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September 1938
September 1, 1938 (Thursday)
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September 1938
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The following events occurred in
September 1938
:
September 1
, 1938 (Thursday)
Benito Mussolini
ordered all Jews who had entered Italy since January 1, 1919 to get out within six months. The order affected some 10,000 people.
[1]
Sudeten German leader
Konrad Henlein
met with
Hitler
at the
Berghof
in
Berchtesgaden
.
[2]
It was announced in Austria that all religious and other private schools would be closed and education would be taken over by the Nazi Party.
[3]
The
Frank Capra
-directed romantic comedy film
You Can't Take It with You
starring
Jean Arthur
and
Lionel Barrymore
premiered at
Radio City Music Hall
in New York City.
[4]
Born:
Per Kirkeby
, artist, in
Copenhagen
, Denmark (d. 2018)
Died:
Nikolai Bryukhanov
, 59, Russian statesman (executed)
September 2
, 1938 (Friday)
Elections were held in the
Sanjak of Alexandretta
. Turkish candidates won 22 of 40 seats, creating the conditions for the declaration of a new Turkish-aligned state.
[5]
Italy ordered Jewish teachers, officials and students excluded from state schools. Some students who had already begun their studies were exempt from the new law under special circumstances.
[6]
Born:
Clarence Felder
, actor, in
St. Matthews, South Carolina
;
Giuliano Gemma
, actor, in Rome, Italy (d. 2013)
Died:
Walter Schott
, 76, German sculptor
September 3
, 1938 (Saturday)
Hitler conferred with
Walther von Brauchitsch
and
Wilhelm Keitel
on
Fall Grün
. Hitler brushed aside Brauchitsch's objections that the Wehrmacht lacked preparedness and ordered the troops to be ready to march at two days' notice.
[7]
The
International Olympic Committee
awarded the
1940 Winter Olympics
to
St. Moritz
, Switzerland and the
1944 Summer Olympics
to
Helsinki
, Finland.
[8]
Born:
Ryōji Noyori
, chemist and Nobel laureate, in
Kobe
, Japan
September 4
, 1938 (Sunday)
Edmonton air crash
: A
Royal Air Force
plane crashed into a residential area in the
Edmonton
region of London, killing the pilot and twelve other people.
September 5
, 1938 (Monday)
Seguro Obrero massacre
: In
Chile
, armed militants from the
National Socialist Movement
launch a failed coup attempt against
Arturo Alessandri
.
[9]
The annual
Nuremberg Rally
began in Germany. This would be the last Nazi Party Congress ever held.
[10]
The Soviet drama film
Professor Mamlock
premiered in the USSR.
September 6
, 1938 (Tuesday)
The Czechoslovak government offered a new plan providing all nationalities with proportional representation in state offices.
[11]
Born:
Dennis Oppenheim
, artist, in
Electric City, Washington
(d. 2011)
September 7
, 1938 (Wednesday)
Hatay State
was created in the territory of the
Sanjak of Alexandretta
of the
French Mandate of Syria
.
On instructions from Hitler,
Konrad Henlein
broke off negotiations with the Czech government. Allegations of Czech police brutality at Moravská Ostrava were used as an excuse.
[12]
Theo Kordt informs foreign secretary
Lord Halifax
at 10 Downing Street on
Oster conspiracy
preparations for a Wehrmacht coup against Hitler to start upon his issuance of a declaration of war on Czechoslovakia.
[13]
A famously controversial editorial appeared in
The Times
which recommended giving Hitler what he wanted because "the advantages to Czechoslovakia of becoming a homogenous State might conceivably outweigh the obvious disadvantages of losing the Sudeten German districts of the borderland."
[7]
Died:
William Henry Singleton
, 95, American slave, soldier and Christian minister
September 8
, 1938 (Thursday)
Representatives of Czechoslovakia's various minorities presented a united front against the government and agreed upon the "urgent necessity for reconstruction of the state and settlement of the minorities question."
