Miss America 1927
| Miss America 1927 | |
|---|---|
| Date | September 9, 1927 |
| Presenters | King Neptune (Eddie Dowling) |
| Venue | Million Dollar Pier, Atlantic City, New Jersey |
| Entrants | 75 |
| Placements | 15 |
| Winner | Lois Delander |
Miss America 1927, the seventh Miss America pageant, was held at the Million Dollar Pier in Atlantic City, New Jersey on Friday, September 9, 1927.[1][2] The winner was 16-year-old Lois Delander who competed as Miss Illinois. She won the Miss America title on her parents' twentieth wedding anniversary.[3]
After newspaper articles alleged that young women were being falsely lured into the competition with claims of a screen test and the promise of a likely film career,[4] public pressure resulted in the 1927 competition being the last pageant to be held in the 1920s.[5] The next Miss America pageant would not be held until 1933, during the Great Depression.
Results
Placements
| Placement | Contestant |
|---|---|
| Miss America 1927 | |
| 1st Runner-Up |
|
| Top 5 |
|
| Top 15 |
|
Other awards
| Award | Contestant |
|---|---|
| Rolling Chair Parade Winner |
|
Contestants
75 contestants competed for the title.
| Represented | Name | Hometown | Age | Awards |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Baltimore | Beulah Goldsborough | |||
| Battle Creek | Charlotte Jane Lowe | |||
| Biloxi | Phyllis Hunt | |||
| Ethel Beatrice Pierce | ||||
| Bridgeport | Antoinette Violet | Bridgeport | ||
| Kay Armstrong | ||||
| Canton | Erma Shorwood Steele | |||
| Charleston | Mary Claudia Harvin | Charleston | ||
| Myrtle Valsted | Chicago | |||
| Moselle Ransome | ||||
| Danville | Gladys Vile | |||
| Denver | Elva Yvette Roy | |||
| Elizabeth | Helen Mankus | |||
| El Paso | Mildred Casad | |||
| Flint | Ruth Bushroe | |||
| Fort Worth | Juanita Gilbert | |||
| Gary | Anna May Owens | Gary | ||
| Hammond | Anna Howe | |||
| Leona Faith Monoson | Hartford | |||
| Huntington | Lillian Ward | Huntington | ||
| Lois Delander | Joliet | 16 | ||
| Jamestown | Laura Belle Cooper | |||
| Jersey City | Eunice Geiser | |||
| Kalamazoo | Florence Nina Clement | |||
| Kansas City | Marion Kenser | |||
| Lansing | Margherite Strang | |||
| Lockport | Peggy Louise Proctor | |||
| Lynn | Muriel E. Bowers | |||
| Madison | Marjorie Leffingwell | |||
| Marcia Hands | ||||
| Sylvia Irene Brenner | Minneapolis | |||
| Katherine Calloway | ||||
| Newark | Carolyn Pierson | |||
| New England | Marion Howarth | Fall River | ||
| New Haven | Dorothy Barton | New Haven | ||
| Gladys Renya Moore | New Orleans | |||
| Freida Louise Mierse | Rolling Chair Parade Winner | |||
| Oakland | Ruby Smith | |||
| Evelyn Wilgus | Russells Point | |||
| Passiac | Harriet Rita Shelby | |||
| Florence Koons | ||||
| Kathleen Coyle | ||||
| Pittsburgh | Mary Millnack | |||
| Pittsfield | Martha E. Hick | |||
| Pontiac | Margaret Tinney | |||
| June Frances Costello | Providence | |||
| Rochester | Dorothea B. Ditmer | |||
| Saginaw | Charlotte Elaine Bowman | |||
| Naoma Farrand | ||||
| Santa Cruz | Bertha Weizel | |||
| Seattle | Eleanor Maddieux | |||
| South Bend | Hilda Koch | South Bend | ||
| Ramona Pearl Sorenson | Lemmon | 18 | ||
| Southern California | Louise Heathman | |||
| Spokane | Eva King | |||
| Springfield | Anna G. Bernard | Springfield | ||
| Storm Lake | Geneva Roberts | Storm Lake | 19 | |
| Terre Haute | Vera Haspal | |||
| Tulsa | Virginia Howard | Tulsa | ||
| Union City | Sue Hoch | |||
| Esther Kilpatrick | Salt Lake City | |||
| Utica | Margaret Lockwood | |||
| Gladys Cookman | ||||
| Watertown | Eva M. Bergman | |||
| Western New York | Betty Schwartz | |||
| Wheeling | Mildred Dorothy Bright | Wheeling | ||
| Wichita | Mildred Orr | |||
| Wilkes-Barre | Esther J. Cantor | |||
| Virginia Hillyer | Fort Atkinson | 17 | ||
| Worcester | Dorothy M. Rawson | |||
| Yonkers | Emma Sackett |
References
- ^ "Unbobbed Girl, 16, Wins Miss America". The Miami News. 1927-09-10. p. 1.
- ^ Associated Press (1927-09-10). "Joliet Girl, 16, 'Miss Illinois,' Queen of Beauty". Decatur Review. p. 1.
- ^ "Miss America History 1927". Archived from the original on 2012-05-02. Retrieved 2012-04-13.
- ^ "A.C. Beauty Contest Bunk: 'Pictures' Used to Mislead Girls - Flagrant Misrepresentatioas by Suggestion to Induce Young Women Throughout America to Enter Beauty Contasts in Hopes of Engagement in Hollywood Films — Adroit Wording to Gain Consent of Mothers". Variety. 88 (4). New York City: Variety, Inc.: 1, 43 August 10, 1927. Retrieved June 5, 2023.
- ^ Miss America: A History at www.missamerica.org
