fbpx
Wikipedia

March 1933

<< March 1933 >>
Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
01 02 03 04
05 06 07 08 09 10 11
12 13 14 15 16 17 18
19 20 21 22 23 24 25
26 27 28 29 30 31  

The following events occurred in March 1933:

March 4, 1933: U.S. President Roosevelt inaugurated for first of four terms
March 2, 1933: Classic film King Kong premieres
March 22, 1933: Dachau, first Nazi concentration camp, receives its first prisoners

March 1, 1933 (Wednesday) edit

  • The fictional defense attorney Perry Mason was introduced, along with his secretary Della Street, and detective Paul Drake, in Erle Stanley Gardner's novel, The Case of the Velvet Claws, published by William Morrow and Company.[1]
  • The Governor of Kentucky declared March 1 to March 4 as "days of Thanksgiving" and legal holidays on which banks could remain closed, and Louisiana and Alabama followed suit, bringing to nine the number of American states that had declared a bank holiday. Banks remained closed in Maryland, Michigan, and Tennessee, while Arkansas, Indiana, and Pennsylvania restricted withdrawals,[2] although the closures were voluntary.[3]
  • Born: Alan Ameche, American NFL player, in Kenosha, Wisconsin (d. 1988).
  • Died: Uładzimir Žyłka, 32, Belarusian poet, at a concentration camp near Kirov.

March 2, 1933 (Thursday) edit

March 3, 1933 (Friday) edit

  • At 2:32 a.m. local time, a powerful undersea earthquake rocked the Japanese island of Honshu. Shortly afterward, a tsunami almost 100 feet (30 m) high[11] roared ashore, killing more than 3,000 people and destroying 9,000 homes and 8,000 boats.[12] At an 8.9 magnitude, the quake was the largest ever recorded, rivaled only by a January 31, 1906 quake off the coast of Colombia and Ecuador.[13]
  • Ernst Thälmann, former Presidential candidate in the 1932 German elections and leader of the German Communist Party, was arrested at his Berlin apartment.[14] Notwithstanding his re-election to Parliament two days later, Thälmann would spend the rest of his life imprisoned, and would be executed at the Buchenwald concentration camp on August 18, 1944.[15]
  • Nohra concentration camp, the first of Nazi Germany's "early camps", was opened in by the Interior Ministry of Germany's Thuringia#Free State of Thuringia, governed by the Nazi Party, and was used to confine arrested members of the German Communist Party. At its height, it would house 220 prisoners before being discontinued in July or earlier when its inmates were transferred to a regular prison at Ichtershausen.[16] with around 100 prisoners arriving directly from regional court prisons, the barracks of the police in Weimar or via the regional court prison in Weimar.
  • Japanese troops, invading China, captured the city of Chengde, capital of the Jehol Province.[17]
  • The impeachment trial of federal judge Harold Louderback began in the U.S. Senate. Louderback would later be acquitted of all charges.[18]
  • On the eve of President Roosevelt's inauguration, more states closed their banks as Georgia, Idaho, Kansas, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Oregon, Texas, Utah, Washington, and Wisconsin, joined in declaring bank holidays, bringing to 25 the number of states under restriction.[3][19]

March 4, 1933 (Saturday) edit

March 5, 1933 (Sunday) edit

March 6, 1933 (Monday) edit

  • General Nikolaos Plastiras, opposed to Panagis Tsaldaris' taking office as Prime Minister of Greece, led a military coup and set up a dictatorship. Plastiras resigned the next day and was arrested, being replaced by General Alexandros Othonaios.[27]
  • President Roosevelt issued Executive Order 2039, declaring a nationwide "bank holiday", temporarily closing every bank in the United States and freezing all financial transactions. The 'holiday' ended on March 13 for the 12 federal reserve banks, and by March 15 for all banks, which then had to apply for a license.[3] Two thousand banks did not reopen after the holiday. On the same day, President Roosevelt placed an embargo on the export of gold and suspended the payment of gold to satisfy government obligations.[28] Finally, he declared a state of national emergency. Along with three other presidential proclamations of an emergency (on December 15, 1950; March 23, 1970; and August 15, 1971), the 1933 proclamation would not be rescinded until the enactment of the "National Emergencies Act", which would become effective on September 14, 1978, forty-five and a half years after FDR's decree.[29]
  • Eleanor Roosevelt, the First Lady of the United States, began holding weekly press conferences for female reporters.[30]
  • Herman Klink, a 40-year-old former woodworker, carried out a mass shooting in Cleveland, Ohio, killing or mortally wounding 5 people and injuring 6. Klink was shot and killed by police.[31][32]
  • Born: Ted Abernathy, American baseball relief pitcher for seven major league teams between 1955 and 1972; in Stanley, North Carolina (d. 2004)
  • Died: Anton Cermak, 59, Mayor of Chicago, 19 days after being shot during an assassination attempt on President-elect Franklin D. Roosevelt. Cermak's physician, Dr. Karl A. Meyer, said later that Cermak's primary cause of death was ulcerative colitis: "The mayor would have recovered from the bullet wound had it not been for the complication of colitis. The autopsy disclosed the wound had healed... the other complications were not directly due to the bullet wound."[33]

March 7, 1933 (Tuesday) edit

  • Austrian Chancellor Engelbert Dollfuss suspended parliamentary procedure and began to rule as a dictator.[34]
  • Born: Jackie Blanchflower, Northern Irish footballer for Manchester United F.C., most notable for the callous treatment received from the club due to his injuries in a 1958 plane crash that killed eight members of the team; in Belfast (d. 1998).

March 8, 1933 (Wednesday) edit

  • The newly appointed U.S. enforcement director for Prohibition announced that federal agents would no longer raid places where liquor was served, concentrating instead on manufacturers and transporters, and leaving it up to the individual states to handle a "speakeasy".[35]
  • The Committees of Unwealthy Peasants, who had led the enforcement of collective farming in the USSR, were abolished. Having overseen the confiscation of grain from local farmers for government use, the committee members were left to starve along with their fellow villagers.[36]

March 9, 1933 (Thursday) edit

March 10, 1933 (Friday) edit

  • An earthquake of 6.4 magnitude struck Long Beach, California at 5:55 p.m., killing 127 people and injuring more than 5,000 others.[39][40] After the earthquake had destroyed more than 1,300 brick-and-mortar buildings in Long Beach, "including most of the public schools", California passed stricter building codes, given that the quake would have been catastrophic if it had struck during school hours. "The sight of school desks buried under mounds of bricks in Long Beach", an author would note decades later, "spurred the Legislature to upgrade construction guidelines in schools."[41]
  • Plans for a new radio network, the Amalgamated Broadcasting System, were announced by American entertainer Ed Wynn.[42]
  • Died Ahmed Sharif es Senussi, 59, Chief of the Senussi order in Libya.

March 11, 1933 (Saturday) edit

March 12, 1933 (Sunday) edit

 
FDR on radio
  • At 10:00 at night Washington time, President Roosevelt gave the first of his "fireside chats" to the American public in a nationwide radio broadcast, to explain why he had declared a bank holiday.[44] The term "fireside chat" was coined by CBS to describe Roosevelt's second address on May 7. In all, Roosevelt delivered 28 live fireside chats, the last on June 12, 1944.[45]
  • Six British electrical engineers of Metropolitan-Vickers were arrested in the Soviet Union and charged with espionage and sabotage of electrical stations. Despite protests from the British government, the prisoners were put on trial, with five being convicted on April 19. Two (MacDonald and Thornton) were kept in prison and the other four were expelled. In April, Britain and the USSR ceased trading with each other.[46]
  • Born: Barbara Feldon, American TV actress best known as "Agent 99" on Get Smart; in Bethel Park, Pennsylvania.