[14]
Born:
Kenichi Horie
, yachtsman, in
Osaka
, Japan;
Poornachandra Tejaswi
, writer, in
Kuppalli
,
Karnataka
,
British India
(d. 2007)
September 9
, 1938 (Friday)
U.S. President
Franklin D. Roosevelt
gave a press conference in which he denied that a quote recently attributed to the Ambassador to France
William Christian Bullitt, Jr.
had ever been made. Bullitt allegedly said that France and the United States "were united in war as in peace".
[15]
Lou Boudreau
made his major league debut for the
Cleveland Indians
, going 0-for-1 against the
Detroit Tigers
.
[16]
September 10
, 1938 (Saturday)
Hermann Göring
made an inflammatory speech at the Nuremberg Rally, accusing the Czechoslovak government of "oppressing a cultured people". Czechoslovakian President
Edvard Beneš
made a radio address making no mention of the diatribe and appealing for peace.
[12]
[17]
Miss Ohio
Marilyn Meseke
was crowned
Miss America 1938
.
The stage musical
Hellzapoppin
opened at the Shubert Theatre in
Boston
twelve days ahead of its Broadway premiere at the
46th Street Theatre
.
Born:
David Hamilton
, radio and television presenter, in
Manchester
, England
Died:
Alfonso, Prince of Asturias
, 31 (car accident)
September 11
, 1938 (Sunday)
Tazio Nuvolari
of Italy won the
Italian Grand Prix
. It was the last Italian Grand Prix held until 1947.
September 12
, 1938 (Monday)
Hitler made a bombastic speech in Nuremberg declaring that the oppression of Sudeten Germans must end.
[18]
The speech was broadcast live to the United States by
CBS Radio
and was the first time that many Americans had ever heard Hitler speak.
[19]
The British cabinet held a meeting almost as soon as Hitler was finished speaking. They were relieved that Hitler had only demanded "justice" for Sudeten Germans and had not committed himself to war.
[7]
BBC Television
showed a film for the first time,
Man of the Moment
.
[20]
September 13
, 1938 (Tuesday)
Sudeten Germans began attacking police stations and other symbols of Czechoslovak authority, causing the government to declare martial law.
[11]
French Prime Minister
Édouard Daladier
asked
Neville Chamberlain
to make the best deal he could with Hitler.
[12]
Nara Prefecture Kashihara Archaeological Institute and Research
, a well known place for
archaeological
research place in Japan, was founded by
Masao Suenaga
in
Japan
.
[
citation needed
]
Born:
Angus Douglas-Hamilton, 15th Duke of Hamilton
, in London, England (d. 2010);
John Smith
, leader of the British Labour Party, in
Dalmally
,
Scotland
(d. 1994)
September 14
, 1938 (Wednesday)
The Czechoslovakian government announced that the Sudeten revolt had been put down.
[21]
The
Graf Zeppelin II
had its first flight.
September 15
, 1938 (Thursday)
British Prime Minister
Neville Chamberlain
boarded a plane for the first time in his life and flew to Berchtesgaden to meet with Adolf Hitler. Chamberlain had already decided not to go to war over Czechoslovakia, so all that was left to negotiate was the means of meeting Hitler's demands.
[22]
Brothers
Lloyd
and
Paul Waner
of the
Pittsburgh Pirates
hit back-to-back home runs off
Cliff Melton
of the
New York Giants
.
[23]
They were the only brothers to ever hit back-to-back home runs in the majors until 2013 when
B. J.
and
Justin Upton
accomplished the same feat.
[24]
Empresa Mexicana de Lucha Libre
held the
EMLL 5th Anniversary Show
.
Born:
Gaylord Perry
, American baseball player, in
Williamston, North Carolina
(d. 2022)
Died:
Thomas Wolfe
, 37, American novelist (pneumonia)
September 16
, 1938 (Friday)
A
mayoral election
has held in Los Angeles following the recall of incumbent
Frank L. Shaw
.
