March 1931

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The following events occurred in March 1931:

March 31, 1931: Legendary college football coach Knute Rockne of Notre Dame killed in airliner crash
March 3, 1931: "The Star-Spangled Banner" officially designated as the United States national anthem
March 26, 1931; March 22, 1931, television co-stars Leonard Nimoy, William Shatner born

Sunday, March 1, 1931

Monday, March 2, 1931

Tuesday, March 3, 1931

Wednesday, March 4, 1931

Thursday, March 5, 1931

Friday, March 6, 1931

Saturday, March 7, 1931

  • Eighteen people died in a collision between two river steamers on the Danube river near Belgrade during a storm.[11][12]
  • Three earthquakes shook a sparsely populated area in the Balkans along the borders of Yugoslavia, Bulgaria and Greece. Twenty villages suffered damage but only one person was confirmed dead.[11]
  • The
    Parliament House of Finland was officially inaugurated in Helsinki, Finland.[13]
  • Born: Atsuko Ikeda, Japanese princess who later renounced her privileges with the Imperial House of Japan in 1952 in order to marry a commoner; at the Tokyo Imperial Palace as the fourth daughter of Emperor Hirohito and the empress consort Nagako
  • Died: Akseli Gallen-Kallela, 65, Finnish painter and illustrator of the Kalevala Finnish national epic

Sunday, March 8, 1931

  • The day after initial quakes in the Balkans, the area was hit again with a much stronger, 6.9 magnitude earthquake.[14] and 35 people were killed in Yugoslavia alone and thousands were left homeless.[15][16]
  • Born: Neil Postman, author, media theorist and cultural critic, in New York City (d. 2003)

Monday, March 9, 1931

Tuesday, March 10, 1931

Wednesday, March 11, 1931

Thursday, March 12, 1931

  • Villages in
    Bauges.[21][22] The French village of Le Châtelard was saved when the landslide split into three great rivers of earth that bypassed it. The Interior Ministry sent an emergency fund to assist villagers left homeless by the landslide.[22]
  • Died: Adolfo Wildt, 63, Italian sculptor

Friday, March 13, 1931

Saturday, March 14, 1931

  • The Prince of Wales opened a British trade exposition in Buenos Aires. He addressed the crowd of 2,000 in Spanish and then pressed a gold button opening the exhibition's gates.[25]
  • A riot broke out at Joliet Prison, the maximum security penitentiary in the U.S. state of Illinois. One inmate was killed and four others, including a guard, were injured.[26]
  • Ernst Henning, a German Communist Party member of the Hamburg city council, was murdered by three Nazis.[27][28]

Sunday, March 15, 1931

Monday, March 16, 1931

  • Communists in Germany stormed Nazi Party headquarters in Altona, Hamburg and killed a Nazi in retaliation for the murder of Ernst Henning. The Nazi leadership officially condemned the Henning murder and, on the NSDAP Party's instruction, the three killers gave themselves up to police.[28]

Tuesday, March 17, 1931

  • Four bombs exploded in an open street near the
    Belgrade railway station where many government buildings stood. An army explosive expert called in to investigate a suspicious package after the first three went off was killed.[31]
  • Actor and filmmaker Jack Pickford was seriously injured in an automobile accident near San Bernardino, California.[32]

Wednesday, March 18, 1931

An early electric razor ad

Thursday, March 19, 1931

Friday, March 20, 1931

Saturday, March 21, 1931

Sunday, March 22, 1931

Monday, March 23, 1931

  • The Indian revolutionaries Bhagat Singh, Shivaram Rajguru and Sukhdev Thapar were hanged in Lahore for assassinating a British police commissioner in 1928 and throwing a bomb into the legislative assembly in 1929.[41]
  • King Alfonso XIII of Spain restored the country's constitutional guarantees ahead of municipal elections scheduled for April 12.[42]

Tuesday, March 24, 1931

Wednesday, March 25, 1931

Thursday, March 26, 1931

  • An international conference of 48 nations opened in Rome to discuss the problem of low grain prices. Many countries were displeased by the Soviet Union's practise of harvesting vast amounts of grain and then dumping the surplus on the world market.[38][47][48]
  • Swissair, the national airline for Switzerland, was founded as S.A. Suisse pour la Navigation Aérienne/Schweizerische Luftverkehr AG.
  • Born: Leonard Nimoy, actor and director, in Boston (d. 2015)

Friday, March 27, 1931

  • A Soviet delegate at the international wheat conference said that Russia would continue exporting as much surplus grain as it pleased and would listen to the proposals of other nations, but would make no commitment to accept them.[48]
  • Born: David Janssen, actor, in Naponee, Nebraska (d. 1980)
  • Died:

