June 1934
The following events occurred in June 1934:
[June 1], 1934 (Friday)
- Germany and Yugoslavia signed a trade agreement.
- U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt sent a message to Congress on war debts, reminding the debtor nations that America still expected the 12 billion 350 million dollars it was owed.
- The comedy-drama film Little Miss Marker starring Shirley Temple was released.
- Born: Pat Boone, singer, actor and writer, in Jacksonville, Florida; Ken McElroy, criminal, in Nodaway County, Missouri
[June 2], 1934 (Saturday)
- 39 nations signed the London Act, an agreement on a complete revision of international conventions on copyright, patents, trademarks and designs.
- Died: James Rolph, 64, 27th Governor of California
[June 3], 1934 (Sunday)
- The Auto-Lite strike in Toledo, Ohio, ended.
- The American Musicological Society was organized and incorporated in New York.
- The Party of the Right won partial general elections in Luxembourg.
- Dayton Speedway officially opened in Ohio.
- Born: Rolland D. McCune, theologian, near Berne, Indiana
[June 4], 1934 (Monday)
- Britain informed the United States that it would make no more payments on its $5 billion war debt. The note explained that resumption of the payments "would be a re-creation of the conditions which existed prior to the world crisis and were in a large measure responsible for it. Such procedure would throw a bombshell into the European arena which would have financial and economic repercussions over all five continents and would postpone indefinitely the chances of world recovery."
- Mobs in Germany smashed the windows of the American-owned Woolworth department stores in reprisal for American boycotting of German goods.
- Born: Monica Dacon, schoolteacher and politician, in Saint Vincent and the Grenadines; Daphne Sheldrick, author and conservationist, in Kenya
[June 5], 1934 (Tuesday)
- A powerful hurricane made landfall in British Honduras. Over the next four days between 1,000 and 3,000 people in Central America were killed by massive floods and landslides.
- Born: Bill Moyers, journalist and political commentator, in Hugo, Oklahoma
- Died: Fred C. Ainsworth, 81, United States Army surgeon
[June 6], 1934 (Wednesday)
- An attempted coup began in Lithuania, launched by supporters of former prime minister Augustinas Voldemaras.
- The Securities Exchange Act was inaugurated in the United States.
- Myril Hoag of the New York Yankees went 6-for-6 in a game.
- Born: Albert II of Belgium, in Laeken, Brussels, Belgium
[June 7], 1934 (Thursday)
- The Lithuanian coup attempt was put down. Voldemaras was arrested and imprisoned as a result.
- Ernst Röhm announced he was going on sick leave, but issued a statement: "If the enemies of the S.A. hope that the S.A. will not be recalled, or will be recalled only in part after its leave, we may permit them to enjoy this brief hope. They will receive their answer at such time and in such form as appears necessary. The S.A. is and remains the destiny of Germany."
- British Fascist Sir Oswald Mosley attempted to give a speech in front of almost 10,000 people at Olympia in London. Mosley had difficulty being heard as anti-fascists drowned him out with booing and heckling, and then he lost the audience's attention as people began climbing on the girders overhead. The event was called off after two hours.
[June 8], 1934 (Friday)
- Railway lines, power plants and telephone lines across Austria were sabotaged in a wave of bombings.
- The Cincinnati Reds became the first major league baseball team to travel by airplane when they flew from Cincinnati to Chicago.
- The Civil War-era romance film Operator 13 starring Marion Davies and Gary Cooper was released.
- Died: Dorothy Dell, 19, American actress
[June 9], 1934 (Saturday)
- An unexploded bomb was found in the Austrian chancellory, inside a desk in an unused room above the offices of Vice Chancellor Starhemberg.
- Romania, Poland and the Soviet Union signed an agreement to recognize each other's borders. In doing so the Soviets recognized the loss of Bessarabia to Romania for the first time.
- Czechoslovakia formally recognized the Soviet Union.
- The cartoon character Donald Duck made his debut in the Walt Disney short The Wise Little Hen.
- Olin Dutra won the U.S. Open golf tournament.
- Peace Chance won the Belmont Stakes horse race.
- Born: Don Manoukian, American football player and professional wrestler, in Merced, California
[June 10], 1934 (Sunday)
- Romania resumed diplomatic relations with the Soviet Union.
- Italy defeated Czechoslovakia 2-1 in the FIFA World Cup Final in Rome.
- In an interview with Randolph Churchill for the Daily Mail, the former Kaiser Wilhelm II said that "Hitler has done marvelous work in putting new life and soul into the German nation."
