 1901 to 1913 (born
1849 )
June 16 –
William E. Mason , U.S. Senator from Illinois from 1897 to 1903 (born
1850 )
July 24 –
C. I. Scofield , theologian (born
1843 )
August 20 –
Grace Carew Sheldon , journalist and businesswoman (born
1855 )
August 25 –
Peter Cooper Hewitt , electrical engineer and inventor (born
1861 )
September 9 –
Virginia Rappe , model and silent film actress (born
1891 )
October 12 –
Philander C. Knox ,
United States Attorney General from 1901 to 1904 and
United States Secretary of State from 1909 to 1913 (born
1853 )
October 25 –
Bat Masterson , gunfighter (born
1853 )
October 31 –
William Egan , gangster (born
1884 )
November 26 –
Charles W. Whittlesey , United States Army officer, commander of the "
Lost Battalion " in World War I (suicide) (born
1884 )
December 12 –
Henrietta Swan Leavitt , astronomer (born
1868 )
December 28
December 31 –
Boies Penrose , U.S. Senator from Pennsylvania (born
1860 )
Nat Love , African American cowboy (born
1854 )
See also
References
^ Tobey, Ronald C. (1971).
The American Ideology of National Science, 1919–1930 . Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press. pp. 66–70.
ISBN
9780822975946 .
^ Chris Pollock (2001).
San Francisco's Golden Gate Park: A Thousand and Seventeen Acres of Stories . Graphic Arts Center Publishing Co. p. 77.
ISBN
978-1-55868-545-1 .
^ Onkst, David H. (2016).
"Women in History: Bessie Coleman" . Natural Resources Conservation Service Nevada . Archived from
the original on 2016-02-16. Retrieved 2020-11-20 .
^ Beauchet, Patrick (2015). Ma vie à bord des cargos et cargos mixtes de la Compagnie Générale Transatlantique . Société des Ecrivains. p. 209.
ISBN
9782342038651 .
^
"Harding Ends War; Signs Peace Decree at Senator's Home. Thirty Persons Witness Momentous Act in Frelinghuysen Living Room at Raritan" .
The New York Times . 3 July 1921.
^ Tobin, James (2013).
The Man He Became: How FDR Defied Polio to Win the Presidency . Simon & Schuster. pp.
50-51 .
ISBN
978-0743265164 .
^ Eric A. Stene (1994).
The Klamath Project . Bureau of Reclamation History Program. p. 20.
^ Anna Elizabeth Rude (1923).
The Sheppard-Towner Act in Relation to Public Health . U.S. Government Printing Office. p. 1915.
^
"The long legacy of the U.S. occupation of Haiti" . Washington Post . Retrieved 19 August 2022 .
^
"Volstead Act | History, Definition, & Significance | Britannica" . www.britannica.com . Retrieved 15 August 2022 .
^ Solomon, Salem (10 June 2018).
" 'Music Man of Africa' Dies" . Voanews.com . Retrieved 23 June 2018 .
^
"UPI Almanac for Sunday, Jan. 6, 2019" .
United Press International . January 6, 2019.
Archived from the original on September 11, 2019. Retrieved September 10, 2019 . golf Hall of Fame member Cary Middlecoff in 1921
^ United States. Department of Commerce (1988).
From Lighthouses to Laserbeams: A History of the U.S. Department of Commerce, 1913–1988 . U.S. Department of Commerce, Office of the Secretary. p. 75.
^ Small, Mike (August 8, 2006).
"Murray Bookchin" (Obituary) . The Guardian . Retrieved June 30, 2018 .
^ Jay Robert Nash (1989).
Encyclopedia of World Crime: S-Z ; Supplements . CrimeBooks. p. 3016.
ISBN
978-0-923582-04-3 .
^ Volume 11 of Encyclopedia of World Biography , Gale Research, 1998, p. 49,
ISBN
0-7876-2221-4
^ Roland L. Bessette; Mario Lanza (1999).
Mario Lanza: Tenor in Exile . Amadeus Press. p. 15.
ISBN
978-1-57467-044-8 .
^ Lou Valentino (1976).
The Films of Lana Turner . Citadel Press. p. 13.
ISBN
978-0-8065-0553-4 .
^ United States; United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Finance (1993).
Anticipated Nomination of Hon, Lloyd Bentsen: Hearing Before the Committee on Finance, United States Senate . U.S. Government Printing Office. p. 39.
ISBN
978-0-16-040767-3 .
^ Martell, Paul; Hayes, Grace P. (1974).
World Defence Who's who .
ISBN
9780356080031 .
^ Steve Knopper (1999).
MusicHound Swing!: The Essential Album Guide . Visible Ink Press. p. 1953.
ISBN
978-1-57859-091-9 .
^ John A. Willis (1957).
Theatre World . Crown Publishing Company. p. 210.
^
Who's who in the West . Marquis-Who's Who. 2002. p. 261.
ISBN
978-0-8379-0933-2 .
^ Folkart, Burt A. (January 24, 1986).
"Gordon MacRae, Star of 'Oklahoma,' Dies at 64" . Los Angeles Times . Los Angeles, CA. Retrieved November 25, 2018 .
^ Blair Imani (16 October 2018).
Modern HERstory: Stories of Women and Nonbinary People Rewriting History . Potter/Ten Speed/Harmony/Rodale. p. 27.
ISBN
978-0-399-58224-0 .
^ Henryk Hoffmann (2000).
"A" Western Filmmakers: A Biographical Dictionary of Writers, Directors, Cinematographers, Composers, Actors and Actresses . McFarland. p. 283.
ISBN
978-0-7864-0696-8 .
^ Bloom, Harold (Jun 1995).
"James Blish" . Science Fiction Writers of the Golden Age . New York: Chelsea House. pp.
63 .
ISBN
9780791021996 .
^ Smith, Vicki; Collard, Patrizia; Nicolson , Paula (1 May 2012).
Key Concepts In Counselling And Psychotherapy: A Critical A-Z Guide To Theory: A critical A-Z guide to theory . McGraw-Hill Education (UK). p. 21.
ISBN
978-0-335-24221-4 .
^ McFadden, Robert D. (December 23, 2019).
"Elizabeth Spencer, Author of 'The Light in the Piazza,' Dies at 98" . The New York Times .
ISSN
0362-4331 . Retrieved December 23, 2019 .
^
Gloria Parker (1921–2022), bandleader known for playing “singing glasses”
^ August C. Bolino (August 2012).
Men of Massachusetts: Bay State Contributors to American Society . pp. 275–.
ISBN
978-1-4759-3375-8 .
^
David Finn Dies at 100
^ Haring, Bruce (January 4, 2018).
"Harry Landers Dies: 'Ben Casey' Co-Star Appeared On Many TV Classics, Was 96" . Deadline . Retrieved January 5, 2018 .
^
Lou Conter, last survivor of the USS Arizona in Pearl Harbor, dies at 102
^
"Rodney Dangerfield, Comic Seeking Respect, Dies at 82" .
The New York Times . October 6, 2004.
^ Andrew L. Pincus (2002).
Musicians with a Mission: Keeping the Classical Tradition Alive . UPNE. p. 52.
ISBN
978-1-55553-516-2 .
^ McHenry, Robert (1980). Liberty's Women . Springfield: G. & C. Merriam. p. 442.
ISBN
978-0-87779-064-8 .
External links