Fletcher Bowron
was elected the new mayor.
Died:
Valerie Bergere
, 71, French-born American actress
September 17
, 1938 (Saturday)
Neville Chamberlain reported to the Cabinet on his meeting with Hitler, informing its members of his belief that a settlement of the Sudeten matter would satisfy Hitler's aims.
[25]
Born:
LeeRoy Yarbrough
, racing driver, in
Jacksonville, Florida
(d. 1984)
Died:
Bruno Jasieński
, 37, Polish poet (executed in the Soviet Union)
September 18
, 1938 (Sunday)
French Prime Minister
Édouard Daladier
and his foreign minister
Georges Bonnet
came to London for a conference on Czechoslovakia. The German annexation of the Sudetenland was agreed upon.
[18]
The
New York Yankees
clinched the
American League
pennant in an unusual fashion: the second-place
Boston Red Sox
were mathematically eliminated by having their doubleheader against the
Chicago White Sox
canceled.
[26]
Born:
Billy Robinson
, professional wrestler, in
Manchester
, England (d. 2014)
Died:
Horace Trumbauer
, 69, American architect
September 19
, 1938 (Monday)
The British and French representatives in
Prague
presented the Anglo-French proposal to allow the Sudetenland to be annexed.
[12]
Died:
Pauline Frederick
, 55, American actress (asthma attack)
September 20
, 1938 (Tuesday)
The Czechoslovak government rejected the Anglo-French proposal in a note explaining that acceptance would mean that Czechoslovakia would be put "sooner or later under the complete domination of Germany."
[12]
Hitler met with the Polish ambassador
Józef Lipski
and told him that Germany would support Poland in a conflict with Czechoslovakia over
Teschen
.
[27]
Hitler also said he was considering shipping Europe's Jews to a colony and expressed hope that Poland would cooperate with such a plan. Lipski replied that if Hitler could solve the
Jewish question
, the Poles would build a beautiful monument to him in Warsaw.
[28]
September 21
, 1938 (Wednesday)
The British and French ambassadors informed Czechoslovakian President
Edvard Beneš
that his country would have to accept their plan or face Germany alone.
[18]
The
New England hurricane
killed 650 people along the coast of the northeastern United States.
[11]
The comedy film
Room Service
starring the
Marx Brothers
premiered in New York.
The stage musical
You Never Know
with music by
Cole Porter
and
Robert Katscher
[
de
]
opened at the
Winter Garden Theatre
on Broadway.
[29]
September 22
, 1938 (Thursday)
The Czechoslovakian government resigned.
Jan Syrový
became the new Prime Minister.
[11]
Neville Chamberlain returned to Germany and met with Hitler again for two days at
Bad Godesberg
. Hitler was much more bellicose than before and demanded to occupy the Sudetenland by October 1 with all of the region's military equipment left intact.
[5]
[22]
[30]
Born:
Gene Mingo
, American football player, in
Akron, Ohio
September 23
, 1938 (Friday)
The new Czechoslovakian government ordered full mobilization of its military.
[11]
Born:
Tom Lester
, actor and evangelist, in
Laurel, Mississippi
(d. 2020);
Romy Schneider
, actress, in
Vienna
, Austria (d. 1982)
September 24
, 1938 (Saturday)
France ordered partial mobilization of its military.
[11]
Carlton
defeated
Collingwood
in the
VFL Grand Final
.
September 25
, 1938 (Sunday)
Czechoslovakia rejected Hitler's latest demands from Godesburg as "an ultimatum given to a defeated nation, not a sovereign one."
[31]
British
Royal Navy
ordered to sea.
