Miss America 1922

Miss America 1922
Date September 7, 1922
Presenters King Neptune (Hudson Maxim)
Venue Million Dollar Pier, Atlantic City, New Jersey
Entrants 59
Placements 4
Winner Mary Katherine Campbell
Columbus

Miss America 1922, the second Miss America pageant, was held at the Million Dollar Pier in Atlantic City, New Jersey on September 7, 1922.[1][2][3] Joining the contestants during the "bathing revue," the parade of beauty pageant hopefuls, were the Mayor of Atlantic City and the entire police force, all wearing their bathing attire.[4]

Mary Katherine Campbell, competing as Miss Columbus in the pageant, edged out the previous year's winner, Margaret Gorman, who competed as "Miss America" in the 1922 event, to claim the Inter-City Beauty title. Campbell then competed against "Professional" beauty winner Dorothy Knapp and "Amateur" beauty winner Gladys Greenmayer to win the title of Miss America for 1922.[5]

Norman Rockwell judged the Miss America 1922 bathing beauty contest along with Howard Chandler Christy and James Montgomery Flagg. They were all unclear as to how to judge the contest. One judge suggested that they judge each part or feature of the body out of ten, then the woman with the total highest score would win. After they had tried the system, they discovered that although one woman might have beautiful individual parts or features, she might not be beautiful over all. So they "...gave up trying to figure out a system and resolved to trust our eyes. It led to squabbles, because all of us didn't see things in the same way, but it was the best we could do." [6]

Results

Final results Contestant
Miss America 1922
1st runner-up
Professional
Amateur
Evening Dress

Delegates

References

  1. "Queens of Beauty Hold Court at Atlantic City". Syracuse Herald. 1922-09-17. p. Art Section 1.
  2. "'Miss America' Is Ohio Girl". Sandusky Star Journal. 1922-09-09. p. 7.
  3. "Miss Indianapolis Much Admired, But Ohio Girl Is Winner". Indianapolis Star. 1922-09-08. p. 2.
  4. "Columbus, Ohio, Girl Is Crowned Miss America". The Bridgeport Telegram. 1922-09-17. p. 1.
  5. "Miss America History 1922". Retrieved 2012-04-13.
  6. "Vanities". .assumption.edu. Retrieved 2013-06-15.

Secondary sources

  • Saulino Osborne, Angela (1995). "Miss Americas and their Courts". Miss America The Dream Lives On. Taylor Publishing Company. ISBN 0-87833-110-7. 

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, February 15, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.