July 1926


The following events occurred in July 1926:

July 1, 1926 (Thursday)

  • The two-day-old government of Canadian Prime Minister Arthur Meighen was defeated in Parliament by one vote on a motion challenging the legality of Meighen's attempt to circumvent normal Parliamentary procedure by assembling a Cabinet consisting exclusively of acting ministers without portfolio. Though it was not strictly a motion of no confidence, Meighen accepted the vote as such.
  • The Swedish Air Force was founded.
  • Born: Robert Fogel, economist and Nobel Prize laureate, in New York City ; Carl Hahn, auto executive, in Chemnitz, Germany ; and Hans Werner Henze, composer, in Gütersloh, Germany

    July 2, 1926 (Friday)

  • President Plutarco Elías Calles of Mexico published the Calles Law, effective July 31, which banned religious education, foreign priests and political commentary in religious publications. Additionally, all church property was to become government property and worship could only be conducted inside of churches and under the supervision of local officials.
  • Canadian Governor General Julian Byng acted on Prime Minister Meighen's advice to dissolve the 15th Canadian Parliament and call a new federal election.
  • At the Wimbledon Men's Singles Final of tennis, Jean Borotra of France defeated Howard Kinsey of the United States.
  • Died: Émile Coué, 79, French psychologist

    July 3, 1926 (Saturday)

  • At the Wimbledon Women's Singles Final of tennis, Kitty McKane Godfree of Britain defeated Lili de Alvarez.

    July 4, 1926 (Sunday)

  • The Nazi Party staged its 2nd Party Congress in Weimar. The Grossdeutsche Jugendbewegung was rebranded Hitler Jugend Bund der deutschen Arbeiterjugend, commonly referred to as the Hitler Youth.
  • The Sesquicentennial of the United States was celebrated to commemorate the 150th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence and the founding of the U.S. On this day, Poland chose to honour this sesquicentennial by collecting signatures for the Polish Declarations of Admiration and Friendship for the United States. This collection of 111 volumes of signatures and greetings was eight months later to President Calvin Coolidge to acknowledge American participation and aid to Poland during World War I. It comprised submissions from nearly one-sixth of the population of Poland as it then existed, including those of approximately 5.5 million school children.
  • Knoebels Amusement Resort opened in Pennsylvania.
  • Born: Alfredo Di Stéfano, footballer, in Buenos Aires, Argentina ; Amos Elon, journalist and author, in Vienna, Austria ; and Mary Stuart, actress and singer, in Miami, Florida

    July 5, 1926 (Monday)

  • Pope Pius XI designated August 1, the feast day of St. Peter ad Vincula, as a day of special prayers for the "deliverance of Mexican Catholics from persecution and for pardon for their persecutors."

    July 6, 1926 (Tuesday)

  • French Finance Minister Joseph Caillaux spoke before the Chamber of Deputies, outlining the severity of the country's economic problems and asking for emergency powers to address them.

    July 7, 1926 (Wednesday)

  • Joseph Caillaux's request of the previous day for special powers was widely attacked in the Chamber of Deputies. Léon Blum proclaimed, "Such action would be a veritable abdication of Parliament and violate the national sovereignty."
  • Edward Pearson Warner became the first Assistant Secretary of the Navy for Aeronautics.

    July 8, 1926 (Thursday)

  • In Britain, fist fighting broke out in the House of Lords as it passed the Coal Mines Regulation Act 1908, which permitted an extra hour of work per day in coal mines. Before Britain's miners were locked out they usually worked seven hours.
  • A grand jury convened in the Aimee Semple McPherson kidnapping case to question McPherson about some questionable details that had arisen in her account of what had happened to her.
  • Born: Elisabeth Kübler-Ross, psychiatrist, in Zürich, Switzerland

    July 9, 1926 (Friday)

  • The Northern Expedition officially commenced when Chiang Kai-shek lectured 100,000 soldiers of the National Revolutionary Army.
  • The Soviet Union passed a law forbidding the transportation of the chervonets, worth 10 new rubles, out of the nation, a move to prevent smugglers from paying for foreign goods with what had become a more stable unit of money on foreign currency exchanges. The Soviets would follow on March 10, 1928, with another law barring the conversion of imported chervonets to rubles, making the currency worthless to foreign sellers.
  • The Rudolph Valentino film The Son of the Sheik premiered in Los Angeles, but it wouldn't go into general release until September.
  • A solar eclipse transpired.
  • Born: Ben Roy Mottelson, Danish-American nuclear physicist and Nobel Prize laureate, in Chicago

    July 10, 1926 (Saturday)

