November 1931


The following events occurred in November 1931:

November 1, 1931 (Sunday)

  • Thirty people were injured during rioting between fascists and anti-fascists at the French towns of Nice, Chambéry and Dijon when Italians came to the towns to pay their respects to Italian war dead.

November 2, 1931 (Monday)

  • The DuPont company announced the invention of a new synthetic rubber called DuPrene, known today as neoprene.
  • Six more nations, including Great Britain and France, joined the one-year moratorium on building armaments. Since the agreement was an informal one, however, the League of Nations was uncertain whether the holiday had really gone into effect on November 1 or not.
  • The United States Supreme Court decided United States v. Kirby Lumber Co., upholding taxation on money saved by settling debts for less than the full amount owed..

November 3, 1931 (Tuesday)

November 4, 1931 (Wednesday)

November 5, 1931 (Thursday)

  • The Mahatma Gandhi attended a formal reception at Buckingham Palace and met with King George V for five minutes. Gandhi wore only his usual attire of loin cloth and shawl, which made for an extraordinary scene of contrast with the silken finery of other guests.
  • Five sailors on the battleship were killed in the explosion of an anti-aircraft gun. 27 others were wounded.
  • Neville Chamberlain became the new British Chancellor of the Exchequer.
  • The blasphemy trial of German artist George Grosz finally ended after three years. The court ordered the confiscation and destruction of the Grosz illustration Maul Halten und Weiter Deinen, which depicted a crucified Christ wearing army boots and a gas mask.
  • Born: Ike Turner, American musician; in Clarksdale, Mississippi

November 6, 1931 (Friday)

November 7, 1931 (Saturday)

November 8, 1931 (Sunday)


November 9, 1931 (Monday)

November 10, 1931 (Tuesday)

November 11, 1931 (Wednesday)

November 12, 1931 (Thursday)

November 13, 1931 (Friday)

  • U.S. President Hoover announced that he would recommend to congress the creation of a federal system of home loan banks to assist the credit facilities of building and loan associations, banks, and other institutions making loans on home property.
  • Died: General Ivan Fichev, 71, Chief of the General Staff of the Bulgarian Army and later Minister of War

November 14, 1931 (Saturday)

  • The Japanese army handed Chinese General Ma Zhanshan an ultimatum, demanding that he withdraw his troops from Qiqihar and Anganchi by November 25, or else Japan would "take effective measures."

November 15, 1931 (Sunday)

November 16, 1931 (Monday)

  • The British government introduced the Abnormal Importations Bill which gave the government power to impose a duty of up to 100% duty on imports.
  • Italian Foreign Affairs Minister Dino Grandi arrived in Washington for talks with President Hoover. Anti-fascist protests were feared, but the crowd that stood at the train station to witness Grandi's arrival was friendly.
  • The sale of the British airship R100, to a London scrap metal firm, was announced.
  • Born: Hubert Sumlin, blues guitarist and singer, in Greenwood, Mississippi

November 17, 1931 (Tuesday)

November 18, 1931 (Wednesday)

November 19, 1931 (Thursday)

November 20, 1931 (Friday)

November 21, 1931 (Saturday)

November 22, 1931 (Sunday)

November 23, 1931 (Monday)

November 24, 1931 (Tuesday)

November 25, 1931 (Wednesday)

  • The so-called "Boxheim Documents" were revealed in Germany by Prussian Interior Minister Carl Severing, who said they had been passed on to police by a former Nazi. The papers, prepared by Werner Best over the summer, detailed the Nazi Party's contingency plans in the event of a communist coup in Germany. After crushing the communists, the documents read, the SA would take over the country and execute anyone who resisted without trial. A national labour service would also be enacted which would be mandatory in order to be guaranteed food stamps, but "non-Aryans" would be excluded and left to starve.
  • Died: Alf Taylor, 83, Governor of Tennessee from 1921 to 1923 and former U.S. Congressman

November 26, 1931 (Thursday)

November 27, 1931 (Friday)

  • American theater chain operator and promoter Alexander Pantages was acquitted of rape charges in his second trial. The negative publicity from the trial, however, ended his involvement in business and he would lose most of his wealth by the time of his death in 1936.
  • Died: Robert Ames, 42, American stage and film actor, was found dead in his room at New York's Hotel Delmonico, from delirium tremens associated with withdrawal from alcohol

November 28, 1931 (Saturday)

November 29, 1931 (Sunday)

November 30, 1931 (Monday)

  • The Chinese government accepted a League of Nations proposal to establish a neutral zone in Manchuria between Chinese and Japanese forces.
  • The British pound fell in value to a worth of $3.41 American dollars or 5 s. 10 d. to one dollar, its lowest level since 1918.