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1934

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Centuries: 19th century - 20th century - 21st century
Decades: 1900s  1910s  1920s  - 1930s -  1940s  1950s  1960s

Years: 1931 1932 1933 - 1934 - 1935 1936 1937
1934 by topic:
Arts
Architecture - Art - Film - Literature
Music (Country ) - Television
Science and technology
Archaeology - Aviation
Meteorology - Rail transport - Science
By country
Australia - Canada - India
Ireland - Malaysia - New Zealand - Singapore - South Africa - UK - Wales - Zimbabwe
Other topics
Awards - Sport - Law - State leaders - Sovereign states - Religious leaders
Birth and death categories
Births - Deaths
Establishments and disestablishments categories
Establishments - Disestablishments
Works category
Works
v • d • e

1934 (MCMXXXIV) was a common year starting on Monday (link is to a full 1934 calendar).

Contents

  • 1 Events
    • 1.1 January
    • 1.2 February
    • 1.3 March-April
    • 1.4 May
    • 1.5 June
    • 1.6 July-August
    • 1.7 September
    • 1.8 October
    • 1.9 November
    • 1.10 December
    • 1.11 Unknown dates
  • 2 Births
    • 2.1 January-February
    • 2.2 March-April
    • 2.3 May-June
    • 2.4 July-August
    • 2.5 September-October
    • 2.6 November-December
  • 3 Deaths
    • 3.1 January - March
    • 3.2 April - June
    • 3.3 July - September
    • 3.4 October - December
  • 4 Nobel prizes

Events

January

Image:Alcatraz Island.jpg
January 1: Alcatraz becomes a prison.
  • January 1 - Alcatraz becomes a federal prison.
  • January 1 - Nazi Germany passes the "Law for the Prevention of Hereditarily Diseased Babies."
  • January 7 - The first Flash Gordon comic strip is published.
  • January 10 - Execution of Marinus van der Lubbe.
Image:TheApolloMarquee.jpg
January 26: Apollo opens.


  • January 13 - The Candidate of Science degree is established in the USSR.
  • January 24 - Einstein visits the White House
  • January 26 - The Apollo Theater opens in Harlem, New York City.
  • January 26 - The 10 year German-Polish Non-Aggression Pact is signed by

Germany and the Second Polish Republic.

February

Image:Flash gordoncomic.jpg
Jan. 7: first Flash Gordon comic.
  • February 6 - February 6, 1934 French political crisis. The French far right leagues rally in front of the Palais Bourbon, an attempted coup against the Third Republic
  • February 9 - Gaston Doumergue forms a new government in France
  • February 12 - The Export-Import Bank is incorporated.
  • February 12 to February 16 - Austrian Civil War
  • February 16 - Commission of Government sworn in as form of direct rule for the Dominion of Newfoundland.
  • February 22 - Frank Capra's It Happened One Night , starring Clark Gable and Claudette Colbert, is released. It becomes a smash hit and the first of Capra's great screen classics. It will become the first film to win all five of the major Academy Awards - Best Actor, Best Actress, Best Screenplay, Best Director, and Best Picture. Gable and Colbert will receive their only Oscars for this film.
  • February 23 - Léopold III becomes King of Belgium.

March-April

  • March 1 - Manchuria becomes Manchukuo following an invasion by the Japanese
  • March 3 - John Dillinger escapes from jail in Crown Point, Indiana, using a wooden pistol
  • March 8 - Prince Sigvard of Sweden loses his titles because of his marriage.
  • March 12 - A coup in Estonia by Konstantin Päts and general Johan Laidoner. All parties are banned.
  • March 13 - John Dillinger, Baby Face Nelson and their gang rob the First National Bank in Mason City, Iowa.
  • March 20 - All the police forces in Germany come under command of Heinrich Himmler
  • April 1 - Clyde Barrow and Bonnie Parker kill two young highway patrolmen near Grapevine, Texas.
  • April 6 - Rudyard Kipling and William Butler Yeats are awarded the Gothenburg Prize for Poetry.
  • April 14 - Black Sunday
  • April 19 - Surgeon R.K. Wilson allegedly takes a photograph of the Loch Ness Monster.
  • April 22 - John Dillinger and two others shoot their way out of an FBI ambush in northern Wisconsin

May

Image:Bonnie and Clyde.jpg
May 23: Bonnie and Clyde shot.
  • May 7 - Pearl of Lao Tzu, 24 x 14 cm, is found in a giant clam off Palawan, Philippines.
  • May 11 - Dust Bowl: A strong two-day dust storm removes massive amounts of Great Plains topsoil in one of the worst dust storms of the Dust Bowl.
  • May 15 - The United States Department of Justice offers a $25,000 reward for John Dillinger.
  • May 15 - Kārlis Ulmanis establishes an authoritarian government in Latvia.
Image:Dust Storm Texas 1935.jpg
May 11: dust storm in Great Plains.


