
Here’s a look back at what happened in the Chicago area on Sept. 20, according to the Tribune’s archives.
Is an important event missing from this date? Email us.
Weather records (from the National Weather Service, Chicago)
- High temperature: 93 degrees (2018)
- Low temperature: 36 degrees (1991)
- Precipitation: 1.33 inches (2001)
- Snowfall: None

1902: Jimmy “Nixey” Callahan threw a no-hitter for the Sox during the first game of a doubleheader against Detroit. It was the second no-no by an American League pitcher. It happened on Amateur Day, when a procession of 200 young baseball players interrupted the game — with a brass band leading the marchers — during the seventh inning. Postgame, the youngsters presented Charles Comiskey with “a handsome fishing outfit,” the Tribune reported.
White Sox pitchers have thrown more no-hitters than any other American League team.

1934: A crowd of 35,265, believed to be the largest ever to watch a wrestling match in the U.S. at that time, packed Wrigley Field to watch Jim Londos successfully defend his world heavyweight title by winning his one-fall match over Ed “Strangler” Lewis in 49 minutes, 27 seconds.
Lewis had beaten Londos 14 times without a loss in previous matches, but the most recent was 10 years earlier. The crowd included some 10,000 walkups who were caught up in the hype surrounding the match.

1984: Singer Steve Goodman died in a Seattle hospital after a 16-year battle with leukemia. He was 36.
The native Chicagoan and avid Cubs fan wrote “Go Cubs Go” and “City of New Orleans.”

2014: Blase Cupich, bishop of Spokane, was appointed archbishop of Chicago by Pope Francis. The Nebraska native was chosen to replace the ailing Cardinal Francis George, who had led Chicago’s Catholics since 1997.
Cupich was installed as the ninth archbishop of Chicago on Nov. 18, 2014, and named a cardinal on Oct. 9, 2016.
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