Bat Masterson in 1911.
On this day in 1921, Bartholemew William Barclay "Bat" Masterson, of OK Corral fame, died at age 67. He'd been working as a columnist there since 1902.
Like a lot of frontier lawmen, Masterson had a few run-ins with the law as well as enforcing it. He was born in Quebec to an Irish Canadian family and had served in most of the classic frontier roles in the West before becoming well known due to the events in Tombstone. His family moved to the United States while he was a child, and he grew up on a series of farms before becoming a buffalo hunter and Army scout. He was at the famous battle of Adobe Walls in 1874. He became a lawman in 1876 and after his famous career in Arizona he occupied that position in Colorado. He moved to Denver in 1882 where he was involved in various scrapes and then to New York in 1902.
Masterson was an acknowledged expert on boxing and became a columnist in New York, a position he occupied for the remainder of his life.
Masterson provides an interesting example of how we tend to compartmentalize figures by their historical period. He was a classic Frontier figure, but lived well beyond the Frontier's close and, no doubt to himself, seemed to always be living in the present even while depictions of the gunfight would continue to be famous all through his own life. He was outlived, FWIW, by Wyatt Earp, who died in 1929.
King Michael I of Romania was born. He was Romania's last king, having became a king as a child due to his father abdicating following his inability to reconcile an illicit relationship with his status as king and renouncing his rights upon his own father's death in 1925. He lost that title in 1930 when parties dissatisfied with the regency reestablished his father as monarch, but he became king again in September 1940 when a military coup led by Ion Antonescue returned him to the position of king and removed his father. He was 18 at the time.
He would be king when Romania declared war on the Soviet Union in 1941, but would lead the coup against the military government in 1944, combining with pro Allied officers who also no doubt saw the handwriting of the results of the war on the wall. He was removed from power in 1948 and died in 2017, by which time he was once again allowed to live part of the year in Romania.
A terrible Categroy Six hurricane hit Tampa Florida. The storm had previously hit Cuba with minimal damage, but Florida was not so lucky.
The government issued a report on the work of government hunters/trappers.
While I know the current thing is to think, "oh, how awful that the Federal Government did that", if I'd been alive then, the life of a government hunter would have appealed to me. Having said that, you could still homestead in 1921, and likely that would have appealed to me more.
Mrs. Ed Chambers and Mrs. Sid Hatchfield on this day in 1921.
Hatchfield had been the sheriff of Matewan County, West Viriginia and was murdered on August 1, 1921, along with his friend Chambers. The killings were probably connected with labor problems in the mining industry. Mrs. Chambers and Mrs. Hatchfield must have been in Washington on this date in some capacity connected with the murders of their husbands.
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