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January 1928
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January 1928
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January 13, 1928: General Electric Company and NBC make first television broadcast
January 12, 1928: Murderer Ruth Snyder executed in the electric chair, secretly photographed by New York's
Daily News
January 27, 1928: The
Los Angeles
becomes the first dirigible to make a landing on a ship, touching down on the aircraft carrier USS
Saratoga
The following events occurred in
January 1928
:
Sunday, January 1, 1928
The
Battle of Las Cruces
was fought in
Nicaragua
.
In
Nicaragua
, five U.S. Marines were killed and 23 wounded in a clash with followers of
Sandino
.
[1]
Nearly 250,000 domestic slaves in the British Protectorate of
Sierra Leone
were freed by decree of 1927.
[2]
Eastern Bloc emigration and defection
:
Boris Bazhanov
,
Joseph Stalin
's personal secretary, crossed the border to
Iran
to defect from the
Soviet Union
.
Died:
Loie Fuller
, 65, American dancer
Monday, January 2, 1928
Stanford University
edged the
University of Pittsburgh Panthers
7–6 in the
Rose Bowl
.
A diplomatic row broke out following the discovery by an Austrian customs official on the Hungarian border of five carloads of machine gun parts falsely labeled as machine parts in a shipment from Italy heading towards
Czechoslovakia
.
[3]
Born:
Howard Caine
, American character actor, in
Nashville, Tennessee
(d. 1993)
Robert Goralski
, American journalist, in
Chicago
(d. 1988)
Daisaku Ikeda
, Japanese Buddhist philosopher and activist;
Ōta, Tokyo
Kate Molale
, South African political activist (d. 1980)
Dan Rostenkowski
, U.S. Congressman for 38 years, later convicted of corruption; in
Chicago
(d. 2010)
Died:
Emily Stevens
, 45, American actress
Tuesday, January 3, 1928
The United States ordered the deployment of 1,000 additional Marines and five
destroyers
to
Nicaragua
.
[4]
The
Senussi
leader in
Cyrenaica
surrendered to Italy, bringing the colony of
Italian Libya
fully under Italian control.
[5]
Died:
Dorothy Donnelly
, 47, American actress, playwright, producer and director
Emily Stevens
, 45, American actress
Wednesday, January 4, 1928
Half of England was under water due to flooding.
[6]
Thursday, January 5, 1928
Charles Lindbergh
landed in
Nicaragua
during his goodwill tour of Latin America where he met President
Adolfo Díaz
.
[7]
Born:
Zulfikar Ali Bhutto
, 4th
President
and 9th
Prime Minister of Pakistan
, in
Larkana
,
British India
(d. 1979);
Walter Mondale
, U.S. Senator and 42nd
Vice President of the United States
, in
Ceylon, Minnesota
(d. 2021)
Friday, January 6, 1928
The
Charlie Chaplin
silent comedy film
The Circus
premiered at the
Strand Theatre
in New York City.
[8]
A 92 m.p.h. gale struck the
British Isles
, increasing the high risk of flooding even further.
[9]
Italian Finance Minister
Giuseppe Volpi
banned industries from taking out foreign loans without government approval.
[10]
Born:
George H. Ross
, American businessman and TV personality, in
Brooklyn, New York
Died:
Alvin Kraenzlein
, 51, American track-and-field athlete
Saturday, January 7, 1928
1928 Thames flood
: The
River Thames
burst its banks in London shortly after midnight, killing 14.
Westminster Abbey
, the
Tate Gallery
and the
Tower of London
were among the buildings flooded.
[9]
[11]
Charles Lindbergh flew to
Costa Rica
where he was greeted by President
Ricardo Jiménez Oreamuno
along with a huge crowd.
[12]
Born:
William Peter Blatty
, American writer and filmmaker known for
The Exorcist
; in New York City (d. 2017)
Sunday, January 8, 1928
The flood tide in London passed at 2:18 a.m.