Saturday, March 28, 1931

  • In an attempt to reduce political violence, Germany's President Paul von Hindenburg used Article 48 to pass an emergency decree curtailing freedoms of speech and assembly, as well as privacy rights.[49]
  • Died: Ban Johnson (Byron Bancroft Johnson), 66, American baseball executive and first president of the American League from 1901 to 1927, just hours after the death of his successor, Ernest Barnard

Sunday, March 29, 1931

Monday, March 30, 1931

  • Alfred Hugenberg bitterly attacked Germany's President Hindenburg's emergency decree, saying it was enforced only to prevent Der Stahlhelm from winning a referendum demanding the dissolution of the Prussian Landtag. The cabinet of Heinrich Brüning countered with a statement accusing the Nationalists of "seeking to undermine the public's confidence in President von Hindenburg", adding, "To demand a repeal of the decree is a personal attack on the president."[52]
  • At the Rome wheat conference, Austrian Agriculture Minister Engelbert Dollfuss blamed Prohibition in the United States for the world's agricultural problems, saying, "If the United States would drop Prohibition so that the American farmers could raise hops to make beer, then the strain of wheat crops would be relieved and the United States would drop out of the wheat exporting category to the relief of the entire world."[53]

Tuesday, March 31, 1931

References

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    . March 2, 1931. p. 3.
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  8. Chicago Daily Tribune
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  10. ^ "6 March 1931: Ruth Rowland Nichols". Women in Aerospace History. March 6, 2015. Archived from the original on May 22, 2015. Retrieved May 22, 2015.
  11. ^
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  12. ^ "Danube Collision". The Straits Times. Singapore: 11. March 9, 1931. Archived from the original on May 22, 2015. Retrieved May 22, 2015.
  13. ^ "Parliament House, Helsinki, Finland - Spotting History". Archived from the original on 2021-06-09. Retrieved 2021-06-09.
  14. ^ "Significant Earthquake". National Geophysical Data Center. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Retrieved May 22, 2015.
  15. Chicago Daily Tribune
    . March 9, 1931. p. 2.
  16. Chicago Daily Tribune
    : 3.
  17. Chicago Daily Tribune
    . March 10, 1931. p. 6.
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  21. Chicago Daily Tribune
    . March 13, 1931. p. 1.
  22. ^
    Chicago Daily Tribune
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  24. Chicago Daily Tribune
    . March 14, 1931. p. 2.
  25. Chicago Daily Tribune
    . p. 16.
  26. Chicago Daily Tribune
    . March 15, 1931. p. 1.
  27. ^ a b Röhl, Bernhard (March 14, 2006). "Drei Schüsse im März". Die Tageszeitung. Archived from the original on September 24, 2015. Retrieved May 22, 2015.
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    Chicago Daily Tribune
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  29. Chicago Daily Tribune
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  30. ^ "Early Days". Newfoundland and Labrador Heritage. Archived from the original on August 23, 2014. Retrieved May 22, 2015.
  31. Chicago Daily Tribune
    . March 18, 1931. p. 12.
  32. Chicago Daily Tribune
    . March 18, 1931. p. 7.
  33. ^ Alfred, Randy (March 18, 2011). "March 18, 1931: The Schick Hits the Fans". Wired. Archived from the original on May 22, 2015. Retrieved May 22, 2015.
  34. A+E Networks. Archived
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  35. Chicago Daily Tribune
    . March 21, 1931. p. 6.
  36. Chicago Daily Tribune
    . March 21, 1931. p. 1.
  37. Chicago Daily Tribune
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  38. ^ .
  39. Chicago Daily Tribune
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  40. Chicago Daily Tribune
    . March 23, 1931. p. 1.
  41. Chicago Daily Tribune
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  42. Brooklyn Daily Eagle
    . March 23, 1931. p. 13.
  43. Chicago Daily Tribune
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  44. Chicago Daily Tribune
    . March 25, 1931. p. 13.
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  46. ^ "Tom Wilson Biography, Songs, & Albums". AllMusic.
  47. Chicago Daily Tribune
    . p. 35.
  48. ^
    Chicago Daily Tribune
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  49. Chicago Daily Tribune
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  50. Chicago Daily Tribune
    . p. 16.
  51. Chicago Daily Tribune
    . March 30, 1931. p. 5.
  52. Chicago Daily Tribune
    . p. 22.
  53. Chicago Daily Tribune
    . p. 1.
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