March 13, 1933 (Monday) edit

March 14, 1933 (Tuesday) edit

March 15, 1933 (Wednesday) edit

  • The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose from 53.84 to 62.10 points. The day's gain of 15.34%, achieved during the depths of the Great Depression, remains to date as the largest 1-day percentage gain for the index.[52]
  • Austrian Chancellor Engelbert Dollfuss kept members of the Austrian Parliament from reconvening, starting the Austrofascist dictatorship.[24]
  • The Soviet Union halted the further seizure of grain from farmers in the Ukrainian SSR, and ordered some stocks returned from army reserves to the villages.[53]
  • Actor Cary Grant sustained a facial injury, and Fredric March and Jack Oakie escaped unscathed, after a bomb being used in the filming of the American war drama, The Eagle and the Hawk, exploded prematurely on the set.[54]
  • Clarence Cannon and Milton A. Romjue, both Democrats and U.S. Representatives from Missouri, engaged in a fist fight in the House Office Building. Minnesota Congressman Ernest Lundeen separated the two, shoving Cannon into an elevator and then taking Romjue to a first-aid station.[55]
  • New German Propaganda Minister Joseph Goebbels gave his first press conference, instructing journalists on their responsibilities. He painted the ideal media as a press "so finely tuned that it is, as it were, like a piano in the hands of the government on which the government can play".[56]
  • Born: Ruth Bader Ginsburg, U.S. Supreme Court Justice (1993–2020); in Brooklyn (d. 2020)

March 16, 1933 (Thursday) edit

  • Philippine Governor-General Theodore Roosevelt Jr. and his wife left the Philippines after one year. Roosevelt was succeeded by Vice-Governor John H. Holiday.[57]
  • In Manchukuo, the puppet state set up in Japanese-occupied China, 50 people were killed and 70 injured when a passenger train derailed. Although few were hurt in the derailment, there was insufficient time to warn that the tracks were blocked, and a freight train crashed into the rear of the passenger train.[58]

March 17, 1933 (Friday) edit

  • Lyman Duff was sworn in as the new Chief Justice of Canada, having served on the Canadian Supreme Court since 1906. He remained on the bench until 1944.[10]
  • U.S. Senator Huey Long of Louisiana purchased air time on NBC radio to deliver his own nationwide address, describing his plan for redistribution of wealth.[59]
  • Adolf Hitler named Hjalmar Schacht as his chief economic adviser. Historian William Shirer would later write: "No single man in all of Germany would be more helpful to Hitler in building up the economic strength of the Third Reich and in furthering its rearmament."[60]
  • Hitler named Baldur von Schirach, age 25, as leader of the Hitler Youth.[61]
  • Born:

March 18, 1933 (Saturday) edit

March 19, 1933 (Sunday) edit

March 20, 1933 (Monday) edit

  • Giuseppe Zangara, 32, who had killed Chicago Mayor Anton J. Cermak while attempting to assassinate President-elect Franklin D. Roosevelt, went to the electric chair at the Florida State Prison in Raiford, Florida. His last words reportedly were "Goodbye to the world. Go ahead, push the button."[65]

March 21, 1933 (Tuesday) edit

 
March 21, 1933: Adolf Hitler shakes hands with President Hindenburg on Potsdam Day.
  • The Day of Potsdam took place at the tomb of Frederick the Great. Hitler, President Hindenburg, and former Crown Prince Wilhelm appeared together in a ceremony choreographed by the Ministry of Propaganda to symbolize the transition between Germany's past before World War I, to its future under Nazi rule.[66][67]

March 22, 1933 (Wednesday) edit

  • Dachau, a Nazi concentration camp, received its first prisoners, as four police trucks brought in 200 inmates from the Stadelheim Prison and Landsberg Prison. The camp, built around a former munitions factory, was initially intended for the "protective custody" of officials of banned political parties (i.e. Communists). The following month, control of the camp was transferred from the police to the German SS.[66][68]
  • The U.S. State Department assured the President of the American Jewish Congress that the U.S. ambassador to Germany stayed informed about the treatment of Jews there, and that persecutions would soon cease.[69]
  • President Franklin Roosevelt signed the Cullen–Harrison Act, allowing the manufacture and sale of "3.2 beer". The Act would take effect at 12:01 a.m. on 7 April.[70]
  • Born:

March 23, 1933 (Thursday) edit

  • By a 441-94 vote, Germany's Reichstag passed the Enabling Act (Ermächtigungsgesetz), entitled "Law to Remedy the Distress of the People and the Nation", which gave Chancellor Hitler the power to enact new laws by decree, without need of legislative approval. The majority was obtained by the exclusion of 81 Communist party members, the reluctance of the Centrist Party to oppose the legislation, and the posting of Stormtroopers to observe the debate.[71]
  • In the last open session of the German Parliament, Social Democratic Party leader Otto Wels spoke against Adolf Hitler's request for formal approval of dictatorial powers.[72] Wels would be fortunate enough to be able to leave the country, and died in Paris on September 16, 1939.
  • Jewish protesters in New York City marched to the Mayor's office to protest against persecution of German Jews and to call for a boycott of German goods.[73]
  • Born: Philip Zimbardo, American psychologist and professor emeritus of Stanford University, in New York City

March 24, 1933 (Friday) edit

  • Low-density polyethylene (LDPE), the first high-strength industrial plastic, was created by British chemists Reginald Gibson and Eric Fawcett at the Imperial Chemical Industries (ICI) plant in Winnington. After mixing ethylene and benzaldehyde, heating the combination under high pressure to 170 °C, Gibson and Fawcett created a waxy solid polymer. It wasn't until 1935 that Michael Perrin replicated the experiment.[74]
  • In an interview with the Universal Press Service, Adolf Hitler's press secretary issued a statement on behalf of the Chancellor. Hitler described reports of maltreatment of Jews and Catholics to be "dirty lies" and said that "there has been no discrimination whatsoever between Jews or non-Jews or Christians, or any other creed or race."[75]
  • In Berlin, the nationalist Jewish civil rights movement Central Union of German Citizens of the Jewish Faith described reports of persecution of Jews as "pure inventions", while the "Patriotic Society of National German Jews" stated that the reports were "foreign attempts to blackmail Germany".[76]
  • Ādolfs Bļodnieks became Prime Minister of Latvia, serving for one year.

March 25, 1933 (Saturday) edit

March 26, 1933 (Sunday) edit

  • In a telegram from U.S. Secretary of State Cordell Hull to leaders of American Jewish organizations, the State Department announced that its investigation of conditions in Germany had determined that "whereas there was for a short time considerable physical mistreatment of Jews, this phase may be considered virtually terminated."[77]
  • Born: Vine Deloria Jr., American Sioux Indian author and activist, at Martin, South Dakota (d. 2005).
  • Died: Eddie Lang, American jazz musician, 31, of complications from a tonsillectomy.

March 27, 1933 (Monday) edit

  • Japan announced it would leave the League of Nations (due to a cancellation period of exactly two years, the egression would become effective March 27, 1935)[78]
  • The Nazi Party ordered a one-day nationwide boycott of Jewish merchants, to begin on April 1 and to be enforced by the presence of SS troops outside Jewish-owned stores.[79][80]

March 28, 1933 (Tuesday) edit

  • All 15 people on board were killed in the crash of an Armstrong Whitworth Argosy. The crew of three and the 12 passengers died shortly after the plane took off from Brussels, bound for London. The crash would later be determined to have been caused by a fire that may have been caused by accident or by a passenger after the plane was airborne.[81]
  • Joseph Goebbels, a film fan as well as the new German Minister of Propaganda, addressed filmmakers and union representatives at the Kaiserhof Hotel in Berlin, describing his requirements that new films reflect the Nazi state's ideals without compromising the artist's vision.[82]
  • Died:
    • Ida Siddons, 76, American entertainer and comedian, known in the 1890s as the "Queen of Burlesque".[83]
    • Friedrich Zander, 45, Latvian-born Soviet rocketry pioneer

March 29, 1933 (Wednesday) edit

  • The "Law Concerning the Sentence and Execution of the Death Penalty" was issued in Germany to permit the death penalty by hanging for certain offences committed on or after January 30, when Adolf Hitler had become chancellor. This followed the "Decree of the Reich President for the Protection of People and State", better known as the Reichstag Fire Decree, which President Hindenburg had issued on Hitler's advice on February 28. The offences attracting the death penalty under the new law included arson of public buildings; it was dubbed the "Lex van der Lubbe" because it permitted the execution of Marinus van der Lubbe for the burning of the Reichstag building in February, even though arson had not been a capital offence at the time. It would also be used to justify the executions of any persons who had been arrested for treason in the first two months of Nazi rule.[84]
  • As famine continued in the Soviet Union, Welsh journalist Gareth Jones made the first report published in the West of the Holodomor, the starvation and genocide taking place in famine-genocide in Ukraine.[85]
  • Born: Clifford Fyle, Sierra Leonean author, in Freetown (d. 2006).