- Died: Frederick Delius, 72, English composer
- Born: Brian Ford Baldock CBE, British businessman
[June 11], 1934 (Monday)
- The Geneva Disarmament Conference ended in failure.
- The newspaper comic strip Mandrake the Magician was first published.
- Died: Lev Vygotsky, 37, Russian developmental psychologist
[June 12], 1934 (Tuesday)
- The Reciprocal Tariff Act was enacted in the United States.
- The Bulgarian dictatorship abolished all political parties.
- Born: Tony Ferrer, actor and filmmaker, in Pampanga, Philippines
[June 13], 1934 (Wednesday)
- Joseph Goebbels flew to Warsaw, Poland, to give a lecture at the University of Warsaw about Nazism. Goebbels and his entourage were under heavy police protection due to the storm of protest the news of the visit had engendered.
- Died: Charlie Gardiner, Scottish-born Canadian ice hockey player, in Winnipeg
[June 14], 1934 (Thursday)
- Adolf Hitler flew to Venice to meet Benito Mussolini for the first time. Hitler mistakenly believed the meeting was to be a quiet and private discussion, and was embarrassed to have arrived in a suit and ill-fitting raincoat when Mussolini greeted him dressed in full military uniform in front of 200 journalists. Their discussions over the next couple of days proved unproductive with the two clashing on the matter of Austria.
- The Australian Eastern Mission, led by deputy prime minister John Latham, returned to Australia after a three-month tour of East and South-East Asia.
- Max Baer won the world heavyweight boxing title with an 11th-round knockout of Primo Carnera at Madison Square Garden Bowl in Queens, New York.
[June 15], 1934 (Friday)
- Cuban President Carlos Mendieta narrowly avoided an assassination attempt when a bomb exploded directly behind his chair during a luncheon. Mendieta was wounded and two naval officers were killed.
- Died: Bronisław Pieracki, 39, Minister of the Interior of Poland
[June 16], 1934 (Saturday)
- Hitler aide Ernst Hanfstaengl attended his 25th anniversary class reunion at Harvard University, despite noisy demonstrations from protestors.
- Born: Eileen Atkins, actress, in London, England; Kumari Kamala, dancer and actress, in Mayuram, Madras Presidency, British India; William F. Sharpe, economist, in Boston, Massachusetts
[June 17], 1934 (Sunday)
- Marburg speech: German Vice-Chancellor Franz von Papen made a speech at the University of Marburg calling for a restoration of freedoms, saying that "open manly discussions" would be a greater service to the German people than "the present state of the German press", and that "Great men are not created by propaganda." It was "only by talking things over with people", Papen said, that "confidence and devotion can be maintained." Joseph Goebbels actively tried to suppress the speech by banning any references to it in the media, but texts of the speech were reproduced in the foreign press as well as Papen's own newspaper.
- Gunmen in Havana opened fire on a parade of a secret political organization known as the ABC. Marchers prepared for such an attack returned fire, and police dispersed the battle with gas bombs. A total of 12 people were killed.
- The first of the Brighton trunk murders came to light in Brighton, England.
[June 18], 1934 (Monday)
- France introduced air service between Algiers and Brazzaville in the French Congo.
- The Indian Reorganization Act was enacted in the United States.
[June 19], 1934 (Tuesday)
- President Roosevelt signed the Communications Act of 1934 into law.
- The Rules Enabling Act was enacted in the United States.
- It became known that President Hindenburg had sent Franz von Papen a congratulatory telegram for Sunday's speech.
- Died: Prince Bernhard of Lippe, 61
[June 20], 1934 (Wednesday)
- The German ocean liner struck a rock in a fjord near Haugesund, Norway, ripping a huge hole in its hull. About 100 passengers jumped overboard without waiting for lifeboats and three women died. The ship beached itself at Karmøy Island and was abandoned.
- Born: Samuel Zoll, jurist and politician, in Peabody, Massachusetts
[June 21], 1934 (Thursday)
- Adolf Hitler flew to President Paul von Hindenburg's estate in Neudeck to investigate reports that Hindenburg was considering declaring martial law and handing over power to the military. There he was met by General Werner von Blomberg as well as the President, who confirmed the rumors.
- Franz von Papen and Joseph Goebbels appeared together before foreign correspondents, shaking hands and presenting a scene of harmony.
- Turkey adopted the Surname Law, requiring all Turkish citizens to adopt the use of surnames.
[June 22], 1934 (Friday)
- The Status of the Union Act, declaring the Union of South Africa to be a "sovereign independent state", received royal assent.
- Ferdinand Porsche signed a contract with the German government to produce a "people's car" .