January 1937


The following events occurred in January 1937:

January 1, 1937 (Friday)

January 2, 1937 (Saturday)

January 3, 1937 (Sunday)

January 4, 1937 (Monday)

  • France restored the Constitution of Lebanon after it had been suspended for a number of years.
  • The winners of the 2nd New York Film Critics Circle Awards were announced. Mr. Deeds Goes to Town was named Best Film of 1936.
  • The U.S. Supreme Court decided De Jonge v. Oregon, unanimously holding that a law against criminal syndicalism could not be applied against someone merely for speaking at a meeting of an organization deemed to be a criminal syndicate. Writing for the Court, Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes commented, "The greater the importance of safeguarding the community from incitements to the overthrow of our institutions by force and violence, the more imperative is the need to preserve inviolate the constitutional rights of free speech, free press, and free assembly in order to maintain the opportunity for free political discussion, to the end that government may be responsive to the will of the people and that changes, if desired, may be obtained by peaceful means. Therein lies the security of the Republic, the very foundation of constitutional government."
  • Born:
  • *Grace Bumbry, African-American mezzo-soprano opera singer; in St. Louis
  • *Dyan Cannon, American actress; in Tacoma, Washington
  • Died:
  • *Paul Behncke, 67, German admiral during the First World War, known for the 1916 Battle of Jutland against the British Royal Navy
  • *Max Wenner, 49, English ornithologist and sportsman, was killed when he fell, jumped or was pushed out of a Sabena Airlines plane from an altitude of. Wenner had boarded the Savoia-Marchetti S.73 airplane at Köln in Germany on a flight to Brussels in Belgium. His body was found four days later in a forest near the Belgian town of Genk.

January 5, 1937 (Tuesday)

January 6, 1937 (Wednesday)

  • The Soviet Census of 1937 was held and resulted in a count of 162,039,470 people, much lower than the 180,000,000 expected by Soviet Premier Joseph Stalin. After the presentation of the results to Stalin in March, he ordered the arrest of Census Bureau, Olimpiy Kvitkin and census statisticians Mikhail Kurman, Lazar Brand, Ivan Oblomov and Ivan Kraval, as well as the chiefs of most of the regional statistical centers, and executions followed. The census would be set aside by decision of the Sovnarkom on September 25, with an editorial in the Communist Party newspaper declaring that "enemies of the people gave the census counters invalid instructions that led to the gross under-counting of the population, but the brave NKVD under the leadership of Nikolai Yezhov destroyed the snake's nest in the statistical bodies."
  • U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt delivered the annual State of the Union address to Congress. "The statute of NRA has been outlawed", the president said. "The problems have not. They are still with us." Roosevelt said that means "must be found to adapt our legal forms and our judicial interpretation to the actual present national needs of the largest progressive democracy in the modern world."
  • The U.S. Congress passed a resolution strictly forbidding the export of arms to Spain.
  • Born:
  • *Paolo Conte, Italian singer and pianist; in Asti
  • *Linn F. Mollenauer, American physicist; in Washington, DC
  • *Underwood Dudley, American mathematician and author known for the book Crank Mathematics, a criticism of pseudomathematics; in New York City
  • Died:
  • *Saint André of Montreal, 91, Canadian religious leader canonized as a Roman Catholic saint in 2010
  • *Howard Vaughton, 75, English footballer who played for the England national team in 1882

January 7, 1937 (Thursday)

January 8, 1937 (Friday)

January 9, 1937 (Saturday)

  • After being expelled from Norway on December 9 and deported on the oil tanker Ruth, former Soviet Russian activist Leon Trotsky and his wife Natalia Sedova arrived in Mexico, where he would spend the rest of his life until his assassination in 1940.
  • Italy banned interracial marriage between its own citizens and women in its African colonies, specifically "Regular or irregular unions between Italians and Abyssinian women," referring to women in Ethiopia. Other decrees were that Jewish communities in Africa must open their business premises on Saturdays and shut them on Sundays," an application of Italy's existing Shop Hours Act to the colonies in Libya, Somalia and Ethiopia.
  • The American Board of Surgery was established in Philadelphia for the purpose of certifying surgeons who have met a defined standard of education, training and knowledge.
  • Born:
  • *Consilio Fitzgerald, Irish Catholic nun and founder in 1966 of the Cuan Mhuire drug and alcohol rehabilitation center; in Brosna, County Kerry
  • *Michael Nicholson, British journalist, war correspondent and newscaster for ITV; in Romford, Essex
  • *Malcolm Cecil, British jazz musician and record producer; in London