[32]
Born:
Jonathan Motzfeldt
, 1st Prime Minister of
Greenland
, in
Qassimiut
(d. 2010)
Died:
Paul Olaf Bodding
, 72, Norwegian missionary, linguist and folklorist
September 26
, 1938 (Monday)
In the
Berlin Sportpalast
, Hitler made a speech threatening Czechoslovakia with war. "My patience is exhausted", Hitler declared. "If Beneš does not want peace we will have to take matters into our own hands."
[33]
68 were killed in a train crash in
Barcelona
.
[20]
Born:
Jonathan Goldsmith
, American actor, in New York City
September 27
, 1938 (Tuesday)
The French government announced that France would not enter a war purely over Czechoslovakia. Neville Chamberlain gave a radio address saying, "However much we may sympathize with a small nation confronted by a big and powerful neighbor, we cannot in all circumstances undertake to involve the whole British Empire in a war simply on her account. If we have to fight it must be on larger issues than that."
[31]
The
League of Nations
identified Japan as the aggressor in the
Second Sino-Japanese War
and invited its members to support China.
[11]
September 28
, 1938 (Wednesday)
Hitler agreed to hold a four-party conference in
Munich
between Germany, Great Britain, France and Italy.
[11]
Gabby Hartnett
of the
Chicago Cubs
hit the
Homer in the Gloamin'
.
Born:
Ben E. King
, soul and R&B singer, in
Henderson, North Carolina
(d. 2015)
Died:
Con Conrad
, 47, American songwriter
September 29
, 1938 (Thursday)
German Führer
Adolf Hitler
, British Prime Minister
Neville Chamberlain
, French Prime Minister
Édouard Daladier
and Italian Duce
Benito Mussolini
met in Munich to settle the Sudetenland crisis. Czechoslovakia was not invited, neither was the Soviet Union.
[5]
[11]
Poland submitted an ultimatum to Czechoslovakia demanding the annexation of
Teschen
.
[5]
Born:
Wim Kok
, Prime Minister of the Netherlands, in
Bergambacht
(d. 2018)
September 30
, 1938 (Friday)
Munich Agreement
: At 1 a.m., the four powers at Munich agreed that Czechoslovakia would cede the Sudetenland to Germany by October 10. The territorial integrity of the rest of Czechoslovakia was guaranteed by all signatories.
[11]
Neville Chamberlain flew back to Britain and declared "
peace for our time
".
References
^
"Expel All Jews Who Moved to Italy Since '19".
Chicago Daily Tribune
. September 2, 1938. p. 1.
^
Schultz, Sigrid
(September 2, 1938). "Czechs Face New Demands".
Chicago Daily Tribune
. p. 1.
^
"Church Menaced by Nazis".
Chicago Daily Tribune
. October 14, 1938. p. 1.
^
"A World Premiere of World Importance! (Advertisement)"
.
Film Daily
. New York: Wid's Films and Film Folk, Inc. August 25, 1938. pp. 8–9.
^
a
b
c
d
"Chronology 1938"
.
indiana.edu
. 2002
. Retrieved
September 19,
2015
.
^
"Il Duce Orders Jews Barred from Schools".
Chicago Daily Tribune
. September 3, 1938. p. 2.
^
a
b
c
Faber, David (2008).
Munich, 1938: Appeasement and World War II
. New York: Simon & Schuster. pp. 246–247, 253, 267–268.
ISBN
978-1-4391-4992-8
.
^
Grasso, John; Mallon, Bill; Heijmans, Jeroen (2015).
Historical Dictionary of the Olympic Movement
. Rowman & Littlefield. p. xxxiv.
ISBN
978-1-4422-4860-1
.
^
"Matanza del Seguro Obrero - Memoria Chilena, Biblioteca Nacional de Chile"
.
www.memoriachilena.gob.cl
. Retrieved
2024-06-04
.
^
Schultz, Sigrid
(September 6, 1938). "600,000 Nazis Go Wils as Hitler Reaches Rally".
Chicago Daily Tribune
. p. 3.
^
a
b
c
d
e
f
g
h
i
j
"1938"
.
