March 1929 Explained
The following events occurred in March 1929:
Friday, March 1, 1929
Saturday, March 2, 1929
- Coal miners in New South Wales, Australia were locked out by their employers for refusing to accept a wage cut.[2]
- A regiment of the Chinese National Revolutionary Army loyal to warlord Zhang Zongchang began a revolt in western Beijing, throwing the city into chaos. Though the uprising was quickly crushed by loyalist soldiers,[3] martial law was consequently declared in the city.[4]
- The Increased Penalties Act was enacted in the United States, increasing the penalties for violating Prohibition.
- During a meet with the University of Chicago, Illinois Fighting Illini wrestler Allie Morrison, a 1928 Olympic gold medalist, fractured some of the vertebrae in his neck. Although he would complete the season, doctors would convince him to retire from competition to avoid paralysis.[5]
- The San Francisco Bay toll bridge (since replaced by the San Mateo–Hayward Bridge) opened. Measuring, it was the longest bridge in the world at the time.[6]
- Died: Sir Edward Hobart Seymour, 88, British admiral
Sunday, March 3, 1929
- An Italian commission released the findings of its investigation into the airship Italia disaster. The report assigned virtually all of the blame to North Pole expedition commander Umberto Nobile.[7]
- A death toll of 2,390 people in France was reported for the recently-ended ten days of extremely cold weather.[8]
- William Fox of the Fox Film Corporation announced a merger with the Loew's theatre chain.[9]
- Mexican rebels seized Nogales and Veracruz as fighting in the Cristero War flared up again.[10]
Monday, March 4, 1929
Tuesday, March 5, 1929
Wednesday, March 6, 1929
Thursday, March 7, 1929
Friday, March 8, 1929
Saturday, March 9, 1929
Sunday, March 10, 1929
- The army of General Plutarco Elías Calles retook the strategic rail center of Cañitas as Mexican government forces counterattacked.[19]
- The Egyptian government granted limited rights of divorce to women.
Monday, March 11, 1929
Tuesday, March 12, 1929
- Mexican rebels retreated from Saltillo as President Emilio Portes Gil issued a statement saying the revolution had been defeated.[20]
- Sir Arthur Conan Doyle was giving a lecture on the paranormal in Nairobi when he displayed a photograph of a supposed ghost in a haunted house in Nottingham. A well-known Nairobi dentist bolted out of his seat and identified himself as the "ghost", explaining that he had posed for the photo in a white sheet some years ago as a trick after he and other members of a party had investigated the house for two weeks and had failed to find any ghost. Doyle accepted the man's explanation, expressed regret at being hoaxed and said he would not show the photograph again.[21] [22] [23]
- The silent comedy film Why Be Good? was released.[24]
- Died: Asa Griggs Candler, 77, American businessman known for his invention of Coca-Cola in 1886
Wednesday, March 13, 1929
- Leon Trotsky gave his first interview to the foreign press in his apartment in Turkey, saying he was writing a book tracing the history of his opposition to Joseph Stalin and expressing a desire to go to Germany because he preferred the care of German physicians.[25]
- Born: Peter Breck, actor, in Rochester, New York (d. 2012)
- Died: Sherry Magee, 44, American baseball player, died of pneumonia
Thursday, March 14, 1929
- Elba, Alabama, was submerged under 10 feet of flood water when the Pea River overflowed. Alabama Governor Bibb Graves delivered a radio broadcast pleading for urgent relief efforts.[26]
- The Fox Film Corporation, Pathé News and Paramount News unanimously declared after checking their inauguration film footage that Chief Justice William Howard Taft had misstated the Oath of Office when he called on Herbert Hoover to swear to "preserve, maintain and defend the Constitution of the United States", substituting the word "maintain" for "protect". The flub had been caught by 13-year-old student Helen Terwilliger, who had listened to the live radio broadcast of the inauguration in eighth-grade history class in Walden, New York, and politely wrote to Taft about the error. Taft later laughed off his mistake by saying, "I think you'll have to get along with what I've already said. After all, I don't think it's important."[27]
Friday, March 15, 1929
Saturday, March 16, 1929
Sunday, March 17, 1929
Monday, March 18, 1929
Tuesday, March 19, 1929
Wednesday, March 20, 1929
Thursday, March 21, 1929
Friday, March 22, 1929
Saturday, March 23, 1929
- The University of Cambridge won the 81st Boat Race. The victory evened the overall record against Oxford at 40 wins each.