March 30, 1933 (Thursday) edit

  • Tornadoes in the southeastern United States killed 68 people.[86]
  • The Trans-Jordan assembly voted 13-3 to repeal a ban against sales of land to foreigners, opening the way for Jewish colonization of Palestine.[87]
  • Raid against Berlin lawyers in the courts, at noon.[88]
  • Born:

March 31, 1933 (Friday) edit

  • Uruguay's civilian elected President, Gabriel Terra, established himself as the nation's dictator, ruling until his overthrow in 1938.[90]
  • The German government announced that the anti-Jewish boycott, set to take place on 1 April, would last only one day and then be "held in abeyance until Wednesday".[91]
  • The "Preliminary Law for the Co-ordination of the States and the Reich" went into effect, giving the national government control over the state governments. Under orders of Interior Minister Wilhelm Frick, the state legislatures and cabinets were "reconstituted" with Nazi Party members, and new governors were appointed from Berlin.[92]
  • The Justice Minister in the German state of Prussia directed that all Jewish judges, prosecutors and legal officers were to resign, and that Jewish lawyers should be limited in their number of cases. Dr. Hans Frank, the Justice Minister of Bavaria, "retired" all Jewish judges and lawyers on the same day.[93]
  • The Civilian Conservation Corps was established in the United States with the mission to relieve rampant unemployment.[94]

References edit

  1. ^ Mitzi M. Brunsdale, Icons of Mystery and Crime Detection: From Sleuths to Superheroes (ABC-CLIO, Jul 26, 2010) p. 550
  2. ^ Regina (Sask.) Leader-Post, March 1, 1933, p. 1
  3. ^ a b c d e Fuller, Robert Lynn (2011). Phantom of Fear: The Banking Panic of 1933. McFarland.
  4. ^ Gerald Schiller, It Happened in Hollywood: Remarkable Events That Shaped History (Globe Pequot, 2010) pp. 74-77
  5. ^ "California Takes Holiday", Spokane Daily Chronicle, March 2, 1933, p. 3
  6. ^ "Rainey Is Chosen Speaker of House", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 3, 1933, p. 1
  7. ^ Maxine N. Lurie and Marc Mappen, Encyclopedia of New Jersey (Rutgers University Press, 2004) p. 540
  8. ^ Hal Rothman, Preserving Different Pasts: The American National Monuments (University of Illinois Press, 1989) p. 232
  9. ^ Margaret Leslie Davis, Dark Side of Fortune: Triumph and Scandal in the Life of Oil Tycoon Edward L. Doheny (University of California Press, 2001) p. 272
  10. ^ a b The Supreme Court of Canada and Its Justices/La Cour Suprême du Canada et Ses Juges, 1875-2000 (Dundurn Press, 2000) p. 52
  11. ^ Tad S. Murty, The Indian Ocean Tsunami (CRC Press, 2007) p. 51
  12. ^ "372 Are Killed by Tidal Wave", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 3, 1933, p. 1; "Quake's Known Dead Is 1,535", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 4, 1933, p. 2
  13. ^ Barbara Tufty, 1001 Questions Answered about Earthquakes, Avalanches, Floods, and Other Natural Disasters (Courier Dover Publications, 1978)
  14. ^ "Communists' Leader Arrested in Berlin", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 4, 1933, p. 2
  15. ^ Heinrich August Winkler, Germany: The Long Road West, 1933-1990 (Oxford University Press, 2007) p. 43
  16. ^ Wohlfeld, Udo (2009). The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum encyclopedia of camps and ghettos, 1933-1945. Volume 1, Early camps, youth camps, and concentration camps and subcamps under the SS-Business Administration Main Office (WVHA). Geoffrey P. Megargee, United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. p. 141. ISBN 978-0-253-00350-8. OCLC 644542383.
  17. ^ R.S. Chaurasia, History of Modern China (Atlantic Publishers, 2004) p. 188
  18. ^ "High Court of Congress: Impeachment Trials, 1797-1936", by William F. Swindler, ABA Journal (April 1974) p. 427
  19. ^ St. Petersburg (FL) Evening Independent, March 3, 1933, p. 1
  20. ^ "Presidential Oath Is Given to Roosevelt" (March 5, 1933), Pittsburgh Press, p. 1
  21. ^ "Roosevelt's Inaugural Address Renews Pledge of 'New Deal'" (March 5, 1933), Pittsburgh Press, p. 6
  22. ^ "Cabinet Sworn, Goes to Work" (March 5, 1933), Pittsburgh Press, p. 1
  23. ^ ""4 March 1933 – The beginning of the end of parliamentarian democracy in Austria"". from the original on 14 January 2013. Retrieved 2 March 2012.
  24. ^ a b Lucas Prakke and Constantijn Kortmann, eds., Constitutional Law of 15 EU Member States (Kluwer, 2004) p. 38
  25. ^ Rik W. Hafer, The Federal Reserve System: An Encyclopedia (Greenwood Publishing Group, 2005) p. 21
  26. ^ ""Reichstag elections 1933"". from the original on 2019-04-24. Retrieved 2012-03-02.
  27. ^ "Greeks to Jail Ex-Dictator". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. March 8, 1933. p. 2.
  28. ^ The Defining Moment: The Great Depression and the American Economy in the Twentieth Century. University of Chicago Press. 1997. p. 29.
  29. ^ "Senate Finally Votes to End Great Depression, Officially". El Paso Herald-Post. El Paso, Texas. October 8, 1974. p. 1.
  30. ^ Beasley, Maurine H.; Shulman, Holly C.; Beasley, Henry R., eds. (2001). "Chronology of Eleanor Roosevelt's Life and Career". The Eleanor Roosevelt Encyclopedia. Westport, Connecticut, London: Greenwood Press. p. xxiv. ISBN 0-313-30181-6. Retrieved 10 May 2022 – via Google Books.
  31. ^ "Patrolman Herman B. Pahler, Cleveland Division of Police, Ohio". The Officer Down Memorial Page, Inc. Retrieved 18 April 2024.
  32. ^ "Cleveland, OH – March 6, 1933". Mass Shooting Victims. Retrieved 18 April 2024.
  33. ^ "Reveals Colitis Fatal to Cermak". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. March 31, 1933. p. 1.
  34. ^ Dutt, R. Palme (1935). Fascism and Social Revolution. International Publishers Co. p. 162.
  35. ^ "Dry Director Bans Raids on Speakeasies", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 9, 1933, p. 2
  36. ^ Robert Conquest, The Harvest of Sorrow: Soviet Collectivization and the Terror-famine (Oxford University Press, 1987) p. 258
  37. ^ James Minahan, Encyclopedia of the Stateless Nations: A-C (Greenwood Publishing Group, 2002) p. 297; "Bavaria Put under Control of Nazis", New York Times, March 10, 1933, p. 13
  38. ^ "ROOSEVELT EXTENDS BANK HOLIDAY AFTER SIGNING EMERGENCY LAWS", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 10, 1933, p. 1
  39. ^ "HUNDREDS ARE KILLED IN S. CALIFORNIA QUAKES", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 11, 1933, p.1
  40. ^ "Long Beach Earthquake: 70th Anniversary" 2012-03-04 at the Wayback Machine, Southern California Earthquake Center
  41. ^ "The Day the Earth Shook: 127 Died 44 Years Ago", by Steve Harvey, Los Angeles Times, March 10, 1977, p. I-3
  42. ^ "Third Radio Chain to Open", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 11, 1933, p. 2
  43. ^ Hilmar Hoffmann, The Triumph of Propaganda: Film and National Socialism, 1933-1945 (Berghahn Books, 1997) pp. 89-90
  44. ^ "ROOSEVELT EXPLAINS PLANS FOR RESUMPTION OF BANKING", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 13, 1933, p. 1