January 10, 1937 (Sunday)

January 11, 1937 (Monday)

January 12, 1937 (Tuesday)

January 13, 1937 (Wednesday)

January 14, 1937 (Thursday)

January 15, 1937 (Friday)

January 16, 1937 (Saturday)

January 17, 1937 (Sunday)

January 18, 1937 (Monday)

January 19, 1937 (Tuesday)

January 20, 1937 (Wednesday)

January 21, 1937 (Thursday)

January 22, 1937 (Friday)

January 23, 1937 (Saturday)

  • Japan's Prime Minister Kōki Hirota and his entire Japanese cabinet resigned due to a split between military leaders, and anti-military parliamentary members of the National Diet who thought that the army had too much influence over the government. Hirota was in sharp disagreement with the War Minister, General Hisaichi Terauchi over a speech made by Kunimatsu Hamada
  • The second Moscow Trial began five months after the trial and execution of 16 former Soviet Communist Party leaders the previous August. The new defendants were 17 lesser communist leaders branded collectively as the Anti-Soviet Trotskyist Center, who were charged with an anti-Stalin conspiracy.

January 24, 1937 (Sunday)

January 25, 1937 (Monday)

  • The soap opera The Guiding Light premiered on NBC Radio at 4:45 in the afternoon Eastern time, initially as "a story which details the experiences of a minister in a melting pot community." The show's title came from the lamp that the show's protagonist, the Reverend John Ruthledge, would turn on in his parsonage to let people know that he was always available to counsel them. The radio show continued until June 29, 1956, running concurrently with a CBS television show which premiered on June 30, 1952, running for 54 years until its final episode on September 18, 2009, 72 years after the premiere of the radio show that began the series.
  • A bus accident killed 23 of 32 passengers in the U.S. state of Florida, most of whom were tourists. The bus, operated by Tamiami Trail Tours, fell into a canal running alongside the Tamiami Trail road in the Florida Everglades.
  • Born: Ange-Félix Patassé, Central African politician; in Paoua, Ubangi-Shari
  • Died:
  • *Dimitri Navachine, 47, Russian economist and Soviet diplomat who guided the Soviet Union's financial matters until defecting to France in 1929, was stabbed to death while walking his dog in Paris.
  • *Addison Burkhardt, 57, American playwright, screenwriter and lyricist, died of influenza.

January 26, 1937 (Tuesday)

January 27, 1937 (Wednesday)

January 28, 1937 (Thursday)

January 29, 1937 (Friday)

January 30, 1937 (Saturday)

  • On the fourth anniversary of becoming the Chancellor of Germany and leading his Nazi Party to control of the nation, Adolf Hitler said in a speech that Germany was renouncing Article 231 of the Treaty of Versailles, in which Germany accepted the blame for starting the First World War. On the same day, Hitler convened a meeting of his cabinet and issued a bill for approval by the Nazi parliament, "Law for the reorganization of relations between the Reichsbank and the Reichsbahn", nationalizing Germany's banks and its railways.
  • Paul Freiherr von Eltz-Rübenach, the Reichspostminister and the Reichsminister für Verkehr became the only remaining official in Hitler's cabinet who was not a member of the Nazi Party. At the cabinet meeting, Hitler personally presented the Golden Party Badge and party membership to those ministers not already enrolled. Eltz-Rübenach, a devout Roman Catholic who was concerned about the government's campaign against religion, declined the offer. He was told to submit his resignation. and was replaced two days later.
  • The Trial of the Anti-Soviet Trotskyist Center ended, and 13 of the 17 defendants were sentenced to execution by firing squad.
  • The Associated Press reported a total of 333 known deaths across eight U.S. states from the recent flooding. 225 of the deaths were in Kentucky.
  • Born:
  • *Vanessa Redgrave, British actress and political activist; in Greenwich, London
  • *Boris Spassky, chess grandmaster and former world champion from 1969 to 1972; in Leningrad, USSR
  • Died: Georgy Pyatakov, 46, Ukrainian Communist leader, was executed.

January 31, 1937 (Sunday)