June 1935


The following events occurred in June 1935:

[June 1], 1935 (Saturday)

[June 2], 1935 (Sunday)

  • Babe Ruth quit the History of the [Boston Braves|Boston Braves] after an argument with team owner Emil Fuchs. Ruth wanted to attend an arrival party for the Normandie since he couldn't play anyway due to a knee injury, but Fuchs refused to give him a day off. Ruth said in his initial statement that he was retiring, but he then said he was merely taking a "60 day vacation" and would consider offers from any other teams made afterward. However, no offers would be made.
  • Uruguayan President Gabriel Terra was shot by a former deputy from a rival party, Bernando Garcia, while visiting a race course. Although Garcia fired from close range, a bystander bumped his arm as he fired and the bullet merely grazed the president's leg. Garcia was swiftly arrested.
  • Born: Roger Brierley, actor, in Stockport, Cheshire, England ; Dimitri Kitsikis, Turkologist, in Athens, Greece ; Carol Shields, American-born Canadian author, in Oak Park, Illinois
  • Died: Vasıf Çınar, Turkish educator, politician, journalist and diplomat

[June 3], 1935 (Monday)

  • The Normandie took the Blue Riband upon completion of its maiden voyage from France to New York in a record 4 days, 11 hours 33 minutes – 3 hours faster than the old record. At one point the ship attained a sustained speed of 31.89 knots, also a record for an ocean liner.
  • 400 people in Mexico died in flooding.
  • The On-to-Ottawa Trek by thousands of unemployed men began in Western Canada.

[June 4], 1935 (Tuesday)

  • Bouisson's cabinet fell when the French Chamber of Deputies voted down his request for emergency powers to save the devalued franc – the same issue that brought down Pierre-Étienne Flandin five days earlier.

[June 5], 1935 (Wednesday)

  • The Swiss government introduced a significant armament expansion program.
  • Bahram won The Derby.
  • The German Propaganda Ministry ordered newspapers to make no mention of the expatriated writer Thomas Mann's 60th birthday tomorrow.

[June 6], 1935 (Thursday)

[June 7], 1935 (Friday)

[June 8], 1935 (Saturday)

[June 9], 1935 (Sunday)

[June 10], 1935 (Monday)

[June 11], 1935 (Tuesday)

[June 12], 1935 (Wednesday)

[June 13], 1935 (Thursday)

[June 14], 1935 (Friday)

  • The New York Times was banned in Italy for coverage critical of the Fascist regime during the Abyssinia Crisis.
  • 42 people were injured and 1 killed in Omaha, Nebraska when police fired on a mob supporting a strike of streetcar employees.
  • 18 Communists captured by the government were executed in Shanghai.

[June 15], 1935 (Saturday)

[June 16], 1935 (Sunday)

[June 17], 1935 (Monday)

[June 18], 1935 (Tuesday)

  • The Anglo-German Naval Agreement was signed, allowing Germany to build a navy equal to 35 percent of the tonnage of the Royal Navy. France was angered by the agreement and a rift in Anglo-French relations resulted.

[June 19], 1935 (Wednesday)

  • A mutiny in a prison coal mine in Lansing, Kansas was put down after 21 hours. No one was injured but an estimated $25,000 damage was done to the mine.
  • Prince Edward's recent remarks were brought up in the House of Commons when Aneurin Bevan quizzed Foreign Minister Samuel Hoare about the idea to invite German war veterans to England. The Foreign Minister replied that it was a matter "entirely for the ex-servicemen's organisations" and that he could neither "approve nor disapprove" of the Prince's comments.
  • Born: Derren Nesbitt, actor, in London, England

[June 20], 1935 (Thursday)

[June 21], 1935 (Friday)

[June 22], 1935 (Saturday)

[June 23], 1935 (Sunday)

  • Britain sent diplomat Anthony Eden to Rome in another attempt to avert war between Italy and Ethiopia.
  • A bomb exploded at the American embassy in Mexico City. It was tossed over the embassy's wall and exploded in the patio, but did no damage other than blowing out several windows.

[June 24], 1935 (Monday)

[June 25], 1935 (Tuesday)

[June 26], 1935 (Wednesday)

  • Anthony Eden left Rome after three days of unproductive discussions with Mussolini.
  • The Reich Labour Service Law went into effect in Nazi Germany, requiring all between the ages of 18 and 25 to perform six months of labour service.

[June 27], 1935 (Thursday)

[June 28], 1935 (Friday)

[June 29], 1935 (Saturday)

[June 30], 1935 (Sunday)

  • 75 were reported dead in Japan's worst flooding in half a century.
  • Reports surfaced that Hitler was using body doubles to thwart any potential assassins.