  45. ^ Neil A. Wynn, The A to Z of the Roosevelt-Truman Era (Scarecrow Press, 2009) pp. 154-155
  46. ^ Jean-Marc F. Blanchard, et al., Power and the Purse: Economic Statecraft, Interdependence, and National Security (Frank Cass and Co., 2000) pp. 232–233
  47. ^ "Theater Fire in Mexico Takes Toll of 41 Lives", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 15, 1933, p. 2
  48. ^ "Erickson Takes Walsh's Position", Spokane Daily Chronicle, March 14, 1933, p. 2
  49. ^ Claudia Goldin and Gary D. Libecap, The Regulated Economy: A Historical Approach to Political Economy (University of Chicago Press, 1994) p. 168
  50. ^ "23 in Four States Killed, 200 Wounded by Tornado", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 15, 1933, p. 1 "Tornado Toll Mounts to 43", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 16, 1933, p. 1
  51. ^ "Leader in Peruvian Revolt Kills Himself", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 15, 1933, p. 2
  52. ^ "Stocks Gain Three Billion", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 16, 1933, p. 1
  53. ^ N. M. Dronin and E. G. Bellinger, Climate Dependence and Food Problems in Russia, 1900-1990 (Central European University Press, 2005) p. 149
  54. ^ "Movie Actor Hurt As Bomb Explodes", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 16, 1933, p. 1
  55. ^ "Congressmen In Fist Fight After Session", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 17, 1933, p. 3
  56. ^ Corey Ross, Media and the Making of Modern Germany: Mass Communications, Society, and Politics from the Empire to the Third Reich (Oxford University Press, 2008) p. 295
  57. ^ "Throngs Shout Farewell As Roosevelt Quits Isles", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 17, 1933, p. 2
  58. ^ Edgar A. Haine, Railroad Wrecks (Associated University Presses, 1993) p. 149
  59. ^ Bill Bradley, Time Present, Time Past: A Memoir (Random House, Inc., 1997)
  60. ^ William L. Shirer, The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich: A History of Nazi Germany (Simon and Schuster, 1959) p. 204
  61. ^ John Alexander Williams, Turning to Nature in Germany: Hiking, Nudism, and Conservation, 1900-1940 (Stanford University Press, 2007) p. 193
  62. ^ "Peasants of Russia Forbidden to Leave Collective Farms". Chicago Daily Tribune. March 19, 1935. p. 6.
  63. ^ "New Constitution Adopted in Portugal", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 21, 1933, p. 2
  64. ^ Tom Gallagher, Portugal: A Twentieth-Century Interpretation (Manchester University Press1983) p. 65
  65. ^ "Zangara Dies, Defiant to End", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 21, 1933, p. 1
  66. ^ a b Evans, Richard J. (2005). The Coming of the Third Reich. Penguin. pp. 345–50.
  67. ^ Petropoulos, Jonathan (2006). Royals and the Reich: The Princes von Hessen in Nazi Germany. Oxford University Press. p. 120.
  68. ^ "The Dachau Gas Chambers" 2012-03-01 at the Wayback Machine, by Harry W. Mazal, Holocaust-History.org
  69. ^ Jean-Michel Palmier, Weimar in Exile: The Antifascist Emigration in Europe and America (Verso, 2006) p. 458
  70. ^ "ROOSEVELT AUTHORIZES BEER SALE BY SIGNING BILL FOR 3.2 BREW", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 23, 1933, p. 1; "Beer Return Set At 12:01 A.M. In All Time Zones", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 24, 1933, p. 1
  71. ^ "HITLER VOTED DICTATOR UNDER PRUSSIAN SYSTEM", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 24, 1933, p. 1; Cyprian Blamires, World Fascism: A Historical Encyclopedia (Volume 1) (ABC-CLIO, 2006) p. 197
  72. ^ "Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung: Archiv der sozialen Demokratie". from the original on 2016-11-07. Retrieved 2017-03-15.
  73. ^ "10,000 Jews Protest German Terrorism", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 24, 1933, p. 1
  74. ^ Stephen Van Dulken, Inventing the 20th century: 100 Inventions that Shaped the World from the Airplane to the Zipper (NYU Press, 2002) p. 98; "Plastic explosion...", by Martin Sherwood, New Scientist (March 24, 1983) p. 836
  75. ^ "HITLER DENIES RELIGIOUS PERSECUTION IN GERMANY", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 25, 1933, p. 1
  76. ^ Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 25, 1933, p. 2
  77. ^ "U. S. FINDS RELIGIOUS PERSECUTION ENDED", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 27, 1933, p. 1
  78. ^ pdf 2015-12-22 at the Wayback Machine p. 2: text of the notice (french), p. 3: answer of Eric Drummond, Secretary-General of the League of Nations (1920–1933)
  79. ^ "Hitler Party Orders Boycott in Revenge", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 28, 1933, p. 1
  80. ^ Gilbert, Martin (1987). The Holocaust: a history of the Jews of Europe during the Second World War (1st ed.). New York: H. Holt. p. 33. ISBN 0805003487.
  81. ^ Michael Milde, International Air Law and ICAO (Eleven International Publishing, 2008) pp. 228-9
  82. ^ Richard Taylor, Film Propaganda: Soviet Russia and Nazi Germany (I.B.Tauris, 1998) p. 144
  83. ^ "Burlesque's Queen of '90's Dies Virtually Penniless", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 29, 1933, p. 3 (online 2015-12-23 at the Wayback Machine
  84. ^ Koch, H. W. (1997). In the Name of the Volk: Political Justice in Hitler's Germany. I.B.Tauris. p. 43.
  85. ^ "Welsh journalist who exposed a Soviet tragedy". walesonline.com. 13 November 2009. from the original on 18 April 2016. Retrieved 7 April 2016.
  86. ^ "23 Are Killed by Tornadoes in Far South", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, March 31, 1933, p. 1; "Tornado Toll of Death 68", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, April 1, 1933, p. 1
  87. ^ Isaiah Friedman, British Pan-Arab Policy, 1915–1922: A Critical Appraisal (Transaction Publishers, 2010) p. 343
  88. ^ Margarete Limberg and Hubert Rübsaat, Germans No More: Accounts of Jewish Everyday Life, 1933–1938 (Berghahn Books, 2006) p. 25
  89. ^ Smith, Harrison (2020-08-30). . Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Archived from the original on 2021-08-03. Retrieved 2021-08-16.
  90. ^ Wolfgang S. Heinz and Hugo Frühling, Determinants of gross human rights violations by state and state-sponsored actors in Brazil, Uruguay, Chile, and Argentina, 1960–1990 (Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, 1999) p. 229; "Terra Seizes Rule of Uruguay in Coup", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, April 1, 1933, p. 2
  91. ^ "GERMANS LIMIT BOYCOTT TO ONE DAY AS 'WARNING'", Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, April 1, 1933, p. 1
  92. ^ Peter Hoffmann, German Resistance to Hitler (Harvard University Press, 1988) p. 224
  93. ^ Frank Bajohr, "Aryanisation" in Hamburg: The Economic Exclusion of Jews and the Confiscation of Their Property in Nazi Germany (Berghahn Books, 2002) p. 66
  94. ^ Neil A. Wynn, The A to Z of the Roosevelt-Truman Era (Scarecrow Press, 2009) p. 102