MusicAndHistory
. Archived from
the original
on August 28, 2012
. Retrieved
September 19,
2015
.
^
a
b
c
d
e
Shirer, William L.
(2011).
The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich: A History of Nazi Germany
. New York: Simon & Schuster. pp. 383–384, 389.
ISBN
978-1-4516-5168-3
.
^
ASHDOWN, PADDY (2019).
NEIN!: Standing Up to Hitler 1935 - 1944
. [Place of publication not identified]: WILLIAM COLLINS. p. 110.
ISBN
978-0-00-825707-1
.
OCLC
1053903299
.
^
Small, Alex (September 9, 1938). "Nazis United All Minorities to Resist Czechs".
Chicago Daily Tribune
. p. 1.
^
Edwards, Willard (September 10, 1938). "President Fires New Broadside at Newspapers".
Chicago Daily Tribune
. p. 6.
^
"Lou Boudreau"
.
Baseball-Reference.com
. Retrieved
September 19,
2015
.
^
"Benes Radios Peace Appeal".
Brooklyn Eagle
. Brooklyn. September 11, 1938. p. 1.
^
a
b
c
Churchill, Winston (2013).
Into Battle
. New York: Rosetta Books.
ISBN
978-0-7953-2946-3
.
^
Cashman, Sean Dennis (1989).
America in the Twenties and Thirties: The Olympian Age of Franklin Delano Roosevelt
. New York University. p. 555.
ISBN
978-0-8147-1413-3
.
^
a
b
Mercer, Derrik, ed. (1989).
Chronicle of the 20th Century
. London: Chronicle Communications Ltd. p. 500.
ISBN
978-0-582-03919-3
.
^
"Troops Suppress Sudeten German Rebellion After Day of Fighting".
Chicago Daily Tribune
. September 15, 1938. p. 1.
^
a
b
Lewis, John David (2010).
Nothing Less than Victory: Decisive Wars and the Lessons of History
. Princeton University Press. pp. 224–225.
ISBN
978-1-4008-3430-3
.
{{
cite book
}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (
link
)
^
"Sept. 15 1938: Brothers Lloyd and Paul Wanter hit ..."
Chicago Tribune
. September 15, 2002
. Retrieved
September 19,
2015
.
^
Perkins, Owen (April 24, 2013).
"Uptons hit back-to-back jacks, a rare feat for brothers"
.
MLB.com
. Retrieved
September 19,
2015
.
^
McDonough, Frank (1998).
Neville Chamberlain, Appeasement, and the British Road to War
. Manchester University Press. p. 64.
ISBN
978-0-7190-4832-6
.
^
"Yanks Lose 2, but Capture A. L. Pennant".
Chicago Daily Tribune
. September 19, 1938. p. 19.
^
Boone, J. C. (2008).
Hitler at the Obersalzberg
. Xlibris. p. 105.
ISBN
978-1-4628-1353-7
.
^
Nicosia, Francis R. (2000).
The Third Reich and the Palestine Question
. New Brunswick, New Jersey: Transaction Publishers. p. 166.
ISBN
978-0-7658-0624-6
.
^
"You Never Know"
.
Playbill Vault
. Retrieved
September 19,
2015
.
^
Tucker, Spencer C. (2010).
A Global Chronology of Conflict: From the Ancient World to the Modern Middle East
. Santa Barbara: ABC-CLIO, LLC. p. 1879.
ISBN
978-1-85109-672-5
.
^
a
b
Cabada, Cabada; Waisová, Šárka (2011).
Czechoslovakia and the Czech Republic in World Politics
. Lexington Books. p. 39.
ISBN
978-0-7391-6733-5
.
^
"Events leading to the Munich settlement"
.
BBC Bitesize
. Retrieved
2020-11-15
.
^
Schultz, Sigrid
(September 27, 1938). "Dictator in Fiery Speech Says He Will Fight".
Chicago Daily Tribune
. p. 1.
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