November 1925
The following events occurred in November 1925:
November 1, 1925 (Sunday)
- A mine explosion killed 17 miners near Gelsenkirchen in Germany.
- In British India, the Sikh Gurdwaras Act, 1925 went into effect, bringing the houses of worship of the Sikh religion under the control of an elected body of orthodox Sikhs and defining a Sikh adherent by a person who solemnly affirmed their belief in the Guru Granth Sahib and the Ten Gurus.
- The Buster Keaton film Go West opened.
- Died: Lester Cuneo, 37, American film actor and director, shot himself to death at his home in Hollywood after a quarrel with his wife, who had filed for divorce.
November 2, 1925 (Monday)
- A dam burst killed 16 people in the village of Dolgarrog in Wales after five days of heavy rains caused the Llyn Eigiau dam to fail. Water from a reservoir held back by the dam then flowed downhill to the Coedty Reservoir, which then burst its dam and swept away homes in the Conwy Valley community. and inundating the village.
- The Victor Talking Machine Company, now part of RCA Victor, introduced breakthrough sound technology with the unveiling of its new electrically-recorded phonograph records, which could be played at their optimum level on the Victor Orthophonic Victrola phonograph. Starting price for the new Orthophonic was $95.
- In Australia, about 100 police clashed with an estimated 1,000 striking seamen on the wharf in Fremantle. The confrontation began as the officers tried to board a ship that the strikers were trying to damage. About 100 people were arrested.
- The unidentified body of a young Polish Army soldier, killed in the Battle of Lemberg during the Polish-Ukrainian War, was interred in the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in Warsaw.
- The operetta Princess Flavia opened on Broadway.
- The Emperor's Cup the championship tournament of Japanese soccer football, was won by defending champion Rijo Shukyu-Dan, 3 to 0 over the Tokyo Imperial University team.
November 3, 1925 (Tuesday)
- Jimmy Walker was elected as the 97th Mayor of New York City, to replace Mayor John Francis Hylan, whom he had defeated in the Democratic primary election on September 15. Walker easily defeated Republican nominee Frank D. Waterman in the general election.
- At the age of 21, film actress Constance Bennett married millionaire socialite Philip Morgan Plant in a hotel lobby in Greenwich, Connecticut. She would not make another film until they divorced in 1929.
- Born: George Eiferman, American bodybuilder and trainer, in Philadelphia
- Died: Lucile McVey, 35, American actress, part of the husband-and-wife comedy team Mr. & Mrs. Sidney Drew, died from cancer.
November 4, 1925 (Wednesday)
- Italian Socialist deputy Tito Zaniboni, an expert marksman, was arrested in a room at the Dragoni Hotel, which he had reserved across from the Palazzo Chigi, with the intent of shooting Benito Mussolini with a telescopic-sight rifle when the Italian Prime Minister was scheduled to come out to the balcony to make a speech. Police had been tipped off by an phone call from an informant who had posed as a friend of Zaniboni, and broke into the hotel room after Zaniboni had set up a sniper's nest, but before Mussolini came out to the balcony.
- Elections were held in New Zealand for all 80 seats of the House of Representatives. The ruling Reform Party, led by Prime Minister Gordon Coates, won 56 seats, well more than the 41 needed for a majority
- Born:
- *Bobby Breen, Canadian-born child film star and singer in Montreal
- *Doris Roberts, American actress and comedienne best known for Everybody Loves Raymond, for which she won four Emmy Awards for Best Supporting Actress; in St. Louis, Missouri
- *Xhoni Athanas, Albanian operatic tenor who had been born in the U.S. to Albanian parents before returning to Albania; in Brockton, Massachusetts
- *Helene Stanton, American singer, actress and operatic soprano; in Philadelphia
November 5, 1925 (Thursday)
- The most popular film of 1925, The Big Parade, distributed by MGM and directed by King Vidor, premiered at Grauman's Egyptian Theatre in Hollywood. Produced on a budget of $400,000 and grossing 15 times that much in rentals and sales, The Big Parade realized a profit for MGM of more than five million dollars.
- The Italian language opera L'Orfeide, composed by Gian Francesco Malipiero and based upon the myth of Orpheus, was performed for the first time, premiering in Germany at the Opernhaus Düsseldorf.
- Died:
- *Sidney Reilly, 51, Russian-born British spy for the Secret Service Bureau, Foreign Section, was executed by the OGPU, the secret police of the Soviet Union.
- *John Newport Langley, 73, British physiologist and neuroscientist known for proposing the concept of the parasympathetic nervous system in 1921, and for coining the term "autonomic nervous system"
November 6, 1925 (Friday)
- The election for President of Latvia was made by an electoral college in Riga. With 94 electors casting votes, and 48 needed for a majority, incumbent president Janis Cakste received only 29 votes, author Janis Plieksans had 33, and former prime minister Karlis Ulmanis 32. Plieskans withdrew from the race and on the second ballot, President Cakste was re-elected with 60 votes against 34 for Ulmanis.
- Kliment Voroshilov was appointed Soviet Union Commissar for Military and Naval Affairs following the death of Mikhail Frunze.
- The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed at 159.39 points. This was the 65th record close of the calendar year 1925, a record in itself almost doubling the old mark of 34 record closes set in 1899. The record stood until 1995.
