July 1931


The following events occurred in July 1931:

July 1, 1931 (Wednesday)

July 2, 1931 (Thursday)

July 3, 1931 (Friday)

July 4, 1931 (Saturday)

July 5, 1931 (Sunday)

  • A marble memorial to Gustav Stresemann was unveiled in Mainz. Foreign Minister Julius Curtius spoke at the ceremony, which was briefly interrupted by a Nazi who jumped up to the microphone and shouted "Germany awake!" before being arrested.
  • Anti-Chinese rioting occurred in Pyongyang. Approximately 127 Chinese people were killed, 393 wounded, and a considerable number of properties were destroyed by Korean residents.
  • Born: Ismail Mahomed, Chief Justice of South Africa, in Pretoria

July 6, 1931 (Monday)

July 7, 1931 (Tuesday)

July 8, 1931 (Wednesday)

July 9, 1931 (Thursday)

July 10, 1931 (Friday)

July 11, 1931 (Saturday)

July 12, 1931 (Sunday)

July 13, 1931 (Monday)

  • The Danatbank in Germany failed, causing a run on all other leading banks in the country.
  • The German government issued an emergency decree through Article 48 ordering all banks in the country closed down for 48 hours. The German stock market was also shut down and ended up not reopening until September.

July 14, 1931 (Tuesday)

  • The Hungarian government ordered all banks closed until Friday to protect Hungary from the German financial crisis.
  • The first Republican Cortes Generales opened in Spain.

July 15, 1931 (Wednesday)

July 16, 1931 (Thursday)

July 17, 1931 (Friday)

  • An accident occurred on the set of the film Scarface when some dynamite caps exploded prematurely, injuring four actors and bystander Gaylord Lloyd, who was struck in the right eye.
  • Died: Dr. Nicolae Paulescu, 61, Romanian physiologist who patented the early diabetes treatment pancreine, an extract from the processing of insulin from cattle pancreas

July 18, 1931 (Saturday)

  • The German government issued several new decrees aimed at making foreign currency more difficult to acquire. A special visa was introduced that every German intending to cross the border was required to obtain for a fee of 100 Reichsmarks.
  • Died: Hermann Hendrich, 76, German painter

July 19, 1931 (Sunday)

  • Eleven people were killed in Bangalore, and 200 wounded, when police in British India fired into a crowd of demonstrators at the Binny Mills.

July 20, 1931 (Monday)

July 21, 1931 (Tuesday)

  • The Heywood Broun-produced musical Shoot the Works opened at George M. Cohan's Theatre on Broadway. Broun himself sang, danced and acted in the show.
  • Born: Gene Fullmer, American professional boxer, world middleweight champion in 1957, 1959 to 1962; in West Jordan, Utah

July 22, 1931 (Wednesday)

July 23, 1931 (Thursday)

July 24, 1931 (Friday)

July 25, 1931 (Saturday)

  • The German government announced the formation of a new bank, the "Acceptance and Guarantee Bank", which would make reserve cash available to all banks to assure them of money to meet possible bank runs.

July 26, 1931 (Sunday)

July 27, 1931 (Monday)

July 28, 1931 (Tuesday)

July 29, 1931 (Wednesday)

July 30, 1931 (Thursday)

July 31, 1931 (Friday)

  • Arriving in Warsaw after his visit to the Soviet Union, George Bernard Shaw said that other countries must follow the USSR's "remarkable example", saying, "Unlike the western politicians, who are working for their own benefit, the Russian rulers are working for the people and for their country. I am a confirmed communist, as I was before Lenin, and even more so after seeing communist Russia. Talk of forced labour in Russia is rubbish. There is more slavery in other countries." Shaw also described Stalin as "a most honest and able man."
  • The Peruvian football club Defensor Lima was founded.