  • May 23 - Near their hide-out in Black Lake, Louisiana, a team of police officers, led by Texas Ranger Frank Hamer, ambush bank robbers Bonnie Parker and Clyde Barrow, killing them both.
  • May 24 - Tomáš Masaryk re-elected president of Czechoslovakia.
  • May 28 - Near Callander, Ontario, the Dionne quintuplets are born to Olivia and Elzire Dionne, later becoming the first quintuplets to survive infancy.


June

  • June 6 - New Deal: U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt signs the Securities Exchange Act into law, establishing the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.
  • June 9 - Release of the animated short The Wise Little Hen, directed by Bert Gillett for the Silly Symphonies series, featuring the debut of Donald Duck.
  • June 10 - Italy beat Czechoslovakia 2-1 after extra time to win the 1934 World Cup.
  • June 12 - Political parties banned in Bulgaria
  • June 14 - Max Baer defeats champion Primo Carnera for the world heavyweight boxing title.
  • June 27 - Emir of Yemen and ibn Saud of Saudi Arabia conclude a peace treaty
  • June 30
    • The Nazi SA camp Oranienburg becomes national camp, taken over by the SS.
    • Night of the Long Knives - Nazis purge the SA

July-August

  • July 1 - The world famous Brookfield Zoo opens
  • July 1 - The Hays Office censorship code for motion pictures goes into full effect in the United States.
  • July 10 - German social democrat and author Erich Mühsam killed in Oranienburg concentration camp
  • July 17 - Supreme court of North Dakota declares lieutenant governor of the state, Ole Olsen, the legitimate governor and tells William Langer to resign. Langer proceeds to declare North Dakota independent. He revokes the declaration after the Supreme Court justices meet him.
  • July 19 - Francisco Sá Carneiro, Prime Minister of Portugal (1980; died in office), is born.
  • July 22 - Outside Chicago's Biograph Theatre, "Public Enemy No. 1" John Dillinger is mortally wounded by FBI agents.
  • July 25 - Austrian Nazis assassinate chancellor Engelbert Dollfuss during a failed coup attempt.
  • August 2 - Adolf Hitler becomes Führer of Germany, becoming head of state as well as Chancellor.
  • August 8 - The Wehrmacht swears a personal oath of loyalty to Adolf Hitler.
  • August 19 - The first All-American Soap Box Derby is held in Dayton, Ohio.

September

  • September 8 - Off the New Jersey coast, a fire aboard the passenger liner Morro Castle kills 134 people.
  • September 19 - Soviet Union joins the League of Nations
  • September 21 - Typhoon in Honshū, Japan - 4000 dead
  • September 22 - A gas explosion took place at Gresford Colliery in Wrexham, north-east Wales which led to the death of 266 miners and rescuers. This was one of the worst tragedies in Welsh mining history.
  • September 28
    • Afghanistan joins the League of Nations
    • Trial for the custody of young Gloria Vanderbilt begins. It lasts seven weeks and ends with a compromise.
  • September 29 - Stanley Matthews makes his England debut, beginning a record 23-year international career

October

  • October 2 - Tornado in Osaka and Kyoto destroys the rice harvest - 1660 dead, 5400 injured
  • October 5 - Asturian miners rebel. (Asturias, Spain).
  • October 6 - Catalonian separatists rebel
  • October 9 - King Alexander of Yugoslavia and French foreign minister Louis Barthou are assassinated during the king's state visit in Marseilles.
  • October 16 - The Long March of Chinese communists begins.
  • October 22 - Charles Arthur "Pretty Boy" Floyd shot and killed by FBI agents near East Liverpool, Ohio.