- Born:
- Roger Bannister, English athlete who was the first person to run one mile in less than four minutes; in Harrow, London (d. 2018)
- Mark Rydell, American actor, director and producer; in New York City[38]
- Died: Denny Williams, 35, American baseball player who had played in the 1928 season, was killed when a car struck and overturned the automobile in which he was riding.
Sunday, March 24, 1929
Monday, March 25, 1929
- Jackie Fields defeated Jack Thompson by 10-round decision in Chicago to claim the vacant world welterweight title.[41] 35 were injured in a riot that broke out in the eighth round after two black spectators took offense to something that a heckler yelled at the African-American boxer Thompson.[42]
- Born: William R. Richardson, U.S. Army general, in Taizhou, Jiangsu, China (d. 2023); Cecil Taylor, pianist and poet, in New York City (d. 2018)
- Died: Jan Kubisz, 81, Polish educator and poet
Tuesday, March 26, 1929
Wednesday, March 27, 1929
- Al Capone appeared before a grand jury in Chicago for the second time in a week. After completing his testimony he was arrested for contempt of court and released after posting $500 bail.[44]
- Born: Rita Briggs, American baseball player for the AAGPBL from 1947 to 1954; in Ayer, Massachusetts (d. 1994)
Thursday, March 28, 1929
Friday, March 29, 1929
Saturday, March 30, 1929
Sunday, March 31, 1929
- The second Trans-American Footrace, nicknamed the "Bunion Derby", began in New York City. 77 runners were competing for a total of $60,000 in prize money awarded to first 15 people to reach the finish line in Los Angeles.[49]
- The airplane Southern Cross and its crew temporarily went missing over northwest Australia, on the first leg of an attempt to fly from Sydney to England.[50]
- Died: Myron T. Herrick, 74, American politician and U.S. Ambassador to France
Notes and References
- Web site: Year End Review – 1929 . CanadaGenWeb.org . March 18, 2015 .
- News: 9 January 1930 . New Move in Coal Dispute . . . 1.
- News: . 4 March 1929 . Peking Revolt. Regiment of Troops Mutiny . . 26 October 2018.
- Book: Mercer, Derrik . 1989 . Chronicle of the 20th Century . . Chronicle Communications Ltd. . 376 . 978-0-582-03919-3.
- Web site: Allie Morrison: Golden boy of 1928 Olympics . Palmer . Mark . InterMat Wrestling . MatScouts . 17 April 2012 . 29 July 2022.
- Web site: County of San Mateo Werder Pier Restoration Feasibility Study . March 2004 . San Mateo County Environmental Services Agency . March 18, 2015.
- News: Root . Waverley . March 4, 1929 . Nobile Blamed by Inquiry for Polar Disaster . Chicago Daily Tribune. 4 .
- News: March 4, 1929 . Paris Deaths Doubled Owing to Cold Wave . Chicago Daily Tribune. 4 .
- Gomery, Douglas. "Problems in Film History: How Fox Innovated Sound. Hollywood As Historian: American Film in a Cultural Context. Ed. Peter C. Rollins. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky, 1983. p. 30. .
- News: Cornyn . John . March 4, 1929 . Mexicans Revolt; Seize Nogales and Vera Cruz . Chicago Daily Tribune. 1 .
- Book: Hovey, Lonnie J. . 2014 . Lafayette Square . . . 115 . 978-1-4671-2203-0.
- Book: Vaughn, Stephen L. . 2008 . Encyclopedia of American Journalism . Oxon and New York . . 404 . 978-1-135-88020-0.
- Web site: Chronology 1929 . 2002 . indiana.edu . March 18, 2015 .
- News: Kinsley . Philip . March 8, 1929 . Hoover Calls Extra Session for April 15 . . 1.
- March 18, 1929 . The Broadway Parade . . New York . Wid's Films and Film Folk, Inc. . 2.
- News: March 9, 1929 . Lindbergh Flies Over Rebel Zone to Open Air Line . . 1 .
- March 10, 1929 . 20,000 Texans Welcome Lindbergh as He Ends Hop Over Revolt-Torn Mexico . . 1 .
- News: March 10, 1929 . King of Spain's Niece Weds Polish Nobleman at Madrid . . 2 .
- News: Dwyer . Orville . March 11, 1929 . Calles Seizes Rail Center . Chicago Daily Tribune. 1 .