- Khai Dinh, the 40-year-old Emperor of Vietnam under the French Protectorate since 1916, died from tuberculosis at his home in the Imperial City of Huế. The task of governing Vietnam was then worked out by a convention between French colonial and Vietnamese leaders providing for a Vietnamese regency council to decide domestic matters, and leaving most power with the French Cochinchina protectorate governor Maurice Cognacq and the French Indochina Governor-General, Alexandre Varenne. Khai Dinh was succeeded by his 12-year-old son, Prince Nguyen Phuc Vinh Thuy, who was formally enthroned on January 8 as the Emperor Bao Dai.
- The Sergei Prokofiev ballet Trapèze premiered in Germany at a theater in the town of Gotha.
- Born:
- *Michel Bouquet, French film actor and winner of two César Awards for Best Actor ; in Paris
- *Nan Winton, British broadcaster known for becoming the first female BBC national television newsreader; in Southsea, Hampshire
November 7, 1925 (Saturday)
- The Indian Hockey Federation, governing body for the sport of field hockey in India for almost 90 years, was founded in Gwalior. Within three years, the India men's national field hockey team would win the gold medal in the 1928 Summer Olympics. It would exist until being replaced by another organization, Hockey India.
- Pittsburgh was granted a franchise by the National Hockey League. The club was named the Pirates, after the baseball team also based in the city.
- Several Italian opposition leaders were arrested in connection with the assassination attempt on Benito Mussolini.
- France announced that the remains of Manfred von Richthofen, "The Red Baron", would be disinterred from France and repatriated to Germany.
November 8, 1925 (Sunday)
- Parliamentary elections were held in Portugal for the 163 seats of the Câmara dos Deputados. With 82 seats needed for a majority, the Partido Democrático of Prime Minister Domingos Pereira gained nine to hold 83 seats, while the Partido Republicano Nacionalista of former premier António Maria da Silva lost 15 to win only 36 seats.
- The film The Eagle, starring Rudolph Valentino, was released.
- German patent No. 442,057 for the "Rhönrad", a metal wheel used by gymnasts in the specialized sport of wheel gymnastics, was issued to Otto Feick.
- Born: Francisco Granizo, Ecuadorian poet; in Quito
- Died:
- *Domício da Gama, 62, Brazilian journalist and diplomat
- *Paul Héger, 78, Belgian chemist
November 9, 1925 (Monday)
- Forces allied with Chinese warlord Wu Peifu of the Zhili clique defeated warlord Zhang Zuolin of the Fengtian clique after several days of fighting south of Xuzhou in Jiangsu province.
- The Kip Rhinelander divorce trial opened in White Plains, New York. Rhinelander was seeking an annulment of the marriage because his wife Alice had failed to inform him of her "colored" blood before the wedding. The trial was a significant media circus event at the time.
- The race film Body and Soul was released, directed by Oscar Micheaux and starring Paul Robeson in his film debut.
- Born: Fred Jordan, Austrian-born American publisher and business manager who fought for the publication of the original, uncensored versions, of numerous novels including Lady Chatterley's Lover, Tropic of Cancer, and The Naked Lunch; as Alfred Rotblatt in Vienna
November 10, 1925 (Tuesday)
- The Archbishop of Canterbury appointed a committee of six doctors and six clergymen to investigate the veracity of faith healing.
- Born: Richard Burton, Welsh stage and film actor, winner of a Tony Award for Best Actor in a Musical for Camelot, seven-time nominee for an Academy Award without winning; as Richard Walter Jenkins Jr., in Pontrhydyfen, Glamorgan
November 11, 1925 (Wednesday)
- Howard Carter and an autopsy team began the unwrapping of the mummy of Pharaoh Tutankhamun. The process was exceedingly difficult due to the extreme fragility of the bandages and the resinous coating that held the mummy fast inside the sarcophagus.
- The Civil and Commercial Code of Thailand, codifying a common law for the civil cases in the Kingdom of Siam, was promulgated for use across the nation's courts, with the release of Books I and II.
- The Great White Train, part of a promotion by the Australia Made Preference League began a six-month tour of the state of New South Wales, lasting until May 20, 1926. With a locomotive pulling 19 cars, it was long and the longest train, up that time, to operate in Australia. The first tour of New South Wales made 61 stops after departing Sydney and running from Gosford to Granville.. A second New South Wales tour of three months began the following spring on August 25, 1926.
- Hendrikus Colijn, Prime Minister of the Netherlands, announced his resignation along with his entire cabinet, though a new government would not be formed until four months later on March 8.
- Le Faisceau, a French Fascist party, was founded, consisting of about 10,000 members.
- The Czech language opera Šárka, written by Leoš Janáček in 1887 but never produced, was performed for the first time after 38 years, premiering at Brno at the Divadlo na Hradbách.
- Born:
- *John Guillermin, English film director known for Tarzan's Greatest Adventure, The Bridge at Remagen, The Towering Inferno, and Death on the Nile ; as Yvon Jean Guillerman in London
- *Jonathan Winters, American comedian and actor; in Bellbrook, Ohio
- *Kola Ogunmola, Nigerian actor and director; in Okemesi, British Nigeria
- *June Whitfield, British actress; in Streatham, London
- *Pham Van Ut, the last Speaker of the House of Representatives of South Vietnam who was able to flee on the day before the surrender of the Republic of Viet Nam to North Vietnam; in Sa Dec, Dong Thap Province, Cochinchina, French Indochina
- Died: Clara Weaver Parrish, 64, American painter