march, 1933, 1933, january, february, march, april, june, july, august, september, october, november, december, following, events, occurred, march, 1933, president, roosevelt, inaugurated, first, four, terms, march, 1933, classic, film, king, kong, premieres, . 1933 January February March April May June July August September October November December lt lt March 1933 gt gt Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa 0 1 0 2 0 3 0 4 0 5 0 6 0 7 0 8 0 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 The following events occurred in March 1933 March 4 1933 U S President Roosevelt inaugurated for first of four terms March 2 1933 Classic film King Kong premieres March 22 1933 Dachau first Nazi concentration camp receives its first prisoners Contents 1 March 1 1933 Wednesday 2 March 2 1933 Thursday 3 March 3 1933 Friday 4 March 4 1933 Saturday 5 March 5 1933 Sunday 6 March 6 1933 Monday 7 March 7 1933 Tuesday 8 March 8 1933 Wednesday 9 March 9 1933 Thursday 10 March 10 1933 Friday 11 March 11 1933 Saturday 12 March 12 1933 Sunday 13 March 13 1933 Monday 14 March 14 1933 Tuesday 15 March 15 1933 Wednesday 16 March 16 1933 Thursday 17 March 17 1933 Friday 18 March 18 1933 Saturday 19 March 19 1933 Sunday 20 March 20 1933 Monday 21 March 21 1933 Tuesday 22 March 22 1933 Wednesday 23 March 23 1933 Thursday 24 March 24 1933 Friday 25 March 25 1933 Saturday 26 March 26 1933 Sunday 27 March 27 1933 Monday 28 March 28 1933 Tuesday 29 March 29 1933 Wednesday 30 March 30 1933 Thursday 31 March 31 1933 Friday 32 ReferencesMarch 1 1933 Wednesday editThe fictional defense attorney Perry Mason was introduced along with his secretary Della Street and detective Paul Drake in Erle Stanley Gardner s novel The Case of the Velvet Claws published by William Morrow and Company 1 The Governor of Kentucky declared March 1 to March 4 as days of Thanksgiving and legal holidays on which banks could remain closed and Louisiana and Alabama followed suit bringing to nine the number of American states that had declared a bank holiday Banks remained closed in Maryland Michigan and Tennessee while Arkansas Indiana and Pennsylvania restricted withdrawals 2 although the closures were voluntary 3 Born Alan Ameche American NFL player in Kenosha Wisconsin d 1988 Died Uladzimir Zylka 32 Belarusian poet at a concentration camp near Kirov March 2 1933 Thursday editThe film King Kong starring Fay Wray premiered at Radio City Music Hall and the RKO Roxy Theatre in New York City The movie about a gigantic ape was the first feature film to use stop motion animation Grossing 100 000 in its first week at the two theaters before going nationwide the profitable film saved both RKO Pictures and the Roxy from bankruptcy 4 The number of American states closing their banks or restricting withdrawals rose to 17 as Arizona California Louisiana Mississippi Nevada and Oregon proclaimed bank holidays and Illinois and Ohio limited withdrawals 5 Henry T Rainey U S Representative from Illinois and the former minority leader was selected as the new Speaker of the House by his fellow Democrats receiving 166 votes of the 301 cast Second in the voting was John McDuffie of Alabama with 112 votes Rainey succeeded John Nance Garner who had been elected Vice President of the United States 6 With two days remaining in his term U S President Herbert Hoover created the America s first national historical park at Morristown New Jersey 7 and the Black Canyon of the Gunnison National Park 8 Born Robert Abbott American game designer known as The Grand Old Man of Card Games in St Louis d 2018 Died Thomas J Walsh 73 U S Senator for Montana since 1913 Walsh was on a train that had passed Wilson North Carolina en route to Washington for confirmation hearings to become the new United States Attorney General when he suffered a heart attack With him was his bride of five days 9 Francis Alexander Anglin 77 Chief Justice of Canada two days after his retirement from the bench He had served on the Court for 24 years as a justice from 1909 to 1924 and as Chief Justice thereafter 10 March 3 1933 Friday editAt 2 32 a m local time a powerful undersea earthquake rocked the Japanese island of Honshu Shortly afterward a tsunami almost 100 feet 30 m high 11 roared ashore killing more than 3 000 people and destroying 9 000 homes and 8 000 boats 12 At an 8 9 magnitude the quake was the largest ever recorded rivaled only by a January 31 1906 quake off the coast of Colombia and Ecuador 13 Ernst Thalmann former Presidential candidate in the 1932 German elections and leader of the German Communist Party was arrested at his Berlin apartment 14 Notwithstanding his re election to Parliament two days later Thalmann would spend the rest of his life imprisoned and would be executed at the Buchenwald concentration camp on August 18 1944 15 Nohra concentration camp the first of Nazi Germany s early camps was opened in by the Interior Ministry of Germany s Thuringia Free State of Thuringia governed by the Nazi Party and was used to confine arrested members of the German Communist Party At its height it would house 220 prisoners before being discontinued in July or earlier when its inmates were transferred to a regular prison at Ichtershausen 16 with around 100 prisoners arriving directly from regional court prisons the barracks of the police in Weimar or via the regional court prison in Weimar Japanese troops invading China captured the city of Chengde capital of the Jehol Province 17 The impeachment trial of federal judge Harold Louderback began in the U S Senate Louderback would later be acquitted of all charges 18 On the eve of President Roosevelt s inauguration more states closed their banks as Georgia Idaho Kansas New Mexico Oklahoma Oregon Texas Utah Washington and Wisconsin joined in declaring bank holidays bringing to 25 the number of states under restriction 3 19 March 4 1933 Saturday editFranklin Delano Roosevelt was sworn in as the 32nd President of the United States succeeding Herbert Hoover and John Nance Garner is sworn in as the Vice President of the United States succeeding Charles Curtis 20 In his inaugural address Roosevelt proclaimed This great nation will endure as it has endured will revive and will prosper So first of all let me assert my firm belief that the only thing we have to fear is fear itself nameless unreasoning unjustified terror which paralyzes efforts to convert retreat into advance 21 The members of the new presidential cabinet were confirmed by the U S Senate in only 35 minutes in an extraordinary session and then sworn in including the first woman to serve at the Cabinet level Secretary of Labor Frances Perkins 22 Thus began the First 100 days of Franklin D Roosevelt s presidency The Nationalrat lower house of the Parliament of Austria was suspended after Speaker Karl Renner and the only two officers authorized to succeed him Rudolf Ramek and Sepp Straffner resigned their positions in order to be able to cast votes on the question of measures to halt a railroad workers strike With the Speaker s chair empty a vote could not be called and the Nationalrat could not be adjourned Austrian Chancellor Engelbert Dollfuss used the opportunity to suspend the Parliament entirely and to rule by decree 23 24 As the banking crisis continued 37 of the 48 U S states closed their banks or limited withdrawals while all 12 Federal Reserve Banks halted operations 25 Died Solomon kaDinuzulu 41 King of the Zulu Nation since 1913 and great grandfather of the present king Misuzulu Zulu March 5 1933 Sunday editIn the last multiparty election in Germany until the end of the Second World War the National Socialist Party led by Adolf Hitler gained 43 9 of the votes and 288 of the 647 seats available while the Social Democrats led by Otto Wels received 120 The outlawed Communist Party KPD led by Ernst Thalmann was third with 81 seats but none of the winning KPD candidates was allowed to take office 26 In parliamentary elections in Greece the People s Party led by Panagis Tsaldaris won 118 of the 248 seats available defeating the Liberal Party of Eleftherios Venizelos In his first full day in office President Roosevelt called the U S Congress into a special session in order to pass emergency legislation to deal with the nation s economic crisis 3 March 6 1933 Monday editGeneral Nikolaos Plastiras opposed to Panagis Tsaldaris taking office as Prime Minister of Greece led a military coup and set up a dictatorship Plastiras resigned the next day and was arrested being replaced by General Alexandros Othonaios 27 President Roosevelt issued Executive Order 2039 declaring a nationwide bank holiday temporarily closing every bank in the United States and freezing all financial transactions The holiday ended on March 13 for the 12 federal reserve banks and by March 15 for all banks which then had to apply for a license 3 Two thousand banks did not reopen after the holiday On the same day President Roosevelt placed an embargo on the export of gold and suspended the payment of gold to satisfy government obligations 28 Finally he declared a state of national emergency Along with three other presidential proclamations of an emergency on December 15 1950 March 23 1970 and August 15 1971 the 1933 proclamation would not be rescinded until the enactment of the National Emergencies Act which would become effective on September 14 1978 forty five and a half years after FDR s decree 29 Eleanor Roosevelt the First Lady of