December 1931

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The following events occurred in December 1931:

File:Soviet calendar 1933 color.jpg
December 1, 1931: Soviet Union institutes new six-day week policy, allowing workers and children one day off (marked in blue) for every five days worked
File:Arkansas senator. Washington, D.C., March 11. Senator Hattie W. Caraway, Democrat of Arkansas, from a new informal picture made in her office at the Capitol today, 3-11-40 LCCN2016877256 (cropped).jpg
Hattie Caraway sworn into office as United States Senator for Arkansas, only the second woman to hold office in the U.S. Senate
File:Christ saviour explosion.jpg
December 5, 1931: Soviet government tears down Moscow's Cathedral of Christ the Savior to make way for planned Palace of the Soviets, never constructed

December 1, 1931 (Tuesday)

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December 2, 1931 (Wednesday)

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December 3, 1931 (Thursday)

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December 4, 1931 (Friday)

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  • Adolf Hitler gave an interview to British and American press at the Hotel Kaiserhof in Berlin.[5][6] "It will not be necessary for me to seize power through a coup d'état", Hitler said. "It will be mine within a short time, anyway, since every election brings my party closer to an absolute majority."[7]

December 5, 1931 (Saturday)

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December 6, 1931 (Sunday)

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December 7, 1931 (Monday)

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December 8, 1931 (Tuesday)

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File:Bundesarchiv Bild 183-1989-0630-504, Heinrich Brüning.jpg
Chancellor Bruening
  • German President Paul von Hindenburg signed Chancellor Heinrich Brüning's enormous 46-page emergency decree into law, slashing prices, wages and rents across the board in an effort to reverse inflation.[15]
  • Hattie Caraway of Arkansas was sworn in as a United States senator, filling the vacancy left by her late husband Thaddeus. This made Caraway the second woman in history to serve in the U.S. Senate, after Rebecca Latimer Felton in 1922, although Felton's service had consisted of only a single day and was largely symbolic.[16][17] In 1932, while serving out the remainder of her late husband's term, she became the first woman to be elected as a U.S. Senator.
  • Herbert Hoover delivered the annual State of the Union message to Congress. The message reviewed the worldwide depression and laid out the measures the government was taking to alleviate the crisis, but made no mention of Prohibition.[18]

December 9, 1931 (Wednesday)

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December 10, 1931 (Thursday)

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December 11, 1931 (Friday)

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December 12, 1931 (Saturday)

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December 13, 1931 (Sunday)

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  • Inukai Tsuyoshi became Prime Minister of Japan.
  • Winston Churchill was hit by a car driven by Edward F. Cantasano while crossing Fifth Avenue in New York City. Churchill went to the hospital with some bruises and cuts but was discharged the following week. Cantasano was not charged because Churchill took full responsibility for the accident, having crossed against the light and forgotten which side of the road automobiles drive on in the United States.[27]

December 14, 1931 (Monday)

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December 15, 1931 (Tuesday)

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File:Chiang1933.jpg
Chiang Kai-shek
File:Lin Sen.jpg
President Lin Sen

December 16, 1931 (Wednesday)

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December 17, 1931 (Thursday)

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December 18, 1931 (Friday)

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  • A jury acquitted Walter Pfrimer and his associates of treason charges.[28]
  • Died: Legs Diamond, 34, American gangster, was shot and killed in his girlfriend's apartment by a rival gang.

December 19, 1931 (Saturday)

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File:James Scullin at his desk-02.jpg
Defeated Prime Minister Scullin

December 20, 1931 (Sunday)

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December 21, 1931 (Monday)

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File:Joseph Aloysius Lyons (cropped).jpg
New Australian Prime Minister Joe Lyons

December 22, 1931 (Tuesday)

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  • The roof of the Vatican Library partially collapsed, killing five and destroying 800 books.[19]

December 23, 1931 (Wednesday)

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  • In Basel, the Young Plan advisory committee issued a report stating that Germany would be unable to meet its reparations payments when the Hoover Moratorium expired in July, and that the only solution was another revision to the plan.[33]
  • Born: Ronnie Schell, American actor and comedian, in Richmond, California
  • Died:
    • Knowlton Ames, 63, American football player and college football coach, later a financier, shot himself after financial reverses during the Great Depression.
    • Tyrone Power, Sr., 62, English stage and film actor, died of a heart attack.

December 24, 1931 (Thursday)

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  • Twenty people were injured in Paris when several hundred unemployed rioters invaded a Montmartre café and smashed tables and chairs, shouting for "work and bread".[34]
  • Born: Mauricio Kagel, Argentine composer; in Buenos Aires (d. 2008)
  • Died: Carlo Fornasini, Italian micropalaeontologist; in Bologna (b. 1854)

December 25, 1931 (Friday)

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December 26, 1931 (Saturday)

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December 27, 1931 (Sunday)

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December 28, 1931 (Monday)

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  • The Mahatma Gandhi returned to India, docking at Bombay. A huge crowd was there to greet him despite the very early morning hour.[39]
  • Sections of Los Angeles flooded after five days of rain.[40]
  • Born: Martin Milner, American film and TV actor known as the star of two series, Route 66 and later for Adam-12; in Detroit (d. 2015)

December 29, 1931 (Tuesday)

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December 30, 1931 (Wednesday)

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December 31, 1931 (Thursday)

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  • German President Paul von Hindenburg gave a New Year's address over the radio. "Germans deserve thanks and praise for the sacrifices they have made and the patience with which they have borne their sufferings and burdens", Hindenburg said. "The greatness of their sacrifice justifies Germany's demand that foreign countries should not seek to oppose Germany's restoration through imposition of impossible conditions." At one point during Hindenburg's address the broadcast was hijacked and an unknown voice called out, "Attention Germany! The Red fighters are here."[43]
  • In the Northwest Territories of Canada near Aklavik, four members of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police trekked to the cabin of a mysterious man by the name of Albert Johnson with a search warrant after Aboriginal trappers suspected him of interfering with their traps. When they knocked on Johnson's cabin door he responded with gunfire, seriously wounding one of the Mounties in the ensuing shootout. Johnson now faced the more serious charge of attempted murder of an RCMP officer.[44]
  • The film Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde starring Fredric March was released.
  • Born: Bob Shaw, Northern Irish science fiction writer; in Belfast (d. 1996)

References

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