Suvarna Garge (Editor)

October 1932

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The following events occurred in October 1932:

Contents

October 1, 1932 (Saturday)

  • Oswald Mosley founded the British Union of Fascists.
  • Gyula Gömbös became Prime Minister of Hungary.
  • Babe Ruth's called shot: During Game 3 of the World Series between the Yankees and Cubs, Babe Ruth allegedly pointed to the center-field bleachers and then hit a home run to that exact spot. Although eyewitness accounts and existing film confirm that Ruth made a gesture of some sort, it remains unclear what the exact nature of the gesture was.
  • Business executive Samuel Insull and his brother Martin were requested by the state's attorney in Chicago to "return voluntarily" from their foreign havens of refuge to face an inquiry into the collapse of the Insull business empire that cost investors millions.
  • Died: Thomas H. McNeil, 72, American football player and lawyer
  • October 2, 1932 (Sunday)

  • The New York Yankees won the World Series with a 13–6 victory completing a four-game sweep of the Chicago Cubs.
  • Born: Maury Wills, baseball player, in Washington, D.C.
  • October 3, 1932 (Monday)

  • Iraq gained independence from Britain and was admitted to the League of Nations.
  • Died: Max Wolf, 69, German astronomer
  • October 4, 1932 (Tuesday)

  • Samuel Insull and his brother Martin were indicted in Chicago on charges of embezzlement and larceny after the request that they "return voluntarily" to face an inquiry went unanswered. Governor Emmerson was asked to take immediate steps to bring about the arrest of Samuel in Paris and Martin in Orillia, Canada.
  • Born: Milan Chvostek, television producer and director, in Canada
  • October 5, 1932 (Wednesday)

  • A British proposal to hold a four-power conference in London to discuss Germany's demand for arms equality failed.
  • Samuel Insull went missing from his Paris hotel.
  • Born: Dean Prentice, ice hockey player, in Schumacher, Ontario, Canada; Michael John Rogers, ornithologist, in Sutton Coldfield, England (d. 2006)
  • Died: Christopher Brennan, 61, Australian poet and scholar
  • October 6, 1932 (Thursday)

  • The legislature of the Mexican state of Veracruz approved a decree declaring that all Catholic priests had lost their citizenship rights and empowering the governor to seize all Catholic church property and convert it for other uses.
  • Martin Insull surrendered to Canadian authorities.
  • October 7, 1932 (Friday)

  • The London Philharmonic Orchestra gave its first concert, at Queen's Hall.
  • Born: Bud Daley, baseball player, in Orange, California
  • October 8, 1932 (Saturday)

  • The Indian Air Force was founded.
  • Samuel Insull fled by plane from Italy to Greece, where the United States did not have an extradition treaty.
  • Born: Ray Reardon, snooker player, in Tredegar, Wales
  • October 9, 1932 (Sunday)

  • In the Soviet Union, Grigory Zinoviev and Lev Kamenev were expelled from the Communist Party by Joseph Stalin.
  • Born: David Plowden, photographer, in the United States
  • October 10, 1932 (Monday)

  • 19 miners drowned at Plank Lane Colliery in Lancashire when a fully loaded pit cage dropped into the water.
  • Dnieper Hydroelectric Station opened in the Soviet Union.
  • Born: Harry Smith, footballer, in Wolverhampton, England
  • Died: Lee Bong-chang, Korean independence activist (hanged for attempting to assassinate Hirohito)
  • October 11, 1932 (Tuesday)

  • As part of observances of the 100th anniversary of the invention of the telegraph by Samuel Morse, the chairman of the Postal Telegraph Company sent a telegram around the world in a record time of 4 minutes and 45 seconds. The message, "What hath God wrought", was identical to the original one that Morse sent from Baltimore to Washington in 1844.
  • Born: Dottie West, country singer-songwriter, in McMinnville, Tennessee (d. 1991)
  • October 12, 1932 (Wednesday)

  • German Chancellor Franz von Papen gave a speech in Munich about a proposed new constitution that would place supreme authority in the hands of the cabinet and not the Reichstag. "The government must have the power, not parliament", von Papen said. "We need a second chamber with clearly defined rights to supervise parliament. Today the government's only means of countersetting the Reichstag is by emergency decree under Article 48."
  • The drama film Rain starring Joan Crawford was released.
  • Born: Dick Gregory, comedian and activist, in St. Louis, Missouri; Yuichiro Miura, alpinist, in Japan
  • October 13, 1932 (Thursday)