[11]
The Emir of Afghanistan
Amānullāh Khān
and his wife
Soraya Tarzi
arrived in Rome during their first visit to Europe.
[13]
Monday, January 9, 1928
A council in Rome declared that the city's new
coat of arms
would include a
fasces
along with the Savoy cross.
[14]
Charles Lindbergh flew to
Panama
where President
Rodolfo Chiari
presented him with a medal and praised him for "establishing a basis of fraternity, and bringing together all of the American countries on a basis of real understanding."
[15]
Born:
Domenico Modugno
, Italian singer, songwriter, actor and politician, in
Polignano a Mare
(d. 1994)
Tuesday, January 10, 1928
New York
Governor
Al Smith
denied
clemency
to convicted murderer
Ruth Snyder
and her partner Henry Gray.
[16]
The
New York Giants
traded star player-manager
Rogers Hornsby
to the
Boston Braves
for
Shanty Hogan
and
Jimmy Welsh
.
[17]
Born:
Philip Levine
, American poet, in
Detroit
(d. 2015)
Wednesday, January 11, 1928
A U.S. Senate committee released its findings of an inquiry into alleged documents charging that Mexican President
Plutarco Elías Calles
was conspiring against the United States by secretly funding anti-American revolutionary activities in
Nicaragua
as well as bribing senators to support Mexico-friendly policies. The investigation concluded that the documents were forged, which came as a blow to the reputation of
William Randolph Hearst
who had broken the story in his newspapers. Pennsylvania Senator and committee leader
David A. Reed
said that "in dealing with the reputations of four senators it was incumbent upon Mr. Hearst to exhaust every avenue in seeking to verify the documents before printing them."
[18]
[19]
Voters in
Haiti
overwhelmingly approved thirteen amendments to the
Constitution
in a national
referendum
.
Born:
David L. Wolper
, American television and film producer, in New York City (d. 2010)
Died:
Thomas Hardy
, 87, English novelist and poet
Thursday, January 12, 1928
An order
staying the execution
of
Ruth Snyder
signed by Supreme Court Justice
Aaron J. Levy
was served to the warden of
Sing Sing
Prison shortly after 2 a.m., based on a plea by her lawyers that her presence as a witness was required in the litigation over the insurance left by her murdered husband.
[20]
In response,
New York Attorney General
Albert Ottinger
ruled that the stay of execution granted by Supreme Court Justice Levy was not binding.
[21]
and Snyder and her partner in crime, Henry Judd Gray, were executed at a few minutes past 11 p.m.
[22]
The Italian press was banned from reporting suicides or sensational crimes.
[1]
Died:
Ruth Snyder
, 32, American murderer (executed by electric chair)
Friday, January 13, 1928
General Electric
demonstrated the
potential of television
by broadcasting into three homes in
Schenectady, New York
. Company officials, engineers and journalists gathered in each of the three locations were able to see and hear a radio announcer on a 2-inch x 2 inch screen.
[23]
The
New York
Daily News
published a surreptitiously-taken photograph of the
Ruth Snyder
execution in an extra edition and reprinted it the following day. Together, the two editions sold an extra 1.5 million copies, despite an uproar.
[24]
Saturday, January 14, 1928
The silent film
The Divine Woman
, starring
Greta Garbo
, premiered at the
Capitol Theatre
in New York City.
[25]
The U.S. government announced plans to restore
Ford's Theatre
in Washington, D.C., and install an
Abraham Lincoln
museum.
[26]
Died:
Al Reach
, 87, American baseball player
Sunday, January 15, 1928
U.S. President
Calvin Coolidge
paid a visit to
Cuba
for the Pan American Conference, and was welcomed in
Havana
.
[27]
His visit marked the last of a U.S. President to Cuba for 88 years, until the arrival of
Barack Obama
in 2016.
[28]
Born:
Joanne Linville
, American actress, in
Bakersfield, California
(d. 2021)
Monday, January 16, 1928
The sixth
Pan-American Conference
opened in
Havana
.