the United States began holding weekly press conferences for female reporters 30 Herman Klink a 40 year old former woodworker carried out a mass shooting in Cleveland Ohio killing or mortally wounding 5 people and injuring 6 Klink was shot and killed by police 31 32 Born Ted Abernathy American baseball relief pitcher for seven major league teams between 1955 and 1972 in Stanley North Carolina d 2004 Died Anton Cermak 59 Mayor of Chicago 19 days after being shot during an assassination attempt on President elect Franklin D Roosevelt Cermak s physician Dr Karl A Meyer said later that Cermak s primary cause of death was ulcerative colitis The mayor would have recovered from the bullet wound had it not been for the complication of colitis The autopsy disclosed the wound had healed the other complications were not directly due to the bullet wound 33 March 7 1933 Tuesday editAustrian Chancellor Engelbert Dollfuss suspended parliamentary procedure and began to rule as a dictator 34 Born Jackie Blanchflower Northern Irish footballer for Manchester United F C most notable for the callous treatment received from the club due to his injuries in a 1958 plane crash that killed eight members of the team in Belfast d 1998 March 8 1933 Wednesday editThe newly appointed U S enforcement director for Prohibition announced that federal agents would no longer raid places where liquor was served concentrating instead on manufacturers and transporters and leaving it up to the individual states to handle a speakeasy 35 The Committees of Unwealthy Peasants who had led the enforcement of collective farming in the USSR were abolished Having overseen the confiscation of grain from local farmers for government use the committee members were left to starve along with their fellow villagers 36 March 9 1933 Thursday editThe government of the German state of Bavaria was overthrown by Nazi troops on the grounds that Minister President Heinrich Held was unable to maintain order Governance of the former free state was assumed by Nazi MP Franz Ritter von Epp whom Hitler appointed as Reichsstatthalter 37 The 73rd United States Congress began its first 100 days of enacting New Deal legislation to fight the effects of the Great Depression starting with passage of the Emergency Banking Act 3 38 March 10 1933 Friday editAn earthquake of 6 4 magnitude struck Long Beach California at 5 55 p m killing 127 people and injuring more than 5 000 others 39 40 After the earthquake had destroyed more than 1 300 brick and mortar buildings in Long Beach including most of the public schools California passed stricter building codes given that the quake would have been catastrophic if it had struck during school hours The sight of school desks buried under mounds of bricks in Long Beach an author would note decades later spurred the Legislature to upgrade construction guidelines in schools 41 Plans for a new radio network the Amalgamated Broadcasting System were announced by American entertainer Ed Wynn 42 Died Ahmed Sharif es Senussi 59 Chief of the Senussi order in Libya March 11 1933 Saturday editThe Nazi Germany Ministry of Public Enlightenment and Propaganda later simply the Propagandaministerium was established by national decree Joseph Goebbels became the first Propaganda Minister on 14 March 43 March 12 1933 Sunday edit nbsp FDR on radio At 10 00 at night Washington time President Roosevelt gave the first of his fireside chats to the American public in a nationwide radio broadcast to explain why he had declared a bank holiday 44 The term fireside chat was coined by CBS to describe Roosevelt s second address on May 7 In all Roosevelt delivered 28 live fireside chats the last on June 12 1944 45 Six British electrical engineers of Metropolitan Vickers were arrested in the Soviet Union and charged with espionage and sabotage of electrical stations Despite protests from the British government the prisoners were put on trial with five being convicted on April 19 Two MacDonald and Thornton were kept in prison and the other four were expelled In April Britain and the USSR ceased trading with each other 46 Born Barbara Feldon American TV actress best known as Agent 99 on Get Smart in Bethel Park Pennsylvania March 13 1933 Monday editAn electrical short circuit caused a fire at the Hidalgo Theatre in Ahualulco de Mercado in Mexico Twenty people were trampled and another 21 died in the blaze 47 Montana Governor John E Erickson in effect appointed himself to succeed Senator Walsh who died on March 2 resigning in favor of Lieutenant Governor Frank H Cooney Erickson resigned at 5 37 pm and was appointed Senator six minutes later by the new Governor Cooney 48 Born Mike Stoller American popular music composer was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame who contributed to hits such as Hound Dog Jailhouse Rock and On Broadway Stoller in New York City d 2011 March 14 1933 Tuesday editThe American bank holiday came to an end for all banks At the beginning of the year there were 17 796 banks 447 of which had failed by the start of the five day holiday The nation s 5 430 unlicensed banks were limited to allowing five percent of deposits 49 Tornadoes swept through the city of Nashville and then to points eastward in Tennessee killing 61 people with 15 in Nashville and another six in Kingsport 50 Born Michael Caine English film actor in London as Maurice Micklewhite Manuel Pineiro chief of security for Cuba killed in car wreck 1988 Quincy Jones American music producer and composer in Seattle Rene Felber President of Switzerland 1992 93 in Bienne d 2020 Died Balto 13 American sled dog famous for saving thousands of people from an epidemic of diphtheria in 1925 A bronze statue of him was built in Central Park in 1926 the year after the relay Balto was there for the opening ceremony of his statue He would be the subject of a 1995 feature film of the same name Lt Col Gustavo Jimenez 47 Peruvian military officer who served briefly as President and was then defeated in the 1932 election Jimenez committed suicide after unsuccessfully attempting to lead a revolt 51 Anny Ahlers 25 German film actress after falling from a building while sleepwalking March 15 1933 Wednesday editThe Dow Jones Industrial Average rose from 53 84 to 62 10 points The day s gain of 15 34 achieved during the depths of the Great Depression remains to date as the largest 1 day percentage gain for the index 52 Austrian Chancellor Engelbert Dollfuss kept members of the Austrian Parliament from reconvening starting the Austrofascist dictatorship 24 The Soviet Union halted the further seizure of grain from farmers in the Ukrainian SSR and ordered some stocks returned from army reserves to the villages 53 Actor Cary Grant sustained a facial injury and Fredric March and Jack Oakie escaped unscathed after a bomb being used in the filming of the American war drama The Eagle and the Hawk exploded prematurely on the set 54 Clarence Cannon and Milton A Romjue both Democrats and U S Representatives from Missouri engaged in a fist fight in the House Office Building Minnesota Congressman Ernest Lundeen separated the two shoving Cannon into an elevator and then taking Romjue to a first aid station 55 New German Propaganda Minister Joseph Goebbels gave his first press conference instructing journalists on their responsibilities He painted the ideal media as a press so finely tuned that it is as it were like a piano in the hands of the government on which the government can play 56 Born Ruth Bader Ginsburg U S Supreme Court Justice 1993 2020 in Brooklyn d 2020 March 16 1933 Thursday editPhilippine Governor General Theodore Roosevelt Jr and his wife left the Philippines after one year Roosevelt was succeeded by Vice Governor John H Holiday 57 In Manchukuo the puppet state set up in Japanese occupied China 50 people were killed and 70 injured when a passenger train derailed Although few were hurt in the derailment there was insufficient time to warn that the tracks were blocked and a freight train crashed into the rear of the passenger train 58 March 17 1933 Friday editLyman Duff was sworn in as the new Chief Justice of Canada having served on the Canadian Supreme Court since 1906 He remained on the bench until 1944 10 U S Senator Huey Long of Louisiana purchased air time on NBC radio to deliver his own nationwide address describing his plan for redistribution of wealth 59 Adolf Hitler named Hjalmar Schacht as his chief economic adviser Historian William Shirer would later write No single man in all of Germany would be more helpful to Hitler in building up the economic strength of the Third Reich and in furthering its rearmament 60 Hitler named Baldur von Schirach age 25 as leader of the Hitler Youth 61 Born Penelope Lively British children s author in Cairo Egypt Myrlie Evers Williams African American civil rights leader and wife of Medgar Evers in Vicksburg Mississippi March 18 1933 Saturday editA decree in the Soviet Union forbade peasants from leaving collective farms to seek work elsewhere without permission 62 Died Prince Luigi Amedeo Duke of the Abruzzi 60 Italian mountaineer Arctic explorer and former Admiral in Italian Navy March 19 1933 Sunday editVoters in Portugal approved the republic s new constitution by a vote of 1 292 864 to 6 190 63 The new constitution declared Portugal to be a unitary and corporative republic and granted Prime Minister Antonio de Oliveira Salazar the power to suspend civil liberties