  • The Reverend Harold Davidson lost the appeal of his immoral conduct conviction before the Judicial Committee of the Privy Council.
  • Born: Jean Edward Smith, political scientist and biographer, in Washington, D.C.
  • October 14, 1932 (Friday)

  • As part of celebrations commemorating the 10th anniversary of the March on Rome, Benito Mussolini granted amnesty to all members of the Fascist Party who had been disciplined for minor offenses.
  • Bing Crosby and Bob Hope first met, outside the New York Friars Club which was then on Forty-Eighth Street.
  • Born: Wolf Vostell, artist, in Leverkusen, Germany (d. 1998)
  • October 15, 1932 (Saturday)

  • Air India began operations, as Tata Airlines.
  • The War Memorial Opera House opened in San Francisco, California with a performance of Tosca.
  • Died: Charles Douglas Richardson, 79, Australian sculptor
  • October 16, 1932 (Sunday)

  • Albert Einstein upset existing scientific theory during a lecture in Berlin in which he said he had calculated the age of the Earth to be 10 billion years – 7 billion more than previously believed.
  • William L. Shirer was fired from the Chicago Tribune due to a defamation lawsuit filed over a minor story in which he mixed up the name of a woman who had been arrested for an accident in Vienna. Shirer was promised a month's worth of severance pay, but he only received it in 1989 – fifty-seven years later.
  • October 17, 1932 (Monday)

  • A prison riot broke out at Kingston Penitentiary in Ontario, Canada. Machinery and equipment were damaged, but there were only a couple of injuries in the four-hour uprising.
  • Croatian political leader Vladko Maček was arrested by the Yugoslavian government.
  • Died: Lucy Bacon, 75, American Impressionist artist
  • Born:My mum - Shirley Ann Blanchard - Yorkshire, UK - lived in Brooke, Norfolk for the last 40 years of life and was much loved.
  • October 18, 1932 (Tuesday)

  • Britain abrogated its trade treaty with the Soviet Union in accordance with the policy agreed upon at the British Empire Economic Conference.
  • Jimmie Foxx of the Philadelphia Athletics and Chuck Klein of the Philadelphia Phillies were named the Most Valuable Players of the American and National Leagues of baseball, respectively.
  • Born: Vytautas Landsbergis, politician, in Kaunas, Lithuania
  • October 19, 1932 (Wednesday)

  • The heir to the Swedish throne, Prince Gustaf Adolf, Duke of Västerbotten, married Sibylla of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha in Coburg, Germany.
  • Henry Ford gave a radio address endorsing Herbert Hoover for re-election, asking, "Why bring in a new recruit and retire this seasoned leader especially since President Hoover has already got the massive forces of defense and recovery into action?" Ford's address concluded, "It is only common sense, when a man like Mr. Hoover has been educated by experience, when he has got control of the thing he is fighting, when is beginning to show results – it is only common sense to let him finish his job."
  • Born: Robert Reed, actor, in Highland Park, Illinois (d. 1992)
  • October 20, 1932 (Thursday)

  • Kingston Penitentiary was the scene of the second prison riot in a week. Troops with machine guns were called in to assist the guards. It was initially reported that the inmates took 40 guards hostage, although the warden denied this. During the riot, several shots were fired into the cell of the imprisoned Communist Tim Buck, but authorities denied allegations of an assassination attempt.
  • A ministerial decree in Thuringia required all students in that state to memorize Article 231 of the Treaty of Versailles.
  • Born: Rosey Brown, American football player, in Charlottesville, Virginia (d. 2004); William Christopher, actor, in Evanston, Illinois; Rokurō Naya, voice actor, in Tokyo, Japan (d. 2014)
  • Died: Boni de Castellane, 65, French nobleman
  • October 21, 1932 (Friday)

  • Harold Davidson was defrocked by the Church of England.
  • The Kingston Penitentiary riot was put down early in the morning after lasting 12 hours. A later inquiry into the unrest there would determine that the prison had so many trivial rules that it was nearly impossible for inmates to avoid committing punishable infractions.
  • The Communist Party of Germany called on its members to wage outlaw strikes in advance of the upcoming Reichstag elections.
  • Died: Al Hopkins, 42 or 43, American country music pioneer (auto accident)
  • October 22, 1932 (Saturday)