[29]
Born:
William Kennedy
, American novelist and journalist; in
Albany, New York
Pilar Lorengar
, Spanish soprano, in
Zaragoza
(d. 1996)
Tuesday, January 17, 1928
Huey Long
won the
Louisiana gubernatorial election
.
Born:
Vidal Sassoon
, English hairdresser, businessman and philanthropist, in
Hammersmith
, London (d. 2012)
Jean Barraqué
, French composer, in
Puteaux
, Paris (d. 1973)
Wednesday, January 18, 1928
Nicaraguan rebel leader
Augusto César Sandino
was rumored to have been killed in a U.S. bombing raid.
[30]
The silent film
Gentlemen Prefer Blondes
, based on the hit
Anita Loos
novel of the same name
, was released.
Belgian biopharmaceutical manufacturing company
UCB
was founded by
Emmanuel Janssen
in
Brussels
.
Born:
Franciszek Pieczka
, Polish actor, in
Godow
(d. 2022)
Died:
Black Gold
, 6, racehorse and
1924 Kentucky Derby
winner
Thursday, January 19, 1928
Otto Gessler
resigned as Germany's
Minister of Defence
amid accusations of financial anomalies in his ministry.
[31]
Born:
Len Szafaryn
, American football player, in
Ambridge, Pennsylvania
(d. 1990)
Prince Tomislav of Yugoslavia
, son of King Alexander I; in
Belgrade
(d. 2000)
Died:
Hans Hinrich Wendt
, 74, German Protestant theologian
Friday, January 20, 1928
Wilhelm Groener
became the new German
Minister of Defence
.
The
American Federation of Labor
said it would ask both the
Republican
and
Democratic
party platform committees to consider modification of the
Volstead Act
to permit the manufacture of 2.75 percent beer.
[32]
Saturday, January 21, 1928
County court judges in
Pittsburgh
ruled that Sunday symphony concerts did not violate the local
blue laws
, explaining that such laws were "evidently intended to forbid actual physical, material interference with the quiet rest of the Sabbath day, and not to forbid the obviously harmless and even ancient custom of the rendition of music on that day."
[33]
Al Capone
announced that he would accept the request of
Miami
authorities to leave the city, in response to protests from civic organizations. "If I am not wanted here I will leave immediately", Capone said. "Where I will go from here I have not decided."
[34]
Born:
Gene Sharp
, American political theorist of nonviolent action; in
North Baltimore, Ohio
(d. 2018)
Died:
Nikolai Astrup
, 47, Norwegian painter
George Washington Goethals
, 69, American army officer and civil engineer
John de Robeck
, 65, British naval officer
Sunday, January 22, 1928
The
Women's Freedom League
sent a message to Prime Minister
Stanley Baldwin
protesting that women were excluded from holding posts in diplomatic and consular services around the Empire.
[35]
The
Josef von Sternberg
-directed silent film
The Last Command
starring
Emil Jannings
was released.
Born:
Yoshihiko Amino
, Japanese historian, in
Yamanashi Prefecture
(d. 2004)
Birch Bayh
, American politician, U.S Senator for Indiana (1963-1981); in
Terre Haute, Indiana
, (d. 2019)
Monday, January 23, 1928
Norway formally annexed
Bouvet Island
by royal decree.
[36]
21 federal prisoners escaped from
Wayne County
Jail in
Michigan
via a tunnel dug through a six-inch brick wall.
[37]
The
American Society of Heating and Venting Engineers
released its findings of a study determining the dirtiest city in America.
St. Louis
was named the dirtiest, followed by
Cincinnati
,
Pittsburgh
,
Detroit
and then
Chicago
.
Boston
was named the cleanest of the 24 cities studied.
[38]
Born:
Chico Carrasquel
, Venezuelan baseball player, in
Caracas
(d. 2005)
Jeanne Moreau
, French actress, singer, screenwriter and director; in
Paris
(d. 2017)
Tuesday, January 24, 1928
The
D. W. Griffith
-directed silent romance film
Drums of Love
premiered at the
Liberty Theatre
in New York City.