and limiting the legislative power In that the results included eligible voters who did not cast no ballots the actual margin was 719 364 in favor and 6 190 against 64 Born Philip Roth American author d 2018 March 20 1933 Monday editGiuseppe Zangara 32 who had killed Chicago Mayor Anton J Cermak while attempting to assassinate President elect Franklin D Roosevelt went to the electric chair at the Florida State Prison in Raiford Florida His last words reportedly were Goodbye to the world Go ahead push the button 65 March 21 1933 Tuesday edit nbsp March 21 1933 Adolf Hitler shakes hands with President Hindenburg on Potsdam Day The Day of Potsdam took place at the tomb of Frederick the Great Hitler President Hindenburg and former Crown Prince Wilhelm appeared together in a ceremony choreographed by the Ministry of Propaganda to symbolize the transition between Germany s past before World War I to its future under Nazi rule 66 67 March 22 1933 Wednesday editDachau a Nazi concentration camp received its first prisoners as four police trucks brought in 200 inmates from the Stadelheim Prison and Landsberg Prison The camp built around a former munitions factory was initially intended for the protective custody of officials of banned political parties i e Communists The following month control of the camp was transferred from the police to the German SS 66 68 The U S State Department assured the President of the American Jewish Congress that the U S ambassador to Germany stayed informed about the treatment of Jews there and that persecutions would soon cease 69 President Franklin Roosevelt signed the Cullen Harrison Act allowing the manufacture and sale of 3 2 beer The Act would take effect at 12 01 a m on 7 April 70 Born Abulhassan Banisadr the first President of Iran from 1979 to 1981 after the declaration of the Islamic Republic in Hamadan d 2021 March 23 1933 Thursday editBy a 441 94 vote Germany s Reichstag passed the Enabling Act Ermachtigungsgesetz entitled Law to Remedy the Distress of the People and the Nation which gave Chancellor Hitler the power to enact new laws by decree without need of legislative approval The majority was obtained by the exclusion of 81 Communist party members the reluctance of the Centrist Party to oppose the legislation and the posting of Stormtroopers to observe the debate 71 In the last open session of the German Parliament Social Democratic Party leader Otto Wels spoke against Adolf Hitler s request for formal approval of dictatorial powers 72 Wels would be fortunate enough to be able to leave the country and died in Paris on September 16 1939 Jewish protesters in New York City marched to the Mayor s office to protest against persecution of German Jews and to call for a boycott of German goods 73 Born Philip Zimbardo American psychologist and professor emeritus of Stanford University in New York CityMarch 24 1933 Friday editLow density polyethylene LDPE the first high strength industrial plastic was created by British chemists Reginald Gibson and Eric Fawcett at the Imperial Chemical Industries ICI plant in Winnington After mixing ethylene and benzaldehyde heating the combination under high pressure to 170 C Gibson and Fawcett created a waxy solid polymer It wasn t until 1935 that Michael Perrin replicated the experiment 74 In an interview with the Universal Press Service Adolf Hitler s press secretary issued a statement on behalf of the Chancellor Hitler described reports of maltreatment of Jews and Catholics to be dirty lies and said that there has been no discrimination whatsoever between Jews or non Jews or Christians or any other creed or race 75 In Berlin the nationalist Jewish civil rights movement Central Union of German Citizens of the Jewish Faith described reports of persecution of Jews as pure inventions while the Patriotic Society of National German Jews stated that the reports were foreign attempts to blackmail Germany 76 Adolfs Blodnieks became Prime Minister of Latvia serving for one year March 25 1933 Saturday editThe U S presidential yacht USS Sequoia was commissioned Born Raymond A Price Canadian geologist in Winnipeg March 26 1933 Sunday editIn a telegram from U S Secretary of State Cordell Hull to leaders of American Jewish organizations the State Department announced that its investigation of conditions in Germany had determined that whereas there was for a short time considerable physical mistreatment of Jews this phase may be considered virtually terminated 77 Born Vine Deloria Jr American Sioux Indian author and activist at Martin South Dakota d 2005 Died Eddie Lang American jazz musician 31 of complications from a tonsillectomy March 27 1933 Monday editJapan announced it would leave the League of Nations due to a cancellation period of exactly two years the egression would become effective March 27 1935 78 The Nazi Party ordered a one day nationwide boycott of Jewish merchants to begin on April 1 and to be enforced by the presence of SS troops outside Jewish owned stores 79 80 March 28 1933 Tuesday editAll 15 people on board were killed in the crash of an Armstrong Whitworth Argosy The crew of three and the 12 passengers died shortly after the plane took off from Brussels bound for London The crash would later be determined to have been caused by a fire that may have been caused by accident or by a passenger after the plane was airborne 81 Joseph Goebbels a film fan as well as the new German Minister of Propaganda addressed filmmakers and union representatives at the Kaiserhof Hotel in Berlin describing his requirements that new films reflect the Nazi state s ideals without compromising the artist s vision 82 Died Ida Siddons 76 American entertainer and comedian known in the 1890s as the Queen of Burlesque 83 Friedrich Zander 45 Latvian born Soviet rocketry pioneerMarch 29 1933 Wednesday editThe Law Concerning the Sentence and Execution of the Death Penalty was issued in Germany to permit the death penalty by hanging for certain offences committed on or after January 30 when Adolf Hitler had become chancellor This followed the Decree of the Reich President for the Protection of People and State better known as the Reichstag Fire Decree which President Hindenburg had issued on Hitler s advice on February 28 The offences attracting the death penalty under the new law included arson of public buildings it was dubbed the Lex van der Lubbe because it permitted the execution of Marinus van der Lubbe for the burning of the Reichstag building in February even though arson had not been a capital offence at the time It would also be used to justify the executions of any persons who had been arrested for treason in the first two months of Nazi rule 84 As famine continued in the Soviet Union Welsh journalist Gareth Jones made the first report published in the West of the Holodomor the starvation and genocide taking place in famine genocide in Ukraine 85 Born Clifford Fyle Sierra Leonean author in Freetown d 2006 March 30 1933 Thursday editTornadoes in the southeastern United States killed 68 people 86 The Trans Jordan assembly voted 13 3 to repeal a ban against sales of land to foreigners opening the way for Jewish colonization of Palestine 87 Raid against Berlin lawyers in the courts at noon 88 Born Jon Hassler American author in Minneapolis d 2008 Joe Ruby American animator in Los Angeles d 2020 89 March 31 1933 Friday editUruguay s civilian elected President Gabriel Terra established himself as the nation s dictator ruling until his overthrow in 1938 90 The German government announced that the anti Jewish boycott set to take place on 1 April would last only one day and then be held in abeyance until Wednesday 91 The Preliminary Law for the Co ordination of the States and the Reich went into effect giving the national government control over the state governments Under orders of Interior Minister Wilhelm Frick the state legislatures and cabinets were reconstituted with Nazi Party members and new governors were appointed from Berlin 92 The Justice Minister in the German state of Prussia directed that all Jewish judges prosecutors and legal officers were to resign and that Jewish lawyers should be limited in their number of cases Dr Hans Frank the Justice Minister of Bavaria retired all Jewish judges and lawyers on the same day 93 The Civilian Conservation Corps was established in the United States with the mission to relieve rampant unemployment 94 References edit Mitzi M Brunsdale Icons of Mystery and Crime Detection From Sleuths to Superheroes ABC CLIO Jul 26 2010 p 550 Regina Sask Leader Post March 1 1933 p 1 a b c d e Fuller Robert Lynn 2011 Phantom of Fear The Banking Panic of 1933 McFarland Gerald Schiller It Happened in Hollywood Remarkable Events That Shaped History Globe Pequot 2010 pp 74 77 California Takes Holiday Spokane Daily Chronicle March 2 1933 p 3 Rainey Is Chosen Speaker of House Pittsburgh Post Gazette March 3 1933 p 1 Maxine N Lurie and Marc Mappen Encyclopedia of New Jersey Rutgers University Press 2004 p 540 Hal Rothman Preserving Different Pasts The American National Monuments University of Illinois Press 1989 p 232 Margaret Leslie Davis Dark Side of Fortune Triumph and Scandal in the Life of Oil Tycoon Edward L Doheny University of California Press 2001 p 272 a b The Supreme Court of Canada and Its Justices La Cour Supreme du Canada et Ses Juges 1875 2000 Dundurn Press 2000 p 52 Tad S Murty The Indian Ocean Tsunami CRC Press 2007 p 51 372 Are