November

  • November 13 - Italian government decreed that teachers must use a military or party uniform in a class.
  • November 21
    • MCC makes an ultimately controversial decision to alter the lbw rule so a batsman can be lbw to a ball pitching outside off stump. The change is later blamed for many problems developing during the 1950s - primarily negative bowling outside leg stump to a field of short-leg fieldsmen.
    • Cole Porter's musical Anything Goes, starring Ethel Merman, premieres in New York City.
  • November 23 - An Anglo-Ethiopian boundary commission in the Ogaden discovers an Italian garrison at Walwal, which lay well within Ethiopian territory. This encounter leads to the Abyssinia Crisis.
  • November 26 - Universal Pictures releases the first film version of Fannie Hurst's novel, Imitation of Life, starring Claudette Colbert and Louise Beavers. It gives Beavers, who was usually featured in small roles as a maid, her best screen role, and features the largest supporting role played by a black person in a Hollywood film up till then. Its storyline is extremely daring for a 1934 film - part of it revolves around a young mulatto girl rejecting her mother and trying to "pass for white". It is the first Hollywood film to seriously deal with this subject. The 1936 film version of Show Boat , also from Universal, will deal with a similar storyline.
  • November 27 - A running gun battle between FBI agents and bank robber Baby Face Nelson results in the death of one FBI agent and the mortal wounding of special agent Sam Cowley, who is still able to mortally shoot Nelson.

December

  • December 1 - In the Soviet Union, Politburo member Sergei Kirov is shot dead at the Communist Party headquarters in Leningrad by Leonid Nikolaev (it is widely thought that Soviet leader Joseph Stalin ordered this murder).
  • December 5 - Abyssinia Crisis: Ethiopian and Italian troops exchange gunfire. Reported casualties for the Ethiopians are 150, and for the Italians 50.
  • December 14 - Female suffrage in Turkey
  • December 18 - Low-key fascist conference in Moreaux
  • December 24 - Actor Lionel Barrymore begins what will become an annual tradition of the Golden Age of Radio - playing the role of Ebenezer Scrooge in dramatizations of Charles Dickens's A Christmas Carol. Barrymore will continue playing Scrooge on radio until shortly before his death in 1954. He will also make a 78-RPM record album of the classic story, which will later be released on LP.
  • December 26 - American Airlines aircraft crashes in Adirondack Mountains
  • December 27 - Persia becomes Iran
  • December 29 - Japan renounces the Washington Naval Treaty of 1922 and the London Naval Treaty of 1930.

Unknown dates

  • The sonoluminescence effect is discovered.
  • The GPU becomes the NKVD.
  • The Maginot Line is finished.
  • Abidjan becomes the capital of the French colony of Côte d'Ivoire.

Births

1934 in other calendars
Gregorian calendar 1934
MCMXXXIV
Ab urbe condita 2687
Armenian calendar 1383
ԹՎ ՌՅՁԳ
Bahá'í calendar 90 – 91
Buddhist calendar 2478
Chinese calendar 4570/4630-11-16
(癸酉年十一月十六日)
— to —
4571/4631-11-25
(甲戌年十一月廿五日)
Ethiopian calendar 1926 – 1927
Hebrew calendar 5694 – 5695
Hindu calendars
 - Vikram Samvat 1989 – 1990
 - Shaka Samvat 1856 – 1857
 - Kali Yuga 5035 – 5036
Holocene calendar 11934
Iranian calendar 1312 – 1313
Islamic calendar 1352 – 1353
Japanese calendar Shōwa 9

(昭和9年)

 - Imperial Year Kōki 2594
(皇紀2594年)
 - Jōmon Era 11934
Julian calendar 1979
Korean calendar 4267
Thai solar calendar 2477
v • d • e

January-February

  • January 7 - Charlie Jenkins, American runner
  • January 9 - Bart Starr, American football player
  • January 11 - Jean Chrétien, Prime Minister of Canada
  • January 16 - Marilyn Horne, American mezzo-soprano
  • January 18 - Raymond Briggs, British writer and illustrator
  • January 20 - Tom Baker, British actor
  • January 22 - Bill Bixby, American television actor (d. 1993)
  • January 24 - Stanisław Grochowiak, Polish poet and dramatist (d. 1976)
  • February 5 - Hank Aaron, American baseball player
  • February 7 - Earl King, American musician (d. 2003)
  • February 10 - Fleur Adcock, New Zealand poet
  • February 11 - Tina Louise, American actress
  • February 11 - Mary Quant, British fashion designer
  • February 11 - John Surtees, British race car driver
  • February 12 - Anne Krueger, American economist
  • February 12 - Bill Russell, American basketball player
  • February 13 - George Segal, American actor
  • February 14 - Michel Corboz, Swiss conductor
  • February 14 - Florence Henderson, American actress
  • February 15 - Niklaus Wirth, Swiss computer scientist
  • February 17 - Alan Bates, British actor (d. 2003)
  • February 17 - Barry Humphries, Australian actor and comedian
  • February 20 - Bobby Unser, American race car driver
  • February 21 - Rue McClanahan, American actress
  • February 22 - Sparky Anderson, baseball manager
  • February 22 - Van Williams, American actor
  • February 24 - Bettino Craxi, Prime Minister of Italy (d. 2000)
  • February 24 - Renata Scotto, Italian soprano
  • February 27 - Vincent Fourcade, French-born interior designer and socialite (d. 1992)
  • February 27 - Ralph Nader, American consumer activist