  • In a 4 a.m. vote following an all-night session, France's Chamber of Deputies voted to approve granting Finance Minister Joseph Caillaux the extraordinary powers he sought to address the country's economic crisis. The matter was then to go to the Finance Committee.
  • Bobby Jones won the U.S. Open, becoming the first golfer to win the British and U.S. Open in the same year.
  • A bolt of lightning struck Picatinny Arsenal in New Jersey. The resulting fire caused several million pounds of explosives to blow up in the next two to three days.
  • Macedonians from Bulgaria conducted the first of a series of raids across the border of the Kingdom of the Serbs, Croats and Slovenes.
  • Born: Fred Gwynne, actor and author, in New York City

    July 11, 1926 (Sunday)

  • 20,000 French veterans of World War I paraded silently through the rainy streets of Paris to protest the Mellon-Berenger Agreement. Blind and maimed veterans led the procession to the Place des États-Unis where they laid wreaths, as well as plaques explaining their position that the debt settlement would ruin France.
  • The Kuomintang captured Changsha.

    July 12, 1926 (Monday)

  • General Motors acquired the Flint Institute of Technology in Michigan and renamed it the General Motors Institute of Technology. Today it is known as Kettering University.
  • Died: Gertrude Bell, 57, English archaeologist, writer, spy, and administrator known as the "Uncrowned Queen of Iraq"; and John W. Weeks, 66, American politician in the Republican Party

    July 13, 1926 (Tuesday)

  • In Florence, King Victor Emmanuel III of Italy took a boy who had just been hit by a train into his auto and rushed the boy to the hospital. The boy died in the car.

    July 14, 1926 (Wednesday)

  • Ziya Hurşit and thirteen others were publicly hanged in Turkey for conspiring to assassinate President Mustafa Kemal Atatürk.
  • In New York, Linton Wells and Edward Steptoe Evans completed their flight around the world in 28 days, 14 hours and 37 minutes, beating the old record of 35 days set by John Henry Mears in 1913.
  • Born: Harry Dean Stanton, actor and musician, in West Irvine, Kentucky

    July 15, 1926 (Thursday)

  • The Belgian government granted King Albert of Belgium six months of practically unlimited powers to try to stop the country's worsening inflation problem.
  • BEST buses first ran in Mumbai, India.
  • Born: Leopoldo Galtieri, President of Argentina, in Caseros, Buenos Aires

    July 16, 1926 (Friday)

  • The Finance Committee of the Chamber of Deputies voted 14–13 against granting Finance Minister Joseph Caillaux the power to legislate by decree to address the currency devaluation crisis, which worsened as the bourse closed with the franc trading at 206.40 to the British pound and 42.49 to the U.S. dollar.
  • Jack Delaney defeated Paul Berlenbach to win boxing's World Light Heavyweight Title.
  • Born: Stanley Clements, actor and comedian, in Long Island, New York ; and Irwin Rose, biologist and recipient of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry, in Brooklyn, New York
  • Died: Donald Ring Mellett, 34, American editor who was murdered after confronting organized crime in his newspaper ''Canton Daily News''

    July 17, 1926 (Saturday)

  • The Aristide Briand government fell in France.
  • In Mexico City, a meeting of Catholics resolved to organize a nationwide boycott to protest the Calles Law. The boycott covered items that constituted a large part of government income, items subject to heavy excise duties, and items subject to heavy import duties.
  • Born: William Pierson, actor, in Brooklyn, New York

    July 18, 1926 (Sunday)

  • An anonymous editorial titled "Pink Powder Puffs" was published in the Chicago Daily Tribune which blamed actor Rudolph Valentino for the installation of a face-powder dispenser in a new men's public washroom and implied that he was responsible for the feminization of American men. Valentino was enraged.
  • Lucien Buysse of Belgium won the 1926 Tour de France.
  • Jules Goux of France won the European Grand Prix.
  • The Charley Chase short film comedy Mighty Like a Moose opened.
  • Born: Margaret Laurence, writer, in Neepawa, Manitoba, Canada ; Robert Sloman, writer, in Oldham, Lancashire, England

    July 19, 1926 (Monday)

  • Rudolph Valentino responded to the previous day's editorial in the Tribune with an essay of his own for the Chicago Herald-Examiner, challenging the writer to come forward and face him in a boxing or wrestling match. The author did not come forward, to Valentino's disappointment.
  • Rumored dissensions among the crew of the airship Norge in the recent North Pole expedition fell into the public sphere as Umberto Nobile shot back at a statement Lincoln Ellsworth had made which denied that Nobile had piloted the airship. Nobile insisted that he steered the entire flight and asserted that Ellsworth was "just a passenger."
  • Born: Helen Gallagher, actress, in New York City