December 1934

Month of 1934 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The following events occurred in December 1934:

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December 1, 1934 (Saturday)

December 2, 1934 (Sunday)

December 3, 1934 (Monday)

December 4, 1934 (Tuesday)

December 5, 1934 (Wednesday)

December 6, 1934 (Thursday)

December 7, 1934 (Friday)

December 8, 1934 (Saturday)

  • Weekly air mail service between England and Australia began.[15]

December 9, 1934 (Sunday)

December 10, 1934 (Monday)

December 11, 1934 (Tuesday)

  • American woman Isobel Lillian Steele was released from prison in Nazi Germany after being held for four months on suspicion of espionage. Her case had garnered significant media attention in the United States, and when she returned there she did much to capitalize on her story by writing articles and a book, eventually even playing herself in the 1936 film I Was a Captive in Nazi Germany.[18][19][20]
  • Kerns Hotel fire: A fire broke out in a 211-room hotel in Lansing, Michigan, killing 32 people.[21]
  • Died: Paul Rougnon, 88, French composer, pianist and music educator

December 12, 1934 (Wednesday)

  • 150 were injured in Liverpool, England, when the floor of a school concert hall collapsed.[22]

December 13, 1934 (Thursday)

  • The German cabinet issued twelve new decrees during its final session of the year. Several economic measures were passed as well as one providing a prison term of up to two years for those who "harm the state, its leaders, or the standing of the National Socialist party and its affiliations."[23]

December 14, 1934 (Friday)

  • The British cargo ship Usworth sank in the Atlantic Ocean. Rescue operations were carried out but only nine of the 26 crew survived.[24][25]
  • 15 were killed and 7 hurt in Berlin when an express train carrying Adolf Hitler and other Nazi leaders struck a bus on a level grade crossing. All the dead and wounded were aboard the bus.[26][27]
  • Born: Marilyn Cooper, actress, in New York City (d. 2009); Charlie Hodge, musician, in Decatur, Alabama (d. 2006)

December 15, 1934 (Saturday)

December 16, 1934 (Sunday)

December 17, 1934 (Monday)

December 18, 1934 (Tuesday)

December 19, 1934 (Wednesday)

December 20, 1934 (Thursday)

December 21, 1934 (Friday)

December 22, 1934 (Saturday)

December 23, 1934 (Sunday)

December 24, 1934 (Monday)

  • Pope Pius XI delivered a Christmas address to the world, saying it was as necessary as ever for mankind to choose Luke 2:14 ("on earth peace, good will toward men") as its "unceasing prayer." For those who wanted war, the pope said he had formulated another prayer: "destroy, O Lord, the people who wish for war."[38]
  • Rudolf Hess gave a Christmas message to Nazi Germany over government-controlled radio, saying "The world today realizes it is only thanks to Hitler that the peace of Europe was saved in the past year when it was repeatedly endangered. Hitler's carefulness and the statements he issued lessened international tension and showed him as a statesman of world importance. He is the chancellor of peace."[39]
  • Mussolini ordered General Emilio De Bono to Eritrea to take command of the Italian forces there.[40]
  • Nazi police arrested and imprisoned an American woman in Waldmohr for remarks she made during a conversation in a restaurant, allegedly saying that Hitler had Jewish blood.[41][42]
  • A leading baseball and professional sports club in Japan, Yomiuri Giants of Tokyo was founded.[citation needed]
  • Born: Stjepan Mesić, Croatian politician, in Orahovica, Yugoslavia

December 25, 1934 (Tuesday)

December 26, 1934 (Wednesday)

December 27, 1934 (Thursday)

December 28, 1934 (Friday)

December 29, 1934 (Saturday)

December 30, 1934 (Sunday)

  • About 40 to 50 members of the Mexican paramilitary organization the Red Shirts opened fire on churchgoers leaving Mass in Coyoacán, killing 5. One of the Red Shirts was beaten to death by an angry crowd to bring the death toll to 6.[49]
  • Mussolini wrote a memorandum for Marshal Pietro Badoglio titled "Directive and Plan of Action to Solve the Abyssinian question." "I decide on this war, the object of which is nothing more than the complete destruction of the Abyssinian army and the total conquest of Abyssinia", Mussolini wrote. "In no other way can we build the empire."[50]
  • Born: John N. Bahcall, astrophysicist, in Shreveport, Louisiana (d. 2005); Joseph P. Hoar, U.S. Marine Corps general, in Boston, Massachusetts (d. 2022); Del Shannon, rock and roll and country musician, in Grand Rapids, Michigan (d. 1990); Russ Tamblyn, actor and dancer, in Los Angeles

December 31, 1934 (Monday)

References

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