- News: Cornyn . John . March 13, 1929 . Revolution Fails, Says Gil . Chicago Daily Tribune. 1 .
- News: March 14, 1929 . Dentist Exposes "Ghost Photo" in Doyle Photo . Chicago Daily Tribune. 24 .
- Book: Pugh, Brian W. . 2009 . A Chronology Of The Life of Arthur Conan Doyle . MX Publishing . 978-1-78092-198-3 .
- August 2, 1929 . Photograph of Ghost . . . 10 .
- Web site: Why Be Good? . Silent Era . March 18, 2015 .
- News: March 14, 1929 . Russia's Ex-War Lord Will Fight Foes With Pen . Chicago Daily Tribune. 24 .
- News: March 15, 1929 . 4,000 in Alabama Town Periled by Flood . . 1.
- Book: Bendat, Jim . 2012 . Democracy's Big Day: The Inauguration of Our President . . . 36–38 . 978-1-935278-48-1.
- News: March 16, 1929 . Flood Terror Sweeps South . Chicago Daily Tribune. 1 .
- News: March 15, 1929 . Calles' Army Captures Durango, Rebels Flee . . 1 .
- Book: Bradley, Edwin M. . 1996 . The First Hollywood Musicals: A Critical Filmography of 171 Features, 1927 Through 1932 . Jefferson, North Carolina . McFarland & Company, Inc. . 27 . 978-0-7864-2029-2 .
- Bradley, p. 352
- News: Cornyn . John . March 19, 1929 . Mexican Rebels Ask Peace . Chicago Daily Tribune. 1 .
- News: March 21, 1929 . Capone, as U.S. Witness, Shuns His Old Haunts . Chicago Daily Tribune. 3 .
- Book: Greenberg, Michael I. . 2006 . Encyclopedia of Terrorist, Natural, and Man-made Disasters . Sudbury, Massachusetts . Jones and Bartlett Publishers . 179 . 978-0-7637-3782-5 .
- News: March 23, 1929 . U.S. Guns Sink a British Ship; Sailor Killed . Chicago Daily Tribune. 1 .
- April 6, 1929 . Report Canada Charges U. S. Broke Treaty . Chicago Daily Tribune. 2 .
- Book: Reid, John Howard . 2008 . Silent Films & Early Talkies on DVD: A Classic Movie Fan's Guide . Lulu.com . 978-1-4357-1073-3 .
- Web site: Mark Rydell - Broadway Cast & Staff . . . December 8, 2021.
- News: March 25, 1929 . Italy Rolls Up Huge Vote for Policy of Duce . Chicago Daily Tribune. 1 and 10 .
- News: March 25, 1929 . 100,000 Pass Before Bier of Marshal Foch . Chicago Daily Tribune. 1 .
- Web site: Jackie Fields . . March 18, 2015 .
- News: March 26, 1929 . Thirty-Five Hurt in Uproar at Coliseum Fight . Chicago Daily Tribune. 1 and 18 .
- News: Wales . Henry . March 27, 1929 . Paris Like Vast Silent Tomb as Foch is Buried . Chicago Daily Tribune. 1 .
- Web site: The Al Capone Trial: A Chronology . Porazzo . Daniel M. . UMKC School of Law . March 18, 2015 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20141031183951/http://law2.umkc.edu/faculty/projects/ftrials/capone/caponechrono.html . October 31, 2014 .
- News: Wales . Henry . March 29, 1929 . I.T. & T. Buys a World Wide Radio Chain . Chicago Daily Tribune. 1 .
- News: March 29, 1929 . New $7,000,000 Stadium Opens; Draws 15,000 . Chicago Daily Tribune. 1 .
- Web site: Tommy Loughran . . March 18, 2015 .
- Book: Holston, Kim R. . 2013 . Movie Roadshows: A History and Filmography of Reserved-Seat Limited Showings, 1911–1973 . Jefferson, North Carolina . McFarland & Company, Inc. . 65 . 978-0-7864-6062-5 .
- Book: Kastner, Charles B. . 2014 . The 1929 Bunion Derby: Johnny Salo and the Great Footrace Across America . Syracuse, New York . Syracuse University Press . xv . 978-0-8156-1036-6 .
- News: Myers . Jack . April 12, 1929 . Southern Cross Found; Report Crew Safe, Well . Chicago Daily Tribune. 5 .