Killed by Tidal Wave Pittsburgh Post Gazette March 3 1933 p 1 Quake s Known Dead Is 1 535 Pittsburgh Post Gazette March 4 1933 p 2 Barbara Tufty 1001 Questions Answered about Earthquakes Avalanches Floods and Other Natural Disasters Courier Dover Publications 1978 Communists Leader Arrested in Berlin Pittsburgh Post Gazette March 4 1933 p 2 Heinrich August Winkler Germany The Long Road West 1933 1990 Oxford University Press 2007 p 43 Wohlfeld Udo 2009 The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum encyclopedia of camps and ghettos 1933 1945 Volume 1 Early camps youth camps and concentration camps and subcamps under the SS Business Administration Main Office WVHA Geoffrey P Megargee United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Bloomington Indiana University Press p 141 ISBN 978 0 253 00350 8 OCLC 644542383 R S Chaurasia History of Modern China Atlantic Publishers 2004 p 188 High Court of Congress Impeachment Trials 1797 1936 by William F Swindler ABA Journal April 1974 p 427 St Petersburg FL Evening Independent March 3 1933 p 1 Presidential Oath Is Given to Roosevelt March 5 1933 Pittsburgh Press p 1 Roosevelt s Inaugural Address Renews Pledge of New Deal March 5 1933 Pittsburgh Press p 6 Cabinet Sworn Goes to Work March 5 1933 Pittsburgh Press p 1 4 March 1933 The beginning of the end of parliamentarian democracy in Austria Archived from the original on 14 January 2013 Retrieved 2 March 2012 a b Lucas Prakke and Constantijn Kortmann eds Constitutional Law of 15 EU Member States Kluwer 2004 p 38 Rik W Hafer The Federal Reserve System An Encyclopedia Greenwood Publishing Group 2005 p 21 Reichstag elections 1933 Archived from the original on 2019 04 24 Retrieved 2012 03 02 Greeks to Jail Ex Dictator Pittsburgh Post Gazette March 8 1933 p 2 The Defining Moment The Great Depression and the American Economy in the Twentieth Century University of Chicago Press 1997 p 29 Senate Finally Votes to End Great Depression Officially El Paso Herald Post El Paso Texas October 8 1974 p 1 Beasley Maurine H Shulman Holly C Beasley Henry R eds 2001 Chronology of Eleanor Roosevelt s Life and Career The Eleanor Roosevelt Encyclopedia Westport Connecticut London Greenwood Press p xxiv ISBN 0 313 30181 6 Retrieved 10 May 2022 via Google Books Patrolman Herman B Pahler Cleveland Division of Police Ohio The Officer Down Memorial Page Inc Retrieved 18 April 2024 Cleveland OH March 6 1933 Mass Shooting Victims Retrieved 18 April 2024 Reveals Colitis Fatal to Cermak Pittsburgh Post Gazette March 31 1933 p 1 Dutt R Palme 1935 Fascism and Social Revolution International Publishers Co p 162 Dry Director Bans Raids on Speakeasies Pittsburgh Post Gazette March 9 1933 p 2 Robert Conquest The Harvest of Sorrow Soviet Collectivization and the Terror famine Oxford University Press 1987 p 258 James Minahan Encyclopedia of the Stateless Nations A C Greenwood Publishing Group 2002 p 297 Bavaria Put under Control of Nazis New York Times March 10 1933 p 13 ROOSEVELT EXTENDS BANK HOLIDAY AFTER SIGNING EMERGENCY LAWS Pittsburgh Post Gazette March 10 1933 p 1 HUNDREDS ARE KILLED IN S CALIFORNIA QUAKES Pittsburgh Post Gazette March 11 1933 p 1 Long Beach Earthquake 70th Anniversary Archived 2012 03 04 at the Wayback Machine Southern California Earthquake Center The Day the Earth Shook 127 Died 44 Years Ago by Steve Harvey Los Angeles Times March 10 1977 p I 3 Third Radio Chain to Open Pittsburgh Post Gazette March 11 1933 p 2 Hilmar Hoffmann The Triumph of Propaganda Film and National Socialism 1933 1945 Berghahn Books 1997 pp 89 90 ROOSEVELT EXPLAINS PLANS FOR RESUMPTION OF BANKING Pittsburgh Post Gazette March 13 1933 p 1 Neil A Wynn The A to Z of the Roosevelt Truman Era Scarecrow Press 2009 pp 154 155 Jean Marc F Blanchard et al Power and the Purse Economic Statecraft Interdependence and National Security Frank Cass and Co 2000 pp 232 233 Theater Fire in Mexico Takes Toll of 41 Lives Pittsburgh Post Gazette March 15 1933 p 2 Erickson Takes Walsh s Position Spokane Daily Chronicle March 14 1933 p 2 Claudia Goldin and Gary D Libecap The Regulated Economy A Historical Approach to Political Economy University of Chicago Press 1994 p 168 23 in Four States Killed 200 Wounded by Tornado Pittsburgh Post Gazette March 15 1933 p 1 Tornado Toll Mounts to 43 Pittsburgh Post Gazette March 16 1933 p 1 Leader in Peruvian Revolt Kills Himself Pittsburgh Post Gazette March 15 1933 p 2 Stocks Gain Three Billion Pittsburgh Post Gazette March 16 1933 p 1 N M Dronin and E G Bellinger Climate Dependence and Food Problems in Russia 1900 1990 Central European University Press 2005 p 149 Movie Actor Hurt As Bomb Explodes Pittsburgh Post Gazette March 16 1933 p 1 Congressmen In Fist Fight After Session Pittsburgh Post Gazette March 17 1933 p 3 Corey Ross Media and the Making of Modern Germany Mass Communications Society and Politics from the Empire to the Third Reich Oxford University Press 2008 p 295 Throngs Shout Farewell As Roosevelt Quits Isles Pittsburgh Post Gazette March 17 1933 p 2 Edgar A Haine Railroad Wrecks Associated University Presses 1993 p 149 Bill Bradley Time Present Time Past A Memoir Random House Inc 1997 William L Shirer The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich A History of Nazi Germany Simon and Schuster 1959 p 204 John Alexander Williams Turning to Nature in Germany Hiking Nudism and Conservation 1900 1940 Stanford University Press 2007 p 193 Peasants of Russia Forbidden to Leave Collective Farms Chicago Daily Tribune March 19 1935 p 6 New Constitution Adopted in Portugal Pittsburgh Post Gazette March 21 1933 p 2 Tom Gallagher Portugal A Twentieth Century Interpretation Manchester University Press1983 p 65 Zangara Dies Defiant to End Pittsburgh Post Gazette March 21 1933 p 1 a b Evans Richard J 2005 The Coming of the Third Reich Penguin pp 345 50 Petropoulos Jonathan 2006 Royals and the Reich The Princes von Hessen in Nazi Germany Oxford University Press p 120 The Dachau Gas Chambers Archived 2012 03 01 at the Wayback Machine by Harry W Mazal Holocaust History org Jean Michel Palmier Weimar in Exile The Antifascist Emigration in Europe and America Verso 2006 p 458 ROOSEVELT AUTHORIZES BEER SALE BY SIGNING BILL FOR 3 2 BREW Pittsburgh Post Gazette March 23 1933 p 1 Beer Return Set At 12 01 A M In All Time Zones Pittsburgh Post Gazette March 24 1933 p 1 HITLER VOTED DICTATOR UNDER PRUSSIAN SYSTEM Pittsburgh Post Gazette March 24 1933 p 1 Cyprian Blamires World Fascism A Historical Encyclopedia Volume 1 ABC CLIO 2006 p 197 Friedrich Ebert Stiftung Archiv der sozialen Demokratie Archived from the original on 2016 11 07 Retrieved 2017 03 15 10 000 Jews Protest German Terrorism Pittsburgh Post Gazette March 24 1933 p 1 Stephen Van Dulken Inventing the 20th century 100 Inventions that Shaped the World from the Airplane to the Zipper NYU Press 2002 p 98 Plastic explosion by Martin Sherwood New Scientist March 24 1983 p 836 HITLER DENIES RELIGIOUS PERSECUTION IN GERMANY Pittsburgh Post Gazette March 25 1933 p 1 Pittsburgh Post Gazette March 25 1933 p 2 U S FINDS RELIGIOUS PERSECUTION ENDED Pittsburgh Post Gazette March 27 1933 p 1 pdf Archived 2015 12 22 at the Wayback Machine p 2 text of the notice french p 3 answer of Eric Drummond Secretary General of the League of Nations 1920 1933 Hitler Party Orders Boycott in Revenge Pittsburgh Post Gazette March 28 1933 p 1 Gilbert Martin 1987 The Holocaust a history of the Jews of Europe during the Second World War 1st ed New York H Holt p 33 ISBN 0805003487 Michael Milde International Air Law and ICAO Eleven International Publishing 2008 pp 228 9 Richard Taylor Film Propaganda Soviet Russia and Nazi Germany I B Tauris 1998 p 144 Burlesque s Queen of 90 s Dies Virtually Penniless Pittsburgh Post Gazette March 29 1933 p 3 online Archived 2015 12 23 at the Wayback Machine Koch H W 1997 In the Name of the Volk Political Justice in Hitler s Germany I B Tauris p 43 Welsh journalist who exposed a Soviet tragedy walesonline com 13 November 2009 Archived from the original on 18 April 2016 Retrieved 7 April 2016 23 Are Killed by Tornadoes in Far South Pittsburgh Post Gazette March 31 1933 p 1 Tornado Toll of Death 68 Pittsburgh Post Gazette April 1 1933 p 1 Isaiah Friedman British Pan Arab Policy 1915 1922 A Critical Appraisal Transaction Publishers 2010 p 343 Margarete Limberg and Hubert Rubsaat Germans No More Accounts of Jewish Everyday Life 1933 1938 Berghahn Books 2006 p 25 Smith Harrison 2020 08 30 Joe Ruby TV writer and producer who co created Scooby Doo dies at 87 Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Archived from the original on 2021 08 03 Retrieved 2021 08 16 Wolfgang S Heinz and Hugo Fruhling Determinants of gross human rights violations by state and state sponsored actors in Brazil Uruguay Chile and Argentina 1960 1990 Martinus Nijhoff Publishers 1999 p 229 Terra Seizes Rule of Uruguay in Coup Pittsburgh Post Gazette April 1 1933 p 2 GERMANS LIMIT BOYCOTT TO ONE DAY AS WARNING Pittsburgh Post Gazette April 1 1933 p 1 Peter Hoffmann German Resistance to Hitler Harvard University Press 1988 p 224 Frank Bajohr Aryanisation in Hamburg The Economic Exclusion of Jews and the Confiscation of Their Property in Nazi Germany Berghahn Books 2002 p 66 Neil A Wynn The A to Z of the Roosevelt Truman Era Scarecrow Press 2009 p 102 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title March 1933 amp oldid 1219560778, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.