[39]
Twenty-six Hungarian soldiers were killed in an accident near
Diósgyőr
when a truck slammed into a stone wall.
[40]
Born:
Desmond Morris
, English zoologist, ethologist and painter; in
Purton
,
Wiltshire
Michel Serrault
, French actor, in
Brunoy
(d. 2007)
Wednesday, January 25, 1928
The Emir of Afghanistan
Amānullāh Khān
and his wife
Soraya Tarzi
arrived in Paris, riding in a procession down the
Champs-Élysées
in an open car.
[41]
The
Avalon Theater
opened in
Brooklyn
.
Born:
Cor van der Hart
, Netherlands footballer, in
Amsterdam
(d. 2006)
Eduard Shevardnadze
,
President of Georgia
1995 to 2003, Foreign Minister of the Soviet Union 1985 to 1990; in
Mamati
,
Transcaucasian SFSR
,
Soviet Union
(d. 2014)
Thursday, January 26, 1928
Volcanic activity on the Pacific island of
Krakatoa
caused a new volcanic cone to emerge from below sea level. This new island was called Anak Krakatoa, or "Child of Krakatoa".
[42]
Born:
Roger Vadim
, filmmaker, in Paris, France (d. 2000)
Died:
William A. Carroll
, 53, American silent film actor
Friday, January 27, 1928
A dirigible landed on an aircraft carrier for the first time in history when the
Los Angeles
was moored to the mast of the
Saratoga
in the Atlantic Ocean, allowing the passengers and crew to descend to the
Saratoga's
deck.
[43]
Charles Lindbergh
flew to
Bogotá
, Colombia, where he was welcomed by a crowd of 15,000.
[44]
The historic Redford Theater opened in Redford (Detroit), Michigan.
Born:
Hans Modrow
, the last Premier of East Germany, from 1989 until its 1990 reunification with West Germany; in
Jasenitz
,
Free State of Prussia
,
Germany
(now Jasienica, Poland) (d. 2023)
Saturday, January 28, 1928
Christopher Hornsrud
replaced
Ivar Lykke
as
Prime Minister of Norway
.
Born:
Pete Runnels
, American baseball player, in
Lufkin, Texas
(d. 1991)
Died:
Vicente Blasco Ibáñez
, 60, Spanish writer and politician
Sunday, January 29, 1928
Charles Lindbergh
flew to
Venezuela
and met with President
Juan Vicente Gómez
.
[45]
Died:
Henry C. Brewster
, 82, American politician
Douglas Haig, 1st Earl Haig
, 66, British general of the First World War
Monday, January 30, 1928
The controversial
Eugene O'Neill
stage play
Strange Interlude
premiered at the
John Golden Theatre
on Broadway.
[46]
A special train carrying Irish President
W. T. Cosgrave
derailed at
Limoges, Ontario
, Canada on its way to
Ottawa
. A foreman was killed but no one in the presidential entourage was injured. Cosgrave arrived in Ottawa three hours late and attended a dinner with Prime Minister
William Lyon Mackenzie King
.
[47]
Born:
Mitch Leigh
, musical theatre composer and theatrical producer known for
Man of La Mancha
; in Brooklyn, New York City (d. 2014)
Hal Prince
, musical theatre producer and director known for
Fiddler on the Roof
and
West Side Story
, winner of 281 Tony Awards; in Manhattan, New York City (d. 2019)
Died:
Johannes Fibiger
, 60, Danish scientist and recipient of the 1926
Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
for a discovery later disproved
Tuesday, January 31, 1928
Charles Lindbergh
flew to
Saint Thomas, U.S. Virgin Islands
, using a golf course west of the city as a landing strip, and met with the local governor.
[48]
Died:
Leopold Greville, 6th Earl of Warwick
, 45, British Army General who commanded two Canadian Infantry brigade
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Chronicle of the 20th Century
. London: Chronicle Communications Ltd. p. 362.
ISBN
978-0-582-03919-3
.