March-April

  • March 1 - Jean-Michel Folon, Belgian sculptor (d. 2005)
  • March 1 - Joan Hackett, American actress (d. 1983)
  • March 4 - Mario Davidovsky, Argentinian composer
  • March 4 - John Duffey, bluegrass musician (d. 1996)
  • March 4 - Anne Haney, American actress (d. 2001)
  • March 4 - Barbara McNair, American singer and actress
  • March 4 - Janez Strnad, Slovenian physicist
  • March 5 - Daniel Kahneman, Israeli economist, Nobel Prize laureate
  • March 7 - Franklin Clarke, American football player
  • March 7 - Willard Scott, American television broadcaster
  • March 9 - Yuri Gagarin, Russian cosmonaut (d. 1968)
  • March 9 - Del Close, American actor, improviser, writer, and teacher (d. 1999)
  • March 11 - Sam Donaldson, American reporter
  • March 13 - Barry Hughart, American author
  • March 14 - Eleanor Bron, British actress
  • March 14 - Paul Rader, General of The Salvation Army
  • March 16 - Ray Hnatyshyn, Governor-General of Canada (d. 2002)
  • March 20 - Willie Brown, Mayor of San Francisco, California
  • March 22 - Orrin Hatch, U.S. Senator from Utah
  • March 25 - Gloria Steinem, American feminist
  • March 26 - Alan Arkin, American actor
  • March 31 - Shirley Jones, American singer and actress
  • March 31 - Carlo Rubbia, Italian physicist, Nobel Prize laureate
  • April 1 - Rod Kanehl, baseball player (d. 2004)
  • April 2 - Paul Joseph Cohen, American mathematician
  • April 2 - Brian Glover, British actor and wrestler (d. 1997)
  • April 3 - Jane Goodall, British zoologist
  • April 9 - Bill Birch, New Zealand politician
  • April 11 - Mark Strand, Canadian-born American poet
  • April 24 - Shirley MacLaine, American actress
  • April 24 - Jayakanthan, Tamil writer
  • April 25 - Peter McParland, Irish footballer
  • April 29 - Otis Rush, American musician

May-June

  • May 3 - Henry Cooper, British boxer
  • May 9 - Alan Bennett, British actor and writer
  • May 13 - Leon Wagner, baseball player (d. 2004)
  • May 14 - Siân Phillips, Welsh actress
  • May 15 - George Roper, British comedian (d. 2003)
  • May 19 - Jim Lehrer, American television journalist
  • May 21 - Bengt I. Samuelsson, Swedish biochemist, recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
  • May 22 - Peter Nero, American pianist
  • May 23 - Robert Moog, American inventor of the synthesizer
  • May 24 - Barry Rose, British choir director and organist
  • May 27 - Harlan Ellison, American writer
  • May 28 - Dionne quintuplets, American quintuplets
  • May 30 - Aleksei Leonov, Russian cosmonaut
  • June 3 - Rolland D. McCune, American theologian
  • June 6 - King Albert II of Belgium
  • June 16 - William Forsyth Sharpe, American economist, Nobel Prize laureate
  • June 26 - Jeremy Wolfenden, British journalist (d. 1965)
  • June 28 - Carl Levin, United States Senator
  • June 30 - Harry Blackstone Jr., American magician (d. 1997)

July-August

  • July 1 - Jean Marsh, British actress
  • July 1 - Sydney Pollack, American film director
  • July 10 - Jerry Nelson, American puppeteer
  • July 11 - Giorgio Armani, Italian fashion designer
  • July 12 - Van Cliburn, American pianist
  • July 13 - Wole Soyinka, Nigerian writer, Nobel Prize laureate
  • July 13 - Aleksei Yeliseyev, cosmonaut
  • July 14 - John Tyndall, British politician (d. 2005)
  • July 15 - Harrison Birtwistle, British composer
  • August 2 - Valery Bykovsky, Russian cosmonaut
    • August 3 - Jonas Savimbi, Angolan political and rebel leader (d. 2002)
  • August 4 - Dallas Green, American baseball manager and executive
  • August 15 - Nino Ferrer, French singer (d. 1998)
  • August 18 - Vincent Bugliosi, American prosecutor and author