  • Charles de Broqueville became Prime Minister of Belgium.
  • Died: Anna Elizabeth Dickinson, 89, American orator and lecturer
  • October 23, 1932 (Sunday)

  • Benito Mussolini made a speech in Turin before 500,000 Italians in which he promoted the idea of a four-power pact between Britain, France, Germany and Italy as a possible solution to Europe's problems.
  • October 24, 1932 (Monday)

  • Thousands of National Hunger Marchers converged on London, where they clashed in the streets with Oswald Mosley's Fascists near Trafalgar Square.
  • Born: Pierre-Gilles de Gennes, physicist and Nobel Prize laureate, in Paris, France (d. 2007); Robert Mundell, economist and Nobel Prize laureate, in Kingston, Ontario, Canada
  • October 25, 1932 (Tuesday)

  • The German Supreme Court at Leipzig handed down a mixed ruling on the legality of July's Preußenschlag decree, finding it partially constitutional.
  • George Lansbury was elected Leader of the Labour Party in Britain.
  • Mussolini said in a speech in Milan that all Europe wuld be Fascist within a decade.
  • October 26, 1932 (Wednesday)

  • 19 Jewish students were injured in disturbances by Nazis at the University of Vienna.
  • Charlie Chaplin won his legal action against ex-wife Lita Grey seeking to prevent her from entering their two young sons into film acting. The judge ruled that the children should not be placed in films without the consent of both parents.
  • Died: Margaret Brown, 65, American socialite, philanthropist and activist
  • October 27, 1932 (Thursday)

  • Tens of thousands of National Hunger Marchers from all over Britain gathered in London's Hyde Park protesting Britain's dole system. When a brick was thrown through a post office window at Great Cumberland Place, mounted police charged with clubs and rioting began, resulting in 60–70 injuries and numerous arrests.
  • The book Greek Memories by Compton Mackenzie was banned in the United Kingdom for revealing who headed the Secret Intelligence Service during the Great War.
  • Benito Mussolini opened the Exhibition of the Fascist Revolution at the Palazzo delle Esposizioni in Rome, consisting of 15,000 different objects portraying the rise of Fascism from the beginning of the Great War in 1914 to the March on Rome in 1922.
  • Born: Harry Gregg, footballer and manager, in Magherafelt, Northern Ireland; Dolores Moore, baseball player, in Chicago (d. 2000); Sylvia Plath, writer, in Boston, Massachusetts (d. 1963)
  • October 28, 1932 (Friday)

  • Mussolini opened the Via dei Fori Imperiali in Rome.
  • A general election was held in Honduras. The National Party of Honduras candidate Tiburcio Carías Andino was elected the new president.
  • Born: Spyros Kyprianou, politician, in Limassol, Cyprus (d. 2002); Suzy Parker, model and actress, in Long Island City, New York (d. 2003)
  • October 29, 1932 (Saturday)

  • Jan Malypetr became Prime Minister of Czechoslovakia.
  • The opera Der Schmied von Gent by Franz Schreker was performed for the first time at the Städtische Oper in Berlin.
  • Born: Bernie Fuchs, illustrator, in O'Fallon, Illinois (d. 2009)
  • Died: Joseph Babinski, 74, French neurologist
  • October 30, 1932 (Sunday)

  • General elections were held in Chile. Arturo Alessandri of the Liberal Party was elected president.
  • British police fought with Hunger Marchers outside Buckingham Palace and 10 Downing Street, resulting in 10–12 injuries.
  • Born: Louis Malle, film director, in Thumeries, Nord, France (d. 1995)
  • October 31, 1932 (Monday)

  • President Herbert Hoover gave a speech at Madison Square Garden in New York City as the presidential campaign entered its final week.
  • Jackie Brown defeated Victor Perez for boxing's world flyweight title in Lancashire, England.
  • Juan de Dios Martínez won the Ecuadorian presidential election with 71% of the vote.
  • Born: Iemasa Kayumi, actor, in Tokyo, Japan (d. 2014)
  • Died: Charles Terront, 75, French cyclist
  • References

    October 1932 Wikipedia