^
"250,000 Slaves in Sierra Leone, Africa, Freed".
Chicago Daily Tribune
. January 3, 1928. p. 3.
^
Rue, Larry (January 3, 1928). "Hungary Seizes Guns from Italy and Causes Row".
Chicago Daily Tribune
. p. 17.
^
"Crush Rebels, Marines Told".
Chicago Daily Tribune
. January 4, 1928. p. 1.
^
"Chronology 1928"
.
indiana.edu
. 2002
. Retrieved
March 4,
2015
.
^
"Much of England is Under Water; Faces New Thaw".
Chicago Daily Tribune
. January 5, 1928. p. 3.
^
Rosenthal, Luis (January 6, 1928). "Nicaragua War Gets Back Seat as Lindy Lands".
Chicago Daily Tribune
. p. 1.
^
"The Circus (1928)"
.
British Film Institute
. Archived from
the original
on February 4, 2007
. Retrieved
March 4,
2015
.
^
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b
Steele, John (January 7, 1928). "Tide Floods London; 27 Die".
Chicago Daily Tribune
. p. 1.
^
Darrah, David (January 7, 1928). "Mussolini Bars Foreign Loans Without His O. K.".
Chicago Daily Tribune
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^
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b
Steele, John (January 8, 1928). "London Up All Night; Watches Flood Waters Recede".
Chicago Daily Tribune
. p. 1 and 4.
^
Cohen, Alex (January 8, 1928). "Lindbrgh Wins Another Nation; It's Costa Rica".
Chicago Daily Tribune
. p. 5.
^
"Afghan Queen Doffs Veil for Rome Crowds".
Chicago Daily Tribune
. January 9, 1928. p. 1.
^
"Fascist Emblem Placed on Coat of Arms of Rome".
Chicago Daily Tribune
. January 10, 1928. p. 3.
^
"Panama Hails Lindy; "Uniting All Americas"
".
Chicago Daily Tribune
. January 10, 1928. p. 2.
^
"Ruth Must Die, Smith Rules".
Chicago Daily Tribune
. January 11, 1928. p. 1.
^
"Rogers Hornsby"
.
Baseball-Reference.com
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March 4,
2015
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Procter, Ben (2007).
William Randolph Hearst : The Later Years, 1911–1951
. Oxford University Press. pp.
142–143
.
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.
^
"Hearst Mexican Papers Forged, Committee Says".
Chicago Daily Tribune
. January 12, 1928. p. 6.
^
"Ruth Snyder Gains a Stay".
Chicago Daily Tribune
. January 12, 1928. p. 1.
^
"Ottinger Edict Dooms Slayers Tonight"
.
Brooklyn Daily Eagle
. January 12, 1928. p. 1.
^
Sutherland, Sid (January 13, 1928). "Electrocute Ruth and Gray".
Chicago Daily Tribune
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^
"Flashes Moving Pictures into Homes By Radio".
Chicago Daily Tribune
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^
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In the Limelight and Under the Microscope: Forms and Functions of Female Celebrity
Ed. Diane Negra, Su Holmes. New York: Continuum International Publishing Group, 2011.
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.
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Chicago Daily Tribune
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^
Henning, Arthur Sears (January 16, 1928). "Cubans Throng to Coolidge".
Chicago Daily Tribune
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^
"Obama lands in Cuba as first US president to visit in nearly a century"
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^
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^
Mueller, Michael (2007).
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^
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^
"Capone to Quit Miami Because He Is Asked To".
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^
"Lindy Carries U.S. Good Will to Venezuela".
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Steele, John (January 31, 1928). "Canada Probes Derailing of Cosgrave Train".
Chicago Daily Tribune
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^
"Lindbergh Hops to Gibraltar of U.S.' Oversea".
Chicago Daily Tribune
. February 1, 1928. p. 1.
v
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Events by month
1932
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1931
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1930
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1929
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1928
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1927
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1926
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1925
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Apr
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Aug
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1924
Jan
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