If I remember correctly from work we done in the fifties with some steel of about the same venue, except from Birmingham, Alabama. The discussion was mostly about what steel used in building construction being used essentially all in compression. There was very little diagonal bracing in the older buildings I saw being demolished due to being mostly of masonry construction and apparently very little consideration was given other loadings on the steel columns. A lot more attention was given to the rivets than the beams. Looking at one of my father’s International Correspondents School books, circa 1924, there is little consideration given to moments on columns, a lot on rivets in shear and the connections in vertical columns, with a little discussion on diagonal bracing.
Again based on my recollection of these events in my younger days I wouldn’t push the envelope even though the design of times probably would have been quite conservitive by today’s standards, simply by the methods of calculations used.
P.S.
The tensile testing machines of the time weren't very good as a lot depended on the operator keeping the beam balanced. There was a propensity to throw out very bad values if the fracture surface had discernible imperfections.